Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Wordless Wednesday: Big Brother

Holding Baby Sister . . .

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Head on over to 5 Minutes for Mom for more Wordless Wednesday posts. 

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Pumpkin Spiced Latte

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I received this yummy recipe at a very special baby shower for my sweet friend, Beth.  Beth’s sister had made a Crockpot of this rich beverage that far surpasses Starbucks in taste.

Each time I have made it since, it receives rave reviews.  With the weather cooling down, heartwarming songs filing our house, the soothing smell of a pumpkin spice latte is the whipped cream on top of our roof.

And this is what my Monday night girls have to look forward to next week! 

Pumpkin Spice Latte

  • 2 cups milk
  • 2 tbsp canned pumpkin (I often use fresh pumpkin)
  • 2 tbsp cane sugar
  • 2 tbsp vanilla
  • 1/2 tsp pumpkin pie spice (or 1/4 tsp cinnamon, 1/8 tsp cloves, 1/8 tsp nutmeg, and a pinch of ginger)
  • 1/2 cup brewed espresso or 3/4 cup strong brewed coffee

Cook all of the ingredients in a Crockpot for approximately 2 hours.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Timberdoodle BambinoLUK Early Learning Series

You have been reading me blab on-and-on about the wonders of learning toys that my children can work on independently the past four weeks. 

And you all know it is because I have a newborn and well . . . I am nursing a lot. 

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Sadly, I don’t always have my hands (or brain) free all of the time to work tete-a-tete as much as I would like with my other munchkins. 

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For example, one day the BambinoLUK Starter Pack, Critical Thinking Pack, and Concentration Pack comprised much of our schooling for the morning.  Sir Honey was content, happy, and delightfully engaged with his new learning toy from Timberdoodle by himself. 

I was an excited mom, proud that my son could learn skills such as

  • logical thinking
  • observation
  • visual discrimination
  • association
  • identifying and relating
  • combining
  • perception of transformation
  • comparison
  • spatial perspective

independently.  Don’t get me wrong.  Sir Honey’s entire schooling can not be independent work.  He needs me to teach and love on him, but there is value in figuring out a concept using your own God-given thinking machine – your brain!

How does the BambnoLUK work? (I must admit I had to read the directions and watch the video – but it was worth it!)

Step 1:  Open the controller (the clear, plastic, scalloped, book-like object) and place it on top of an exercise page. 

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Position the six tiles on the controller case’s upper half.  (FYI -- Sir Honey’s tiles are on the lower half in the picture.  He is in the process of moving the house tile to the picture just above the mushroom that shows a house.) 

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Step One is completed when it looks like this:

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Step 2:  Pick up the house tile in the upper left hand corner to reveal the question (rather picture).  It is best to work from left to right, and move down the page – as if you were reading a book. 

That said, I am going to show you an example OUT OF ORDER!

Sir Honey picked up the car tile that revealed an ice cream cone.

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Based on the uncovered picture, he had to figure out where to put the tile in his hand. 

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As you can see, he found the correct home for his car tile.

Repeat this procedure until all tiles have been placed on bottom portion of the controller.

Step 3:  Close the controller,

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flip it over,

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and match the pattern up with the one located on the bottom, left-hand side of the exercise page.  You know you completed the page correctly when you have a perfect pattern match.

My thoughts:  I am sure you can already tell that I like the BambinoLUK learning toy.  It teaches a variety of important skills as I have already stated, is perfect for independent learning, and is quality made.

We have used a similar product (geared toward the same age group as the BambinoLUK, 3-5 year olds), but not of the same caliber of construction and more difficult to manipulate.  The ease of use comes from two different construction aspects:

1.  thick tiles with thick walls to keep the tiles in place

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versus . . . thin tiles.

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2.  the controller actually sits on top of the exercise book for the activity, making it less likely for the child to spill the contents of the controller.

(Notice that the book Smackdown is using is located beside the exercise book.  It isn’t uncommon for us to accidentally misplace the tiles due to repositioning the controller.  Depending on where you sit, often the book and the controller can not comfortably fit on your lap.)

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3.  Without a doubt, the BambinoLUK is far more colorful.

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Thank you, Timberdoodle for allowing my family to use and review the BambinoLUK Early Learning Series.  We have been enjoying it . . . and even one little boy is using it right now for his Quiet Time, while I type this!

This product was provided to me for free and I was allowed to express my personal opinion regarding the BambinoLUK.  

Friday, November 12, 2010

A List For Myself

This is actually a purely selfishly motivated post.  I need to create a “to-write” blog post list.  And by uploading it for the whole world to see it holds me moderately accountable. 

Notice, though, I am not setting due dates at this point.

Wow.  I have my work cut out for me.

No due dates.  Only when I have time and it is for the pleasure of the Lord.

Animal Train Sort and Match

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I love order, but I struggle to keep it.  I greatly enjoy when everything has a place.  A box.  A home.  A permanent location. 

But with three boys, toys end up everywhere, and used for multiple purposes (often not what they were intended for).

I think that is why I have always appreciated the children's quiet times, especially when they were contained confined to their bed or crib.  The toys stayed in one location and they were easy to put away.

That is until Smiley came along.  His goal is that by the end of his quiet time to see how far he can throw his toys across his room.

Anyhow, recently we began playing with the Guidecraft Animal Train Sort and Match.  Though this learning toy teaches matching, sorting, sequencing, and pattern recognition, it best served us by teaching our boys how to work together! 

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Here is the low-down on this learning toy from Guidecraft:

An award-winning educational tool for teaching color-matching, shape-matching and pattern-recognition in a fun, game-like setting. Animal Train Sort and Match includes six double-sided pattern cards, 43 animal and train pieces, a wooden storage case, and a self-propping board with pegs and metal backing to help guide the parts into place. Ages 3+.

From a mom perspective the primary reason why I like this toy is  because it is self contained.  Technically, no pieces – NOTHING -- would have to ever leave the box. 

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The Animal Train Sort and Match has worked well in our house as an independent item for our workboxes. 

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I recommend this toy especially if you are a nursing mom and you need to provide you child (children) with an independent  learning  toy while you are attending to your new baby.

This toy can be found at Guidecraft or on Amazon ranging in price from $33-$40.  Similar and equally cute products are the Construction Sort and Match and the Flower Match Garden Patch.

Or you can try to win this toy by heading on over to My Life On  A Taffy Pull.

Once again, a big thanks goes out to Guidecraft for allowing me to be a part of their Mom Bloggers Review Team.  I was not paid for this post nor do I have to return this toy!