Or it might be more fun than you would think!
But Peter rose and ran to the tomb; stopping and looking in, he saw the linen cloths by themselves; and he went home wondering at what had happened.
Friday, December 31, 2010
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Jiffy Pop
Thirty or forty years ago, I used to see TV ads for Jiffy Pop popcorn, but my family never actually bought the stuff.
John and I ran across some in a store the other day, and decided it would help fight the winter doldrums.
Jiffy Pop, Jiffy Pop, the magic treat. As much fun to make as it is to eat!
Rachel's afraid it's going to blow, so she protects Audrey's eyes.
Parents, if you see this on your grocer's shelf, you really ought to buy it and pop it with your kids, at least once in your lifetime. It IS as much fun to make as it is to eat! Really.
Monday, December 27, 2010
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Piper
This is Piper, our Golden Retriever pup. She's eight months old.
My father-in-law calls her Hyper.
Our yard is strewn with deer bones, dead moles, raccoon claws, chewed up shoes, shredded rugs, and a variety of other choice items brought to us by Piper.
Photo by Erica
If you did yesterday's algebra, you found out that the gift recipient in the song received a total of twenty-two pipers piping. I'm glad I only have one Piper.
And I'll be glad when I don't hear that song again for a while.
Saturday, December 25, 2010
Christmas Algebra
For some reason, I'm seeing the twelve days of Christmas everywhere I look. And I don't even like that song!
Yesterday I woke up thinking about all those turtle doves, French hens, calling birds, lords-a-leaping and et cetera. While still half asleep I wondered this: if the recipient got a partridge in a pear tree the first day; then two turtle doves and another partridge and on the second; three French hens, two more turtle doves and yet another partridge on the third, etc., etc., etc...can I figure out an algebraic equation that would allow me to plug in any one of those gifts and quickly figure out how many were given in total, over the twelve days of rampant gift-giving?
I do love puzzles, and I was happy to have stumbled across one to wrap my brain around before my feet even hit the ground.
Try it, Puzzleheads! Or try it with your algebra students. It's definitely doable, and not too hard. The answer is in the comment section following this post.
If you want to work it out on your own, stop here. If you want some help, read on. If you think the whole thing is totally nuts, go bake some cookies and bring me some. I'll put the coffee on.
*********************************************
How to solve:
Let T be the total number of any certain thing.....laying geese, golden rings, whatever. T is the total number of that particular gift in hand after the twelve days expire.
Let D stand for the day on which that gift was first introduced, or, to phrase it a little differently, D can stand for how many of that particular gift were given at a time. They are the same number. So, for maids-a-milking, D = 8, because eight maids-a-milking first show up on the 8th day of Christmas, and then eight are given each day through the 12th..
Now comes the thinking part. Obviously, how many swans-a-swimming you get will be the number of swans you receive per day, times the number of days you receive them. Think about how many days you get turtle doves, and how many days you get French hens, etc., and see if you can find a pattern that relates the quantity of how many you get at a time to the number of times, total, that you receive that quantity. If you can make that pattern into an equation, you're home free. Try out your formula on a couple of different gifts and see if it works. If it does, you've solved the puzzle!
Congratulations. And don't forget to send me the cookies!
Yesterday I woke up thinking about all those turtle doves, French hens, calling birds, lords-a-leaping and et cetera. While still half asleep I wondered this: if the recipient got a partridge in a pear tree the first day; then two turtle doves and another partridge and on the second; three French hens, two more turtle doves and yet another partridge on the third, etc., etc., etc...can I figure out an algebraic equation that would allow me to plug in any one of those gifts and quickly figure out how many were given in total, over the twelve days of rampant gift-giving?
I do love puzzles, and I was happy to have stumbled across one to wrap my brain around before my feet even hit the ground.
Try it, Puzzleheads! Or try it with your algebra students. It's definitely doable, and not too hard. The answer is in the comment section following this post.
If you want to work it out on your own, stop here. If you want some help, read on. If you think the whole thing is totally nuts, go bake some cookies and bring me some. I'll put the coffee on.
*********************************************
How to solve:
Let T be the total number of any certain thing.....laying geese, golden rings, whatever. T is the total number of that particular gift in hand after the twelve days expire.
Let D stand for the day on which that gift was first introduced, or, to phrase it a little differently, D can stand for how many of that particular gift were given at a time. They are the same number. So, for maids-a-milking, D = 8, because eight maids-a-milking first show up on the 8th day of Christmas, and then eight are given each day through the 12th..
Now comes the thinking part. Obviously, how many swans-a-swimming you get will be the number of swans you receive per day, times the number of days you receive them. Think about how many days you get turtle doves, and how many days you get French hens, etc., and see if you can find a pattern that relates the quantity of how many you get at a time to the number of times, total, that you receive that quantity. If you can make that pattern into an equation, you're home free. Try out your formula on a couple of different gifts and see if it works. If it does, you've solved the puzzle!
Congratulations. And don't forget to send me the cookies!
Friday, December 24, 2010
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Bald Eagles
Baldy found a deer carcass for breakfast. I'm happy for him, and happy that he is thinking more about his belly than about the strangers who brought their car to a stop on the road nearby. The last time I tried to get a photo of a bald eagle--just last week--he flew off before my tires had even quit rolling.
Seeing this bird feasting on breakfast reminded me of a time last year when John spotted a different bald eagle from his combine seat.
Some punk had shot this one off of a power pole, and it fell in our fencerow. John didn't see the crime, just the evidence.
He called the game warden, who confirmed Audrey's ID of an immature bald eagle. Bald eagles live in the wild for twenty or thirty years, but they don't get their white heads until they are around five years old. This
is a young one.
I'm sad that some people feel big if they can put down something smaller than themselves.
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Lunar Eclipse or Lunacy?
The word "lunacy" comes from "luna", a Latin root that refers to the moon. A thirteenth century definition of "lunacy" reads: periodic insanity, dependent on the changes of the moon.
This may look like periodic insanity, dependent on changes in the moon. But let me assure you, these are perfectly sane people, even if they did spend a while outside in the twenty degee darkness between 1 and 2 a.m. this morning.
Lunar eclipses happen at least twice each year, although the last total lunar eclipse was in 2008.
Things that look like lunacy can happen any time.
Monday, December 20, 2010
Grey
This photo has not been edited, nor changed to black-and-white.
God sometimes paints in shades of grey.
God sometimes paints in shades of grey.
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Cap and Gown
Homeschooling carries with it a multitude of benefits, tempered by a few losses.
If you teach your children at home through high school, you might miss the chance to see them beam from beneath a cap, gown, and tassle as they walk across a stage and hear their names read aloud.
Or then again, you might get the opportunity.
If you teach your children at home through high school, you might miss the chance to see them beam from beneath a cap, gown, and tassle as they walk across a stage and hear their names read aloud.
Or then again, you might get the opportunity.
We are proud of Rachel.
Friday, December 17, 2010
What do farmers do in winter?
Sometimes they work cattle.
This little guy, along with thirty of his buddies and thirty mama cows,
has to go down a long alleyway into the squeeze chute. The vet pulls the lever to tighten the sides of the chute, so that the immobilized animal can't hurt himself or anyone else.
Then Merrill and the vet and the vet tech pour on lice protection, administer vaccinations, and check to see which cows are pregnant and which aren't.
Merrill writes it all down,
while Shane keeps the cattle moving to and through the alleyway.
John hauls the treated cattle back to the field. Alice tries to look helpful and important, but is really there because she wants to take pictures.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Too Many Roosters
Four roosters are too many for our little laying flock. Two roosters, a prize-winning Black Australorp and a Barred Plymouth Rock, are really too many, but we like variety, so two roosters still live. But the other two had to go. "Had to go" is a euphemism. Using euphemisms, and not putting too many photos of the "going" keeps the blog clean and family friendly.
Once before, when roosters had to go, Audrey and I decided not to heat the scalding water and set up the electric plucker and all the butchering equipment just for a couple of roosters. It all has to be hauled out of the shed and cleaned up before use. Then, it all has to be cleaned again before you put it away. That's a lot of work. We thought it would be easier just to pluck or skin the birds by hand, but, thirty minutes into the project, we thought it would have been easier to just throw their carcasses into the trees for the coyotes.
As with so many things in life, when you get discouraged and want to quit, that's when you're just about over the hump. We pressed on, and then were glad that we did, as there was homemade chicken soup waiting to warm chilly fingers and hearts when the snow flew.
But almost all of my butchering help has flown the coop, so to speak, and other things besides chicken noodle soup crowded my calendar last week. So this rooster fed the circle of life in the form of coyotes, not people.
There is a time coming, when something doesn't have to die in order for something else can live. I'm looking forward to it.
The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together; and a little child shall lead them. Isaiah 11:6
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Monday, December 13, 2010
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Friday, December 10, 2010
ish
Have you noticed that "ish" has become all the rage?
We used to be home around seven-ish, or maybe her eyes were bluish-grey. But the new vernacular seems to allow the attachment of "ish" onto any word or phrase, in order to mean "sort of, but not quite all the way."
"Did it work?" "Yes...ish."
"How was the film?" "It was good, ish."
"The exam went well, ish."
I can either roll my eyes or roll with this, and I've decided to just roll. I'm not saying I like it, since my nature leans me toward grammar stickler. But I can flex, and I no longer cringe every time someone adds "ish" onto the end of her sentence.
We used to be home around seven-ish, or maybe her eyes were bluish-grey. But the new vernacular seems to allow the attachment of "ish" onto any word or phrase, in order to mean "sort of, but not quite all the way."
"Did it work?" "Yes...ish."
"How was the film?" "It was good, ish."
"The exam went well, ish."
I can either roll my eyes or roll with this, and I've decided to just roll. I'm not saying I like it, since my nature leans me toward grammar stickler. But I can flex, and I no longer cringe every time someone adds "ish" onto the end of her sentence.
But yesterday I had to draw the line. The answer to "What is the slope of this line?" on an algebra paper was written as "3.5 - ish."
Because my student is a visual learner, I used a Venn diagram to make my point. You remember Venn diagrams, don't you? Circles or ovals that represent sets, with the items that belong to both sets written where the ovals overlap? I first illustrated with "people genetically related to your dad" and "people genetically related to your mom," each represented by a separate oval. And then there you are, right in the middle where the two ovals overlap.
Then I made a Venn diagram for algebra and ish.
There is no ish
in algebra.
Thursday, December 9, 2010
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Good Times
Same old boots and blue jeans,
same old husband fencing the same old cows
same old cornfield, same old horse.
Good times before winter.
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