Letterboxing

We recently discovered a very interesting activity called letterboxing. Letterboxing involves searching for hidden boxes using clues provided by the individuals who created and hid the boxes. Inside each letterbox you will find a rubber stamp, an ink pad, and a small journal or pad of paper. Usually the rubber stamps are hand carved and represent a theme, or a personal symbol unique to the carver.

When you find a letterbox, you use the rubber stamp in your own scrapbook, journal or piece of paper. Then, using your own stamp, leave an image on a page in the letterbox’s journal! You can also sign your name or leave a personal message for the letterbox creator. There are several websites that serve as databases for letterbox locations and clues all over North America, just type in your location and choose from the list provided.

Today, we were visiting Edgefield Lodge in Troutdale, Oregon. After lunch, we searched the atlasquest website and discovered a letterbox had been placed right at the lodge grounds!  The letterbox was titled “Kelly and Steve’s Wedding”.  We quickly gathered our materials and read the clue:

Clue: To find the loving tribute to their marriage look for Blackberry Meadow where they were married. Stand in the middle of the meadow and look for the water tower. Walk towards it and you will see an old white barn. Find the path on the right side of the barn. There should be birdhouses in the trees on the right side of that path.
On the left side of the path you will see a huge rusted boiler with plants growing out of it. Look under it for the lock’ n’ lock box!

     Since we had been walking the grounds before lunch, it wasn’t long before we found the blackberry meadow and white barn. The kids very quickly found the location and M got down on all fours and pushed aside the plants to find the letterbox. From under the boiler he pulled a very tiny plastic container that held a picture of the bride and groom, and a hand carved stamp with their initials, and the date of their wedding. We were so excited to stamp our book, and to leave a stamp in theirs! We will have to get a special book just for our letterbox adventures, but until then the kids are using their journals.

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B and I spent some time designing and carving our own stamps a couple of weeks ago, and I designed a new one tonight that has our travel blog information. Speedball makes a very user friendly carving medium that I highly recommend. It is soft, easy to carve, and can be trimmed with a scissors. We purchased all of our materials at Michael’s craft store. Many people use rubber erasers for carving as well! Here is our collection of hand carved stamps so far:

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Day 55: Wood Village, OR to Mt. Hood National Forest, OR

On the way out of Wood Village towards Mount Hood, we stopped to visit McMenamins – Edgefield, a 1930s era poorhouse converted in the 1990s into a hotel.  Edgefield sits on 70 acres and has its own garden for its restaurant:

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We had the overflow lot more or less to ourselves:

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We visited the glass blowing shop, where the artist was fashioning a drinking glass:

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The watertower is the tallest structure at the hotel:

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The interior of the hotel itself has been maintained in its 1930s interior, so much so that the hotel rooms share a common bathroom just as the original residents did 80 years ago:

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There’s also a pottery shop (closed today), a brewery, and a winery.  It’s a very interesting place!

We also did our first letterboxing attempt at Edgefield, but I’ll let Trish talk more about that:

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Leaving Edgefield, we drove up to Mount Hood.  We are dispersed camped near Trillain Lake, on the southern slope of Mount Hood. The National Forests usually allow camping in campgrounds for free if they are “closed” for the season, so we first tried going to Trillain Lake campground, since the source I had seen said that it closed on 9/30. When we got there, the campground host told us that the campground would be open until 10/6, and that once it’s closed the gate is locked. Since the campground is open, we would have to pay $20 a night, so we settled for a nice clearing a few miles from the campground which is actually an abandoned airstrip. There are no services, but that’s fine as we are completely self contained in our RV, and you can’t beat the quiet solitude!   See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.

LittleBits and Big Fun!

     We’ve been using a wonderful new educational material that introduces electronics in a fun and easy to use way.  The idea behind these tiny, colorful electronic pieces is to get kids (and adults!) excited about creating circuits to build anything imaginable.  Each piece (or bit) is color coded based on its function.  The colors are bright, but not obnoxious, and make organizing simple.  Because the littleBits are magnetic and will only attach in their proper direction, even small children can begin creating circuits.  The fact that children can experiment and manipulate the bits before knowing complex vocabulary or concepts makes this an amazing introduction to electronics. 

     B received her first littleBits kit (the extended kit) as a birthday gift from Bubbe and Zayde.  She immediately fell in love with them and started experimenting.  The littleBits website features hundreds of projects created by their in-house design team as well as from littleBits users all over the world.  In fact, they encourage everyone (teachers, kids, artists, etc) to build and post their projects on the company website.  Looking at other projects and videos gave B lots of ideas and provided some early projects to try on her own.  Her first project was a simple blender, followed a couple of days later by a flashlight!  Soon after that, she began experimenting on her own and came up with her now famous sock game, featured on the littleBits website.

     Now that we are on the road, working with littleBits has become part of our homeschool curriculum, especially since they take up very little storage space.  B’s first invention on the road was to make a doorbell for her RV bunk. You can see our previous post here.

     A few weeks and several states later, we designed a magnifier that used lights to illuminate the insects and plants we found in Yosemite National Park!

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     Our latest project, was inspired by the amazing youtube video, Caine’s Arcade.  For anyone who hasn’t seen this wonderful story, it is about a little boy named Caine, who created an entire storefront arcade out of cardboard boxes.  His creativity is astounding!  My kids thought it was really cool and were excited to try designing something themselves.  We couldn’t create something as magnificent as Caine’s Arcade in our tiny RV, so they kids each designed one game.  They both chose to make a skill game with balls and holes.  We talked about what she wanted her game to do, and she decided that the long LED’s should light when the ball dropped through the hole.  She grabbed her motion sensors and LED’s and laid them out.  When I asked her show she would connect them, she started to put them together and realized she needed something more.  She said, “Oh, I’m gonna need a branch!”  We had a little bit of a challenge getting the motion sensor to be a little less sensitive, but some tape around the edges helped!  Even though we are in a tight space, the kids decided to make it more like a real arcade and dimmed the lights, made badges for the “staff” and they even made a money changer.

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     I am looking forward to building more complex projects with the kids as the year goes on! 

Day 54: First day of (home)school and Farewell to Portland

While I was hitching up the RV, the kids were doing a unit on the color wheel:

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I had a last minute fix to do before we left:

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It was truly wonderful to be back with our old community, see old friends, and make new ones.  We hope to be back in the spring:

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We drove to Wood Village, OR, where we used the dump station at the Camping World. It turns out they allow overnight parking, so we’re staying here for the night as well.

We drove 20 miles today.   See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.