Monday, July 23, 2007

The Jamestown Adventure

You can tell that most of these pictures were taken by the kids. We got to Jamestown Settlement at about 9:30 am or so. Jamestown was the first permanent English settlement in what is now the United States. This year celebrates it's 400th anniversary.
Inside this building are all kinds of exhibits which we were not allowed to take pictures of. There were set ups of life in England, Africa, and America. The idea was to show how the cultures from these three very different places merged into what became Virginia. There were examples of art and clothing and language. There was also a movie that told about the settlers voyage from England to Virginia.
Outside, there was a replica of a Powahtan village set up. This picture is of Julie learning how to twist rope made from long grass. There were people dressed as Native Americans demonstrating things like cooking, tanning, games, and chopping wood.







There were huts made out of what looked like woven grass mats. Inside were bench-like beds spread with animal hides. This picture is Josh and Kailey inside one of the huts.














We got to talk to this sailor for quite a while about life onboard a ship and about being a volunteer with the reinactment programs. Josh was told he would have to start out as a cabin boy... whose main job is cleaning slop jars. (A slop jar is basically a pot used as a toilet.) I was told I'd be scraping barnacles off the bottom of the ship. Kailey and Julie weren't at all interested in being sailors.




This is Kailey standing in what would serve as a bed in the cargo hold of the largest of the three ships. This ship held 71 people. Each person was allotted a 4x6 foot mat to sleep on, sometimes contained in a box, sometimes just tossed wherever they could find a dry place to sleep.






This is one of the officer's bunks onboard the smaller of the three ships. It was only about four feet long and about two and a half wide. Living conditions could not have been all that great spending some hundred and fourteen days at sea.


After exploring the ships, we continued down the path to where they were demonstrating how the Powahtan Indians made dug-out canoes. These were not so much dug-out as burned-out. Hot coals were placed on the top of the logs and allowed to burn through until it was hollowed out. We got one of the people there to take this picture of all of us in a finished canoe.





Inside the fort was this big cannon and the opportunity to try on the armor that soldiers would have worn while guarding the fort. I think Joshua and Julie have theirs on backwards.










We also got to watch the blacksmith make nails. He told us that blacksmiths were usually more like repair-men than actual producers. Kinda like the difference between a car manufacturer and a mechanic. Unfortunately, by this point we had run out of film in our cameras. On the wall in the blacksmith's shop were written silly latin phrases, one of which was, "If you can read this, you've had too much education." We watched one of the carpenters working on a lock for a chest of medical supplies. We also got to catch the tail end of a musket demonstration. In all, it was a pretty interesting adventure.



Our First Recorded Adventure

Our first adventure in this series took place from July 18, 2007 to July 20, 2007. We packed up all of our camping gear and headed for First Landing State Park in Virginia. Josh was the navigator for the trip, reading off the directions we printed out. It was supposed to be about a five and a half hour trip. Due to traffic and two accidents, it took us nearly ten hours. It was HOT and to save gas we were riding with the windows down. Half the time we were on the road, the van was sitting there in park with the engine turned off. Thankfully, a nice lady in an RV brought us some popsicles. It took over two hours to go just under two miles. We followed the directions printed out from Google. For some reason though, they lead us not to the park, but to someone's house. We stopped in someone's drive way to turn around and ask for real directions. He looked at what we had and laughed... it had lead to his house. So, he pointed us back in the right direction. We arrived at our campsite at about 5:30pm. We set up our tent and got out the necessary supplies to cook dinner.

We had gathered firewood at home and brought it with us. State parks don't like it if you burn their downed wood, it messes with the natural environment. I wasn't about to go buying firewood when there was plenty of it around here, so I got a box and brought it with us. Little did I know, you're not supposed to do that either. They will not frown to harshly though if you keep it in your vehicle and either burn it all or take it home with you. The problem is that the wood brought from other places introduces bugs and molds and other things not native to the area, which can quickly destroy the trees.

Anyway, we gathered a bit of leaves and pine needles off the ground and attempted to start a fire. After three packs of matches and a burned thumb from using my lighter multiple times, we got it going. We made hamburger foil packets. Those consist of a layer of cabbage, a layer of potato slices, and a hamburger patty topped with ketchup or whatever you want on it. They took a lot longer than I expected to cook. It was nearly 9pm by the time we actually ate dinner. We also had baked beans that burned on the bottom of the pot... which was not fun to scrub out. After cleaning up the dishes and packing all our food and stuff back into the van, we went to bed, it was nearly 11pm.

6:20 am the next morning, everyone is awake. We got up and put our bathing suits on. I really wanted coffee, so I wasted about an hour trying to start another fire and make coffee. Julie decided to roast marshmallows with her breakfast. She caught one on fire. Usually this isn't a problem, but when she blew it out, it fell off the skewer and onto her leg. She ended up with a row of blisters on her leg and on her hand where she grabbed at the marshmallow to get it off her leg. So, I cleaned her up and we headed for the beach. We got there at about 8:30 am or so. It was nice, we had most of the beach to ourselves.


Kailey had been saying that she was afraid to go in the ocean, but once we got there, she was fine. The beach was on the bay, so the waves were not as rough as on the Atlantic side. We had planned to build the world's biggest sandcastle, but somehow we ended up with just a really big hole. We just kept digging and digging and digging.




In the water, we saw all kinds of little fish. I caught one, but it was freaking out and swimming around so fast it was hard to even get a look at it, then it jumped out of the bucket. Josh kept going out further and further. He kept saying that he was going out to the currents. I told him that probably wasn't the best idea. Then they caught sight of something floating out a ways and didn't know what it was. So, I ended up swimming out almost to it and found that it was just a bouy.
About noon, the beach was getting crowded and we were getting hungry, so we packed up our stuff and headed back to the campsite for lunch. After lunch, we went out in search of burn cream for Julie's leg and some bug spray. We got both and went to play on the playground that was shaped like a pirate ship.

Then we took a much needed nap. About 5 pm, we started another fire for dinner. I set a pot of water to boil the potatoes... it took forever for it to finally boil, meanwhile thunder was threatening in the distance. Finally, the potatoes and chicken were ready and it was starting to rain. Thankfully it turned out to be little more than a light drizzle.

After cleaning up dinner, we went back out and got some icecream. On the way back, we stopped at the playground again for a bit and then went back to the campsite. We sat in the van for a bit and watched Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl, for the hundredth time and then went to bed.

In the morning, we got up and broke camp. We checked out and headed to find some breakfast. We stopped at a place called Waffletown, where I demonstrated how a spoon could be used as a simple catapult. (I'm sure the waitress appreciated that one...LOL) And we were off again, headed for Jamestown. That part of the adventure will be recorded in the next blog.

About Us

Ok, so I've decided to attempt this online in order to keep as little paper as possible. This is going to be something of a homeschool portfolio online. I want to keep track of the things that we're doing in order to convince John that with the right preparation I can actually successfully homeschool the kids. Never one for conventional means, we're writing this in story form to a degree.

I'm the Captain... also known as "Mom." Joshua, Kailey and Julie are the crew. Their ranks and positions are ever in flux, so it's kinda pointless to attempt to pin that much down. We're pirates, space explorers, time-travelers, Pokemon trainers and occasionally ninja warriors.








This is the Chaos Destroyer. It is a 2003 Mazda MPV. It's mission is to destroy chaos by creating order. So far it has been floundering miserably, but each day is a lesson in life and an attempt to have our "ship" live up to it's mission. The ship got it's name when we moved from Philadelphia to Bensalem last year. The kids and I had to do most of the packing and moving while John was at work, so we made a game of it. We pretended that we were raiding the governor's mansion and hauling our loot to the Isla de Muerta, often stopping at Tortuga for breakfast. (In reality, we were packing up our house and taking our stuff to storage and stopping for breakfast at the Pub.) Being as Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's chest had just come out, we were all in "pirate mode." Also Vacation Bible School was right around then and the theme was "Son Treasure Island" so it fit.

And so began our adventures as the crew of the Chaos Destroyer...