June 2008


I was too ambitious. I decided to homeschool Niccolo during the summer, in preparation for the start of (semi)real schooling in September. My chief aim is to help him learn to stay still for longer than half a nanosecond, but should he pick up something else along the road, I certainly wouldn’t mind.

After much pondering I opted for a literature-based homeschool programme because Nicco really loves being read to. I based it loosely on Sonlight because I like their choice of books. And indeed stuff like Milly Molly Mandy has been a great hit. But, overbearing mum that I am, I opted for replacing some of their recommended books—which Nicco had already read or which he no longer enjoys because he finds them a bit basic—with classic, picture-less stories. My idea was to help him concentrate on the story itself as a first step towards reading chapter books. Well, it turns out it was a BAD idea.

I read about two of these stories to him, which I printed out from Project Gutenberg, before he made it clear that he wanted “a story from a book.” Upon further investigation, it turned out that he didn’t object to the stash of loose paper I was reading from, but to the lack of pictures on said papers. So I backpedalled quickly (for fear of putting him off reading altogether) and we are back to illustration galore. I never learned the concept of age appropriateness faster than in the last few days.

That said,  there are a couple of knights stories that I printed out which I think he would really enjoy. So my next project is to find suitable images to illustrate them—something like this knight from Karen’s Whimsy.

If I find the time, that is. Because just now I am knee-deep in another project: setting up the scene for Nicco’s birthday party on Saturday. More to come as I struggle to turn my in-laws garden into a medieval tilting yard….

Phew! My schedule is getting even more crazy now that Niccolo is off nursery school. good thing we are about to decamp to the seaside where the nonni can help take care of him and Caterina. Or maybe not—I have just remembered that there will be two more preschoolers (my nephews) with us during the week, and said preschoolers plus another baby (my niece) at the weekend. So my life may well end up being even more hectic.

This sustained craziness obviously means I have little time to do anything beyond work and childcare (unless you include working with Nicco on some crafts—we are in the midst of making a tree-shaped seasons booklet).  I did, however, find enough time to take a few pictures of our family’s eyes, which prove beyond doubt that Nicco has my eyes through and through and Caterina hasher father’s eyes. I had obviously noticed this, but seeing the similarity in picture is shocking. You can barely tell my eye from Nicco’s (OK, mine is the one with the wrinkles around it).

Nicco’s eyes
Nicco’s eye

My eye
My eye

Manfredi’s eyes
Manfredi’s eye


Caterina’s eyes
Caterina’s eye

I can’t believe how crazy the last ten days have been. Lots of work, nursery school singalongs, birthday parties and playground jaunts meant that I had no time to update the site, let alone put together a collage, digital or otherwise. But my friend Leslie—who is even busier than me with writing and childcare but manages to work some friendship magic anyway—has made one for me. It came unexpected on a week when I know she is really pushed for time, and is much much appreciated. Thank you Leslie (and yes, I’ll post the nursery school singalong video soon, I promise!).

Leslie’s collage
Leslie is the best

Long white hair rippling down his back, a knight in full Templar regalia stops to peruse the goods at the weaver’s stall, unmindful of the drizzle that wets the sword at his side. A lady in flowing green robe—her blond hair pulled up in a soft chignon under a gleaming tiara—glides past him, while a young boy in a green and red tunic gapes at them in a slightly undignified manner (for a page).

It is the last Sunday of the medieval fair in Pavone Canavese, and the whole village dresses up for the part. Every nook and cranny houses a craftsman carving wood, making candles or weaving wool. Stalls sell helms, swords and charms. Taverns throw open their cellars, where they serve meat cooked over an open fire (although they do give you forks, in a slight departure from period authenticity). A juggler works miracles with balls and scimitars, falconers fly their birds and a minstrel sings.

Knights milling about
Knights milling about before the tourney

Papa gets his just deserts
Papa gets what he deserves

Assessing the wares
Nicco assesses the wares at the market

with the falconer
With a falconer

But best of all—at least as far as Niccolo was concerned—is the jousting ground, where knights prove their prowess in a tournament. Two tournaments actually—the Italian historic duel championship, and the international one. Sitting on Manfredi’s shoulders, Niccolo soaked it all up, and occasionally waved his wooden sword to take part in the action (coming perilously close to chopping off his father’s ear).

Watching the tourney
Watching the tourney

I was seated a bit further back on the butcher’s bench feeding Caterina—the young blue-eyed lady offered me a place to seat when she saw me fiddling with bottle and baby—and only heard the clang of the knights’ swords, slow and measured at first, then fast and furious as the pace changed. I am happy to report that the clangor of swordplay doesn’t spoil Caterina’s appetite (after all, it is far less noisy than the building works we are forced to endure at home).

Caterina enjoys the tourney
Caterina enjoys the tourney

Indeed, it was alse less noisy than Nicco’s laughter when he tried his hand at the medieval games in the games court. He was pretty good at the period equivalent of skittles, failed miserably at fish the bottle, and loved firing a mini crossbow against a knight-shaped target. But his favourite game was rolling a ball along two poles then opening the poles up in time for the ball to drop into a bowl. It was devilishly difficult, and he succeeded—which is probably why he liked it so much.

Playing skittles
Playing skittles

My little crossbowman
My little crossbowman

A novel ball game
A novel ball game

It was reat fun, but my favourite bit was bedtime, when Nicco, perhaps inspired by all the valiant action he saw during the day, came up with a story about a dragon.

“One upon a time there was a baby dragon. One day, some bigger dragons came. They were big and fast and hurt his family. And so the baby dragon blew out fire, and made a wall of fire and sent the bigger dragons away.”

It’s short and simple, but I love that he came up with it all by himself and told it to me at bedtime.

Off to the Alps but before I go, here is my entry for the red challenge…Nicco’s collection of ‘pebbles’ on a red background.

Stones on red
Stones against a red background

I have a confession to make. Summer puts me in a staggeringly foul mood. The weather is too hot, mosquitoes are out in droves, and beach life—which I had to endure every single day of every single summer when I was a child—is incommensurably boring.

Living in London, where there is no beach (unless you count the Ruislip Lido) and you can always rely on a generous downpour to cool the air and send mosquitoes packing had gone a long way towards reconciling me to the season.

However, things reverted to default three years ago when we started spending most of June and July by the seaside in Italy. I usually start getting cross in early June and only snap out of it after mid-September.

Thankfully, my friend Leslie came to the rescue last year when she came up with the idea of having a summer of fun—journeys, trips, excursions and dinner parties to fill the long hot days. Her ‘recipe’ helped make last summer a lot more bearable, so I am taking her up on it again this year (even though she hasn’t officially launched the summer of fun 2008 campaign—possibly because summer hasn’t yet started).

The plan is to cram as many jaunts, activities, crafts and interesting things to do every day between now and September that I won’t physically have time to get in a bad mood (or go to the beach, which is one and the same).

Captain at the helm
Captain at the helm


First boating trip ever
Caterina’s first boat trip

We have already started—last Friday, we all went to Sardinia for my mother’s birthday and enjoyed a long weekend of countryside walks, boating and bouncy castle action. Now we are getting ready to go to a small Alpine hamlet for a medieval style fair complete with knights’ joust. I am also planning a trip to Eurodisney (another Leslie-induced idea), and excursions to Hever castle, Legoland and Leeds castle.

Looking for enemies among the bushes

Looking for enemies among the bushes

FUn among the balls
Playground fun

Ohhhh
Marvelling at everything

But there are so many more days ahead that I need more ideas, preferably of stuff to do while at the seaside or at home. So if anyone has any brilliant summer plans to share with me, please shout!

I really saw red today, after queueing up for half an hour under the pouring rain to get Caterina her passport—only to be told that the office where we had been directed was the wrong one. So I will have to do it all over again tomorrow, dragging poor Caterina with me to yet another office (because they “have to see her”). It is the second time we fail to get the passport application done thanks to misleading official information, so I was a bit put out.

Since I was seeing red anyway, I started snapping red pictures for the challenge as soon as I got home. The pictures aren’t much to look at—I have a problem with composition in photos that I don’t seem to have when papercrafting—but at least my mood improved considerably!

Red ephemera for red challenge
Ephemera in red

Day two of the I Saw Red challenge and it is starting to work! I am actively looking around for patches of red, and starting to think how I could use them in my crafting. Good.

What struck me the most today is how drops of rain pooled and shone against the red petals of the geraniums (or are they pelargoniums? I always get confused) in my window boxes. It was a splash of colour against a plumbeous sky.

Red flowers in the rain for red challenge
Raindrops on red

Sara Duckett of Sadie Olive designs is running a fun I Saw Red challenge this week—post a photograph with something red in it as many times as you can (thanks to Artsymama for pointing me in Sara’s direction). Now I have never had much use for red. Truth be told, I don’t much like it—it is too bold, too bright, too much. So this sounds like a great way to stretch myself and broaden my colour palette. My first entry for the challenge is, predictably, a picture of Nicco (who loves red and has plenty of red clothes).

Nicco among the shrubs
Nicco among the shrubs in Sardinia

I rather like how his red t-shirt stands out among the ochre and dull green of the Mediterranean scrubland around him…

Her story reads like a sad romance novel. Pia was the beauty of the family, the prettiest of my great aunts. In the late Thirties, she got engaged to an aeroplane pilot, but the Second World War put paid to her dreams. Her fiance was killed in action. She became one of the many widows before marriage.

Although Pia was still very young at the time, she never married. Whether she didn’t find anyone else, or didn’t even look, I don’t know. She died when I was still relatively small so my childhood memories of her are sketchy—I remember an old but cheerful spinster who was very much part of her wider family’s life.

Back then, I didn’t know about the death that had changed her life. But ever since I found out, I have wanted to tell her story, to make sure it is not forgotten. The Theme Thursday challenge gave me the excuse. So here is Pia before the war, stars in her big brown eyes, a hint of a smile playing on her lips. Beautiful, happy, and blissfully ignorant of the tragedy that time was about to bring.

ATC collage for Theme Thursday challenge
Pia in the mid-1930s