Our Latest Field Trip

Last week, my friends and I decided that it was time to end our winter home school hibernation and take a field trip. Maybe some of you aren’t familiar with what home school hibernation is. This is the time between January and March when we don’t have any extra curricular activities going on in our lives, so we hunker down at home and work really hard on our school books. We catch up on anything that we might have been behind on and sometimes even get ahead on some subjects.

Anyway, we’d all had enough of the hermit life and we decided to make our first field trip of the spring a really big one. No, I mean REALLY BIG. Like, 620 miles in less than 48 hours big. It was a total blast.

I had done some searching online, and found out that Luray Caverns had a home school week in March. The prices were phenomenal, so we decided to start our trip off there. We met up with our friends at 5:15 on the morning of March 19th, and we packed into two vans and made our way west toward the caverns.

We made one stop for fuel and handing out breakfast along the way, and then our motley crew arrived at Luray at 9:00. There was just enough time for a bathroom break and to pay for our tickets before going on the first tour of the day. I should probably mention that our kid to adult ratio on this trip was 19:4…

The caverns were amazing! Some of the kids had never been in a real cave before, so it was fun to see their reactions to all the different structures down there. My favorite was probably the reflecting pool!


After the caverns, we visited some of the other museums on the property.
The Car & Carriage Caravan Museum, Luray Valley Museum, and Toy Town Junction were all included with our tickets. Toy Town Junction is a museum for vintage toys and I saw a lot of the stuff from my childhood there. Not sure how I felt about that!

I still have this Mandie doll!

We had a picnic lunch and let the kids run around a bit before loading them up for the next leg of our journey. The view was absolutely breath taking with all the mountains surrounding us!

All of us had been studying the Civil War era, so our next two stops would be focusing on events that took place during that time.

Booker T Washington was freed from slavery at the end of the Civil War when he was 9 years old. We visited the Booker T Washington Monument National Park where he was born and worked with his family. After watching a short film about his life we got to tour the farm and go inside a replica of the cabin that Booker and his family lived in. We found out that the ranger that helped us there went to Tuskegee Institute which is the school that Booker founded. That was pretty cool. Our time there ended with a short hike, because we always hike, wherever we go!

By this point, we had really packed a lot into our first day, so we stopped for some dinner and then crashed at our hotel for the night. I may or may not have been in bed by 8:00!

After resting up, we all met for breakfast in the hotel lobby. I don’t think the staff knew what hit them. The waffle maker was on over-load and I think they almost ran out of milk. Despite the breakfast madness, we were packed back up and on the road by 8:30.

In keeping with our Civil War studies, we visited Appomattox Courthouse National Park. This is where Lee surrendered to Grant and the Civil War was officially ended. We spent a great deal of time in the visitor center. The park rangers gave each of the kids a junior park ranger book, and they all worked really hard to find all the information needed to complete the activities inside.

If you’ve never gotten a junior park ranger book which is available at most national parks, you should really try it! It gives the kids a chance to be interactive in their visits and makes learning a lot more fun for them. When they’re done, they get a park ranger badge from that specific park.

We got to piggy back on the tour of another school group that was at the McLean House where the terms of surrender were drawn up. This meant that we got to hear the ranger talk that was given. The rangers did a great job explaining what happened there!

The McLean House

The ranger talk

After another picnic lunch, we surprised the kids by taking them to Dairy Queen for a free cone because it was the first day of spring! This has been a tradition for a few years, and we weren’t going to break tradition just because we were on a field trip! Shout out to Appomattox Dairy Queen for handling our crew like champs!

We were really close to Appomattox-Buckingham State Forest, so before heading home, we stopped and took an hour long hike on one of the trails there. As I said before, it’s not a field trip unless we take a hike!

We were about five hours from home at this point, so we set our GPS for the nearest Rita’s Italian Ice and took off towards home. First day of Spring = free Rita’s, so we planned our dinner time around our dessert! Traditions must not be broken! The closest one was 82 miles away in Fredericksburg, which was perfect timing for dinner and a snack before ending our trip.

Free Rita’s

This was an awesome field trip and an awesome group to hang with. Not everyone can hang with crazy, but this crew definitely can! I am so blessed to have friends like these.

Sibling Rivalry – Stop it or Let it Go?

If you’re a parent of more than one, how often do you find yourself breaking up fights between your kids? Or maybe you don’t actually break them up, you are just constantly dropping phrases such as, “Stop hitting each other”, “Give back the toy”, “Don’t call names” or maybe, “I told you to stop arguing”!

When siblings have a conflict, it’s like a parent alarm goes off in in our heads. Quick! Make it stop! Hurry! End it before someone gets hurt! Why do we do this? Our kids are just relating to each other, and like all normal relationships, there will be conflicts.

Everyone knows that sibling rivalry is as old as time. Look at Cain and Abel. Sheesh! That was some intense rivalry on Cain’s part! Or how about Jacob and Esau? First, Jacob stole his brother’s birthright and then he tricked their dad into giving him Esau’s blessing too! After that, Jacob had to run for his life, because Esau threatened to kill him. There’s also Joseph and his multitude of brothers that threw him in an old well and then sold him to a slave trader because they found him annoying. So, if fighting among siblings has been around for so long, should we continue playing referee or should we just ignore them and toss it up to being just a “normal” part of raising kids?

While no one wants a house full of chaos and constant bickering can be tiresome, I think that constantly breaking up squabbles between your kids can keep them from learning some important life skills. As they learn to deal with the reality of differences and conflicts, kids can be developing skills such as negotiation, compromise and valuing another person’s opinion. They can also begin learning how to stand their own ground while defending their point of view on a matter. Of course, they may need our help in learning to do that without physically harming the other person!

In my house, my two youngest are 6 and 8 year old boys. Their siblings are all teenagers and adults, and they pick up on every, single, dad-blasted, sarcastic or snarky comment that is said in our house. It’s not uncommon to hear them say things that would normally come out of a teenager’s mouth. In fact, just the other day, my 6 year old had a “roast battle” with his 16 year old brother. If you’re not familiar with this, allow me to give you a sample of their battle of words! It went something like this:

16 – Your ears are fat!

6 – You smell like cheese!

16- Your bangs have split ends!

6 – You have hair on your face! Oooh burn!

This was all in fun, at the dinner table, with their dad in tears because he was laughing so hard. It was also only a small portion of the “insults” hurled back and forth. The battle probably lasted a full ten minutes. So, why didn’t we stop them from saying things like this to each other? What’s going to stop them from saying these things in anger later on?

Let me answer that question with one of my own. What would you rather have your child do when they come upon a real life situation where someone says something mean to them – curl up in the fetal position and cry because someone insulted them, or be able to laugh it off and possibly diffuse the situation with a witty come back?

My youngest used to get really upset when one of his older siblings would tease him or say something he didn’t like. Instead of badgering the other kids to stop teasing, we taught him early on, that he simply cannot get angry at this and that the best way to work through it is to throw it right back at them with a comment of his own that will probably make them laugh. He’s gotten pretty good at this!

Our homes are the training ground for real life that will one day smack our kids right in the face and knock them down if we haven’t prepared them for what it will probably be like. Real life deals with real people, and real people aren’t always nice. That doesn’t mean that we should not be teaching our kids to walk in kindness and humility towards others, but they also don’t need to let others walk all over them. This is why we don’t stop every single altercation that comes up between our kids.

Instead of making our kids stop fighting with each other, I think that encouraging them to find a way to solve their differences without our interference is a much healthier approach. Taking these moments and making them teachable is actually modeling the way Jesus did things. He often repeated Himself over and over again, but, unlike us, it wasn’t with short commands desperately flung at our children. Jesus sat down and talked with people. He talked over and over again about loving God and loving people. Jesus said what needed to be said, but not in exasperated harsh orders. He spoke in calm, quiet and loving repetition. He was repetitious in His stories because we humans are slow to catch on. 

I’m not saying that we should never interfere in our kids’ rivalry with each other. There is definitely a time and a place to stop an argument or break up a fight, and our kids surely need to learn how to behave out in public. We just need to know where to draw the line between when to discipline and when to just let them work it out themselves.

Sometimes, though, words aren’t enough for our kids. We often find ourselves dealing with the same issues that we dealt with yesterday, and the day before that, and the day before that. We get tired of repeating the same thing over and over again to little ears that just don’t seem to get it. Instead of trying to change our kids ways just with words, we need to teach by example and we need to pray for our kids. Words simply won’t change our kids’ hearts, but God can.

So, keep correcting in love, but more than you speak, keep modeling humility and calmness. Model humility by not being too proud to apologize to your kids and asking for forgiveness when you lose your cool. Don’t just teach them to apologize to each other; teach them the importance of forgiving the other person as well. Teach them to find alternate ways to solve their differences instead of arguing. Above all, teach them to love like Jesus loves.