Thursday, December 11, 2014

Collaborative play



At the beginning of your time at Apple Blossom you'll probably hear a few wise words from the teachers about play. One tidbit I really found interesting -- partially because it encouraged me to break a common habit -- had to do with friendship on the playground.

"Try not to ask your child 'Who did you play with today?' Because chances are they took a turn playing with everyone. They'll run in and out, in and out, of different groups. So they won't know quite what to answer and it's not quite the right question to ask."

The photograph above, a perfect portrait of collaborative play, really brings these words to life.

Monday, December 1, 2014

Chopping apples

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At Apple Blossom, the children and their teachers follow a rhythm -- a comforting daily and weekly routine made up of outdoor and indoor time, focused activities and free play. 

Every Monday morning the children bring a vegetable from home and sit around the outside table to chop them for Tuesday's soup. And every Thursday morning you'll find them cozied up again, peeling and chopping apples for Friday's apple crisp. 

It's such fun to see the same activities performed within the changing of the seasons. In September, tiny heads poked out from sun hats and arms were slathered with sunscreen as they chopped and chatted. And now fresh snow surrounds the happy workers as they sit bundled in woolly layers, smiling with rosy cheeks. 

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Martinmas

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Apple Blossom's beautiful lantern walk celebrating the Martinmas festival occurs every November. Martinmas falls halfway between the summer solstice and the winter solstice. The meaning, as I understand it, is that we our celebrating the light inside ourselves as the season turns to a time of darkness.  From connecting with this light within we help ourselves and each other build up our inner resources of courage and strength to be our best selves.
  
Before the lantern walk a parent makes a lantern for his or her child out of a beautiful watercolor painting made by the child and the parent illuminates it with carved shapes covered with kite paper.  At the lantern walk we each place a candle inside  our lanterns and the entire community of parents and children does an evening walk throughout the school while singing lantern songs. I love this festival!  My children are still singing Glimmer Lantern Glimmer.

Glimmer, lantern, glimmer
Little stars a-shimmer
Over meadow, moor and vale
Flitter, flutter, elfin veil
Pee-wit, pee-wit, tikka-tikka-tik
Rucoo, rucoo.

Glimmer, lantern, glimmer
Little stars a-shimmer
Over rock and stock and stone
Wandering, skipping little gnome
Pee-wit, pee-wit, tikka-tikka-tik
Rucoo, rucoo.




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Sunday, November 9, 2014

Parents' evening

Such focus!

Last week, on a chilly evening after the sun was down and the kids were asleep, the Apple Blossom parents and teachers gathered inside school. The topic of the evening was Warmth -- how essential it is to our children in their physical and emotional growth and how to encourage and support it. 

We sat around a beeswax candle under a soft light, savored warming refreshments (peppermint tea, warm soup and homemade bread) and enjoyed a lively and fascinating -- and sometimes silly -- conversation. 

It's wonderful to really spend quality time with the Apple Blossom teachers and hear their thoughts on children and home life. So many new ideas and helpful tips and loving guidance, and right at the end of a long day when we often need that most. When the discussion opens up and different parents chime in with comments or questions or simply a funny story you can feel how dear everyone holds each other.

 

Adding a wire handle to a finished beeswax lantern.


While we chatted and ate and laughed, we all worked on lanterns for the upcoming lantern walk. Using beeswax warmed in our hands, we molded colorful patterns onto glass jars. How beautiful they will look, lit up with candles on a cold autumn night! What fun to use our hands and make something all our own.

In the end, such a peaceful, calming -- and yes, very warming -- evening to connect and create together. 

Monday, October 27, 2014

Community



Instead of zipping in and out of school, Apple Blossom parents and families like to linger. Whether you're dropping off or picking up or stopping by to shop at the Apple Blossom school store, you'll likely find a parent or two (or three) on school grounds.

There's no great rush to leave school behind, so you'll always find people sprinkled around. Bringing a thermos of tea and pushing the younger siblings on the swings after drop-off. Getting to school a little early and cozying up in the community room to nurse an infant. Spreading out a blanket and sharing a snack with another mom to discuss upcoming school events or weekend plans.

If you're looking for community, for other families that like to kick up their heels and roll up their sleeves and really become a school family, then this is the place to be. It's pretty impossible to feel lonely when you're always surrounded by such warmth.



Monday, October 20, 2014

Symbols



Every child at Apple Blossom is given his or her own symbol. It may be an apple, a rainbow, a dolphin, or a sunflower. A rooster, a turtle, a rose, or the sun.

This handmade label is placed on the child's clothing bag, cubby, sewing basket, and chair. Without letters or words, the children are easily able to find their place in the classroom. What a beautiful and gentle guide for each day.

Monday, October 13, 2014

Artwork at Apple Blossom

An Apple Blossom 5-year-old's drawing of St. Michael's dragon

At Apple Blossom, the children use beeswax crayons to color and high quality watercolors for their paintings. The paper is thick and sturdy and the children know you can't burn through 100 pages at a time. They learn to take their time and respect the materials, slowly mastering the fine motor skills needed for artwork.

Twice a year, the children bring home a folder of their pieces. It's a fun surprise to see what they've been working on, the drawings often inspired by the stories the teachers have been telling, or from the puppet shows they've watched, or the games they've invented on the play yard. There are dragons and gnomes, rainbows and trees. The watercolors fill the paper with rich tones of yellow or pink or red. They are gorgeous.

Instead of oodles of papers sent home everyday, parents receive a selection of beautiful and quality pieces to treasure. I have loved, especially, framing the beautiful watercolors to brighten up my home's walls. How proud the children are of their work!

Handworks

Handworks is our wonderful group of knitters, sewers, crocheters, and crafters of all sorts that gather together on Tuesdays for some community creating.  It is one of my favorite times of the week.  There are always great homemade baked goods, a different variety depending on who felt like bringing what - decadent, gluten-free, whole wheat, almond-meal, maple-syrup sweetened, etc.  

We have amongst us a master knitter who can whip up a whole sock while I might be just untangling my needles and she is a fabulous resource.   Mostly it is lovely to sit and knit with this group of fun women every week.  If you haven't dropped in lately, please come by!

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After pickup, running under the trees

Running for the fun of being together on a fall afternoon.  Leaves kicking up under their feet.  Laughing.  

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And moms having a few moments to be not running!

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Sunday, October 5, 2014

Michaelmas

Apple Blossom's dear teachers, Ms. Marquis and Ms. Khoshabo. 


Last week, the students, teachers, and families of Apple Blossom celebrated Michaelmas, the first of the school year's festivals. If you're new to Waldorf traditions, these festivals are one of the most fun new elements to discover. Each one helps mark a change in the seasons and prepares both children and parents for the seasonal shift ahead.

Michaelmas is celebrated when Summer turns to Autumn, when we start calming our wild summer energy into the more focused rhythm of the school year. It's a great time to connect with new and old friends after the first few weeks of school have finished. Families arrive at lunchtime, carrying in picnic blankets and bowls to the schoolyard lawn. The children run out to meet us, feet fast and eyes bright. An afternoon to stay at school together instead of heading straight home -- what fun!



Ms. Khoshabo serves the soup.


Michaelmas is a symbol of harvest time and to celebrate the children make us homemade bread (in the shape of an amazing dragon) and vegetable soup (with veggies harvested from the school garden) while the teachers fill our bowls and plates with each.

How lovely to take a few moments out of the day to sit next to our children on the grass, enjoying together the food they so proudly made, sharing stories from our day or maybe just a quiet hug. And when the typical lunch for moms might be a quickly eaten sandwich or something half-frozen from the microwave, what a treat to to enjoy a homemade meal. A simple ritual that warms us all.




And after everyone has rested and eaten their fill, the kids spring up and run free alongside their friends, tossing their handmade comet balls into the air and watching them flutter down again and again.


Comet balls!

And too soon it's time to roll up the blankets and bring home all the warm energy from an afternoon spent outside, amongst friends and family and great food.