Celebrating Winter

Welcome to a week of winter inspiration! This post first published in January 2011. Enjoying winter is a choice.

I love having four seasons but winter has been the most challenging for me to embrace with my whole heart.

Not as a child mind you. Winter as a child was fun.


photo credit: Becky Tougas

When you've outgrown childhood winter can become a drag. Dark nights, cold cars, and high heating bills. But I'm finding that if I surrender to the season and not fight it the fun factor goes up.

  • Dark nights. Cuddle with your whole family on your bed (the warmest place in our house). Read, play games, and go to bed early.
  • Cold cars. Drive less.
  • High heating bills. Don't crank the heat, wear some fun layers and save money. (Editor's note: my winter warmth factor has significantly increased over the last 3 winters, living in houses with woodstoves!)

In truth, my winter fun has increased now that my children have grown past the toddler and preschool age. Nothing against young children, I loved mine dearly. But all parents know that by the time you bundle them up and spend a few minutes outdoors they are ready to come back in. Which works out to 45 minutes of clothing prep and clean up for about 10 minutes of outdoors. Such is life with littles.

As I sit here typing this my children are donning their gear, with minimal help from me, to head outdoors for an hour or so while I write. No wonder I think winter is more fun!

But seriously, enjoying winter is a choice. I'm not always good at making that choice but at least I recognize it as such. I can choose to bundle up for a winter walk or a morning of sledding with my kids or I can give in to the temptation to park my butt down in this computer chair (which I'm doing right now) and miss out on the incredible beauty of winter.

The squeaky crunch of packed snow beneath my boots.

Winter's pink, purple and orange sunset making long shadows of bare trees.

Climbing city snow mounds pretending to summit Mt. Everest.

Sledding down mountain slopes on sparkly winter weekends.

The bright red barberries contrasting the white snow.

Making music with a row of thick hanging icicles.

The beauty of winter is all around, I just need to appreciate and celebrate it, not wish it away. 

Here's a few things we're doing to celebrate winter this month of February. 

  • Go outdoors, every weekend, as a family. We call this one day a week and it's a family ritual. This of course is our big weekly family time but throughout the week the kids and I spend time outdoors together also.
  • Winter camping. This weekend will be our third annual trip to Camden Hills State Park here in Maine. It is the highpoint of our winter. We've added another family to the mix this year. So it will be a full cabin with days outdoors, meals shared and evenings around the fire. 
  • Chinese New Year. For years I've wanted to do something to celebrate Chinese New Year. So why not? And why not make it into a homeschool study while we're at it.
  • Crafting. I think it's about time to use the Staedler Carving Block I've owned since 2009 to make hand carved stamps. I think we'll try some Chinese New Year inspired designs, maybe hearts for Valentines and then let our imaginations go from there.
  • Laurent's birthday. The boy turns 10 this year and I can't wait to make a special day to honor him.
  • Winter reading. I love reading all year round but winter reading is just so cozy. I keep a whole shelf of winter-related books at Goodreads if you're looking for inspiration.
  • Inspirational evenings. The first time I heard of this was in Leadership Education: The Phases of Learning. Inspirational evenings have revolutionized our winter nights. Winter is a time for ideas and evenings with the family are for inspiration (and fun). Adventure stories, documentaries, games and occasional nights out that inspire us to dream, explore and plan for our future with excitement and anticipation. All day I look forward to our inspirational time in the evenings.
  • Homeschool fun. February is a great month to plan a field trip. January is all about getting back to routine but February it's time to mix it up a bit. This month we plan to meet friends at our state museum (free for schools and homeschoolers) and we will join a local homeschool co-op. Our first co-op experience ever. And I don't have to teach anything, though I will volunteer in my kiddos' classes. 

And I think that might be all the fun we can manage for one month. Because there still is that one big project our family is getting ready for - moving out the country in just over 3 months.

Before I know it winter will be over. But I'm not wishing it away. Too much fun to be had in the moment. 

How are you celebrating winter this month?

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  • Shelly Sangrey

    Shelly Sangrey on Feb. 5, 2014, 1:45 p.m.

    Thank you for a fresh perspective, since I honestly hate winter. I'm ready to move south. I've been trying to do the one outing a week thing, and it hasn't happened for weeks because of constant bad weather. It's REALLY hard to push a stroller and navigate walking little ones in the snow.

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    • renee

      renee on Feb. 5, 2014, 2:54 p.m.

      I hear you! I could never push a stroller in winter, maybe a backpack is better, or sling for a teeny one. With practice, littles get better at navigating snow.

      If I hated winter, I would hate my life for 5 months of the year. That's just no way to live (smile).

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    • Alaina

      Alaina on Feb. 6, 2014, 4:19 a.m.

      What about using a sled, too?  We attached a plastic bin to a sled (so our toddler can't fall out and we can turn her around to not be in the wind, and we can tuck in blankets etc) with bungee cords.  We alternate walking (when the path or sidewalk is more packed down we let her out, and yes, we still pick her up from some falls at times) and then going in the sled.  But an even better idea would be a combo of options walk/sled/backpack.  There is no way I could use a stroller, either.

      reply

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