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Video WanderLog

Vancouver, British Columbia to Whidbey Island

This Week on Instagram Sept 27 - Oct 3 2014

Travel Dates: September 27 – October 3, 2014

We did it! We crossed the border into Canada! Definitely more details coming later, but we enjoyed the beautiful city of Vancouver, B.C. for 4 days before heading to Whidbey Island and relaxation at Deception Pass State Park. Lots of trees, our hammock, some hiking, school, and not much else going on. It’s perfect!

This weekend, we will be watching and listening to what we LDS folks call General Conference, a two day conference where we hear from church leaders. The event is open, and you can watch it live or view archives at lds.org or the church’s Youtube channel.

We also managed to skip a Wandering Update from Mt. Rainer, so check that out as well!

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California Featured Destination National Parks State Parks

The Redwood National & State Parks – California

We spent 2 weeks exploring The Redwood State and National Parks in California. Check out our favorite activities!

At first, this National Park was completely confusing. Is it a State Park? Run by the NPS? Did they have a Junior Ranger Program? Where exactly was it located? Turns out there’s a fairly simple answer for most of those questions.

When We Visited: August 6-19, 2014

Ages of Kids: 8, 6, 4

Where We Stayed: Burlington Campground (Humboldt Redwoods State Park), Sounds of the Sea RV Park (near Trinidad), Shoreline RV Park (Crescent City near Jedediah). We tried to get into both Prairie Creek Campground and Jedediah Smith Campground (both looked FABULOUS) but no luck. If you are visiting in the summer – which we definitely recommend – try and get reservations as early out as possible. Del Norte Campground also looked decent, but we didn’t end up staying there.

BONUS: Before or after have your kids read “Operation Redwood“. Its a super fun book about a couple of kids out to save an endagerned grove of redwood trees. Both of our older kids loved it!

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The Redwood National & State Parks is exactly what it claims to be. A partnership between the California State Parks and the National Park System. There are both State Park Rangers and National Park rangers at each visitor center, and your National Parks Pass (America the Beautiful Pass) will get you past the fee booths in any of the participating parks. The park consists of : Humboldt Redwoods SP, Prairie Creek SP, Del Norte SP, and Jedediah Smith SP. There’s one overview map & newsletter for the entire system, as well is individual brochures for each state park. We found both to be incredibly useful.

The State Parks were created and run first, and then the national government got involved and designated a lot of the area as wilderness to protect the old growth redwood trees from logging operations. There are areas of trees that have never been logged and they are beautiful! From what we could tell, the partnership was great! The NP rangers helped with the state park programs as well as generally upkeep around the parks.

Junior Ranger Programs

There are A LOT of opportunities in the area to earn Jr. Ranger Badges and Patches! Not only is there the National Park Jr. Ranger booklet (which, as always, is a self-guided program), but during the summer there is also a California State Park program and it is AMAZING. So amazing in fact, that I detailed a post about it HERE.

So, where should you visit? Which is the best area for seeing BIG trees? Here’s our opinions about each of the places we visited and what we liked about that particular area:

Humboldt State Park & Avenue of the Giants

Farther south than most people venture, this park was our favorite! We had seen Instagram photos of friends driving their Airstreams through the Avenue of the Giants and knew we wanted to follow in their tracks. It was worth it! Its a narrower side road, but winds among the tallest, prettiest, redwood trees we have ever seen. About halfway along the scenic drive there are a few campgrounds, and we managed to pick up a reservation at Burlington, right next to the visitor center and Junior Ranger programs. It was perfect! We also heard that Burlington is the only campground in the area to really be UNDER the trees. We heard rumors that some of the other campgrounds are not among the redwoods (but we didn’t visit so don’t quote me on that one!).

Redwood Forests_02One of the reasons we really liked Humboldt was the variety of short walks to see BIG trees. Some of the biggest trees in the whole park system are located here and they are easy walks for little legs.  Many of the biggest trees are also labeled with the height and other interesting facts.
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Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park

The kids and I went on a scouting trip. Sometimes when I get to a location and am not sure what the deal is, I’ll round up the kids and we’ll drive around for an hour or two visiting places and deciding what exactly there is to do in the area before we rope Sam in for the grand adventure. This particular afternoon we set out to explore the Redwoods near Prairie Creek State Park.. We stopped by the Kuchel Visitor Center as it was the first visitor center inside the designated National Park area. We planned to pick up our National Park Jr. Ranger Badges and get some more information on timing for the Jr. Ranger Programs and the EdVenture Quests.

The state park ranger on duty was a goldmine of information. He was awesome. Best trails to hike with kids, things to see, where to get more info on ranger programs, etc. I left feeling very well prepared, along with 3 National Park Jr. Ranger booklets for the kids to work on. There wasn’t anything to really see (that we were interested in anyway) close to the Kuchel Visitor Center, so we drove up to the Prairie Creek State Park Visitor Center and spent a few hours up there earning 2 patches, attending a program to earn a stamp, and working on our NPS booklet. It was great!

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Aptly named “Prairie Creek”, there is a giant meadow outside the visitor center frequented by herds of Elk.

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Fern Canyon

“Wait a minute. Where are we going? How long is this drive? Are you SURE?” Sam poured out question after question as we would through a fairly curvy, dusty, out of the way road on our way to Fern Canyon.

“It’s okay. Just keep going. Everyone says it is worth the drive,” I replied calmly from the passenger seat.

“Okaaaaay, ” he answered skeptically.

After about 30 minutes we finally reached the ranger station (what a commute!), flashed our America the Beautiful Pass and drove another 15 minutes past the beach (it looked awesome!), through a few creeks (seriously?) and finally arrived at the Fern Canyon trail head and parking. There were quite a few other cars, so I knew we weren’t completely crazy.

It was beautiful! Ferns draped the sides of the canyon as water dripped down and formed a small creak threading through large, fallen logs. We didn’t hike the entire loop, but mostly went through the fern-y part (is that even a word?) and turned around to hike back. The kids had so much fun climbing over, under, and around all of the logs. I can’t promise they didn’t get a little wet.

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Jedediah Redwood State Park

The last of the parks, I think this one might be one of the most popular. The biggest thing Jedediah has going for it is the Smith River. It is crystal clear, shallow, and runs right through the park. The kids were so mad we hadn’t brought their swimming suits with us! We drove up early and spent almost the entire day there. We started out with a Jr. Ranger Program about Cones and Conifers. Super interesting. I loved how he took us all on a walk to find conifers out in the park after explaining and showing examples.

After a quick lunch, we managed an 8 mile hike through some pretty great trees! I felt like they weren’t as large and obvious as Humboldt, but still very pretty!

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The Redwoods are definitely worth seeing, and there are lots of options! Which spot you go to depends on how much time you have and what your goal is. Hopefully this helps with that decision!

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WanderLog

Portland, Battle Ground, & Lake Alder

Travel Dates: September 13-19, 2014

What a great week! I’m pretty sure I always say that, but I really mean it this time. 🙂

We finished up our time in Portland, Oregon with a visit to the Campfires & Candlelight event at Fort Vancouver, celebrating Rachel’s birthday, and a visit to OMSI.

After leaving Portland, we visited some family in Battle Ground, WA met up with new traveling friends in Morton and then settled near Lake Alder for some awesome R&R. Laying in the hammock has never felt so good!

This Week in Instagram Sept 13-19 2-14

Categories
California Homeschool State Parks

California Jr. Ranger Program & Redwood EdVentures Quest

CA Jr Ranger I was so skeptical. You have what? A Quest thing? What’s that? Oh – you have a SCHEDULE for your ranger programs? And to earn the badge they have to attend at a certain time? That’s lame.

Only its not. At all. I’m now a believer.

Coming from the National Park system which has all self-guided Jr. Ranger Programs, I’ll admit I struggled a little once we found out about the California State Park ranger led programs. Once we got on a roll, however, we were fairly hard to stop!

There are two different programs and I’ll see if I can do a quick summary of each.

California State Park Junior Ranger Program

First off, this is a summer program. Not so good for those of us full-timers that like the off-season, but the program was designed to get kids out and exploring over the summer. Can’t really argue with that.

We had to find out the schedule of ranger led programs from the visitor center once we arrived at the park.  (You could also probably call ahead if you were driving in and wanted to make sure you showed up at the correct time.) Once you attended an hour long program, the rangers handed out the log books, the star badge, and stamped the back of your book. 1 stamp = badge, 5 stamps = poster, 10 stamps = patch. Until recently, kids could only earn stamps by attending a program (yes, you read that right, 10 stamps at 1 hour each = 10 hours to earn a patch. whew!), but they are now also stamping for every 3 pages done in the activity book. That totally helped us earn the patches in the limited amount of time we had.

I googled up a quick list of those CA parks that participate. We earned ours while at the Redwood State Parks (Humboldt, Prairie Creek, Del Norte, Jedediah plus Patrick’s Point) in the space of about 2 weeks.

The best part of these programs are that the topic changes every day. They’ve done such an amazing job with organizing this! We attended programs on recycling, banana slugs, conifers and cones, nurse logs, native american necklace making, astronomy, and scat (aka poop!). It was great! Parents are encouraged to participate and all 3 of our kids had a great time.

Rachel and Andrew earned their badge, posters, and patches, and Cara earned her badge & poster.

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Redwood EdVentures – Humboldt County

This is another program I didn’t understand or know about at first, which makes me sad because there are a few patches we could have earned (because we were in the area) but we didn’t know about it yet! So sad!

My kids call them “Banana Slug Adventures”.  At many of the state parks in Humboldt County, the rangers have put together little adventures. You pick up the brochure from the rangers, and then hike along a trail reading as you go. They are cute little poems that talk about the area, the trees, the wildlife, and end with a final phrase you write down on your brochure. Once you take it back to the ranger you earn your patch! SO easy! And FUN! My kids loved these!

Here’s an example of one we did at Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park.

We were able to earn Jedediah Smith, Prairie Creek, Redwood National park, and Patrick’s Point State Park. What was so frustrating is that we also visited Eureka/Arcata, Humboldt Redwoods, Fort Humboldt and Trinidad Head. SO many!! Ugh. But that’s the “We have to do everything” part of me talking. I figure we’ll just have to save some for next time around, right?

So, California for the win! If you are spending any significant portion of your summer vacation in California I definitely recommend looking into these programs!

Categories
Homeschool

Road School Curriculum 2014

With the “start” of another school year I thought I’d update the far reaches of the universe with our current road school curriculum. After a harrowing,  first ever experience putting together a curriculum on my own last year I feel that this year has been pretty low key. We’ve moved ahead in most of their books, added a few unit studies we thought they would enjoy, and generally have become a whole lot more relaxed about the situation. If that’s even possible to be more relaxed than we were at the end of last year.

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The biggest milestone for our structure-driven oldest child was that we gave her an end of 2nd grade test which she cried over (tests are SO hard! Mom! I don’t KNOW the answer) and then passed with flying colors. Of course there are still concepts we need to work on, but overall I feel pretty good about our progress.

Just a quick note – Utah does not require testing for home school students. This was purely for my benefit to see how far she has come and what we still need to work on. Plus, learning how to take a bubble test is just something every kid needs to learn to survive in this world.

We also have a very high-tech (insert eye roll here) way of keeping track of assignments. With our crazy, unpredictable schedule, we don’t have time to do every subject every day. We’d all go nuts and I would much rather have them outside exploring tide pools than reading about it in a book.

To that end, I wrote them out a schedule in a small notebook that lists the schedule for the week. I fill in their assignments usually a week at a time. I try and make sure they do each subject at least twice a week.  No, we don’t always get them ALL done, but I figure at least this way there is some record of what we’ve done.

With that said, here’s a look at what we are planning on doing this year (most links are Amazon affiliates – we use the money to buy books. Don’t be stingy, okay?):

Back to School Portland_10Rachel – 3rd Grade

Spelling:  Spelling Power – new book this year, but so far we are loving it. Kind of confusing to read the manual (its huge) but once we got on a roll things fell into a rhythm.
Math:  Spectrum Grade 3 – she started this mid-year last year and we are continuing. We are also contemplating starting Beast Academy maybe around Thanksgiving. It comes highly recommended and Sam is totally on board (since he does math anyway its his call). She’s also working on addition & multiplication flash cards.
Language Arts: Spectrum Grade 3 – she protests she hates this book but at least she’s learning it. I also bought Grammaropolis on our tablet for them to review.
Reading Comprehension: Scholastic Grade 3 – this is a short book and she’s almost done so we’ll have to find something else soon. I’m not worried as a lot of our Jr. Ranger Badgering involves this subject.  Maybe we’ll do book reports.
Writing: 20 minutes of free writing in her journal, Typer Island, Scholastic Story Starters, Journaling, or helping me with our Currently Wandering Magazine.
P.E.: Family Time Fitness I’ve had this since last year and we’ve yet to be consistent, but we sure are going to try!
Geography: Color a state page in Road Trip USA (we’re pretty lax about this one), work on their States & Capitols Flash Cards, or play Scrambled States with mom. I figure we are living Geography and the fact they can sing the states and capitols song all the way through is pretty impressive. That should hold us for at least another year, right?
Science: Read and Understand Science Grades 2-3 – not my favorite book, but its okay. We are finishing up from last year and then I’m going to have to find something new (seems to be a trend?). We also visit a lot of science centers/museums around the country so I figured that counts as well.
Unit Study: This one is my favorite. We pick what we want to study and then go for it. Right now we are doing Poetry, we’ve done a Space/Astronomy unit over the summer, lots of Greek Mythology, and I’m planning a Human Body unit. I’ll post more about these later.
Tablet Review:  Since their electronic free time never includes school/learning games (hello, Minecraft anyone?) I thought I’d give them some incentives to review time, money, math, language arts and anything else they want. 20 minutes twice a week.

Back to School Portland_07Andrew – 2nd Grade

Spelling:  Spelling Power -Same book as above, but he was getting overwhelmed with doing a new list everyday. Instead on Day 1 he writes his rule for the week and organizes all the words into his dictionary pages. Day 2: We test like normal. Day 3: He studies the words he missed and does his Skill Building Activity.
Math:  Spectrum Grade 2 – He started this last April and is still cruising. We’ll probably head into Beast Academy over the next few months as he progresses. Also working on addition flash cards.
Language Arts: Scholastic Success Grammar 2 – This one is pretty easy. We’ll probably move on to Spectrum Grade 2 after he’s finished. He also likes Grammaropolis.
Reading Comprehension: Scholastic Grade 2 – He’s almost done with this as well. See above for why I’m not worried.
Writing: 20 minutes of free writing in his journal, Typer Island, Scholastic Story Starters, Journaling, or helping me with our Currently Wandering Magazine.
P.E.: Family Time Fitness I’ve had this since last year and we’ve yet to be consistent, but we sure are going to try!
Geography: Color a state page in Road Trip USA (we’re pretty lax about this one), work on their States & Capitols Flash Cards, or play Scrambled States with mom. I figure we are living Geography and the fact they can sing the states and capitols song all the way through is pretty impressive. That should hold us for at least another year, right?
Science: Read and Understand Science Grades 1-2 – Once again, not my favorite book, but its okay. We are finishing up from last year and then I’m going to have to find something new (seems to be a trend?). We also visit a lot of science centers/museums around the country so I figured that counts as well.
Unit Study: This one is my favorite. We pick what we want to study and then go for it. Right now we are doing Poetry, we’ve done a Space/Astronomy unit over the summer, lots of Greek Mythology, and I’m planning a Human Body unit. I’ll post more about these later.
Tablet Review:  Same as Rachel, 20 minutes twice a week.

Back to School Portland_08Cara – Pre- School

We are working on lot on her letters (names and sounds) as well as learning to write them (that seems to be what she’s really into right now). I also want to work into getting her to read. She loves to “do school” when the older kids do, but often time will tell me, “Mom. Today I played LEGOs for my school.” Awesome. Totally great, sweetheart.

Leap Reader: I LOVE this thing. We had a TAG reader and bought this for her birthday last May (I was tired of running out of book space). This one comes with special paper and books for writing as well as reading. She’s eating it up.
Leap Workbook: We work through one letter or one number a day. She really likes this book.
Teach Your Kid to Read in 100 Easy Lessons: Just bought this last week so we’ll see how it goes!
She also participates in our Unit Study activities, Family P.E. and Jr. Ranger Badges!

There’s the plan! We’ll see how long this lasts! If its one thing we’ve learned from road schooling its that things always change. School is never consistent, we’d all rather be outdoors than in, and that if I don’t give my kids school to do first thing in the morning we’d better be out exploring because otherwise everyone gets cranky pretty quickly!

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