Monthly Archives: September 2020

fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography

This year for science Linc and I sat down and picked our curriculum together. We chose two from our program curriculum: Energy (which we will study after January) and Marine Biology!

So far we are loving our Marine Biology studies! We both have learned so much and each lesson comes with some super cool science experiments! This past Monday though, Tuck and I decided we ALL needed to go ahead and get out of the house for a little bit and take a much needed FIELD TRIP!

We just studied sharks (which was awesome and one of the more anticipated lessons we’ve been looking forward to) and I had been researching all kinds of activities or adventures we might be able to do to pair with our lessons. A friend of mine had told me about a beach a little ways from here called Fossil Beach.

fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography
fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography

The idea here was to hop in the car and drive (yep it’s a a drive) and then hike and hunt for some shark’s teeth and anything else we could find. My main goal was just to gather my family together and spend some quality one on one time together: no phone calls, no work, no computers! Just us three together outside doing something FUN… did I say outside and out of our house?!

Luckily we accomplished just about all of it! We drove (it’s about a 2.5 to 3 hour drive from here to Montross, VA). We talked A LOT in the car and on the hike to the beach and on the way back! We played and splashed in the water! We searched and searched the beach and this is where it gets funny!

We THOUGHT we were finding shark’s teeth or some kind of old fossilized shark’s teeth! I mean none of us really researched what we were looking for and we had been there for like 2 hours already. We had our colliander’s and our sifters and we were in it to win it. Then a new family came down to the beach and within about 5 minutes that grabbed the real deal and showed me! MAN I felt embarrassed. It was an actual TOOTH! DUH! Which ironically I had asked Tuck about in the beginning… like aren’t we actually looking for teeth teeth like the ones you find on a necklace?!

So then of course I was even more motivated to find AT LEAST 1 real shark tooth and not these dumb rock things we “thought” were fossilized teeth! We drove 3 some hours, we can’t walk away with just rocks!

fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography

Long story short, I found a super tiny baby shark tooth that if you weren’t looking very hard you would miss it! You almost need a magnifying glass to see it. Tuck finally found another baby-ish one as well. Linc came over later and while we were struggling to tell him that “hey, guess what we weren’t finding shark teeth but hey THESE right here are shark teeth..” He was like yeah I know guys… while I was digging deep over there, I got one too.

And ya’ll.. his was HUGE! It was the biggest of the day we think! Go figure!

fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography
fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography
fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography

Anyway… we had a blast and we each came home with a shark tooth we found and that makes me incredibly happy! Linc had a blast so that makes it an adventure totally worth the day trip drive!

First homeschool field trip: total success!

fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography

We totally recommend Fossil Beach if you’re looking for a place to just adventure for the day with no real time worries! It’s a great place to pack up and go get lost for a couple of hours!

Things I would do if we go again:

  • Pack a Lunch/ Bring a cooler!
  • Bring a chair to sit in! (Your back gets tired from all the bending and sifting! I sat in the sand for a bit… but it would have felt nice to have a chair.
  • SHOVEL!! They say no shovels but soo many people had shovels and they were finding some good stuff!
  • A lot of sifters or mesh stuff to help sifting. A colliander doesn’t work great. It works but the actual sand sieves are the best! 1 per person at least.
  • A clear locking lid container to put your precious finds INSIDE! Linc brought his rock/gem pouch but man I was so worried they would break or fall through.
  • Bathing suits! This was an epic fail on my part! We wore like athletic clothes/ hiking stuff with tevas and flip flops. You are totally in the water while searching for shark teeth! WEAR A SUIT! (At least we packed a change of clothes.)

Here are some more photos from our trip!

fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography
fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography

Linc was teaching me his sand sieving technique he learned from some “new friends” after he found the large shark tooth! 😉

adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography
fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography
fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography
fossil beach adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography
adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography
  • September 30, 2020 - 2:08 pm

    Tom Mathias - You captured the day in photos to perfection. I felt like I was there with you. We never visited that location while growing up in Va. Beach. However, we did find Indian arrowheads in Seashore State Park. Maybe they were small rocks that we renamed arrowheads, LOLReplyCancel

    • February 8, 2021 - 6:27 pm

      brooketuckerphoto@gmail.com - Linc would DIE to find arrowheads I think! Maybe we will do that this week!ReplyCancel

So we’ve gotten into our homeschooling rhythm and what’s funny is that what I thought would be our favorite subjects are the toughest to get through! What I thought would be the least loved subjects are those that are the most favorite. Take history for example; I wasn’t sure how history was going to go this year. I knew I was going to fill it with hands on learning and activities. I needed that because that’s the only way I can learn history and have it stick. This is why I picked a program that included incredible stories and real world application. We chose The Story of the World and we started with the ancients. We’ve done archaeology digs, cave paintings and even written our name in hieroglyphics.

This past week though… enter DINO, the mummy chicken! Ya’ll, I have been waiting on this moment and talking about this moment to just about anyone who would listen since we decided to homeschool back in like June!

Yep, you read that correct…a MUMMY chicken! I went to the grocery and I bought a whole chicken, the kind you roast and makes the house smell delicious; except my intent was NOT to provide a delicious family meal. Nope, my intent was to salt it and leave it in the garage for 6 plus weeks following some strict directions and show my kid a hands on approach to mummification like the ancient Egyptians! I prepared my lesson, we talked about Canopic jars and Pharaoh’s and the whole deal! I had my supplies and I waited until all our other subjects were finished so we would have plenty of time to talk about this and dive in!

I totally thought Linc would be super excited and WAY into it. I mean I WAS/AM way into it. I love mummies and ancient Egypt and when would you ever have the opportunity to do this?!

Well.. Once we got started his excitement went from let’s do this to, OH MY GOSH I’M GONNA PASS OUT! ;).

mummy chicken
adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography

See… here we are all excited! He was like YES I got this, look at my muscles, look how tough I am… I’m AMAZING….

Then…. when I unwrapped the chicken and had him help me wash/bathe it in the warm water (because our chicken “Dino” was a revered pharoah) he saw it’s “toes/ toenail” and some of the marrow where it had been bleeding and home slice HIT THE DECK!

There was allll kinds of drama up in our house with gasping breath and OH NO THE BLOOD… I can’t! Let’s just say, I doubt Linc will ever become a doctor!

adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography
adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography

So, how do you make a mummy out of a chicken?! I’ve had a LOT of questions about this from friends and family! I’ve had lots of people ask me to please document this process so here we go:

  1. Get yourself a nice big chicken from the grocery store!
  2. Put your gloves on! Linc and I had a long chat about how chicken carry germs like salmonella and how those germs specifically can make you very sick. This means don’t touch ANYTHING, especially your face!
  3. BATHE the chicken lovingly (I kid, I kid… but not really). In the story we read the “mummy” used to be a King so Linc wanted our chicken a.k.a. DINO to be King as well. So we treated our chicken with love and respect and bathed him with honor! The water should be very hot!
  4. Pat the chicken dry and then BATHE again with Alcohol! ** Two little helpful tips about this step. First, we forgot it and dried our chicken out completely and had to go back. Don’t do that! Two: HOLY SMELL! Linc and I were overwhelmed with the smell and kept coughing! Be prepared because we used three bottles of alcohol (tiny bottles) to wash our chicken and woah! Make sure to get inside the cavity really really well!
  5. Dry your chicken with paper towels! I put mine on a baking dish and just sat it in the oven with paper towels to dry. DID NOT TURN THE OVEN ON… just let it sit for like 30 minutes to dry off. Your chicken needs to be super dry for the next part.
  6. Linc and I gloved up again for the SALTING! MIX baking soda, baking powder and SALT (we have already used 8 boxes) Pour the mixture into the cavity of your mummy chicken. Make sure the cavity is completely filled. Then place your mummy chicken gently in a large plastic bag (we set our bag inside a bowl to help) then cover the chicken ENTIRELY with your salt mixture and if you need more salt pour on some more plain salt. This took another whole box of salt for us. Tie off the bag making sure it’s completely sealed and we placed DINO in the garage.
  7. Check mummy every day for the first week. If the salt is wet… repeat the salt process~
adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography
adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography

This is Day 2 and the rest of the week of Dino the Chicken Mummy… we only had to change the salt 3 times!

adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography
adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography

I made Tuck come in for the salt exchange! 😉

adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography

So Dino is already getting a bit whiter in color. There is still no smell which is awesome (and shocking!). The next few weeks we just continue to check on him and change his salt! We will keep you posted! We still have 5 more weeks to go!

Linc’s attitude so far regarding Mummy experiment:

  • Day 1: Super Excited
  • Day : 1.5 Grossed out… mad at mom…. hates the sight of blood…. still ate chicken that night for dinner!
  • Day 3 & 4 : Refuses to check Dino Chicken Mummy by himself and makes dramatic woah is me noises when it is mentioned!

In the meantime, I’ll be over here watching the Mummy with Brendan Fraiser because now I need to figure out how we’ll design a cardboard sarcophagus to put this thing in once we are finished!

  • September 15, 2020 - 4:05 pm

    Tom Mathias - I like my chicken salted, but not quite that much! Looks like Dino will be ready for Halloween dinner, LOLReplyCancel

    • September 29, 2020 - 8:19 pm

      brooketuckerphoto@gmail.com - HAHAH! We love chicken salad too! I think Dino will be ready for Halloween… He’s getting close!!!!ReplyCancel

  • September 30, 2020 - 2:14 pm

    Penny - I read this entire post to the family at dinner the other night. It inspired quite a conversation. My two home-schoolers were very impressed. We are on the lookout for updates!❤️ReplyCancel

    • February 8, 2021 - 6:27 pm

      brooketuckerphoto@gmail.com - Hahah! It’s a fun one but it takes time!ReplyCancel

adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography

It’s only been a few weeks but we have realized very quickly that what you think you need and what you actually need to homeschool are very different! At least this has been our experience so far! Here are a few things that have been helpful for us in these first few weeks:

  • BINDERS! Lots and lots of binders! (if you are like us and had to print your curriculum, you will need sturdy binders to hold all the papers.). We have also utilized page protectors, like the clear ones (you know what I’m talking about). I put EVERYTHING in there! I put any work Linc has done including any drawing he has made that might be relevant which is a lot because he usually draws while I read or instruct. A friend of mine who has homeschooled all 3 of their kiddos their whole lives told me to do this because it was great when it came to end of the year review.
  • A really great 3 hole punch! We have gone through 2 already… don’t ask! Mom fail!
  • AN AMAZING PLANNER: This maybe should be number 1 on the list. Organization is essential to homeschooling and planning your lessons. If you don’t have some sort of idea of what you’re going to teach and what materials you need, things will go haywire! Fail to plan… plan to fail. Here is the planner I ended up ordering and I ADORE IT…. https://wellplannedgal.com/. Her planner and tips are just so encouraging and amazing and I am telling you friends, she is getting me through this!
  • WHITE BOARDS! Ok so this is essential for us but I feel like honestly everyone could benefit! Our white boards are crucial for movement and focus. I’ve talked with several other homeschooling families out there and most of them with kiddos that have ADHD or need extra movement to focus swear by the whiteboard! We have a little one for Linc and then occasionally I will break out the wall chalk board if he really needs to move and stand on the stool. It allows them the ability to get their whole body involved in writing or working on an equation etc. We also use it for drawing when I have to read a passage or paragraph to him!
  • TIME TIMER: I found this on amazon when Linc was in Kinder to help him with transitions and classroom assignments. It has been one of the best little tools we have ever found and we use just about everywhere in our lives. I usually have one that I give to his classroom teachers just for the classroom and I keep one at home for us. We use it to help brush our teeth, we use it to help with screen time or before bedtime. It is just helpful in all kinds of ways. It’s absolutely helped Linc how to tell time as well. We use it specifically for homeschooling because we like to work in 20 minute blocks, especially for tasks that Linc is not a fan of (like phonics cards and sight word ladders). This way he can visually see how long he has worked and how much more he has to go. This also helps with the whining and complaining. The timer is bad guy, not mommy!
  • TATTOOS & JOLLLY RANCHERS: OK seriously don’t laugh because this is serious! Teacher’s have incentive jars or as I like to call positive reinforcement treats! Homeschool needs to have them as well. Not all of the curriculum is going to be fun and engaging. Some of it is just not fun. I mean I LOVE reading and I love language arts. My kiddo ,however, he does not. Reading is HARD for him and while he gets better at it every day and he shows more interest in it every day (proud mom moment) he would still rather be outside getting dirty and doing something that makes my anxiety triple. So… tattoos and jolly ranchers! We have a deal that when his language arts lesson calls for phonic cards, sight word ladders or spelling, if he can try his best and get through them without complaining, whining OR telling me ” I KNOOOWW MOM” (gosh I hate that phrase), then he can choose a jolly rancher or a tattoo, or both depending on the request when he finishes! Ya’ll… it works. Don’t knock it. I swear you’re going to see him on his bike outside and he’s going to be covered from head to toe in tattoos but he’ll be able to spell all his words! REVISION!! We just bought him legit full sleeve temporary tattoos! Now it is a fact that you will see my kid covered in tattoos because at the end of the week if he has made it all the way through the 5 days of lessons without complaining, he gets a SLEEVE! I can’t tell you how excited he is about this!
  • A DAY TO PREP & PLAN: I know this isn’t a tangible object but I swear by it. I give myself a block of time on Sunday’s to plan for the week ahead! If I don’t sit down with all the curriculum and my planner I feel scattered and lost! and usually I’m overwhelmed while I’m trying to teach. So I SCHEDULE time for myself. I list each subject out for each day, what lesson we are learning and what supplies we need. This way if we have an experiment or activity I can note if I need to prepare the night ahead. I can figure out what supplies are needed and make sure I have them on hand. I can see if some of the materials and lessons can be taught together. For example this week language arts and science both talked about shells in one lesson so they were perfect to combine. I know next week I need to have a chicken on hand and about 20 boxes of salt! It also helps if I need to switch some things around because regardless of the plan, something will always come up! I usually do this when the boys are gone and I can spread out and work in silence (with a cup of coffee!). Sometimes I work in my bedroom and spread out all over the bed. Sometimes I get the gift of a quiet house and can work at the coffee table and watch a show I love and have seen about a million times. Either way, it always involves a cup of coffee (or a coke) and about a million binders, and some kind of arts and crafts project I realize I need to complete before the upcoming week! Fail to plan… plan to fail!

Hope this helps you if you are starting to homeschool like it’s helped me. This is such a learning process as we keep diving in week after week!

This week was crazy for us! We had some ups and we had some downs…

AWESOME:

  • Linc still wanting and requesting to start school every morning without being asked!
  • Linc’s reading skills getting better and better each and every day!
  • We completed an entire book in 2 days!! BIG UPS for little man on that! I secretly celebrated that victory that night when I wrote it in my three things journal! That was a huge win for us!
  • Our science experiment win! This week I split up our lesson into two mini lessons so it was easier to digest. We did an experiment on intertidal zones and Linc was super hooked! We made a tide pool and the continental shelf and the pelagic zone and discussed what happened during low tide and how tide. Linc actually remembered all the zones and what happened. Then he wanted to play with it after for a good hour! WINNING!

AWKWARD

  • I had a horrible migraine the first few days of “school” this week so journaling at the end of the day did not get done. We also had to postpone school on Monday.
  • I feel like we are flying through the day and not working long enough. It feels like we aren’t quite doing “enough”. I’m still trying to figure out what is right if you know what I mean. How much should we supposed to be doing? What is the formula?
  • Some days it’s hard to separate mom from teacher and respect vs. I can let go and let it all out on mom because she is my safe person. We had an emotional night last night and that was hard. We are both trying to find our way through when it’s ok to push and when it’s ok to let things slide because we both need a break.
adventures in homeschooling by brooketucker photography