My cousin and her daughter helped me make 12 little capes for the guests, which turned out really cute.
The first thing we did was have the kids do an obstacle course to train them as superheroes. It went around the yard and culminated in them rescuing stuffed animals. They loved it and did it four times in a row. Wish I'd gotten pictures of it, but we were too busy cheering and guiding.
Then we played Superheroes and Villains. Two of the moms were villains and the kids were the superheroes. They got to chase and capture the villains and tie them to chairs with toilet paper.
Then the villains would break free and it would all start over.
It was *such* a blast. After the first villain run, one of the villains had to give up her life of crime because it bothered her son to see her being chased. Another villain - with an infant, no less - stepped up and the game went on
and on ....
and on ....
until the toilet paper rolls were used up.
Then the superheroes got to clean up their town, eat cake, and play around as long as they wanted. We had emptied our swimming pool and filled it back with only three inches of water and a bottle of dish soap. The kids would stand in the water and we would pull a hula hoop up over them to make a bubble around them. It almost worked on the shorter kids, but only got waist high on the bigger kids. Then they used the hoops to make huge bubbles.It really was a brilliantly fun party.
Ains only wanted a few things. A scooter. A book about Dragonology. A skirt.
I wanted to put up some pictures of the handmade goodness she got, so here is her (very) ruffly skirt. *Very* ruffly.
Seriously, I never want to see ruffles again.Hannah made her a pillowcase.
She drew a picture of a unicorn, transferred it to a piece of muslin and embroidered it, picked out fabric to match and I sewed it into a pillowcase.
Darling.Then there's the present my sister gave her - a knitted superheroine doll.
It looks cute in the picture, I know, but people - it is so. much. cuter. in your hands. You can't help but fly her around.And the detail is wonderful - look at her cape.
I want one.
Lots of super hero play - X-men, She-ra, Black Cat, Justice League, Ladybugs ... so glad that we're in a house with a circle from the living room to the kitchen for them to run around. So glad no-one's busted their head running that circle yet.
The girls are really into it. Gray is kind of into it - especially the 'shaking your joints out' part.
But see here, how he's starting to look down, noticing something on the ground?
Yeah, we lost him.
Downward tractor.
Still not paying attention.
But we had him for all of two minutes. That's a record.
This means that Gray and I are back behind the fence watching. Watching for five minutes until he breaks into squealing because
Wish I'd thought of encouraging him to do that.
It kept him busy and happy.
For all of 15 minutes.
Then they moved to the trampoline and he couldn't follow. Back to exploring the rest of the gym far away from her class, but it was a glorious 15 minutes.
Silly girl with a missing tooth.
Silly boy trying to ignore even sillier sisters.
(This is the
Can you tell how covered he is? His face and hair turned dark brown when I showered him off.
When you got needs, you got needs.
It may not seem like much, but she's not had any formal instruction in less than/more than, bigger than/smaller than, addition/subtraction. I still have my niggling, suspicious worries sometimes about the big scary math issue with the way we homeschool. This helped put some of that to rest. Like she said, "It's so easy Mother. Seven is bigger than five, so if I want 175 grams and I have 153, I still need more. I don't need your help."
The result was predictable.
(and the cake was delicious, btw - great recipe)
She cooked me a chocolate cow.
The county fair brings out the crazy.
(that's the only Hannah picture in this post - not because she's been doing nothing, but because everything she's doing I have blog posts planned for)
The youngest get their groove on at an outdoor concert.
Ains makes a wish upon a star.
Seriously. That's what she's doing - with her little clasped hands and her upturned face on a horse bareback by herself. I think I deserve an award for not eating her up before now. Better than chocolate, that cuteness.
But she got distracted by the ribbons. It could happen to even the most reasonable kitten.
Though she's declared that she doesn't want to be a space traveler. "I'm gonna be that wady that twains seals at the ocean." So that's that.
Just in case. Better safe than sorry.
And we've still got a month of summer!
Yee haw, Cowboy!
Then Hannah brought out 29 books for us to read, they fell asleep, and it thundered and poured all night long. It was surprisingly relaxing. The girls slept in the next morning.
It's not like waking up in the forest, but it's not like waking up in your bed either.
Definitely more exciting than the boring old bed.
She'd made her own bazooka and we still don't know where she got the idea.
Once again, I don't know where he got the idea.
Drawing super-heroes.
Origami.
Lovin'.
There's Gray with a life jacket and a badminton racket.
There's Ains with her bunny (and eventually her shoes) tied to her handlebars.
On the way home, she let Gray do what he loves most of all these days - sitting on her back fender while she pedals.
It's very generous of her because it doubles her work load.
Then she found some that were neither cute nor pretty but 'awesome' and 'cool' and one was even 'stupendous'. These got their own space outside of the diagram because she didn't want me to draw her a new one.
Hannah wanted to do one, so I made her a diagram with her specifications - 'cute', 'pretty', and 'interesting'.
She's played a Venn diagram game on
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