![]() VivaRoses Review & Giveaway By: Elizabeth D Unless you're Katniss Everdeen, you probably like roses. They're pretty, fragrant, unique and the colors are universally understood. And what's better than a few roses? A few dozen. That's what you get when you order from VIVAROSES. VIVAROSES is a company who has partnered with a farm in Cotopaxi, Ecuador. Why a farm located next to a volcano in Ecuador? Legend has it that a poor farmer vying the affection of a princess searched high and low until he found the perfect roses to win her hand in marriage. The website shares this story along with adorable other stories for the bouquets you can order. They carry bouquets of 24, 50 or 100 from $50-100. Shipping is even free! The only drawback is the lead-time required to get your order. Current orders have delivery dates beginning 7 days from now. VIVAROSES offers concierge type services, where you can schedule future deliveries for important dates or get an auto-shipment for a discount. There's even an incredible incentive program - for every referral you get 2 dozen roses for free. It works, I did it! ![]() I chose to send the Farmer's Choice to a friend. The packaging was a chic black and the interior was reminiscent of a Victoria's Secret bag. The roses were bundled per dozen and then carefully wrapped in 4's. The attention to detail was great but it generated a lot of (recylcable) waste. ![]() The roses were gorgeous and required minimal pruning. Of concern was the lack of food provided for so many flowers: only 1 package for 50 roses. This seemed to be an exception based on feedback from my other orders. After 5 days, the roses began to wither but they lasted up to 10 days with changing the water and adding sugar. This was fine since I needed my pitchers back - it's hard to find that many tall vases! Overall VIVAROSES is a unique concept for flower buying. If you're not in a hurry or are a decent planner, it's worth the wait. You're not likely to find a better deal than $1-2 per rose with free shipping. Plus Cape Cod Moms readers get 15% roses! GiveawayOne lucky Cape Cod Mom will receive four dozen roses of the winners choice. A $60 prize value. To enter all you have to do is comment on this blog post telling
us the following: Your favorite color roses? Who the roses would be for? And a tip for making roses last longer? Goodluck! This contest is open beginning 7/28/16-8/10/16 at 11:59pm EST. Contest is open to US Residents 18+. This contest is sponsored by VivaRoses and hosted by Mommies LLC. Winner will be chosen via random.org and contacted via the email provided. If winner does not respond within 24 hours then up to 3 other winners will be chosen.
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Whydah Pirate Museum Adventure By Molly It was a Sunday at around three in the afternoon that my family and I arrived at the Whydah Pirate Museum located on route 28 in W. Yarmouth (where the Zooquarium use to be). We found free parking in front of the museum and took a few pictures with the pirate statues outside the museum. When you enter the museum to you right is the admission desk and gift shop. For this post I was provided two complementary tickets for an unbiased review and my three year old son was free so we only paid for my five year old daughter who was $11.50 with a coupon. Admission is usually $18.50 for an adult, 4-18 years old are $14.50 and kids three and under are free if you buy tickets ahead you can save $3 using promo code treasure. The Whydah is a pirate ship that sank off the coast of Welfleet almost 300 years ago.
As you enter the exibit there is the Whydah bell and a very short video about the Whydah that plays about every five minutes. The next exhibit room has lots of artifacts on display from the Whydah plus history about those objects. There is also information about Sam Belemy the Pirate captain of Whydah. These artifacts include cannons, guns, coins, syringes, and gun powder. Then there is a replica of the Whydah Galley inside which are many artifacts, information about everyday pirate life and why people became pirates. After that you can see the treasure chest full of coins and you learn that no pirates really buried treasures and nor did they make treasure maps. Before learning about the persecutions and end of piracy you get to see what the artifacts look like when they are brought up from the wreck site and what goes into retrieving and preserving each item. Both my husband and I really enjoyed the whole museum and found all the information and displays interesting and informative. If my husband and I went alone two hours would be a good amount of time to allow. For the kids an hour and a half was plenty of time including a visit to the gift shop. The kids liked see all the artifacts quickly and move to the next thing as only a few of the exhibits are interactive. They did enjoy chatting with Chris (he is our neighbor and an archaeologist) and seeing some of the coins being removed from the concretion. Have you been to the new pirate museum? What's your take? Molly Hubner Usborne Books & More Independent Educational Consultant I am always looking for people to join my Usborne team, host parties (Facebook or home), or just share these wonderful books! For more information visit https://w4728.myubam.com or contact me at mollyhubner@gmail.com ![]() Working with Clay…No Guarantees Sandy Nickerson, Head of School Ok, full disclosure. When I was in college, I took a clay class. I worked very hard in that class. I just knew I could impress myself and my professor while I was at it. I wedged, slabbed, coiled, pinched, threw, and created all kinds of glaze concoctions. I spent hours perfecting each technique. And no matter what I did, how I did it, or how long I did it, the results were always the same oddly familiar shapes. Dare I call them vessels? I guess they were vessels, each with a unique likeness to my childhood mud pies. Needless to say, I achieved a ‘C’ in that course. I considered myself lucky…considering the hauntingly nostalgic repeated forms. About 25 years later, as an Art teacher at Bridgeview Montessori School, I very much wanted our school to have a kiln. I knew our art curriculum would not be complete without our students experiencing the process of bringing a clay piece to its completed glazed finish. The Bridgeview Parent Association jumped aboard and raised money to pay for a new kiln and the kiln shed. The goal was reached, and the kiln and shed were installed. At last, there I stood, a ‘C’ clay student in charge of the new clay curriculum. I took a deep breath and contacted Kim, a local potter, and a parent at our school and pleaded for her guidance. As a parent volunteer, she helped me choose the most appropriate clay and glaze to use with children. She reminded me of all the steps involved in bringing a clay piece to its finish. We started by offering an After School Clay Class that Kim helped me teach. At home, I studied my clay vocabulary words. Our clay adventure was underway, our students and their ‘C’ clay teacher were ready to explore, make mistakes, discover, make mistakes, and create three dimensional art pieces, some beautiful, some not. Each step in the process provided opportunity for great success and undeniable failure. Working hard did not factor into guaranteed successful outcomes. As the teacher, I could only guarantee the full process… celebrate the student successes and help students endure the failures, and continue on to the next work. Here’s the full process. Wedge your clay to make sure there are no air pockets. Build your piece and make sure all added pieces are scratched and slipped, being sure not to create any air pockets. Allow piece to dry until leather hard with no moisture left. Bisque fire. Glaze piece making sure to layer every glaze color at least three times. Glaze fire. Bring completed pieces home without breaking them. Air pockets will cause your piece, no matter how beautifully built, to explode in the kiln. Not scratching and slipping properly will cause your piece to break during the leather-drying phase. Little bits and pieces that managed to stay connected in drying may still fall off during the bisque firing. Failure to layer the glaze at least three times will lead to a “watery” layer of color that is bound to disappoint. I am sure we all understand the consequences of breaking clay pieces on the way home. As a teacher, the stressful part of teaching clay is that I cannot assure my hard working students that they will not make a fatal mistake along the way. I can’t see air pockets or incorrect scratching and slipping technique or that a leather hard piece won’t slip out of my hands and fall crashing to the floor. All I can do is be a good role model for picking myself up, dusting off, and trying again when something disastrous happens to my demonstration pieces. My students and I have worked and grown together. They have encouraged me through my trials, as I have encouraged them through theirs. I start each clay lesson with the words, “There are no guarantees.” Why all this trouble anyway? First of all, everyone should experience working three dimensionally. Most importantly, all learners need to experience the excitement of working hard even though they know from the start there will be no guaranteed success. Yet my belief is that the lesson is not as important as the attribute that can be gained… that attribute is true grit. Handling success is wonderful, but the real challenge is handling it when the going gets tough. I am proud that this ‘C’ clay student did not use her ‘C’ as an excuse to never teach clay. I am very proud of our clay students who continue to exclaim, ”Yeah, its clay time!” even though each of them has experienced disappointment while working with clay. I am equally proud of our cumulative successes and disappointments. Together, they have led to growth and grit. Oh, and those annoying mud pie forms previously mentioned, they are fewer and farther between. Phew! ![]() Bridgeview Montessori School 885 Sandwich Road P.O. Box 270 Sagamore, MA 02561 508-888-3567 www.bridgeviewschool.com info@bridgeviewschool.com Director of Admission: Suzanne Lawson at slawson@bridgeviewschool.com Serving ages 2.9 to 12 years, Bridgeview Montessori School, guided by the educational philosophy of Dr. Maria Montessori, provides a child-centered learning environment in which students develop a love of learning that will sustain them throughout their lives. Our goals include: the development of the whole child, emotionally, physically and intellectually; academic excellence gained through independent and critical thinking; inspired learning through creativity, courage, passion, personal responsibility and respect for self, others, and the world in which we live. We encourage our students to approach their work and their world with a sense of wonder, curiosity and the excitement of discovery. We value diversity and, above all, we value a compassionate and peaceful community. Bridgeview Montessori School awards upwards of $70,000 in need-based financial aid annually! Our school is allergen free. A wonderful small school for all kinds of learners. Getting Ready for Our Road Trip
By Molly Early Saturday morning my husband and I will be loading the three and five year old into the minivan and starting on our road trip to Pennsylvania. I have the novel snacks like goldfish in small bags, trail mix and granola bars plus squeezes packed with access from the front seats. The DVD players are charged and ready to go. Plus the brand new Usborne activity packs ready to go. I am very impressed with these activity packs I got Sticker Dolly Dressing Activity Pack which contains mini versions of Princesses, Fairies, Dolls and Ballerinas and Fairy Activity Pack which contains Fairy things to make and do, First coloring fairies, First sticker fairies and Lots of things to find and color in fairyland for my five year old daughter. For my three year old son I got Sticker Dolly Dressing Activity Pack which contains mini versions of Knights, Pirates, Soldiers and Sports and 1001 Pirate Things to Spot Sticker Book. Also hidden away is 100 to do on a Trip wipe clean cards just incase. Our first stop (other than a bathroom break) is the Crayola Experience in Easton, PA which is about a 4.5h drive without traffic. Hopefully the excitement of seeing the Crayola factory and making their own crayons will make the drive easier. We plan on spending about three hours at Crayola and then heading on to Lancaster, PA where we will be staying in an airbnb for two nights. Our second day in PA we will be staying locally in Lancaster as my husband and I have a 4pm wedding to attend. But during the day the kids are looking forward to our visit to Dutch Wonderland. The kids are excited about the Adventures of the Frog Prince show, Exploration Island - Where Dinosaurs Come to Life!, Duke’s Lagoon Water Play Area and trying out some rides. If you want to save on tickets click here! On Monday before heading back to Massachusetts we are going to Visit Sesame Place. We plan on getting there right when it opens and hope that the kids will sleep some of the 4.5h ride back home! The kids are looking forward to checking out Cookie’s Monster Land and Elmo’s World. Be on the lookout in the coming weeks for my reviews on The Crayola Experience, Dutch Wonderland and Sesame Place! What are your tips to surviving long drives with your kids? Molly Hubner Usborne Books & More Independent Educational Consultant I am always looking for people to join my Usborne team, host parties (Facebook or home), or just share these wonderful books! For more information visit https://w4728.myubam.com or contact me at mollyhubner@gmail.com ![]() Cape Cod Moms Advisor, Gary DellaPosta, CPA is pleased to announce Jacquelyn Grinnell as the winner of the 2016 Gary DellaPosta, CPA Business Scholarship for $1,000. Jacquelyn is a local 2014 Falmouth High School graduate who has excelled in her studies at University of New Hampshire while majoring in Business Administration Accounting and Marketing. She has received excellent grades in her accounting classes, has earned high honors twice and currently holds a cumulative GPA of 3.58. Jacquelyn is a first generation college student in her family attending the University of New Hampshire. Her parents Robert & Nanette both work within our community and her younger brother, Robert attends Lawrence Jr. High School. She has grown up learning that nothing is handed to you in the real world and that one must work hard for what you want in life. As a result she has paid her own way through college working full time as a manager in the summer in Falmouth at Jimmy’s of Woods Hole and the Surf Drive Snack Bar. She is a valued employee who is trusted to help operate the business responsibly and takes ownership of her job. She also works at the Dimond Library at the college during the school year. In addition to working and going to school, Jacquelyn also volunteers at a therapeutic art club. Jacquelyn has demonstrated passion and dedication to her studies, her job, her family and to our community. It is because of her strong work ethic and devotion to her all these that proves just how far in life this young woman will go. She is a true asset to our community and we are extremely pleased to offer her this opportunity to help her finish her college education. Congratulations Jacquelyn! Keeping Kids Occupied By Molly Trying to get work done as a stay at home mom in the summer is not an easy task. As many of you may know back in November I became an independent consultant with Usborne Books & More and now I am a Team Leader as well as an Educational Consultant. Up until the end of June I could usually get 30 minutes of uninterrupted work done while my 5 year was at school and my three year old played or if necessary watched a video and then get my other stuff done here and there. But now that my daughter is home I don’t have a chunk of uninterrupted time so I feel like I only start things and never finish them leaving even more work to be done. With new book titles being released July first (Wahoo) I need to find time to book some New Title Parties and keep business rolling plus plan for the Fall when both kids will be in school! Enter Busy Bags… I was first introduced to the concept of busy bags (or boxes) when I was expecting my second child and was looking for things my daughter then 22 months could do while I was nursing the baby. Busy Bags are great because they can be tailored for different ages and easily store and pull out when you need them. When my kids were younger I participated in and organized Busy Bag and craft exchanges which is a great way to get lots of busy bags or crafts while only having to make X number of the same thing yourself: it is also more cost effective. Pinterest is a great source of busy bag ideas (find me on Pinterest Molly Hubner). Some of my favorite Busy Bags I have made (will include pictures below) are Build a Cupcake, Decorate a Gingerbread Man, Feed the Tennis Ball, Paint Strip cutting (no picture), Sorting Puffballs, Make Your Own Puzzle, Card Making, for older kids fuse bead sort and making and if you have some time on your hands an Alphabet Box (check out Pinterest for this). If you are looking for quick busy bags to make get 8 big ziplocks in one bag put paper fold in half and crayons, in the second stamps (self inking is best) and paper, third beads and string, fourth stickers and envelopes, fifth a coloring book and “special markers”, sixth bag order Generic Men People Minifigures Toy (I got mine at Amazon) and have the kids assemble them then play with them 7th bag buy cheap kids bandaids and print out pictures of your child's favorite characters and the 8th bag a set of wipe clean cards on a ring or an Activity Pack.
Now when I am trying to finish a task or project I don’t have to stop everything to set up a project or activity I can just have the kids go grab a bag of their choice and have them work on it. Now does this work every time no but at least it gets me a little more time some of the time... Do you have a favorite busy bag? How do you get work done while the kids are around? Molly Hubner Usborne Books & More Independent Educational Consultant I am always looking for people to join my Usborne team, host parties (Facebook or home), or just share these wonderful books! For more information visit my website or contact me at mollyhubner@gmail.com. Plus follow me on Instagram www.instagram.com/mollyhubnersusbornebooks/ ![]() Scholastic Summer Reading Tour Aims To Engage Young Readers By: Amy Cape Cod Moms was recently offered an opportunity to visit one of the local legs of a summer reading tour that visited Cape Cod. The goal of the tour is to make reading come alive. Today with the current technology, publishers, authors, illustrators must compete and find new ways to make reading fun and engaging. And engaging literacy activities is what we found at the Scholastic Summer Reading Book Tour that visited Eight Cousins. This was a first year project for Scholastic and their two RV’s visited over 25 cities across the United States. Lucky for us, they chose Cape Cod as one of their destination points. There were opportunities for interviews and autographs with local New England authors which was such a treat for the kids to meet the faces behind some of their favorite books and stories! There was also some character meet and greets with Clifford the Big Red Dog and Geronimo Stilton, both of which were a hit with the kids, a prize wheel and an animated photo station with options of Clifford or Slappy from Goosebumps. There were also fun games and tables with face painting, baked goods, reading contracts for cash, and an interactive Star Wars fingerprint center which they allowed kids to try to make their own Yoda. I thought this was a great way of having kids interact with literacy type activities and getting them excited about reading instead of a Pokemon game ;-) ![]() We were invited to come on board the RV and chat a little more about the Book Tour. Inside the RV we were given the opportunity to scope out the table which the authors on the tour had signed along the way. Check out some of these names! Can you match authors with their popular books? ![]() I bet most of our moms can pick out one particular author’s signature who was a blast from the past from our childhood. Having grown up reading the many of the Goosebumps stories I was more than excited to have a chance to pose with Slappy! Overall we thought the Scholastic Summer Reading Tour was a fantastic way to encourage more reading and literacy activities in a day and age where authors are now competing against the constant onslaught of technology which gives instant gratification. I hope they continue with this tour every year and are able to reach more kids and families across the country to encourage reading and demonstrate just how important and engaging literacy really is. I also love how the local bookstores along the tour are getting involved with this and hope to see more engaging activities like this for our community in the future! I’m A Dirty Dinosaur by Janeen Brian and illustrated by Ann James is an exciting book about a little dinosaur getting all dirty (then clean at the very end). The rhyming and repetitive text make it a great book to read over and over with young children. Plus the illustration that were made using really mud are great fun. Materials:
Activity One: Read I’m a Dirty Dinosaur. Reread leave words out and ask child to fill them in. Have you child retell the story. Ask your child favorite part and why. Activity Two: Make Playdough with your child. Have them measure and stir ingredients. Talk about how to make brown. Play dough recipe: 1 c. flour, ½ c. salt, 2 t. cream of tartar, 2 T. vegetable oil, 1 c. water, food coloring (to make brown mix red, blue and yellow in a 1:1:10 ratio) 1. Combine flour, salt, and cream of tartar and mix well. 2. Add food coloring to the water and oil, and combine with dry ingredients. 3. Stir over medium heat several minutes until it forms a ball. 4. Let cool in a bowl. 5. Knead until smooth. 6. Store in an airtight container. Activity Three: Let child play with the playdough with cookie cutters or dinosaur toys. Activity Four: Trace fun shapes on compressed sponges and cut them out. Fill dish pan with water ask the child what they think will happen when sponges go in the water then let them put them in the water and see. Activity Five: Put dirt in dish pan with dinosaur toys and let child play. Activity Six: Have child wash dinosaurs with shaped sponges Activity Seven: Use shaped sponges and finger paint to sponge paint on paper or dinosaur pictures. Variation finger paint the dinosaur picture with brown paint Activity Eight: You or child cut out capital D outline and find and cut out d pictures out of magazines or catalogs. Glue the d pictures on the D. Activity Nine: Label the 10 dinosaur picture with numeral 1-10 (or for younger kids dot to represent 1-10) then have child place that many counters on each picture. For more activty ideas checkout this link http://www.friends.kanemiller.com/uploads/1/3/0/7/13072337/pa_dirty_dino.pdf
Molly Hubner Usborne Books & More Independent Educational Consultant I am always looking for people to join my Usborne team, host parties (Facebook or home), or just share these wonderful books! For more information visit my website or contact me at mollyhubner@gmail.com. Plus follow me on Instagram www.instagram.com/mollyhubnersusbornebooks/ **CALLING ALL DRAMA QUEENS AND KINGS**
They have 2 spots left in Me's CIRCUS DRAMA CAMP in Mashpee July 11-15! Ideal for ages 5-10. A wonderful, productive way to spend the mornings from 9am-Noon, with a fun show on the last day! JOIN US for a week of dramatic fun! |
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