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Thursday, March 12, 2015

Visiting an Oriental Carpet Store with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget




Visiting an Oriental Carpet Store with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



Even though the sign on the Oriental Carpet display room on Lighthouse Avenue in Monterey, Californai said, “Trade for Dealers Only,” I wanted to learn more about hand-woven carpets.  My daughter Florence was learning to crochet, knit, and sew at her Waldorf School and had just started weaving baskets.  I wanted her to know more about “Oriental Carpets,” too.

I took Florence by the hand and popped my head into the display room.  The owner was on the telephone talking.  I smiled and motioned my hand around the room.

The owner nodded “yes” and motioned for us to come into the store.

He was speaking in a language I had never heard before; it was not Arabic or Farsi.  I suspected it was Dari or Pashto, two of the languages of Afghanistan.  Dari and Farsi were related I later learned, but they did not sound alike I thought.

I asked Florence what carpets she liked.

“I like that long, thin red one,” she replied.  I had worked for an art gallery that sold Persian carpets and said to her, “That is a kilim carpet that you can weave on a portable loom.”

We talked about the colors she liked best in each carpet while the conversation continued.  When the owner finished his conversation, I said, “My daughter is learning to knit and sew at school.  Could you tell us about your carpets?”

He gave us a short monologue that was very informative:

“They are made by Afghan rebels.  The traditional styles have remained the same, but the colors have changed.  Customers wanted new colors in the 1980s.  The rug patterns are the same as those in Iran, but are colored differently, because the vegetable dyes use different flora.”

I immediately told Florence, “ ‘Flora’ means plants.”

The owner could see that not only was I interested, but Florence was, too.  She got right up close to the carpets he was holding to examine the knots.

He took out some smaller carpets that were more Florence’s size and said they were prayer rugs of the Balkh tribe.

He told Florence, “Uneven lines mean the rug was made in a village.  In towns people use patterns to weave.”

The owner told me, “Silk Turkish prayer rugs are not rally used for praying.  Wool is better to go on the ground.”

“Wool protects knees better,” I said.

He told me as Florence was examining a pile of rugs that seventy members of his family made a living from weaving.

“Without weaving, the children and adults would starve.  Doctors, teachers, and parents, who are refugees all have to eat,” he said.

I thanked him showing us the carpets when he had so many responsibilities.

“It was my pleasure,” he said.  “Let your daughter look at the carpets as long as she would like.  I have to get back to the phone.”

“I understand,” I said and was truly thankful for his time.


By Ruth Paget - Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



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Visiting the Egyptian Museum in San Jose (California) with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



Visiting the Egyptian Museum in San Jose (California) with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



My husband Laurent, my daughter Florence, and I went on a fun outing as a birthday present for me in December 2001 to the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum in San José, California.

I did not know what Rosicrucianism was, but was reassured that they did historical and scientific work when I saw that they had carried out research with Stanford University, UCLA, NASA Ames Computation Center, the British Museum, and National Geographic’s Mummy Road Show.  The building itself was inspired by the Temple of Amon at Karnak, Egypt.  

They had an extensive display of mummies on view and a reproduction of King Tut’s mummy case.  Florence liked the scale models of Nefertiiti and Akenaton’s palace as well as a scale model of the step pyramid at Saqqara.

I especially liked the Egyptian necklaces.  I have some beads that look like the ones displayed.  Mine come from Murano Island outside Venice.  I thought the Venetians were picking up on a long tradition of trade beads from Egypt.

At the bookstore, I bought Florence a book of famous Egyptian mazes.  We sat and worked on them while Laurent investigated an exhibit about famous Rosicrucians.  Florence asked for a book on mummies, too, so I bought her one and read it with her.

We all wanted to visit the park outside with its freshly painted Egyptian buildings.  The paint was pastel colored and there were many roses in the garden.  We looked for roses etched in sculpture and on buildings.

The Egyptian Museum provides many resources for teachers on their website.  Florence was studying ancient Egypt and Egyptian mythology at her Waldorf School.  I wish her teacher had had access to the curriculum they have for download on their website entitled “Expedition to Ancient Egypt.”

The Egyptian Museum also has fact sheets now that would help teach about ancient Egypt as well.  Teachers could use some of them as scavenger hunt sheets for younger students on Museum visits I thought.  The fact sheets are centered on the following themes:

-The Cat in Modern and Ancient Egypt
-Gods and Goddesses in Ancient Egypt
-Read, Write, and Record
-Who was Rosetta?
-The Making of a Mummy: A Real One

On the way home to Monterey, we listened to Christmas carols until we hit a traffic jam.  Florence asked me to read Harry Potter to her.  We reworked Egyptian mazes when she became tired of the reading.  It was a successful day in San José.  I liked the Egyptian Museum.

Some books parents might like to read as reference while their child is studying Egypt include:

-Red Land, Black Land: Daily Life in Ancient Egypt by Barbara Mertz

-The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt by Ian Shaw

-Ancient Egypt: A Social History by B. G. Trigger, B.J. Kemp, and A.B. Lloyd

-Daughters of Isis: Women of Ancient Egypt by Joyce Tyldesley


By Ruth Paget - Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



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Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Attending San Jose (CA) Science Conferences for Teens with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget





Attending San Jose (CA) Science Conferences for Teens with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



My husband Laurent and I took our daughter Florence to the “Exploring Your Horizons in Science and Mathematics Conference” for three years in a row to San José State University (SJSU).  This conference was organized by SJSU and the Math/Science Network for young women between the 6th and 9th grades.

2003 was the best year we attended since it was the 25th annual conference.   Laurent went to all the fun science workshops that were led by women with Florence while I did the college admissions and financial aid sessions.

The first session that Florence and Laurent went to had them look at the properties of density and surface tension.  The session was called “Sink or Swim” and had real-life applications I thought for swimming.  The session was run by graduate students, which was a good way for them to do community service work I thought. 

Then, Laurent and Florence went to a session run by Agilent Technologies Engineers called “Lasers, Lenses, and Light.”  They did experiments with lights and laser to learn how a TV uses color and how fiber optics is used to transmit phone calls.

In the third session called “Can a Cardboard Boat Float?” the girls worked in teams to get a boat to float.  Florence said her boat floated, but it was hard to tell why exactly.  Later that night Laurent worked a calculus problem to show Florence that you want to get a cube as big as possible to float on the water.

Meanwhile, I went to workshops on financial aid, the college admissions process with information on writing college admissions essays, and choosing the right college.  I had been to these workshops beginning in grade 6 for Florence, but they got better every year.  I especially appreciated having admissions deans from competitive schools speak.

We ate lunch and we traded stories about what we learned at the workshops.  I wished a similar conference could be held where I lived; it takes venue, insurance, workshop leaders, supplies, bag lunches, and children, teachers, and parents to organize.  You need money to fund this, but you need the basic organization first.

Florence participated at two science fairs as a result of this conference.  She did one project on volcanoes and another one on the golden ratio found throughout nature.  I am grateful to “Expanding Your Horizons” for that alone and wish the conference held a workshop on how to prepare for science fairs.   This conference drove home the fact to her that math is very important in every sphere of life as well.  The money spent on this conference was well invested I thought.

By Ruth Paget - Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



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Hiking in Big Sur (California) with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget




Hiking in Big Sur (California) with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



When I saw that the Ventana Wilderness Society was offering a day camp for children, I immediately enrolled my daughter Florence in the “Hooray for Habitats” program. 

The Ventana Wilderness Society had successfully reintroduced bald eagles and condors to the Big Sur Wilderness area, and I fully trusted them to give children a great educational experience in ecology and conservation.

I dropped Florence off everyday at the Carmel Crossroads Shopping Center and got reports on what the children had done at night.  Florence was subdued when I picked her up, because hiking is an integral part of Ventana Wilderness programs.

The first day of camp the children went on a hike through the Redwood Forest at Pfeiffer State Park.  There is a small waterfall along the hiking trail there.  However, Florence said she spent most of the time there letting a little girl know she was going to be okay.  The Redwood trees tower above you at Pfeiffer State Park and make the woods dark.  Illustrations for books about Hansel and Gretel show a similar landscape; maybe the little girl was thinking about that.  (Youth Services Librarian’s analysis)

On the second day of camp, the children went tide-pooling at Point Lobos (lobos means “sea wolves” in Spanish, referring to sea lions).  This craggy piece of land with cypress forests juts out into the Pacific Ocean.  There are many coves, and that is where the children looked for starfish and shells.  They examined them and put them back into the water without hurting or damaging the animals.  Tide-pooling is not souvenir hunting.

Day three was a hike through the oak woodlands of Garland Ranch Regional Park.  Our family had been there on picnics and had gone hiking on their many trails.  They have a field of old farm equipment that has been “donated” for use by children.  I knew the children had all been pretending to drive tractors when I picked Florence up.

Things got a bit more physical for the children on Thursday.  They hiked in Elkhorn Slough, looking for birds, and went kayaking.  You can see birds, fish, and crabs in the Slough’s water.  Elkhorn Slough is shallow, which makes it possible to see fish swimming.  The water is also very clear to aid in fish sightings. 

Thursday was also camping night under the Redwoods in Pfeiffer State Park.  Camp guides told the children about bugs and other wildlife that come out at night.  I am sure the animal stories kept the children in their tents.

Friday was a day of giddy excitement for the children.  They helped the biologists band birds by the Big Sur River.  The children had to go from giddy to gentle to handle the birds.  Florence told me that she put bracelets on robins to help the scientists.

Learning the gentleness to band birds was one of the best outcomes for Florence from the Ventana Wilderness Society’s “Hooray for Habitats” camp I thought.  Hiking in nature with explanations of what you are seeing along the way is great for children and adults, too.  You forget you are exercising when you do this.

I felt Florence had learned about Monterey County’s natural beauty on this trip as well the need to preserve it based on scientific knowledge.


By Ruth Paget - Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



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Bird Watching at Elkhorn Slough in Moss Landing (CA) with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget





Bird Watching at Elkhorn Slough in Moss Landing (CA) with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



After I chaperoned a field trip for my daughter’s Waldorf School to the Monterey Bay Aquarium, I wanted her to see ocean and migratory birds in their natural habitat.  We drove to Elkhorn Slough, a few miles north of Monterey across from Moss Landing to do this.

Elkhorn Slough is an estuary.  It is a body of water with an opening to the ocean with rivers and streams flowing into it.  The Reserves’ brochure said that Elkhorn Slough winds inland for seven miles and encompasses 2,500 acres of marsh and tidal flat.

The visitor’s brochure went on to state that nearly 90% of California’s estuaries have been destroyed.  An impressive number of wildlife finds homes in estuarine habitats.  The one at Elkhorn Slough is home to over 400 invertebrates (animals without a backbone), 80 species of fish, and more than 200 species of birds.  The visitor’s center staff said that if you included migratory birds, Elkhorn Slough hosts and is home to 267 species of birds that have been identified in its area.

The visitor’s brochure also stated that six rare, threatened, or endangered species use the Slough – peregrine falcons, Santa Cruz long-toed salamander, clapper rails, brown pelicans, least terns, and sea otters.

You can see the birds and other wildlife from eight different walking trails.  The day of our first visit, we started with the Overlook of Elkhorn Slough Channel Trail, which follows the main channel.  There are Native American burial sites visible on this trail, but you cannot visit them.

We had exchanged our driver’s licenses for binoculars at the visitor’s center and looked at tree branches and over the water for birds.  We saw white pelicans form a circle in the water and then dive for fish.  It was a cute bobbing show.  There were also black cormorants and bald eagles out in the water.  We walked about two miles and soaked up the sea breeze as well as the smell of dry leaves.

We bought a membership to the Elkhorn Slough Foundation to obtain free entry for a year.  There were seven more walking trails that we wanted to explore:

-Long Valley Loop Trail – Woodland Trail

-Coast Live Oak Trail – Native trees that are home to birds, mammals (warm-blooded animals whose females carry developing babies within them), and insects

-Parson’s Slough Overlook – Sand dune area with the opening to the Monterey Bay

-Eucalyptus Grove – Trees imported from Australia in the 1800s

-Old Elkhorn Dairy Site – Kids love playing in the abandoned barns here that are supplied with a few haystacks

-Marsh Restoration Project – Site of experimental studies in marsh biology and ecology

-Elkhorn Slough Overlook – Ancient river valley trail

I left the Elkhorn Slough happy that groups like our French-language and culture club, the Alliance Française, did monthly walks there to support the conservation efforts of the Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve.  Elkhorn Slough also has picnic tables for families and groups who wish to make their visit an all-day outing.

I love exercise that involves bird watching and think Elkhorn Slough is great for this reason.

By Ruth Paget, Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



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