MudPies & Bu’flies Village Parkdays 11:00am – 4:00pm

2009
July 27 - Yarn & More - Giant Wind Mobile

August 6 - Wind, Earth & Rocks -(w/ a little Roll)

August 13 - Water & weatherwizkids.com

August 20 - Celebrate different and same Cultures from around the world ***Potluck Dinner & Drumcircle until 8pm

August 27 - Character & Creative Construction Day (come as favorite character from book, movie or comic)

September 3 - Sky, Stars, Planets & Int’l Space Center

September 10 - Fairies & Dragons, Oh My!!!

September 17 - Tell (or read) a Story Day & Stone Soup *** Potluck Dinner & Drumcircle until 8pm

September 24 - Atoms & Molecules Part 1– Fun with building blocks of our World

October 1 - Anatomy Fun Part 1– learning how our body works

October 8 - Recycle, Reuse, Remember & Create

October 15 - Planets, Moons & Space (back for more!) Potluck Dinner & Drumcircle until 8pm

October 22 - Making Music: Investigating Rhythm, Song and Sounds: Make your own instruments

October 29 - Halloween Party & Making Masks ~Come in your Costumes

November 5 - Culture Gap- Focus on Tibet - Craft making Prayer flags and doing the Snow Lion Dance!

November 12 - Remembering the Early Settlers (Like Laura Ingalls Wilder)

November 19 - International day – come dressed in a cultural outfit and bring a dish of that nation.

November 26 - THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY

December 3rd - Into the Woods: Nature Activities

Dec 10: Nature Part II - PineCone Birdfeeders & Greet a Tree

Dec 17: Paint ornaments, Make Kwanza Mkekes & Hanukkah Menoras and sing Holiday carols

Dec 24: Holiday no Parkday

Dec 31: Make Music to bring in New Year

2010
Jan 7: Anatomy Part II

Jan 14: Physics & Spiderman

Jan 21: Rained out

Jan 28: Freedom & Civic Rights: Ghandi, MLK jr, Mandela

Feb 4: Chumash Native American Day

Feb 11: Spirit of Olympic Games:curling - speed skating

Feb 18th: Chinese (Korean & Vietnamese) New Year

Feb 25th: Spirit of Olympic games II Flags & Hockey

March 4th: Spring Bling: Worms, Dirt & Seeds: Preparing for spring

March 11th: Global Timelines (pocket timelines)

March 18th: Desert Life (preping for Campout at Joshua Tree )

March 25th: Magnetism part I: I'm attracted!

April 1st: Magnetism part II: Physical Force of Nature

April 8th: More than Block Designs: Bridges, Cantilevers & Treehouses

April 15th: Japanese Culture: Authentic Girls' Day & Boy's Day Celebrations

April 22nd: 40th anniversary of Earth Day

April 29th: Earth Day Part 2

May 6th: Let's get Nautical: Boats, Knots, Pirates & Explorers

May 13th: Ladybugs, Silkworms & Praying Mantis

May 20th: Cultural Highlight on Hawaii & Potluck Luau!

May 27th: Pollination, Fruit & Seeds - Turn fruits & vegi's into creatures

June 3rd: BodyGuards : Snot, Scabs and More

June 10th: Catapults & Parachutes: Gravity & Lift

June 17th: Swedish MidSummerFest & Potluck

2 week Holiday

July 8th: Undetermined

July 15th: Bastille Day - French Independence & Potluck

July 22nd: Inuit Culture & Games

July 29th: Mudpies & Butterflies 1 year anniversary

August 5th: Honey, Bees & Wasps

August 12th Turtles, Tortoises & YOU

August 19th: Potluck dinner

August 26th:Light, Refraction & Rainbows

Sept 2nd: History of Flight

Sept 9th: Chemical (molecular) Reactions

Sept 16th: Cancelled due to Campout

Sept 17-20th
Family Campout @ Sequoia Nat'l Park

Sept 23rd Russian Culture & Potluck

Sept 30th Light & Refraction Part II

Oct 7th

Oct 14th

Oct 21st Potluck

Oct 28th - Halloween Spooks

Pirates & Sea Explorers circa 1785

Our Navy Sea Capt'n

Our Navy Sea Capt'n

IMG_7768Before Boyscouts, (modern-day experts of the Knot), Explorers, Pirates and Capt’s from the High Seas were Masters of Knots.

We learned that many of the Sea Captains of England, France, Spain and other European Navys were not much different than Pirates.  Some Capt’ns and sailors were allowed to seize ships and take goods from them in the name of the country that sponsored them.  IMG_7795Some seamen even started out as Pirateers but were commissioned anyway because a nation hadn’t enough ships to protect the coastlines of their colonies or protect the ports where they traded their country’s goods.  And if a Navy Captain was really tyrannical,  there might be a mutiny, where his crew choose not to listen to his orders (a defiance punishable by death or dismemberment). IMG_7794 The mutineers might be sent off in a dinghy or if the mutiny was great in number, the ship was won the Captain and the men loyal to him pushed off in a small boat into the ocean.  These men would no longer be allowed to sail for a country, and from then on would be labeled Pirates.  And pirate ships would be the only boats that would hire them.

Before 1700’s the sea ports were only in Europe, Africa and Asia.  No one  had braved the Atlantic Ocean to discover what would be called the Americas yet.  Many felt that if you sailed West from Europe far you would fall off the shelf of the earth and get eaten by monsters.

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Sea Queens by J. Yolen

ballad-of-the-pirate-queens

Pirate Queens by J. Yolen

IMG_7763And don’t think that all pirates were men.  Through the ages, there have been some formidable Pirate Queens.  Jane Yolen has written two books on the subject, and one MudPies & Butterflies Mom posed with me as my favorite Pirate Queen Pair – Anne Bonney and Mary Reade who sailed aboard the Vanity!

Silk, spices, Otter pelts, glass beads, hammerheads were traded around the globe.

By the late 1700's Silk, spices, Otter pelts, glass beads, hammerheads were traded around the globe.

M&P kids learned about how Ships 300 years plus ago traded goods for other goods.

We either tasted or smelled the assortment that came from my spice drawer at  home: Cinammon from Ceylon (shaken atop Karen’s Apple slices- Yummy!), Tarragon from France, Ginger from China, and other spices from Thailand which were appropriately placed on the map below.longs

IMG_7802In order to get Tea, Spices and Silks from China, American ships leaving the Chesapeake Bay (washington D.C. area) loaded up with glass beads and Metal axe heads to trade with Native Americans in the Pacific Northwest for Otter Pelts.   The otter pelts are the only thing worth enough in China (Sadly, China had already eradicated their native otter population).  After choosing a woodchip from the park as the boat, the Kids navigated the ship from port to port.  Our crafty kids tried to slip between North and South America, but 300 years ago there was only need not a canal.  it would save a total of 18,000 miles on a trip from New York to San Francisco. They learned about the Panama canal and how it took .  Active Learning is so awe-inspiring to witness.

btw- The Panama Canal took over 70,000 men to to build 51 miles of locks.  It was managed by the French from 1881 to 1888 and then completed by the US from 1904 to 1914.  27,500 workers (more than one third) died due to overworking and Malaria.

We also learned a bit about how the Sailors kept on course by using magnetic compasses, the sun, stars and a quadrant.  Everyone made their very own simple quadrant from these simple directions.  A quadrant would measure the angle your ship was to either the sun or the north star.  With that angle, you could determine your Latitude or at a bare minimum ensure you didn’t steer your vessel outside of a preferred latitudinal margin.

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Figuring out the landmarks upon the Treasure map

One of the craft stations were set up to make a treasure map.  I made one that showed where a Pirate’s Ghost had hidden golden nuggets 300 years ago.

Nico found the right tree and the treasure, but collectively they helped him get down…IMG_7773

I also had three colors of rope for knot tying and making crafts and fun. Grog’s is a wonderful site for learning how to tie knots online.  With two Knot printouts, the kids took on making knots with three colors of ropes.IMG_7791IMG_7792

The kids also invented their own games to play. CLick onto the long image to see it happening live.

For more on the true seas adventure check out our blog to go aboard The Hawai’ian Cheiftan, an Historical 1700’s sailing ship or go to the Historical Seaport website.

IMG_7770“In the love of narrow souls I make many short voyages but in vain – I find no sea room – but in great souls I sail before the wind without a watch, and never reach the shore.”

Henry David Thoreau

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Click on the image to see it happening live!

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Hawaiian Cheiftan - Historical Ship

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That's some Mudpies & Butterflies onboard

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