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Jul. 24th, 2014

helwen: (Due Consideration)
Last week was Kung Fu Adventure Week at our kung fu school. L and I ran crafts for the week, with assistance from one of the teen students from the school. Before this was prep of various things -- some of the materials, and demo pieces to show them what we were making that day. Age range was 7-13 enrollment, although we think the oldest was 12 this year. Class size was usually 8-9, three groups every morning, except on Friday, when it was 4 groups at 5-6 per class.

What a lot of energy kids have! Still, in some ways it was easier than teaching adults, interestingly enough. We had to have backup activities every day, since some kids would finish sooner than others -- this year, origami was the top pick for backup, as none of them had seen a flapping bird before.

We made:

- Wax paper "stained glass" with leaves, ground-up crayons (all the school's broken ones), and some colored tissue paper from some other previous project. Attached sticks at top and bottom like a scroll, by punching holes in the wax paper and wrapping a yarn around the sticks and through the holes.

- Paper cut-out trees (like making snowflakes or dolls), cut out then paint. We saved some money by buying large sheets of paper and cutting to size. These became a little forest during the week, on one of the windows in the waiting area. The remainders from cutting out the trees could be used to make cards, by gluing them onto construction paper. What actually happened is some kids glued the trees onto the paper instead, but it's all good -- we had a great forest!

- Mobiles of wood and string, which the kids stamped with rubber stamps (school's and some of mine). Sticks gathered by assistant and head of school, wood discs from a log off the family farm sawn by L w/me assisting, twine from L's bookbinding supplies.

- Painter's tape trees. Use low-tack tape to create a tree on paper. Paint rest of page; let dry. L and I handled attaching rods to the top and bottom like a scroll -- we used hot glue this time, and old bamboo garden stakes that we got with the greenhouse stuff. These were significantly larger and heavier than the "stained glass" pieces, so the previous method wouldn't work well. Remove tape carefully, and you get a negative space within the color. (paper, tape, and paint were all new)

- Tibetan prayer flags. We cut, sewed and ironed them, strung them onto yarn with a crochet hook (L's idea), and the kids stamped them. Fabric was mostly from my stash, including a green I got at the local craft swap, and also from an old Christmas tablecloth that had stains I couldn't get out of it.

Yarn for all projects was from either my or the school's stash. Paint brushes were from school's supplies. We did need to get a few more pairs of scissors.

As the theme this year was trees, leaf stamps were popular. They also liked their traditional stamps -- elements, dragon, fish, ancient Chinese coin, and Friend (in Chinese).

***
We'll need new ink stamps for the next camp. The current ones mostly held up, but they're getting hard to use. Not too much leftover materials from newly bought things: some sheets of white paper, and painters tape.

***
The tree theme was covered in the rest of the day with stories about trees, information on each group's tree, how trees are important to us and the environment, and emulating aspects of trees in kung fu, like rooting.

The weapon practice for this year was staff. Everybody worked hard! On Friday afternoon the parents and some friends came to see all the things the kids had made, and to watch them perform. We used all the crafts to decorate the outdoor area, creating a "magical" woods next to the actual woods. They did a good job showing what they'd learned and the story was funny.

They had discovered these wonderful forest and were practicing some of their hand skills and movement, when an evil developer (in a Skeletor mask) showed up. He and his chainsaw-wielding ninja lumberjacks (also masked) say they're going to cut down forests and build meaningless structures (evil Skeletor laugh). Then the kids find magical staffs and learn to use them, and when the developer and ninja lumberjacks show up again, the kids stood firm and stamped their staffs at the bad guys and scared them off.
helwen: (Due Consideration)
Kung Fu Adventure Week took most of our time and energy, but we did get some work done on moving the greenhouses. We'd made pretty good progress until getting to figuring out how to get them off the ground (anchored). But L dug around, figured it out, and we moved the houses over the past weekend.

Neighbor's brother came through with an equity line on his own place to catch up her mortgage payments and get to work on fixing everything. We were trying to get the buildings moved by end of July anyway, but this added urgency, as they were going to be moving the leach field from wherever it is to somewhere approximately where the buildings were.

Then we got held up on digging out the footings -- freeform concrete pilings with metal brackets sticking out the top. L and I got two up and out and were working on a third one that was twice the size of the first two. Fortunately one of the guys working on clearing the yard for construction saw L working on #3 and offered to help with his bucket loader (our neighbor from down the road who plows our driveway in winter). So he dug around the rest, then they'd tie a chain to one and pull it out of the ground and then moved them over to our property. Six of those things all told.

***

Other yard work is happening. Digging out in front of the barn, clearing a little ground, transplanting some daylilies, a little forms practice, and sewing.

I have a lot more sewing to do -- been working on slow, fiddly stuff. Spent 4 hours last night on finishing hemming the snow queen bodice, attaching binding around the collar and down across the front (slanted side-opening for neck), then attaching lace to that. Only one of six hanging panels complete so far, altho' a second one is almost done. Two panels have beading down the center to look kind of like a frost pattern; the other four I'm just going to outline with beads. I'd love to do frost on all of them, but realistically I don't think I have time. Also, not sure I have enough beads, so there's that. Goal for this outfit is to get all parts wearable. I've been trying to plan what projects can be done on the road, and I think I can save the pearling of the top layer for then...

***

Physically, the increase in physical activities has been good but not without challenges. Increased turmeric intake, soaking in bath with epsom salts when I can, doing baduanjin daily -- started to get a blister on one toe last Thursday, but a bandage to cushion it for a few days took care of that.
helwen: (Due Consideration)
Been helping L with hay deliveries, since the problem with his neck -- he's not supposed to do lots of heavy lifting.

And speaking of which, time for me to put on a shirt with sleeves -- not really crazy about getting hay slivers and cuts all up and down my arms.

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