Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Corn Maze

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November 5, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

The kids wanted to do some fun fall activities.

It’s getting harder the older they get. Most of the fun things seem to be for little kids.

We went to the homeschool day at Pot-Luck Greenhouse.

We went for the corn maze. It was ok. It was near our house, and we went through a couple times. There were activity books.

We’re already lost!

I have this same shot when Alex was 18 months old in Utah!

I love this shot of the bridge!

Fun games!

We took a hay ride to choose pumpkins. They were already cut, to my kids’ disappointment.

Our Other Fall Field Trips:

Black Island Farms in Utah

Sunshine Pumpkin Farm in Germany

Appel Happel in Germany

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Sunshine Pumpkin Farm

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November 5, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

We took a homeschool field trip to Sunshine Pumpkin Farm.

We travel a lot in fall, so this was exciting for us to do something a little more normal.

The kids liked visiting the animals.

Katie loves cows.

We took a wagon tractor ride to pick our own pumpkins.

Yummy cider and cake for sale in the farm shop!

You can also visit their English and German website. They’re about 10 minutes away from Landstuhl.

There’s a milk and egg dispensary.

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Filed Under: Europe, Germany, Travel Tagged With: fall, farm, field trip, Germany, Pumpkin

Favorite Pumpkin Books

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October 2, 2017 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

Fall is a magical time of crunchy leaves, crisp breezes with warm sunshine, bonfires, cider, harvest festivals, and all things pumpkin.

We love to snuggle up under blankets in the mornings and evenings with fun story books.

These pumpkin-themed books are perfect for fall!

Favorite Pumpkin Books:

Pumpkin Soup

Deep in the woods in an old white cabin, three friends make their pumpkin soup the same way every day. The Cat slices up the pumpkin, the Squirrel stirs in the water, and the Duck tips in just enough salt. But one day the Duck wants to stir instead, and then there is a horrible squabble, and he leaves the cabin in a huff. It isn’t long before the Cat and the Squirrel start to worry about him and begin a search for their friend. Rendered in pictures richly evoking autumn, Helen Cooper’s delightful story will resonate for an child who has known the difficulties that come with friendship. Included at the end is a recipe for delicious pumpkin soup.

Pumpkin Moonshine

It’s almost Halloween, and little Sylvie Ann has found the biggest, fattest pumpkin in the patch! But before she can carve it into pumpkin moonshine (also known as a jack-o’-lantern), she must get the pumpkin home.

It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown

It’s Halloween night, which means costumes, trick-or-treating, bobbing for apples…and waiting for the Great Pumpkin. Linus is certain that the Great Pumpkin will rise out of the pumpkin patch to bring toys to all the children of the world. Could this be the year that it finally happens?

The Pumpkin Patch Parable

This charming story for children illustrates how a loving farmer can turn a simple pumpkin into a simply glorious sight. In the same way, God’s transforming love can fill each of our hearts with joy and light. Liz Curtis Higgs created this parable as a way to share the Good News with her own precious children each harvest season . . . and now with children everywhere.

Seed, Sprout, Pumpkin, Pie

Pumpkins! Who can resist the sight of big, round, orange pumpkins ripening in a field? Children piling off school buses to pick one out. Carving out funny faces, smiles, or scary frowns to illuminate Halloween doorsteps. Making room for that last piece of pumpkin pie after a delicious Thanksgiving feast. In this book, pumpkins aren’t just a fruit, they’re a symbol, a scent, a flavor of the entire season.

Pumpkin Jack

The first pumpkin Tim ever carved was fierce and funny, and he named it Jack. When Halloween was over and the pumpkin was beginning to rot, Tim set it out in the garden and throughout the weeks he watched it change.

The Biggest Pumpkin Ever

Once there were two mice who fell in love with the same pumpkin….
Desmond the field mouse wants to carve the biggest jack-o’-lantern in the neighborhood with his pumpkin. Clayton the house mouse wants to win the Biggest Pumpkin contest with his. But when they discover that their choice pumpkins are actually the same one, Desmond and Clayton decide to work together to grow the biggest pumpkin ever!

The Pumpkin Book

How they grow, their traditional uses and cultural significance.

Too Many Pumpkin

With countless unwelcome pumpkins to deal with, Rebecca Estelle turns disaster into a celebration. One day, years and years later, white-haired Rebecca was busy not eating pumpkins when–SPLAT–a giant pumpkin fell off an overloaded truck and smashed into her yard. She buried the mess so she wouldn’t have to look at it, and, as you might imagine, she witnessed a bumper crop the following fall.

Pumpkin Circle

Bouncy verse and glowing photographs show a backyard pumpkin patch move through its natural cycle — a bug’¬?s eye and a bird’s high view of seeds sprouting, flowers blooming, bees buzzing, pumpkins growing . . .and then going back to earth. An author’s note explains how to grow your own pumpkin.

Pumpkin Pumpkin

Jamie plants a pumpkin seed in the spring and, after watching it grow all summer, carves a face in it for Halloween! But best of all, he saves some seeds that he will plant again next spring.

How Big Could Your Pumpkin Grow?

Every year, giant pumpkin contests take place at fairs across the country—the 2012 record-holder weighed over a ton! The latest craze is to carve the most enormous pumpkins into racing boats. But what’s next? Why not think really big? Award-winning artist Wendell Minor does just that as he imagines larger-than-life pumpkins decorating some of America’s favorite places—as immense as the Capitol dome, Mount Rushmore, the Brooklyn Bridge, even the Grand Canyon! This celebration of famous landmarks and landscapes plays with concepts of size and scale and is full of fun facts.

The Roll-Away Pumpkin

On a windy autumn day, Marla Little comes running down the hill, yelling, “Help! My giant pumpkin is rolling away! Onward it goes, rolling and turning, with no sign of stopping! Diddle-dee-doo! Oh, what shall I do?”
A little girl chases her giant pumpkin all over town with some help along the way. It’s the perfect autumn bedtime story to read with your little pumpkin.

The Very Best Pumpkin

Growing up on Mimi and Papa’s farm, Peter knows a lot about caring for pumpkins. One summer Peter finds a lonely pumpkin all by itself in the field, and with his tender care, the pumpkin flourishes. By autumn, it’s the very best pumpkin of all, and Peter wants to keep it for himself. But when a young girl shows up at the farm in quest of a perfect pumpkin, will Peter pass on his prized pumpkin and gain a friend?

Pumpkin Town

What happens when a town has an accidental abundance of pumpkins? What do José and his well-intentioned brothers do with a mountain of pumpkins? An EXPLOSION of pumpkins? Step into Pumpkin Town and see!

As a teacher, Katie McKy saw many children make mistakes. She also saw many children want to make their wrongs right.

As a gardener, Katie once planted too many pumpkin seeds. She was that a good thing can be a bad thing when the vines start to grow every which way.

A Pumpkin Prayer

Colorful pumpkins, crunching leaves, crisp breezes―celebrate the abundance of the harvest season through charming illustrations and sweet rhymes that are perfect for young hearts.

The Legend of Spookley the Square Pumpkin

What’s going on in the pumpkin patch? Well, a very unusual pumpkin has hatched. While all others are round, Spookley is square. He’s not like his friends-they have curves, he has ends. And so everyone teases him, night and day.
But just before Halloween, the weather turns stormy. Winds toss the round pumpkins to and fro, and off they go, crashing and bashing and smashing–except Spookley. Can he, with his square little body, save the day?

The Ugly Pumpkin

The Ugly Pumpkin has waited all through October for someone to take him home, but no one wants him. He doesn’t look like other pumpkins. So the lonely Ugly Pumpkin leaves the patch in search of a place where he’ll fit in. By the time Thanksgiving arrives, he discovers the truth about who he is–but it’s not what he expected!

Pumpkin Patch Blessings

The sweet rhyming text by Kim Washburn and whimsical illustrations by Jacqueline East bring autumn alive for readers young and old as they take in the fun of the fall season and remember how much they have to be grateful for.

Pumpkins

Did you know pumpkins have been around for 11,000 years? Or that the biggest pumpkin on record weighed over 1,300 pounds? Learn all about pumpkins—where they come from, how to grow them, and more—in this informative book that’s guaranteed to squash the competition. Recipes, fun facts, and resources round out the text.

The Fierce Yellow Pumpkin

A fat little, round little, yellow little pumpkin dreams of growing up to be fierce and frightening, just like the scarecrow in the field. Then one day in autumn, when he has grown big and fat, the fierce yellow pumpkin gets the chance to become terrific and terrible.

The Vanishing Pumpkin

When a 700-year-old woman and an 800-year-old man want to make pumpkin pie on Halloween, they can’t find their pumpkin. “Our pumpkin’s been snitched,” cries the woman. And off they go to find it.

The Itsy Bitsy Pumpkin

A little pumpkin is trying to find his way back home! And with a little help from a friendly witch, he is soon safe and sound, back on his porch—where there are no spiders to be seen!

The Pumpkin Runner

“Nearly all the sheep ranchers in Blue Gum Valley rode horses or drove jeeps to check on their sheep. But Joshua Summerhayes liked to run…with Yellow Dog trailing behind him.” So it’s no surprise when Joshua decides to enter a race from Melbourne to Sydney. People laugh when old Joshua shows up in his overalls and gumboots, calmly nibbling a slice of pumpkin for energy. But then he pulls into the lead, and folks are forced to sit up and take notice. Inspired by a true event (and just in time for fall’s pumpkin harvest!) a talented team introduces a humble and generous hero who knows that winning isn’t always the reason to run a race.

This is NOT a Pumpkin

It
may
be round like
a pumpkin and even orange
like a pumpkin, but this is NOT
a pumpkin! If it’s not a pumpkin,
then what is it?

Have fun with this pumpkin unit study!

Check out my fall posts and other pumpkin posts.

What are your favorite pumpkin books?

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Pumpkin Scones

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October 25, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

I’ve been trying to do better about preparing breakfasts we all like. So when I saw a pumpkin scone recipe online, I thought yeah, I can make that.

It’s super easy and I had all the ingredients already.

My son is my helper. He loves to be in the kitchen!

stirring

I kneaded it and sliced the dough into triangles and sprinkled with cinnamon and sugar.

cut scones

Getting the wedges onto the baking sheet was a little tricky.

pumpkin scones

The cinnamon sugar drizzle was delectable.

Pumpkin Scones

The kids loved these! Middle sister was in heaven. She loves pumpkin anything.

He wasn’t sure at first, but he liked it after he tried it!

She loved it!

Even my eldest enjoyed a scone when she returned from her piano lesson.

Definitely a favorite that’s going in our baking repertoire. And I think the kids can make them on their own next time!

And I got to spend some one on one time with my son. He loved it. And I realize that we need to do that more. I need to bake more and introduce new flavors and foods. It’s easy for me to just let the kids get cereal in the mornings, but they do so much better with a warm breakfast – even something simple like oatmeal, grits, or bread.

Print

Pumpkin Scones

Course Breakfast
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings 8 scones

Ingredients

  • 2 cups flour
  • 1/3 cup sugar
  • 1 t baking powder
  • 1/2 t baking soda
  • 1/4 t cream of tartar
  • 1/2 t salt
  • 2 t cinnamon or pumpkin spice
  • 1/2 t nutmeg omit if using pumpkin spice
  • 1/2 c butter cold
  • 1 can pumpkin puree
  • 1 large egg

Instructions

  1. Mix dry ingredients together in a large bowl.
  2. Cut in butter.
  3. Stir in pumpkin and egg.
  4. Turn out onto floured counter and cut into triangles (or any shape you like!)
  5. Place on a baking sheet 1 inch apart. Sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar.
  6. Bake 15-20 minutes at 350* or until browned.
  7. Optional Glaze! Blend 1/2 cup powdered sugar with 3 T milk or cream. Add 1/2 t cinnamon. Drizzle over warm scones. We also love them with honey butter!

Linking up: Sunny Day Family, Eats Amazing, Grammy’s Grid, Wife Mommy Me

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Filed Under: Recipes Tagged With: Pumpkin, recipe

Pumpkin Math

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October 15, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

We did this fun pumpkin math with candies.

The pages are part of this pack: Simple Schooling Autumn Fun Pack (which I can no longer find anywhere).

pumpkin math

M&M math:

We figured area and perimeter!

They just traced the picture with candies for perimeter and filled in the pumpkin for area.

Pumpkin Math

First, the girls placed M&Ms around the outside of the pumpkin to measure perimeter.

Candy Perimeter
Measuring Perimeter with Candy

Tori is saying 42. They both got 42 for perimeter.

And it’s the meaning of everything. sigh

42
Counting Candy

Then they covered the pumpkin picture for area.

Measuring Area with Candy
Pumpkin Area

Extend the activity:

  • Estimate and Measure the height and width of real pumpkins with a tape measure.
  • Estimate and Measure the circumference of real pumpkins with a tape measure.
  • Calculate the diameter and radius – using the circumference measurement.
    • d=C÷3.14         (3.14 is otherwise known as π or pi)
    • r=d÷2
  • Estimate and weigh pumpkins before and after cleaning out the seeds to make jack o’ lanterns.
  • Estimate and count the seeds.
  • Dissect the seeds.
  • Measure the shell thickness.
  • Count the vertical lines on the sides of the pumpkin skin.  These numbers can be used to calculate:
    • Fractions – “1/2 of the pumpkin is equivalent to 8/16”
    • Percentages – “What percentage of the pumpkin is equivalent to 4/12?”
    • Degrees – “If a full circle is 360°, how many degrees is 1/8 of the pumpkin?”
  • Measure the volume of the pumpkin using water displacement.
  • Compare pumpkin measurements if you have several. Make graphs.
  • Test gravity by dropping pumpkins from different heights.
  • Make your favorite pumpkin recipes!

Fall Chalk Pastels has a great pumpkin art project!

We also completed our reviews in Singapore math 1B and worked on Life of Fred math lessons this week.

Linking up: The Resourceful Mama, Curly Crafty Mama, Life of Faith, ABC Creative Learning, Living Montessori Now, Kiddy Charts, The Modest Mom, What Joy is Mine, A Proverbs 31 Wife, A Life in Balance, Rich Faith Rising, Growing Hands on Kids, Simple Life of a Fire Wife, The Educators Spin On It, Hip Homeschool Moms, True Aim Education, The Natural Homeschool, Tots and Me, The Stay at Home Mom Survival Guide, I Choose Joy, Frogs Lilypad, A Little R&R, A Wise Woman Builds Her Home, Raising Homemakers, Pat and Candy, Time Warp Wife, F Dean Hackett, Cornerstone Confessions, Snap Creativity, Home Stories A to Z, Your Homebased Mom, Homemade for Elle, Christian Montessori Network, Life with Lorelai, Happy and Blessed Home, Sunny Day Family, Gluesticks and Gumdrops, The Jenny Evolution, Crafty Moms Share

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Pumpkin Unit Study

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September 28, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Pumpkins mean autumn!

We love seeing the pumpkin patches and pumpkin decorations in September and October.

We’re cleaning out the garden. Most of the pumpkins are ripe and ready.

Aaron cut them and the kids carried them to the deck.

Little Pumpkins

Alex is telling me: “It’s HEAVY!”

Heavy Little Pumpkin

Katie is super excited it’s fall and October is next week!

Crazy Pumpkin

Tori always does the most work in the garden.

She’s already picked all the tomatoes and brought a few pumpkins to the deck.

She’s getting tired.

Tired Pumpkin

These are only few of our pumpkins. Not sure what to do with them all. They’re not eating pumpkins, but jack o’lanterns. They’re pretty for decorating though!

Pumpkins from the Garden

Pumpkin Unit Resources:

  • Here’s my autumn Pinterest board with lots of fall fun!
  • We made some yummy pumpkin streusel muffins
  • We love these pumpkin scones!
  • It’s always fun to head to the pumpkin patch and play!
  • Pumpkin math activities
  • Pumpkin unit from The Homeschool Scientist
  • Meet Penny Pumpkin Unit
  • Living Montessori Now Pumpkin Unit
  • Pumpkin Study from Enchanted Homeschooling Mom
  • The Biggest Pumpkin Ever Unit from The Proverbial Homemaker
  • In All You Pumpkin Printables
ProSchool Membership - Productive Homeschooling


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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: fall, garden, nature study, Pumpkin, unit study

Pumpkin Streusel Muffins

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October 31, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Pumpkin streusel muffins are a great fall breakfast or treat!

Recipe adapted from Williams Sonoma The Cookbook for Kids.

Pumpkin Streusel Muffins

 Kid and neighbor approved!

Muffins and Broccoli Soup
Yummy Fall Lunch
Muffin Boy
We also had yummy Broccoli Soup.
Print

Pumpkin Streusel Muffins

Course Breakfast
Cuisine Holiday

Ingredients

Streusel Topping

  • 3 T brown sugar
  • 2 T AP flour
  • 1/4 t cinnamon
  • 1/4 t nutmeg
  • 1/4 c chopped nuts (pecans or walnuts)
  • 1 T butter

Dry ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 c AP flour
  • 1 t baking soda
  • 1/2 t baking powder
  • 1/2 t kosher or sea salt
  • 1/2 t cinnamon
  • 1/2 t cloves
  • 1/2 t nutmeg

Wet ingredients

  • 1 c pumpkin puree
  • 1 c sugar
  • 1/2 c oil I use EVOO
  • 2 large eggs room temperature
  • 1/2 t vanilla

Instructions

  1. Mix streusel topping together in small bowl and set aside.
  2. Preheat oven. Prepare muffin tin, cups, liners, etc. Mix dry ingredients in one bowl. Mix wet ingredients in another bowl. Combine.
  3. Scoop into muffin tin, cups, liners, etc. and sprinkle on streusel topping. Bake at 350* for 20-25 minutes. Rest for 5 minutes, if you can stand it!
Linking up: Sunny Day Family, Eats Amazing, Life of Faith, Curly Crafty Mom, The Resourceful Mama, A Life in Balance, Your Homebased Mom, Crafty Moms Share, Rich Faith Rising, Time Warp Wife, F Dean Hackett, , A Little R&R, A Wise Woman Builds Her Home, Pat and Candy, Raising Homemakers, The Stay at Home Mom Survival Guide, Teaching Mama, Adventures of Mel, True Aim Education, Crystal and Company, Simple Life of a Fire Wife, Home Stories A to Z, A Bowl Full of Lemons, The Educators Spin on It, Organized 31, A Kreative Whim, I Choose Joy, Frogs Lilypad, Life with Lorelai, Happy Blessed Home, The Jenny Evolution, The 36th Avenue, Design Dining and Diapers, AKA Design, Olives and Okra,
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Black Island Farms

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October 24, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

We had a blast on our Black Island Farms pumpkin patch field trip.

Daddy even took off work to experience the fun with us (and help me wrangle the young uns!) This farm does agro-tourism to help stay afloat in this economy. We learned about their irrigation system and saw a harrow plow in action.

Tractor

Alex really was fascinated by the tractor during the wagon ride. So glad we got a seat up front!
Big Carrot
Cabbage Snack
Trying Cabbage

The kids got to see, feel, and test out the carrots and cabbage that they grow. Gimme some coleslaw!

(Did you know that those baby carrots are actually carrot pellets? They’re not quite so thrilling now…)

Picking Out Pumpkins

Everyone got to pick out a pie pumpkin (even I did!) and we’re going to try our hand at making homemade pumpkin pie and some other delectable pumpkin-y recipes this week.

Silly Scarecrows

Of course, we couldn’t resist the cheesy scarecrow picture!

Feeding a Llama

We got feed animals too! Katie loved the baby cows, but they were sleepy. Pigs, goats, turkeys, and chickens were in their zoo too. This llama was super friendly and hungry.

Tractor Train

Katie and Alex got to ride the tractor train! I was so proud of Katie holding tight her little brother! He didn’t want to get off, but they were closing the ride for the day!

Big Slide
Bumpy Slide
Tube Slide

They had some amazing slides made from straw bales.

Corn Maze

The corn “maize” was super fun for all of us.

They offered maps, and it’s pretty obvious that even I need to work on my map-reading skills. sigh

Black Island Farms is one of our favorite fall traditions! Also a great place to buy farm fresh fall produce and decorations.

Black Island Farms has been a family business for over 50 years!

Opening Hours During Most of September and October

Mon-Thurs 4pm – 10pm

Fri 4pm – Midnight

Sat 10am – Midnight

Sun 11am – 5pm

Corn Maze and Courtyard

Adults $11

Kids (Ages 12-2)$9

Corn Maze and Courtyard + Hayride

Adults $16

Kids (Ages 12-2) $11

Corn Maze and Courtyard + Nightmare Acres

Adults $20

Kids $20

Nightmare Acres

Adults $16

Kids $16

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Filed Under: Utah Tagged With: fall, farm, field trip, Pumpkin, Utah

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