I'll post some more about our trip soon regarding Green Hour challenge.
Mostrando postagens com marcador Travelling. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Travelling. Mostrar todas as postagens
terça-feira, 11 de novembro de 2008
In the countryside
We went to visit some relatives in the countryside this weekend. My sister-in-law is the teacher of a tiny village school and I had the opportunity to visit the school again (we were there in December last year for the first time, I posted about that in here). They don't have any crafting supplies so I took some with me and we did some stars for Christmas.



Luana and Lucas came with us to the school as did their little cousin. She's only 4 but she usually follows her mother to school and is quite used to being there. There are less than 10 students between grades 1 and 4. I love to visit them as I get the warmest welcome. Apart from the crafting my sister-in-law allowed me to teach the weekly religious education. It was just like teaching my regular Sunday School class and I enjoyed that a lot too.
sexta-feira, 17 de outubro de 2008
Back at home
The five months in Finland were really good - I worked a lot and enjoyed what I did, the kids liked their nursery and learned lots of new things in Finnish. Although I often felt there wasn't enough of time for the kids I still think we managed to do many nice things together and I hope the kids have good memories of their Finnish summer.
Daddy had made such an effort here at home and it was so exciting to open the doors of the rooms in order to find out all the things he had done in each of them.
And now we're slowly getting into the everyday rhythm over here. The kids have been at school this week and they've enjoyed it. Lucas doesn't really speak any Portuguese although he understands most things. His teacher told me that he'd speak Finnish to everyone at school too although he knows people don't understand :) Luana didn't speak much upon arrival but she's really making an effort to speak Portuguese and it's getting more fluent every day. The kids still speak Finnish when they're together but I reckon that'll change with some time.
We've got two lovely puppies left at home. One is already reserved and there's one more to go. I keep telling the kids the puppies aren't ours to keep and they keep telling me they understand that. I bet it'll still be a sad day when the new owners come to pick them up... The big dogs remembered us right away and there haven't been any problems with them.
I'm really looking forward to our homeschooling afternoons, nature notebook, cooking together and Green Hour Challenge time. In fact Luana was already asking to go for a nature walk so we did that yesterday but I'll post about that separately. I'm still in the middle of organising things. There are some things still in the suitcases as I need to solve some serious storage issues first...
sexta-feira, 12 de setembro de 2008
Stockholm
The only real travelling this summer was our cruise to Stockholm (Wed-Fri). We travelled on board Silja Serenade.
Luana looking at Helsinki as we're leaving. It was bitterly cold on the deck but she was able to squeeze a smile on her face :)
First thing we did was to visit Junibacken, home to Astrid Lindgren's characters. It was a lovely place and the kids liked it a lot. We got to see two short theatre plays and although they were in Swedish the kids still found them interesting. This picture is of Pippi Longstocking.
Then we went to the Royal Palace and saw some of the fine rooms and halls inside. This picture is from the court yard.
Finally a walk in the old town. This is the old market square.
And one of the main shopping streets in the old town.
The cruise takes two nights and you get to spend the day in Stockholm. The boat is great with kids; ours loved the play area! We also had a really good buffet dinner and the kids surprised us by behaving really really well for almost two hours at dinner. They didn't even go crazy with the desserts and allowed us adults to carry on eating even when they had already finished their meals. I had some pencils and small notebooks for them to draw and that was enough to keep them busy until we all had finished our dinners.
The kids were very excited about the whole trip and that came out as tantrums and excessive whining for most of the time. We were trying to enjoy the trip but it was a bit hard at times with at least one of them strongly objecting to everything we suggested... Good memories all the same and the kids sure had a good time! :)





The cruise takes two nights and you get to spend the day in Stockholm. The boat is great with kids; ours loved the play area! We also had a really good buffet dinner and the kids surprised us by behaving really really well for almost two hours at dinner. They didn't even go crazy with the desserts and allowed us adults to carry on eating even when they had already finished their meals. I had some pencils and small notebooks for them to draw and that was enough to keep them busy until we all had finished our dinners.
The kids were very excited about the whole trip and that came out as tantrums and excessive whining for most of the time. We were trying to enjoy the trip but it was a bit hard at times with at least one of them strongly objecting to everything we suggested... Good memories all the same and the kids sure had a good time! :)
sábado, 26 de abril de 2008
Spring in Finland

The flights were ok, the kids slept reasonably well and generally enjoyed flying. It got very boring in São Paulo where we had a nine-hour-wait but the rest was good. Lucas got a bit fed up with all the sitting and apparently getting nowhere and "wanted to go home" towards the end of the travelling...
Yesterday we celebrated my sister's birthday and had a few people over. Today there'll be a big party in the church as the Spanish speaking group celebrates its 9th aniversary. I called one of the ladies yesterday and she told me there'll be loads of foods from different Latin American countries. I'll also get to meet all the dear people we used to congragate with when we lived here so I'm expecting a very special afternoon today at church.
Very happy to be here although we still think it's chilly :)
segunda-feira, 14 de abril de 2008
busy busy
The last couple of days have somehow been so hectic with us trying to organise the trip (very last minute) and hubby having to travel to Porto Velho (the state capital) in order to do the final medical consultations and hand in his documents for his new job. He's stressed about the flights (or rather about us not finding decent prices this close to departure) and I'm getting stressed about all the zillions of things I still need to get done before we leave.
I'm a list person so I made a few lists (what to do before we leave, what to take along, what to buy as gifts etc.). That helped and I divided the things to do between the days I still have left. There are just so many small things to do as always when you're about to travel.
I have a crafting mess in our room and I really need to get that organised before we go. I can't just let things lying around for five months... I think it'll be a good thing to organise the crafting supplies though as I'm sure I'll find many things I can send to my sister-in-law for her to use in the poor rural schools in the landless movement.
But now I'm just too tired to do anything like that. I stayed up far too late last night looking for flights for us so tonight it'll just be some ice-cream and telly for me and then to bed! I'm hoping to do something nice (like the next Green Hour challenge or some nice crafting) with the kids the next couple of days despite the travelling madness :)
I'm a list person so I made a few lists (what to do before we leave, what to take along, what to buy as gifts etc.). That helped and I divided the things to do between the days I still have left. There are just so many small things to do as always when you're about to travel.
I have a crafting mess in our room and I really need to get that organised before we go. I can't just let things lying around for five months... I think it'll be a good thing to organise the crafting supplies though as I'm sure I'll find many things I can send to my sister-in-law for her to use in the poor rural schools in the landless movement.
But now I'm just too tired to do anything like that. I stayed up far too late last night looking for flights for us so tonight it'll just be some ice-cream and telly for me and then to bed! I'm hoping to do something nice (like the next Green Hour challenge or some nice crafting) with the kids the next couple of days despite the travelling madness :)
sexta-feira, 11 de abril de 2008
Finland!!!
I just got a summer job in Finland for five months! Five! I'll start already in the beginning of May so we'll travel in a few weeks. I'll be a busy bee until then as I still have a few English courses I need to finish as well as some things to prepare for the trip.
Hubby is off to the travel agent to sort out our flights and I'm trying to get daycare organised for the kids. My mum will obviously help with the kids but I can't expect her to look after them 24/7.
I'm just so excited!!! So happy we'll be able to stay for a little longer. This allows me to go to a friend's wedding, see another friend's baby that is due in September and simply see all friends and relatives and do lots of nice things with the kids.
Hubby is off to the travel agent to sort out our flights and I'm trying to get daycare organised for the kids. My mum will obviously help with the kids but I can't expect her to look after them 24/7.
I'm just so excited!!! So happy we'll be able to stay for a little longer. This allows me to go to a friend's wedding, see another friend's baby that is due in September and simply see all friends and relatives and do lots of nice things with the kids.
terça-feira, 25 de dezembro de 2007
Pictures from the countryside

Here's some lace from the rainforest.
And some pretty leaves in the middle of all that green.
There are a few more photos in here.
sábado, 22 de dezembro de 2007
On the land of the landless
We spent Mon-Thu at my sister-in-law's in the landless movement's village called Lamarca. It took us some hours on a noisy but still somewhat comfortable bus to get there and the kids were really good during the trip. They slept half of the way and were really patient the rest of the time.
We were received by relatives (my two brothers-in-law also have houses there) and were immediately shown around the premises (ie my sister-in-law's tiny house and the garden). The boy wanted to go to the toilet and as we were getting out of there he looked at a man that had been cleaning the bushes behind the house and said: "that's my daddy." I laughed and explained that daddy had stayed at home. But as I looked up it really was "daddy". My husband had left the city at the same time with our bus and got there roughly an hour before us. They had dressed him with some old rags and he pretended to be a worker as we got there. What a great surprise!
I got to visit the tiny school where my sister-in-law is the teacher (and cleaner, principal, cook, secretary and anything else that might be needed). The kids are aged between 8 and 16 and most are on second or third grade. I showed them a book with loads of pictures of Finland and taught them how to make some Finnish Christmas decorations. Then they had the last Portuguese exam of the school year and as my sister-in-law was marking the exams she asked me to check their reading. Everyone picked a poem or a short story and read it to me. They were all able to read although some just about. There's a challenge for the teacher; kids come and go during the year, some have never gone to school before and she also has a special student who follows a customised study plan. The school is a small wooden house with earth floor and it rains inside quite often.
Otherwise we just stayed at home and let the kids enjoy the countryside. They mainly made mudcakes with their cousin, ran with the hens and played with the dog. At night everyone was really tired and literally passed out.
My sister-in-law also took me to visit some of the neighbours. It was really interesting to see the difference between people's houses. Some were really simple with earth floor, homemade wood burning stove and oven and little lanterns made with old tins. Then there were some houses that were painted and had a concrete floor. Some people had refrigerators that worked with gas or a generator, TVs (with 30 channels), stereos etc. My sister-in-law's family have a house somewhere between these two examples. They have a concrete floor, gas cooker and a small 12-volt-lamp that works with solar energy.
Lamarca was taken over some six years ago from the government. At first it was a camp (acampamento) where everyone lived together literally camping in small palm-leave huts. Later on the land was divided and now they're all settled (assentados) each with their own little house and plot of land. No one has any documents to prove land ownership but everything's considered more or less organised by now. Apparently it's a bit less complicated to invade government land than private lands.
My sister-in-law and her husband have now cut and burned half of the forests they have. On Wednesday they took me to the "forest" (that is now a huge area filled with burned and fallen trees) to look for some Brazil nuts. It was somehow weird as just next to us there was the green rainforest packed with life and we were walking in the middle of a destroyed piece of land. I somehow felt I was part of the destruction of the Amazon whether I wanted to or not. I guess it's enough that one lives over here to make one is a part of it.
I asked them a lot of questions about the land and the forests. They told me that legally they could cut and burn 20% of their forests but that's usually not enough for a small farm to survive. Now they're still able to do whatever they want with the land as there's no legal ownership. Even if someone came to check the use of land they couldn't prove that a certain person has cut too many trees as nothing is documented. There's also no control of the wood that is sold although legally it's prohibited to sell certain wood.
I just kept my mouth shut and didn't utter a single opinion on any matter. I just kept on asking. Then again, what could I have said; most of the people live there simply because they don't have anywhere else to go.
The trip was really interesting. It opened my eyes to yet another reality that I didn't know before. It also awoke loads of new questions to which answers might no even exist.
We were received by relatives (my two brothers-in-law also have houses there) and were immediately shown around the premises (ie my sister-in-law's tiny house and the garden). The boy wanted to go to the toilet and as we were getting out of there he looked at a man that had been cleaning the bushes behind the house and said: "that's my daddy." I laughed and explained that daddy had stayed at home. But as I looked up it really was "daddy". My husband had left the city at the same time with our bus and got there roughly an hour before us. They had dressed him with some old rags and he pretended to be a worker as we got there. What a great surprise!
I got to visit the tiny school where my sister-in-law is the teacher (and cleaner, principal, cook, secretary and anything else that might be needed). The kids are aged between 8 and 16 and most are on second or third grade. I showed them a book with loads of pictures of Finland and taught them how to make some Finnish Christmas decorations. Then they had the last Portuguese exam of the school year and as my sister-in-law was marking the exams she asked me to check their reading. Everyone picked a poem or a short story and read it to me. They were all able to read although some just about. There's a challenge for the teacher; kids come and go during the year, some have never gone to school before and she also has a special student who follows a customised study plan. The school is a small wooden house with earth floor and it rains inside quite often.
Otherwise we just stayed at home and let the kids enjoy the countryside. They mainly made mudcakes with their cousin, ran with the hens and played with the dog. At night everyone was really tired and literally passed out.
My sister-in-law also took me to visit some of the neighbours. It was really interesting to see the difference between people's houses. Some were really simple with earth floor, homemade wood burning stove and oven and little lanterns made with old tins. Then there were some houses that were painted and had a concrete floor. Some people had refrigerators that worked with gas or a generator, TVs (with 30 channels), stereos etc. My sister-in-law's family have a house somewhere between these two examples. They have a concrete floor, gas cooker and a small 12-volt-lamp that works with solar energy.
Lamarca was taken over some six years ago from the government. At first it was a camp (acampamento) where everyone lived together literally camping in small palm-leave huts. Later on the land was divided and now they're all settled (assentados) each with their own little house and plot of land. No one has any documents to prove land ownership but everything's considered more or less organised by now. Apparently it's a bit less complicated to invade government land than private lands.
My sister-in-law and her husband have now cut and burned half of the forests they have. On Wednesday they took me to the "forest" (that is now a huge area filled with burned and fallen trees) to look for some Brazil nuts. It was somehow weird as just next to us there was the green rainforest packed with life and we were walking in the middle of a destroyed piece of land. I somehow felt I was part of the destruction of the Amazon whether I wanted to or not. I guess it's enough that one lives over here to make one is a part of it.
I asked them a lot of questions about the land and the forests. They told me that legally they could cut and burn 20% of their forests but that's usually not enough for a small farm to survive. Now they're still able to do whatever they want with the land as there's no legal ownership. Even if someone came to check the use of land they couldn't prove that a certain person has cut too many trees as nothing is documented. There's also no control of the wood that is sold although legally it's prohibited to sell certain wood.
I just kept my mouth shut and didn't utter a single opinion on any matter. I just kept on asking. Then again, what could I have said; most of the people live there simply because they don't have anywhere else to go.
The trip was really interesting. It opened my eyes to yet another reality that I didn't know before. It also awoke loads of new questions to which answers might no even exist.
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