The things we do to house our children’s books…
Family Field Trip: Cape Palliser
Once we came down from the lighthouse, we made our way back to the beach below. Locals were heading in to the rocky outcrop at the end and were clearly bringing up shellfish, probably paua. The beach was mainly a variety of large or small rocks, but hiding amongst the larger parts were a few other natives. (Just a word of caution, this is going to be a seally gratuitous photoblog today.)
He would have been about 20 metres away, give or take. There was at least one more a bit further down the beach, but I couldn’t get a good photograph of him as he was partly hiding on the seaward side of a rocky outcrop, and I wasn’t game enough to get any closer than I did.
After Miss Oh and I walked down the beach away from the rocky area, and she had some time to get her feet wet in the sea, we headed back to the rocks where Mr and Master Oh had been fossicking in the rockpools. We decided to head back along the road to a nice, photogenic outcrop of rocks and let me have a bit of a fiddle with the new camera. The bonus being yet more natives.
The Outcrop:
The Local’s Bathing & Snoozing Spot:
A Native:
He was across a water gap and the photo was taken with my longer lens, but he would also have not been more than 20 metres away.
As it turned out, you had to be very careful of this bathing spot. Just where it was easiest to get down on to it there was a nice little rock “cave” inside which yet another local was avoiding the sun and trying to take a nap. Gave me the fright of my life when he raised his head and took a good look at me. Anyway, he just looked (all of a few metres away from me) and I duly scampered back a few metres and let him settle back down.
After taking some more photographs of my little outcrop and the seaweed, I turned to snap one more of the sleepy friend above when I heard something that was slightly cough-like. I was on the outcrop on my own, so it wasn’t any of the Oh Wailys. I turned around and just about broke the sound barrier with the speed at which I launched myself up the rocks leading to the road. Unbeknownst to me, while my back was turned, another native who had been frolicking in the water decided that the flat sunbathing spot was where he wanted to be.
Again, he would have been less than 20 metres away when this was taken, and a darn sight nearer before I realised he was there. In hindsight, I needn’t have worried, he showed absolutely no interest in me at all. But isn’t he wonderfully shiny?
So Cape Palliser was a very nice drive from town, and had the added advantage of the lighthouse at the end and the seals just below. A very nice day trip. Next time I head out here I plan to have a trek to the Dimholt Road, but that will need to be child free as our recce visit showed me that it is just a little too far and a little too steep and a little too rocky for little legs.
And to finish off our trip home, we had to stop in Ngawi and take some photographs of the grader/tractor fleet – and I mean fleet.
This barely scratches the surface, there were loads of them, absolutely loads !! And some of them were very humorous, eh, Tinky-Winky?
So if you’re in the neighbourhood and you want a fairly pleasant drive with a beautiful bay to take plenty of photographs of, a lighthouse to climb to and some native animals to admire, then you could do very well to take a trip out here.
Have you been on a Field Trip lately? Let me know, I’d love to visit.
Family Field Trip: Cape Palliser Lighthouse
With the last few days of Mr Oh Waily’s summer break we went on another family outing. This time we headed out to Cape Palliser. Not sure where that is? Here’s a map for you.
At the end of a mix of gravel roads and tar seal we arrived at the first of our stops for the day, the Cape Palliser Lighthouse. It was first lit in 1897 and was manned for 99 years before being automated. As you can see, it has a very prominent position.
Getting up to the lighthouse involves a bit of courage for those with a fear of heights.
Roughly 250 steps later you are rewarded with far-reaching views.
I highly recommend getting the stillest day you possibly can as it is exposed and the gusts can be extremely strong. Even on this loveliest of days the wind was gusting quite hard. Not for the feint hearted.
The Oh Waily kids had a good look around the flat platform area, including the rusty old winch.
After we had been blown about a bit and had taken a few photographs, we slowly headed back down the stairs. Our next stop was the beach you can see in the photograph above, to look for seals, walk around the rock pools and see what the locals were wading in to get off the rocks.
Our next adventure is seeing seals.
Family Fun: The Play Park
While we were enjoying the last few days of Mr Oh Waily’s holidays, it seemed like a good time to take a day trip to a fun play park. It’s a bit of a drive from home, but we get to combine the feeling of going on an adventure with having a good pay-off at the end. It also gave me a chance to try out my new camera.
We quite love this particular park because it is so accessible for even the smaller children, and it has one or two items that are not common locally. Take, for instance, the basket swing. I can’t think of one locally, but Miss Oh loves it. Master Oh took a little warming up to it, as perhaps you can see.
He eventually got the hang of it and that grimace turned into a happy scared smile.
Along with that, there is also a zip line that Miss Oh can actually reach and use. This is usually too high for her elsewhere and she needs to rely on me helping, holding or pushing her along. Not so at this park.
In the little kids section there is the option to play storekeeper. In this instance Master Oh decided that he was an ice cream vendor. (No, there was absolutely no hinting with that. At all.)
And this trip proved to have a new favourite – the tyre swing-roundabout-thingy. Remarkably both Oh Waily kids were happy to be pushed and shoved along on this. As you can see.
No that’s not smudges on the photograph. That’s pen smudges on his face. Boys! Really!
Did we play games? Yes.
Did we have fun? Yes.
Will we do it again? Probably, but not for a wee while.
Down time
What happens when your mojo deserts you?
How do you recharge yourself and get back on the right track?
I’d love to know what you do. Right now I’m in a slump and I could do with some ideas and a cheerleader or two who has been here. I understand that by the time the end of the year rolls around everyone is starting to feel the need to slow down, take a break and get back some of their energy. I guess that this might be partly my problem. But I think there’s a little more to my missing mojo.
This year has been host to the most time that I have had to solo parent two children* without a really good support network to let me have time off. I don’t think a month has gone by when Mr Oh Waily hasn’t been away for at least a week of it, if not more. As well as this, up until the end of October I was regularly running three times a week when I was hit with an injury. Since then there has been minimal exercise carried out, a once a week weights & core routine with a PT has been it.
Adding to these external issues, is my lack of continuous forward planning. Despite having some great tools, courtesy of Jo’s My Organised Chaos course, I have failed in recent weeks to set aside time each week for planning and getting things set out. I have also found myself wandering away from my original Montessori leanings and focusing more on the “schoolish” formal teaching for Miss Oh Waily.
So in a nutshell here are my issues:
- Tired, run-down parent.
- Lack of implementation of planning time.
- Excess focus on Miss Oh Waily’s formal learning**.
- Not enough focus on Master Oh Waily’s learning^.
My intended solutions (so far):
- Start exercising again.^^ This will bring the biggest reward.
- Set aside a specific time each week to plan for the next week.
- Re-read Tim Seldin’s How to Raise an Amazing Child to remind myself of why I want this for my kids.
- Read the ebook Montessori At Home that I have just purchased to reinvigorate my activity creations.
- Find a babysitter so I can get some time off to be me and not Mum for a little while.
Now it’s down to implementation. Any other suggestions that work for you?
—
* My hat goes off to those solo parents who do this all year round. You have my complete admiration.
** It’s a thing about her turning 5, I’m sure of it. A little switch has gone off in my brain telling me I need to be “schooling” her now. 😦
^ He is learning by osmosis mostly at the moment.
^^ I plan to try out my achilles heel when we return from visiting family after Christmas. If it holds up I will start back on my running. If it shows signs of being uncooperative I will look into going swimming as an alternative.
My Pals Are Here! – Maths
Following up on my earlier, excited, post here is a first look at the new maths books.
I gave Miss Oh Waily the choice of which set to begin with, and naturally she chose the red set (it’s the closest colour to pink, after all). So we have started off with My Pals Are Here! Maths.
Sorry about the photo. I should have thought about the red on red beforehand. Anyway, another attraction for Miss Oh were the cute characters inside. Her favourite (unsurprisingly) being Koogol – that’d be the fuzzy pink one on the right hand side.
Last Monday we started out on our new maths adventure and so far it is going fairly well. Miss Oh isn’t keen on structured, sit-down (sit still) learning but she is coping with it for the most part. I’ve been keeping it short – one chapter or section at a time – as seems sensible.
Here’s the contents page for the pupil’s book for you to get an idea of what they cover. We are pretty much at the end of the Number Bonds chapter after 10 days. (A total of 5 sessions – today’s being shortened due to Miss Oh being a little under the weather.)

Next up is the first contents page of the workbook that accompanies the pupil’s book. It’s all fairly straightforward and there are notes and identifiers (as though you actually need them) to tell you which part of the workbook corresponds to the pupil’s book.

Finally, here are a couple of pages in the workbook relating to counting 1 to 10.

We’re currently breezing our way through these exercises with very little difficulty. At the moment we are really learning how to read and follow instructions, as well as understand how exercise books are set out more than anything else.
Admittedly, if you haven’t been teaching anything to your children in the maths area you will not be whizzing through a section a day (or every second day). You will be needing to work on the basics of counting, number identification (both numeral and written) and similar. And, frankly, until very recently I would not have thought to teach number bonds. Having read about Singapore Maths I decided to add those in to our semi-regular maths/writing/Classical Education session a while back though so Miss Oh Waily is familiar with them.
You will most probably need to supplement the exercise and pupil’s book with more exercises of a similar nature. We’ve done a lot of number bonds in the past so the ones we are currently doing in the book are very straightforward. There are many free resources on the internet to help you do this, plus there are the old stand-bys of your own word processor and some simple images.
If, like me, you find that there might be areas that aren’t well understood (number patterns in a graphic form) then this set of books will show it up and you can find other resources to help cover them until you are satisfied that your little person has got it.
The only other issue with the books is the fact that they have the connector blocks (see the image on the front page) as a method of teaching the concepts, along with a nifty number balance scale. In our home we’ve used some simple manipulatives (wooden ladybugs) and small, square, lego blocks as alternatives. There’s not much I can do to replicate the number balance scale, but it doesn’t seem to have thrown Miss Oh so unless it becomes more important later we won’t need to figure out an alternative.
So far so good is my assessment of this set. Miss Oh even likes to colour in her workbook pictures so it keeps it closer to being ‘fun’ rather than ‘work’ most of the time.
What do you use to teach maths? How have you found it? (Or, how does your local school teach maths? And does it work for your little person?)
Reading Eggs deal
Just a quick note for those who may be interested.
Today’s Living Social deal for Wellington is a very well priced annual subscription to Reading Eggs. We use Reading Eggs for Miss Oh Waily, but I couldn’t justify another subscription for Master Oh Waily – until today. The littlest member of the family will now become the proud owner of his own login to Reading Eggs for a whopping $39 for the year. Hopefully his letter learning will take a nice leap forward from this.
It can join his iPad Eggy apps and instead of watching his sister sit learning, he can get his hands on it too. I’ll let you know how it goes.
The MoE goes online

Well, not The Ministry themselves of course. They’ve had a website since forever. But they have finally caught up with the rest of the world and have put the homeschool exemption application form and details up for “easy” access.
For those thinking about homeschooling in New Zealand, here’s where you should head to get the forms required to apply. The link has also been added to my Resources page for future reference.
Only another six months and I’ll have to be seriously thinking about writing one of these. Is it really that soon? Wow, time flies.
Videos
Today’s post is a very short one. Perhaps attributable to a NaBloPoMo hangover?
Anyway, I just wanted to say that I’ve created a new page here called “videos”. Yes, I’m showing my age. Perhaps I should have called it YouTube or Media or some other funky, techy name. But I am what I am. And Videos it is.
Currently it is only inhabited by three actual links to YouTube, but I do promise that more will be forthcoming. I just want to make sure that I don’t double up and that what I put on the page is actually worth listening to.
So sit back with a cup of tea or coffee and enjoy. I hope you find them thought provoking, funny and interesting.





















