Yearly Archives: 2012

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

imagesJanuary 1~New Year’s Day –

The first day of the New Year is a federal holiday. For
many people, January first also means making a New Year’s resolution. The most
common being to lose weight/get in shape, stop smoking and get organized. Think about yours and how  you plan to achieve it!
In some communities families visit each other for New Year’s Day brunch and lots
of watching football bowl games. There are five “bowl” games today, including
the Outback Bowl in Tampa Florida, The Rose Bowl in Pasadena California and
the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans, Louisiana.

To learn about football visit http://aupairinamerica.com/resources/life_in_the_us/football.asp

Learn to say Happy New year in these languages heard in our clusters

* Chinese (Cantonese) – Sun nien fai lok
* Chinese (Mandarin) – Xin nian yu kuai
* Danish – Godt Nytår
* Dutch – Gelukkig nieuwjaar
* French – Bonne année
* Gaelic – Aith-bhliain Fe Nhaise Dhuit
* German – Gutes Neues Jahr
* Hebrew – Shanah tovah
* Italian – Buon Capo d’Anno
* Norwegian – Godt Nyttår
* Polish – Szczesliwego Nowego roku
* Portuguese – Feliz ano novo
* Romanian – La Multi Ani
* Russian – S Novym Godom
* Spanish – Feliz Año Nuevo
* Swedish – Gott Nytt År
* Turkish – Yeni Yiliniz Kutlu Olsun
* Welsh – Blwyddyn Newydd Dda

Rainy days activities

The forecast for our area this week is mainly rain,but this will not stop our au pairs from having fun with their kids.

Here are some fun ideas to try out and make the best out of a rainy day:

Listen to Music and Dance Day
Don’t let the rain or snow stop you from being active. Put on a lively tape and dance
around the house today. Show the children some traditional dance moves from your
country!

Tea Party Day
Mix up some warm cocoa or milk and invite the dolls or stuffed animals for a tea party

Art Day
Make today an art day – try drawing, painting, creating with glue or clay.

Make a necklace today– use a licorice “shoelace” (the really long thin ones) and cereal
for young children and then they can eat the whole thing. For something less sticky, use
string instead of the licorice.

Puzzle Day

Do a puzzle or make one of your own. Find a fun picture in a magazine and glue it to
lightweight cardboard. Cut into shapes.

Make a Pie

Pies are popular every day and are easy to make if you buy a prepared crust in the freezer
or dairy section of the grocery store. Try this easy recipe;
Chocolate Pie
Purchase pre-made pie shell and Jell-O instant chocolate pudding. Prepare pie shell per
directions. Let cool. Prepare pudding, pour into pie shell, let set for an hour and voila!
Dessert is served!

Pet Rocks

Make an imaginative pet using a smooth stone. Draw a face with marker or paint.
Decorate with feathers, sequins, yarn, buttons, or whatever else you can find.

Have a pretend day at the beach
Put on swimsuits and relax on beach towels. Pretend you can hear the ocean!

Stamping
Rubber stamps and stamp pads are fun, but for a change try sponge and some kitchen
utensils or cut shapes into a potato, apple, or orange. You could even let the child dip his
or her hand into some water-based paint to make great pictures.

Indoor Gardening

Children love to watch things grow! Take a root vegetable (potato, carrot, turnip or
beet) and cut off the top 1-2 centimeters. Hollow out the inside. Tie a string around the
vegetable and fill it with water. Hang it in a window and watch what happens! Don’t
forget to add water as needed.

Make your own snowstorm

Find a clear glass jar, any size, with a tight fitting lid and no label. Cut a piece of
aluminum foil into teeny, tiny pieces. The easiest way is to first cut strips then cut across
the strips into little pieces. The smaller the pieces, the more it will look like real snow. It
takes a lot of flakes (and patience) to make a good snowfall.
Don’t stop until you have enough to at least completely cover the bottom of the jar. Cut a
small evergreen branch for your tree. Fill the jar with water, add the tree and one drop of
dishwashing liquid and put the lid on. Turn the jar over, give it a shake and put it down
right side up. Watch the snow fall!

Treasure Hunt!

Pretend you are all on a desert island looking for treasure. Make a map or place clues
around the house leading the children through the hunt. This can be done with pictures
for non-readers – draw a picture of the television, then at the television place a picture of
the stove. At the stove place a picture of a bed, and so on to the end. The “treasure” can
be a treat to eat, or a new game to play. Read books about pirates to add to the fun.

Build a playhouse today

Find a box from a large appliance and turn it into a playhouse to use indoors. Cut
windows and a door. Furnish it and decorate it as you wish.

Make a fort today
Use blankets and couch cushions to make a fort and play inside. Don’t forge to put
everything away!

Make a picture frame

Glue 4 Popsicle sticks (available in craft departments) in a square to make a frame.
Decorate the frame with glitter, lace, yarn, feathers, stickers, confetti or whatever you
have on hand. Mount a picture from the back and be sure to date it! You can also
glue a magnet on from the back so that the picture can hang on the refrigerator. (This
activity is suitable for children 3 and older)

The Story of Hanukkah

First of all, we want to wish all who celebrate this holiday a very happy Hanukkah!
Hanukkah started on Saturday evening and will end on Sunday, December 16th.
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It is a Jewish holiday celebrated for eight days and nights. It starts on the 25th of the Jewish month of Kislev, which coincides with late November-late December on the secular calendar. In Hebrew, the word “hanukkah” means “dedication.” The name reminds us that this holiday commemorates the re-dedication of the holy Temple in Jerusalem following the Jewish victory over the Syrian-Greeks in 165 B.C.E. Here is some information to share with your au pairs.

The Hanukkah Story

In 168 B.C. the Jewish Temple was seized by Syrian-Greek soldiers and dedicated to the worship of the god Zeus. This upset the Jewish people, but many were afraid to fight back for fear of reprisals. The Syrian-Greek emperor Antiochus then made the observance of Judaism an offense punishable by death. He also ordered all Jews to worship Greek gods.

Jewish resistance began in the village of Modiin, near Jerusalem. Greek soldiers gathered the Jewish villages and told them to bow down to an idol, then eat the flesh of a pig – both practices that are forbidden to Jews. A Greek officer ordered Mattathias, a High Priest, to follow their demands, but Mattathias refused. When another villager stepped forward and offered to cooperate on Mattathias’ behalf, the High Priest became outraged. He drew his sword and killed the villager, then turned on the Greek officer and killed him too. His five sons and the other villagers then attacked the remaining soldiers, killing all of them. Mattathias and his family went into hiding in the mountains, where other Jews wishing to fight against the Greeks joined them. Eventually they succeeded in retaking their land from the Greeks. These rebels became known as the Maccabees, or Hasmoneans.

Once the Maccabees had regained control they returned to the Temple in Jerusalem. By this time it had been spiritually defiled by being used for the worship of foreign gods and also by practices such as sacrificing swine. Jewish troops were determined to purify the Temple by burning ritual oil in the Temple’s menorah for eight days. But to their dismay, they discovered that there was only one day’s worth of oil left in the Temple. They lit the menorah anyway and to their surprise the small amount of oil lasted the full eight days. The holiday is observed by the kindling of the lights of a unique candelabrum, the nine-branched Menorah, one additional light on each night of the holiday, progressing to eight on the final night. The typical Menorah consists of eight branches with an additional raised branch. The extra light is called a shamash and is given a distinct location, usually above or below the rest. The purpose of the shamash is to have a light available for use, as using the Hanukkah lights themselves is forbidden.

For fun and educational activities for children go to http://www.apples4theteacher.com/holidays/hanukkah/

Directions to play the Dreidel game. Play for Hershey kisses, a great way to have fun with the kids when they are home from school! http://www.apples4theteacher.com/holidays/hanukkah/dreidel-game.html

Happy Hanukkah!

Fifty-plus Great Places to See the Holiday Lights in 2012

November 5, 2012
http://www.takingthekids.com/travel

For some families, it may be cutting down their own tree; For others, their holiday tradition is oohing and aahing over the light display in a favorite city, botanic garden, zoo or theme park. You’ll find memorable displays wherever you live or wherever you visit this holiday season. Some families opt to see the holiday lights in far flung destinations with the grandparents (Check out what Tauck offers these multigenerational groups with their special Bridges trips, for example.) See what I wrote about the holidays in Hong Kong last year!

To help make holiday lights part of your tradition, here are 55 places to light up the holidays.  If you have a favorite not mentioned here, please leave a comment.

1.  ALBUQUERQUE, NM – The Rio Grande Botanic Garden hosts New Mexico’s largest walk-through holiday light show, “The River of Lights” featuring giant sculptures of plants, animals and seasonal themes created by millions of lights in over 150 displays. Visit between November 24 and December 28 (closed on December 24 and 25).

2.  ANNAPOLIS, MD – Lights on the Bay is a drive-through holiday light show at Sandy Point State Park along Chesapeake Bay, where there are stationery and animated displays including a glowing lighthouse, Navy midshipmen, oysters and blue crabs. Visit between November 19 and January 2.

Austin Zilker Park Trail of Lights

3.  AUSTIN, TX – Zilker Park’s “Trail of Lights,” a mile long stretch with seasonal scenes composed of multi-colored twinkling lights, will be on display from December 16-23.

4.  BOSTON, MA features the largest Christmas Tree in New England, and the 70th annual lighting ceremony will take place on December 1. Take a Freedom Trail Holiday Stroll with a costumed guide, learn how Christmas and holiday traditions evolved in Boston and end your tour with hot chocolate or tea with Boston Cream Pie at the Omni Parker House Hotel. This tour is offered at 3:30pm, Thursday to Sunday from November 17 to January 20.

5.  BRANSON, MO – Silver Dollar City celebrates “Old Time Christmas” with a 5-story special effects Christmas Tree and millions of lights from November 3 to December 30.

Dyker Heights Lights in Brooklyn

6.  BROOKLYN, NY twinkles with the “Lights of Dyker Heights,” a neighborhood (between 83d and 86th streets from 11th to 13th Avenue between Bay Ridge and Bensonhurst) that attracts 100,000 visitors to view amazing decorations. Visit between 5 and 9 p.m. for the most intense lighting

7.  CHARLESTON, SC celebrates the “Holiday Festival of Lights” in James Island County Park where you will drive (or take a train ride) three miles through over two million lights and hundreds of displays. Visit from November 9 to December 31.  And also enjoy Santa’s Village and Winter Wonderland which have attractions and activities including marshmallow Roasts, festival train rides, carnival rides, Santa’s Sweet Shoppe and more.

8.  CHARLOTTE, NC – Charlotte Motor Speedway is excited to bring the holidays to life this winter season with the return of “Carolina Christmas,” a spectacular drive-through Christmas light park and village located at the legendary superspeedway. Featuring more than 600 light displays boasting 3 million lights, the event also offers a Christmas Village with a realistic Bethlehem-themed village, a Festival of Trees, photos with Santa and areas with food and music. This year, the route of twinkling lights is extended, giving visitors extra miles of Christmas cheer! Come experience it from November 23 to December 31, excluding Christmas day.

9.  CHATANOOGA, TN – Rock City Garden’s “Enchanted Garden of Lights” celebrates its 17th year with more than 30 holiday scenes and over a million lights. Visit from November 18 to December 31 (closed Christmas eve).  Enjoy hot cocoa, gingerbread cookie decorating, face painting and costume dress up with Sugar Plum Fairy Makeovers and nightly entertainment.

10.  CHICAGO, IL boasts “The Magnificent Mile Lights Festival” with a Mickey and Minnie Mouse Parade on November 17 and more than one million lights along Michigan Avenue. The Museum of Science and Industry illuminates “Christmas Around the World” and “Holidays of Light” with more than 50 trees and displays to reflect worldwide holiday traditions from November 15 to January 6. “Christkindlmarket,” a German-American Holiday Market is celebrating its 16th year in Daley Plaza in downtown Chicago from November 21 to December 24.

11.  CLEVELAND, OH – Head to Nela Park, home of GE’s Lighting Division in East Cleveland to see thousands of lights illuminate buildings along Noble Road. Visit between early December and New Years Day the annual holiday tradition, adored by celebrators since 1925.

12.  COEUR d’ALENE, IDAHO — The Coeur d”Alene Resort launches the  largest water holiday show in America Friday, Nov 23 with  more than 1.5 million  lights, 250 displays and  a 160-foot tall living Christmas tree  decorated with 40,000 LED lights and lighted tours on the lake to Santa’s Workshop where Santa and his elves are waiting.

13.  COLONIAL WILLIAMSBURG, Jamestown and Yorktown in Virginia offer the chance to time travel back at the  Historic Triangle to see how the holidays were celebrated at Revolutionary Times and before  while at nearby Busch Gardens, Christmas Town: A Busch Gardens Celebration you can enjoy special holiday entertainment, more than five million twinkling lights and the park’s  signature peppermint fudge hot chocolate..  Come to Colonial Williamsburg Dec.2 to usher in the season with the Grand Luminations celebration with other special holiday programs (have you ever seen a holiday shadow puppet show?) scheduled throughout December.     At  Jamestown Settlement holiday film and guided tours – with periodic appearances by the “Lord of Misrule” – compare and contrast English Christmas customs of the period with how the season may have been observed in the difficult early years of the Jamestown colony. At the Yorktown Victory Center, visitors hear accounts of Christmas and winter in Revolutionary War encampments and glimpse holiday preparations on a 1780s farm.

14.  COLORADO SPRINGS — At America’s only mountain zoo, take in the nearly one million sparkling lights illuminating the crisp winter night, warm up at one of the fires throughout the Zoo, then stop in and see Santa.  More than 260,000 Strands of Lights decorate the historic Broadmoor nearby—the biggest display in the city where the Annual White Lights Cermemony kicks off the season Nov. 24with music and more.  Ride the  Santa Express Train as kids in their pj’s sip cocoa and listen to stories read by Elves on their way to the North Pole, decorated like a  a true Christmas town, bedecked with holiday lights and decor for its most famous resident – Santa Claus.

15.  CRUISE AWAY — You won’t skip holiday festivities if you are onboard ship in sunny climes this holiday season.  Garland, wreaths, twinkling lights and glitter transform Disney Cruise Line ships into a winter wonderland during the holidays with King Triton’s Tree Lighting in the atrium lobby with a three-deck-tall tree, with holiday storytellers sharing tales of Christmas, Hanukkah and Kwanzaa as well as family holiday crafts (want to help decorate a stocking. Celebrity Cruises has fanciful gingerbread houses,  Santa himself give the kids gifts—even to the teens on board, carolers and a special “Tree Trimmers Buffet” on Christmas eve while Holland America Line has holiday-themed culinary demonstrations, sing-alongs and  of course, plenty of holiday decorations throughout. Carnival ships not only are decorated with Christmas trees, wreaths and mistletoe, but kids help put on a special holiday show, while everyone can join in the caroling on deck.

16.  DESTIN, FL For the month of December, enjoy a festive light show in the Events Plaza at Sandestin Golf  and Beach Resort set to holiday music every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday leading up to Christmas at 6 & 7 p.m. You can also arrange for Santa to come to your room or condo to read the kids a holiday story.

17.  FRISCO, TX – More than 175,000 lights sparkle and shine as visitors walk or drive through “Christmas in the Square.” from November 23 to January 6, with the exception Christmas Day. This is the largest holiday lights and music show in North Texas, and includes hot air balloons, a trackless train, visits with Santa, snow machine creating a winter wonderland and a Christmas marketplace. Visit from November 25 through the first weekend in January.

18.  GALVESTON ISLAND, TX – The largest holiday lighting festival on the Gulf Coast, “Festival of Lights at Moody Gardens” features a mile-long trail of more than 100 lighted holiday scenes, shows, visits from Santa and a “Snow Zone” for kids from November 12 to January 1. Visitors enjoy nightly entertainment, watch a variety of holiday-themed films in three separate theaters, the area’s only outdoor skating rink and new this year, snow tubing!

19.  GATLINBURG, TN is where the 22nd annual “Winter Magic” light displays will feature animals indigenous to Great Smoky Mountains National Park while the city’s guided trolley tour lights entertain visitors of all ages. Visit from November 7 to February 28.

20.  GREENSBORO, NC – Head to the Sunset Hill neighborhood to see hundreds of Lighted Christmas Balls, made by the community, that float through the trees. Those touring are invited to bring non-perishable food items to donate – last year over 4,000 lbs. of food was collected.

21. HALLANDALE, FL’s Village at Gulfstream Park will present “Symphony in Lights,” a spectacular dancing light display choreographed to the holiday music of the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. The event features more than 250,000 lights affixed to buildings and three trees that are choreographed to strobe, twinkle, fade, sparkle and burst by renowned light artist Carson Williams. It also requires 2,000 watts of sound, 47,000 feet of cable and 2 tons of holiday décor! Shows are on the hour, every hour from 6 – 11 p.m. from November 19 through December 31.

22.  HERSHEY, PA lights up with two million twinkling lights. The centerpiece is Hersheypark’s “Christmas Candylane” through which the park is transformed with rides, Hershey characters, Santa and reindeer.  Hershey’s “Sweet Lights” is a 2.3 mile drive-thru spectacle with nearly 600 animated, illuminated displays. Visit from November 16 to December 30.

23.  INDIANAPOLIS, IN celebrates the 50th anniversary of the “Circle of Lights” by illuminating the embellish the Indiana Soldiers and Sailors Monument with 26 gigantic toy soldiers and sailors, 26 giant peppermint sticks and nearly 5,000 lights. Enjoy the beauty of thousands of lights setting the trees ago. The opening ceremony is November 25, and it runs through early January. Many Indianapolis attractions are offering free admission on one of the 12 days leading to Christmas. Experience an 1830s Christmas at Conner Prairie just out of Indianapolis where you can  view all the amazing gingerbread entries from their famous Gingerbread House Competition.  The day after Thanksgiving, the annual Jolly Days Winter Wonderland exhibit will open at the Children’s Museum of Indianapolis, the largest in the country, where among other things, the kids can clib and  slide on the Snow Castle.

24.  KANSAS CITY, MO – The “Season of Lights” at Country Club Plaza is an 82-year tradition with 80 miles of lights decorating 15 blocks of the city featuring 150 shops and restaurants. The Mayor’s Christmas Tree at Hallmark’s Crown Center, meanwhile, is 100 feet – taller than those on display at the White House and Rockefeller Center. The lighting ceremony will take place on November 22, Thanksgiving night.

25.  LOS ANGELES – Look for fake snow and holiday scenes as everywhere as neighborhoods go all out to celebrate. One of the best places to go is: Candy Cane Lane (Dec. 8 – 31): Woodland Hills’ Candy Cane Lane where the eight-square-block neighborhood near Lubao Avenue and Oxnard Street where the all-out decorating has been a Valley tradition for 60 years.

26.  MARSHALL, TX welcomes families to the 26th annual “Wonderland of Lights.” Featuring more than a million lights in hundreds of displays in the historic town square, the festival also features outdoor ice skating, carriage rides pulled by Clydesdale horses, a polar challenge obstacle course, Santa’s Workshop and Mrs. Claus’ Kitchen and the chance to take a family portrait inside a “life-size” 16 foot giant snow globe! Enjoy these and other family-oriented activities from November 21 through December 31.

27.  MILWAUKEE, WI – The “Holiday Lights Festival” includes  some 500,000 lights, animated sculptures and Movavian Stars along Wisconsin Avenue. Visit November 15 to December 31. During December, check out “Candy Cane Lane,” a stretch of four blocks just north of Oklahoma Avenue in West Allis, one of Milwaukee’s neighborhoods. Each year, three downtown Milwaukee parks are set aglow by animated scenes, dancing luminaries and thousands of lights illuminating the trees. Visit Cathedral Square Park, Pere Marquette Park and Zeidler Union Square.

28.  McADENVILLE, NC – Visit the town of McAdenville, where virtually every home is decorated, is famous throughout the state for its holiday lights between November 30 to December 26. The miraculous lights will glow nightly, Monday through Friday from 5:30 to 9:30 and on weekends from 5:30 to 11 p.m.

29.  MYSTIC, CT – “Christmas by the Sea” at Mystic Seaport is where you can stroll through the decorated 19th century village, sing sea chanteys, and hear stories of holidays told aboard historic vessels. You can also print a Christmas Card or souvenir toy and build a creation at a Gingerbread Workshop. Visit from November 23 to December 31.

30.  NEW ORLEANS, LA – “Celebration in the Oaks” takes place in City Park and has a walking tour with millions of lights throughout the Botanical Garden, Storyland, a children’s theme park and Carousel Gardens, an amusement ride area.  Alive with holiday excitement, visitors enjoy a variety of nightly musical entertainment November 23, 24, 25 and nightly from December 2 to January 1, including Christmas night (closed Christmas Eve and New Years Eve).

31.  NEW YORK, NY has not only the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree (Lighting Ceremony is on November 28) but, at 32 feet tall, the world’s largest menorah at Grand Army Plaza (5th Avenue and 59th Street) and the New York Botanical Garden’s “Holiday Train Show” with miniatures of NYC landmarks made entirely out of plants, and more from November 17 to January 13

32.  NIAGARA FALLS, NY – where the Canadian side has a drive-through Festival of Lights ” with over 3 million tree and ground lights featuring 125 animated displays, making it Canada’s largest illumination festival. Visit from November 3 to January 31.  The Great Wolf Lodge in Niagara Falls, Ontario  puts up over 25,000 lights and like its sister resorts, hosts a huge Snowland celebration complete with indoor  snow and a life-size gingerbread house.

33.  OCEAN CITY, MD – “Winterfest of Lights” in Northside Park with a mile-long path of illuminated displays, Santa, caroling and more. Hop on the Winterfest Express to take a train ride through scenes of your child’s favorite fairy tales (and the Twelve Days of Christmas!) The Winterfest Village is another must see, located inside a heated pavilion decorated to holiday perfection. Visit from November 15 to January 1.

34.  OCEANSIDE, CA – Oceanside Harbor is one of the best spots to view the “Parade of Lights” – decorated fishing boats, sail boats, yachts, kayaks and dingys, all lit up for a spectacular procession on December 8th.  Holiday shopping just got easier. Visit the Holiday Sunset Market every Thursday evening in December from 5-9pm where you’ll find amazing gifts, and enjoy carolers, pony rides, face painters, and more.

35.  ORLANDO, FL – Orlando has it all – glittering trees, fireworks and more from Disney World at “Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party”(on select nights between November 9 and December 21); Epcot’s “Holidays Around the World” with celebrity narrators and a candlelight processional (from November 23 to December 30); to Sea World’s ”Christmas Celebration” (from November 17 to December 31), and Macy’s Holiday Parade and “Grinchmas” at Universal Studios (from December 1 to January 1.) See what my family said about experiencing Ice! At the Gaylord Palms in Orlando where like at other Gaylord properties elsewhere,  your family can explore 10 different holiday scenes created entirely of two-million pounds of ice, including ice slides that stand more than 2 stories tall.

36. PALM DESERT, CA where Living Desert, a 450 acre museum, zoo and botanical garden presents the “WildLights Festival” featuring over 750,000 of lights that turn the desert into an after dark wonderland. Come for games, rides and other activities, and a train ride through the display. Enjoy “Holidays Around the World,” featuring new light displays, international food, Camel and Carousel Rides, wildlife shows and more holiday fun.  Presented on select evenings between November 21 and December 31.

37.  PAWLEYS ISLAND, SC where Brook Green Gardens“Nights of a Thousand Candles” features 5,500 candles illuminating garden paths, festive holiday lights, handbell ringers and carolers on December 7-8, 14-15 and 20-22.

38.  PHILADELPHIA, PA All December-long Franklin Square will be lit with thousands of festive holiday lights! Beginning December 1st with the Holiday Lighting Ceremony through New Year’s Eve, the park will be aglow, setting the perfect mood for the season. Philadelphia will be all aglow this holiday season—from the classic Holiday Light Show, Dickens Christmas Village and daily organ concerts at Macy’s in Center City; A Longwood Gardens Christmas, complete with half a million glowing lights; the Independence Seaport Museum’s third annual Parade of Lights; and two New Year’s Eve fireworks displays–one at 6:00 p.m. and one at midnight–along the Delaware River Waterfront. And that’s’ just the beginning.

39.  PIGEON FORGE, TN puts up more than five million holiday lights in gigantic displays during “Winterfest” which you can enjoy guide from the comfort of your heated Pigeon Forge Trolley and tour guide from November 6 to February 28. Additionally, the Dollywood theme park adds another four million lights to illuminate the park and special entertainment during its Smoky Mountain Christmas including Dollywood Christmas on Ice from November 10 to December 30.

40.  PINE MOUNTAIN, GA southwest of Atlanta is where, for the 20th season, Callaway Gardens Resort will present 8 million lights stretching more than five miles from November 16 to December 30. Be surrounded by giant glowing soldiers as you pass through the March of the Toy Soldiers, numbers of winter snowflakes in Snowflake Valley and watch dazzling lights as travel through the colorful Christmas Tree Lane.

41.  PORTSMOUTH, NH hosts “Vintage Christmas” with sparking lights and a festival of strolls and shows on select nights in December.  Visit Strawbery Banke Museum, a living history museum celebrating holiday traditions from around the world and join a Candlelight Stroll (December 1-2, 8-9 and 15-16), where you can experience the sights, sounds and smell of a traditional New England Christmas.  Head into New Hampshire’s Mountains Nov 24 to Waterville Valley and see Santa arrive by dogsled—bringing gifts for all the kids—followed by the tree lighting and fireworks or travel with santa on the     Santa Claus Express – North Conway, NH through the Mt. Washington Valley.

Tacky Lights Tour Richmond VA

42.  RICHMOND, VA- “Tacky Light Tour” is a local tradition where people dive, or even rent buses or limos to take the tour.

43.  RIVERSIDE, CA is home to the 20th annual “Festival of Lights” at the historic Mission Inn Hotel and Spa. Free and open to the public, it features 3.6 million lights, more than 400 animated figures, horse-drawn carriage rides, Santa and reindeer sightings plus entertainment. The event runs from November 23 through January 5.

44.  SAN ANTONIO, TX where 1.8 million lights sparkle along the San Antonio River Walk from November 23 to January 1. The Ford Holiday River and Lighting Ceremony will take place on the debut day at 7 p.m. and will feature illuminated floats with celebrities, bands and costumed participants. The whole family will enjoy this beautiful area and unique holiday experience.

45.  SAN DIEGO, CA boasts “Garden of Lights” in San Diego’s Botanic Garden with over 100,000 lights illuminating all of the displays (from December 8-23 and 26-30) and the “Holiday of Lights” at the Del Mar Fairgrounds north of San Diego with more than 400 family-oriented light displays (from November 24 to January 1).  Legoland also touts an annual “Holiday Block Party” with a 30-foot tall Christmas tree constructed of 245,000 green Legos displaying Lego ornaments.

46.  SAN FRANCISCO touts 49 square miles of holiday cheer, whether you want to eat, see a holiday performance or holiday lights. Towering lighted trees are found outdoors from the waterfront (PIER 39′s Tree Lighting Celebration  includes Disney Pals on Nov 18); to Nob Hill  to Union Square to the Castro.  All four towers of the Embarcadero Center are outlined with lights for six weeks, while the palm trees at Union Square are wrapped in lights and the historic Path of Gold streetlights on Market St. bear lighted snowflakes.   The historic cable cars even wear festive decorations and motorized cable car tours are available to take in all the sights of the season.

47.  SEATTLE Toyland Village on the Waterfront from Nov 26-Jan 2 Seattle’s Waterfront Park serves as host to the Toyland Village Lighted Holiday Displays with more than 50 larger-than-life toy-themed holiday displays.  The holidaysinseattle.com site will be live on November 1. It will include a full listing of events, attractions and travel tips.Bring the entire family to Westlake Park in downtown Seattle for a ride on the annual holiday carousel while the 74-acre Seattle Center campus is covered in twinkling lights while you ice skate, listen to music and see a train roll through the turn-of-the-century miniature village decorated with lights and snow (Nov. 24 to Dec. 31). Woodland Park Zoo launches its first ever winter lights festival this 2012 holiday season featuring wild animals and wild places recreated in approximately 375,000 of sparkling LED lights inspired by nature while the 63rd Annual Argosy Christmas Ship festival sends parade of brightly-lit boats sails to over 45 different waterfront communities with a holiday choir on board.

48.  SEDONA, AZ is celebrating the 22nd anniversary of its “Red Rock Fantasy” light show with over two dozen displays and a million lights from November 15 to January 5. The event benefits local charities and families each year and has a number of enticing activities for young people, including scavenger hunts within the displays and an illuminate undersea adventure.

49.  SPRINGFIELD, MA hosts the 16th annual presentation of “Bright Nights,” New England’s premier holiday lighting exhibit. This 3-mile long driving route through historic Forest Park is filled with exhibits and displays such as Seuss Land (Dr. Seuss was from Springfield), North Pole Village and Jurassic World created with holiday lights. The event will run from November 21 through January 1.

50.  STANWOOD, WA is hosting “The Lights of Christmas,” held annually at Warm Beach Camp. The grandest holiday event in the Pacific Northwest, it offers displays of more than one dazzling million lights, a life-size nativity scene, five entertainment stages (music ranges from Victorian caroling to country and bluegrass), pony rides, Polar Express train rides, Santa Claus, Bruce the Talking Spruce, Joyland Toy Shop, a petting farm, holiday gifts and crafts, plus affordable food and snacks for the family. The festival will run on November 29 and December 2, 6-9, 13-16, 18-23 and 26-29.

51.  ST. PAUL, MN – IBEW presents “Holiday Lights in the Park” with more than 50 huge holiday light sculptures and animated displays in Phalen Park from November 20 to January 1. A fun and affordable holiday event for families, the event also serves a great cause, as proceeds will be donated to local non-profit organizations.

52.  SYRACUSE, NY where “Lights on the Lake” is celebrating 23 years of two-mile long drive through one of the largest and colorful light shows in the Northeast. The light extravaganza features several themed scenes including Land of Oz, Fantasy Forest and a Fairytale Grand Finale that are sure to be favorites for your family. Visit between November 15 and January 6 (except on New Years Eve.)

53.  THOMASVILLE, GA is celebrating the 25th anniversary of its “Victorian Christmas” with 22,500 twinkling lights, Victorian Museum, Victorian Craft Village, horse-drawn carriages, performances, Winter Wonderland for children, carolers singing holiday favorites and more. The festival, which will bring snow to southwest Georgia, will be held on December 13 and 14. Additionally, from November 25 through December 31, Flower Foods’ presents its annual “Christmas in Lights” on the company’s grounds. Features include a Victorian village, an animated train and thousands of lights and holiday music.

54.  VIRGINIA BEACH, VA is one of six Virginia cities featuring “100 Miles of Lights” with displays from its capital city to the ocean, including Richmond, Williamsburg, Newport News, Hampton, Norfolk, Portsmouth, and Virginia Beach, from November 24 to January 1. “McDonalds’s Holiday Lights at the Beach” along Virginia Beach’s Ocean Front Boardwalk include a 40-foot tall tree on the beach and for over 30 blocks, people can drive or walk to see the nautical themed “Fanta-Sea” of Lights from November 16 to January 1.

National Christmas Tree Lighting at White House

55.  WASHINGTON, DC is where you can see the 90th Annual National Christmas Tree lighting ceremony on December 6, feauturing recording artists OneRepublic, Ellie Goulding, Big Time Rush, Kernit the Frog and more!  The National Menorah celebrates the First Night’s lighting “Zoolights” at the National Zoo is where the fun begins with thousands of eco-friendly lights, activities, musical performances, rides on Thomas the Train, and ice-skating weekends November 23-25 and 30 to December 1-2, 7-9, 14-23 and 27-30 (except Christmas Eve and Day, and New Year’s Eve).  Experience a historic Christmas at Mt. Vernon with a candlelight tour and caroling on selected evenings from November 23 to January 6.

(Special thanks to our Taking The Kids intern, Becca Tash, a senior at the University of Miami, for helping us compile and fact-check this guide)

THANKSGIVING CELEBRATION

Thanksgiving, a uniquely American holiday, dates back to the first European settlers in North America.

After much hardship, illness and hard work, the Pilgrims were finally able to celebrate a successful harvest which they shared with their Native American friends who had helped them through their difficult beginning in America.

Today this day is set aside to feast and to give thanks-something we can all share, as we too celebrate our cross-cultural friendships.

Some activities to share with the children :

Maple-Nut-Berry Popcorn Balls ( for children ages 3 and older): Add some chopped walnuts and  raspberries, blueberries or blackberries. Add enough melted butter to lightly coat popcorn. Stir. Pour maple syrup over the warm popcorn and stir until all the corn, nuts and berries are covered. Shape the sticky corn into balls and place on a plate to refrigerate until the syrup hardens.

Thanksgiving cards and place cards: Fold a piece of paper in half, place a leaf on the inside and close the card. Use a crayon to rub lightly across the front of the card in the area where the leaf is. The shape of the leaf will appear on the outside. Remove the leaf. Write a name on the front for a place card, or a message inside for a Thanksgiving card. Older children might want to make more sophisticated designs using more than one leaf.

Make a chain of paper doll (adults should do the cutting): Fold a piece of paper back and forth over and over again with a width between folds of 2-3 inches. With the paper folded cut out a shape of a person, make sure that the hands and feet touch the fold, but don’t cut through the fold. When you unfold the paper there will be a line of people holding hands. Children ages 3-10 can color the figures to look like Pilgrims(men wore big white collars, belts with buckles, and buckles on their shoes, pants to their knees; women wore white hats and aprons over solid color dresses) or Native Americans (draw feather headdresses  and brightly colored geometric patterns on their clothes).

Tree of Thanks: This Thanksgiving tree is bound to become a new holiday tradition.

Trace leaves onto autumn colored craft’s paper and cut out. Punch a hole into the stem of each paper leaf. Measure and cut a 2” length of wire or twine for each leaf. Thread it through the hole and bend the ends to make a hook for hanging. Place the tree branches in a pot or vase. Let the children or/and guests choose a leaf or two and ask them to jot down things that they are thankful for.

Thanksgiving Resources

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Recipes

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Arts & Crafts

Lesson Plans

Halloween 2012

October 31st is a big day for kids around this country and this year,with Sandy just behind us,Halloween will not be the same.

Au pairs,if you go out trick-or-treat tonight with your kids,be aware of downed trees and power lines.Avoid those streets and make sure it is safe.

Also ,here is a bit of history behind Halloween.Stay safe and have fun!images

How did trick-or-treating begin?
The modern practice of trick-or-treating appears to have originated from a combination of the Celtic new year celebration called Samhain celebrated on October 31st and the early Christian ritual related to All Saints Day, celebrated on November 2nd.

The Celts believed that on Samhain, spirits of the dead would come back and try to posses the bodies of the living. So to avoid being possessed by a ghost, living Celts would dress up in scary costumes and parade around the town making a lot of noise, so as to scare the spirits away. This is where the modern tradition of wearing costumes seems to have derived from.

As for the collection of treats, most scholars credit early Christians’ ritual of “souling” to the development of this festive activity. In connection with their All Saints Day celebration, Christians would walk door to door collecting square pieces of currant bread called “soul cakes”. The person who collected the cakes would say prayers on behalf of a deceased relative. The more cakes collected, the more prayers were said and the quicker the soul of the deceased would find heaven.
The combination of these two early activities has evolved into the modern practice of trick-or-treating.
How did “bobbing for apples” become a popular Halloween activity?
The apple has historically been associated with immortality and fertility because when cut down its center it has a five point star. This five pointed star was a common goddess symbol in many ancient religions and believed to help determine marriages, especially during the magical, spiritual season of Samhain. During early celebrations, apples would be hung either from a string or placed in a tub of water and young, unmarried people would try to take a bite. The first one to successfully bite the apple was believed to be the next one married.

Why are bats associated with Halloween?
In early Halloween celebrations, people often gathered around giant bonfires to ward off evil spirits. Night-flying insects were attracted to the flames, which made bonfires the perfect feeding ground for bats. Thus, bats became quickly synonymous with Halloween celebrations. Additionally, during the Middle Ages, people began to link bats to witches because the both seemed to mystically fly throughout the dark night and disappear during the day.

Have people always carved pumpkins for Halloween?
Jack-o-lanterns are an Irish tradition brought to America by early Irish immigrants. But early jack-o-lanterns were not pumpkins, they were turnips, rutabagas or gourds that were hollowed out. Lights were placed in them to ward off evil spirits and to keep “Stingy Jack” (the legendary Irish drunkard and prankster, believed to have made a deal with the devil and condemned to walk the earth upon death, whose namesake has been given to modern day, carved pumpkins) away. It was not until the 1800’s when Irish immigrants came to America and found pumpkins to be so plentiful and easier to carve, that the tradition was altered.

Kid’s Euro Festival in Washington DC

Kid’s Euro Festival Returns to Washington

If you are in the metro area,I hope you will take advantage of this free event that runs through November 14th.

As one of the local community counselors for Au Pair In America,I’d like to encourage  host families and au pairs to  check out the program of events and participate in any of the venues offered at  some of the major local cultural institutions. logoKEU08

The largest children’s performing arts festival in the United States, the “Kids Euro Festival,” began its month-long run in Washington, D.C. on October 17. Offering over 200 free events, the annual program seeks to introduce the diversity of European culture to children and families from all over the area. Embassies of the 27 European Union member states will present a variety of activities, from mime acts and puppets to concerts and film screenings. The event was first created in 2008 to coincide with the French presidency of the European Union, and the French-American Cultural Foundation helps make the series possible.

FALL IS HERE….

imagesFun things to do with your kids during this season……

When a crisp fall air invites you outside for a walk, gather some brightly colored leaves. Press them in sheets of newspaper under heavy books for a few weeks. When they have dried they will still have their bright colors and can be glued onto paper.

Make leaf prints by painting one side of a leaf with tempera paint and then pressing it down gently into paper to form the leaf pattern. Make designs for fun, or use large sheets of paper (like tissue paper, brown paper or even newspaper) and save the painted paper to use as gift-wrap.

Place some leaves between pieces of wax paper and iron. This will keep them from crumbling and give the leaves a glossy sheen. You can then glue them onto paper- try adding bits of bark or seeds too.

Try putting leaves between pieces of clear contact paper. You can hang them in the window or use them as place mats.

Fall is apple season. Apples come in many varieties, colors, shapes and sizes. Some are wonderful to munch on, others best when cooked. Regardless of the variety, apple-picking is a fun activity. Please check your local newspaper, especially the Week-end section, to find out about local farms that offer apple-picking and hay rides.

Recipe for applesauce:

Remove the core and quarter the apples. If you leave the peel on during cooking it will give the applesauce a pink color. When the apples are very soft, remove any peel that is left, mash the pulp or put it through a sieve. Add sugar if needed.

Recipe for dried apple rings:

Peel, core and slice as many apples as you like into 1/8 inch rings; Macintosh or golden delicious apples work best. Dip each ring into a mixture of lemon juice and water to help the apples keep their color. Pull a piece of string through the center of each ring and hang in a dry, warm place. They take 1-2 weeks to dry and become chewy.

This makes an easy and nutritious snack!