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Our trip to Ireland by David Evan

Friday, April 8th, 2011

Ireland

My favorite part of the trip was Dublinia, a Viking Museum. It was interesting and fun, you could dress up as a Viking or a 14th century peasant. We learned about the Black plague and fairs in medieval times and it wasn’t boring.

My second favorite thing was Granny Gertie’s birthday party because I got to see all my cousins and got to celebrate with her, I have 23 Dixon cousins. My father put together a slide show which showed all of my cousins and Grannie Gertie growing up.

My third favorite thing was Fungie the dolphin. We got on a boat and he swam up next to us and played around, jumping in and out of the water. He never leaves dingle bay, he has been here for 28 years.

What we have learned so far

Friday, April 1st, 2011

Notes to self re. our practice run

Vincent lost his wallet containing all his credit cards and, more importantly, his green card on the london underground. We learned a) we should not be carrying the same cards since when he canceled his, my debit card still worked and b) that he (and I) should only carry one card with us with our daily cash. This is something we both knew perfectly well but just hadn’t bothered doing. Ah well.

The kids have been amazingly good in the car. Yesterday we were driving for a grand total of ten hours, admittedly with about four hours of stops but still, there was no squabbling or fussing at all. Poor Miriam regularly gets car sick but she just handles it with a bag and paper towels, no fuss at all. We actually use the travel time as our down time, the kids can read, do their math packet or watch movies on their Itouches, I knit or read and Vincent listens to music while driving. And we actually all chat! So I’m slightly less worried about all those 4 or 5 hours drives people have warned us about (especially in Bhutan!). The reason we were in the car all day yesterday was because we were driving around the Ring of Kerry. We were told it would take from two to four hours to do the whole thing. Another lesson learned – either we travel very slowly or people wildly exaggerate! Admittedly, we did stop for an hour and a half to have a picnic on the beach. While there we made a beehive house in imitation of the primitive stone dwellings that the earliest inhabitants lived in, They are made out of the flat stones that are everywhere here, including the beach. They would just pile stones up like an igloo but so perfectly that they didn’t need any mortar or concrete and it kept the rain out completely. A valuable lesson in how road schooling can be fun! (i.e. note to mom – less on the dragging around monuments and more on the spontaneous creativity)

As far as homework goes, surprisingly David Evan has done a lot of reading, dipping into books instead of his itouch at rest stops. He polished off his assigned book and almost finished a new Alex Ryder mystery. Not surprisingly, it has been a real drag to get him to do his journal and even more so math. Granted we did not have a nice neat math packet for him like we did for the girls so it was more a question of fiddling about trying to find fun, grade appropriate math sites on the Internet but it was not like he was falling over himself to participate. Hopefully with Singapore math we’ll be carrying around what we need and he can go thru the workbooks one lesson at a time.

So far the girls have been fantastic about doing their homework, writing pages in their journals and working through the math packet their teachers gave them. I have even had time to read to them at bedtime (the kindle is a definite keeper for the big trip!). So the only thing they are not doing is reading on their own but I assume they will pick that up more as we travel. They all definitely had a good dose of science from the very hands on, interactive exhibits at both the Science museum and Natural History museum in London, not to mention all the astrology programs they did at the Observatory in Greenich. David Evan especially had a blast setting up the equipment needed for various space exploration expeditions, deciding which specific items were needed and making sure the weight balance was maintained (or else the rocket ship blew up on re-entry!). There was a wonderful table with stars floating across it and if you captured a star with a cone it would immediately tell you something interesting about black holes, nebulas, the birth or death of stars, etc., which the girls loved. All in all we were very impressed with the museums in London! In Ireland we went to Dublinia in Dublin and King John’s Castle in Limerick which were interactive in a completely different way – being able to put on 14th c peasant clothing or hold a Viking battle-ax or simply walk along the battlements of a 12th c castle (or put your sister in the stockade).

We’ve actually pulled together on the fly a kind of school kit that hopefully will be all we need – mechanical pencils, pens, colored pencils, small eraser, sharpener, glue stick, scissors, math dice, ruler, tiny stapler and staples. We will need to bring both lined journals and ones for drawing

We didn’t forget anything earth shattering tho we didn’t bring water bottles which I think we should do on the big trip and we will have to work out day packs for the kids. They definitely need better ones than the ones they have now. Mine, however, worked out much better than I expected. Most importantly, not only did nobody kill anybody, DE and the girls really, really got along and cooperated and that is more reassuring than finding out we could cope without credit cards for two weeks!