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derbygirl

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About derbygirl

  • Birthday 04/11/1971

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  • Biography
    homeschooling my three kids since the beginning
  • Location
    extremely SW Canada
  • Interests
    aspiring roller derby girl, homeschooling, gardening, kayaking and belly dancing
  • Occupation
    sahm
  1. At our prison (pretrial centre to be exact), the neighbours would get people released going door to door asking for money.
  2. Thank you Lecka. That helps me so much as I begin this journey with my son.
  3. The Bamix is the best I have ever used. Very expensive though.
  4. I remember being in a very similar place with my son. You are going to have to do some serious thinking outside the box if you are a meat and potatoes kind of family. Fortunately it is summer so it is a little easier with so many fresh, different products. Consider yams/sweet potatoes or Jerusalem artichokes as a mashed potato or French fry substitute. Rotating items, like your doctor suggested can actually be a help not only as a way to prevent more severe reactions but as it starts framing your options kwim? I tried all sorts of crazy items and some were actually winners. I found that if I steamed the milk substitute using my old espresso maker, I could get a pretty creamy substance for making sauces. Please remember to be kind to yourself and remember this is not necessarily a forever thing. My very allergic son, got past his allergies with an elimination diet. I wish you the same success.
  5. I have successfully trained one of my cats to use the toilet. She loved to pee on garbage bags. I wrapped one around the toilet seat. Each day I would make a slightly bigger hole in the bag until it was no longer necessary. It was actually ridiculously easy. However it was very creepy to wake up in the middle of the night to hear someone going to the bathroom when the rest of the family was away.
  6. I had to deal with them regularly in a group home I worked at. You can rub a sharpie marker over a patch of skin you are concerned about and then remove it with an alcohol pad and you may be able to see the little tunnels the beasties leave behind just under the first layer of skin. It is contagious via articles like fabric. In our case everything went through a hot water wash and drier or went into storage for several months. Freezers could also be used but I cannot remember how long belongings need to stay in the freezer. Be prepared to feel itchy, really crazy itchy, not because you have scabies but just because you are thinking about them.
  7. I just want to back up Impish on her brother's experience regarding the police. That is the way hiring is done for the RCMP in Canada. http://www.rcmp-grc..../eq-div-eng.htm
  8. I so share your frustration BlueTaelon. :grouphug: It is frustration for us to have to research everything that goes into our Celiac kids mouths. It is downright dangerous when friends and family see something marked gluten free and trust "truth in advertising". Discussing the issues time after time with offending stores, manufacturers, restaurants, and even a pharmacy, I repeatedly come up against a wall of apathy. There must be a better way.
  9. I have pretty good luck with candle making. One trick with beeswax candles is that they seem to need time to cure. I've read a year but we've never waited anywhere near that long. What you describe sounds like the candles didn't have enough cure time. I bet they smelled wonderful still :hurray: .
  10. Hi Kathy, We have tried several programs and what works the best for us is Mammoth Math. It uses American money but kids are loony savvy so no worries for us there. It covers both the imperial and metric systems. We live near the boarder so we want the kids to be proficient in both systems.
  11. I considered the word "stupid" a bad word until we all saw the movie The Stupids. Because of that movie it is now a goofy word for our family.
  12. I guess I'm not the only one with food/IL issues:grouphug: My FIL knows more about Celiac disease than my daughters gastro-enterologist and the hospitals pediatric dietitian because (drumroll) he bought a copy of Celiac Disease for Dummies. Even more infuriating for me is medical professionals that just don't get it. The dentist who says that the kids can spit the gluten out afterwards (...right), the hygienist who is put off by having to check ingredients or the late night pharmacist who kept asking if it really mattered if the medicine had gluten - no matter how I explained Celiac disease to her. Come on people: 1 in a 140 people have this condition. Welcome to planet Earth.
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