Welcome!


Welcome Friends! I hope you enjoy tasting these teaching and travel tidbits.
Come along with me as I attempt to navigate my way through a new country, school system, and life for a year!


Saturday, September 15, 2012

Kids and Castles




I survived my first week of teaching in England!   The kids continue to be just great, but boy, do these British teachers work hard!!!  A lot is expected of these very young students, as well as from this not so young teacher!  I did manage to squeeze a bit of fun into the week with our study of light and dark.  I thought these photos of our shadow puppet theater would be okay to post, as they don't show the kids' faces.  They loved making puppets and experimenting with which kinds of materials light would pass through and which shadows would show up in color.  I also learned a lot about what kind of paper made the best shadow puppet screens, as I had to experiment with that since my "especially made for shadow puppetry" screen is back in California.   I found that thin tissue paper worked the best. 


My Darling Class Doing Shadow Puppetry














Today, after a trip to a new farmers' market, I decided to enjoy the sunny day at Hever Castle.  This childhood home of Anne Boleyn is only 7 miles from my home.  (There are other castles even closer, but let's stick with this one for the time being.)  I learned quite a bit about Anne and all 6 wives of Henry VIII. ("Divorced, Beheaded, Died, Divorced, Beheaded, Survived") A later owner of the castle was the American, William Waldorf Astor, who did a lot of restoration and added many of the gardens.  It's really gorgeous, with lovely rose gardens, Italian gardens, a yew maze, a lake, and a water maze on on the grounds.  Today was the "Country Life Celebration" on the grounds as well, that featured a quilt show, woodturners, and my favorite, felters!  I picked up a few new felting techniques that I look forward to trying. 


Me at Hever Castle
Castle Gardens
Woodturning Demonstration


Another View
Quilted Kites





1 comment:

Please feel free to let me know what you think!