Macy’s marks sixth year of partnership with Haitian artisans

Recycled Metal Trays from Macy's Heart of Haiti product line
Recycled metal baskets from Macy’s Heart of Haiti product line
A few months ago I told you about how I spruced up our holidays with a Heart of Haiti piece. This month, Macy’s sent me a late Christmas gift to further beautify our home. I’m taking that as a kindness rather than as a suggestion that I need extensive decorating guidance. Although — who am I kidding? — I definitely need extensive decorating guidance.

Anyway, they sent me one of their Heart of Haiti recycled metal baskets. The pieces are made in Crois-des-Bouquets by metal artisans who forge bowls, lanterns and other decorative items out of recycled oil barrels. Here’s a short video that demonstrates how it’s done:

I didn’t know much about Macy’s Heart of Haiti initiative when I first agreed to write about it a few months ago. The more I’ve learned about it, though, the more I love the idea.

Macy’s started the program after the 2010 earthquake in Haiti as a way to help the artisans rebuild, and for many it has become a sustainable livelihood.

Heart of Haiti was and still is a “trade-not-aid” program. Rather than a one-time charitable event, Macy’s program is an ongoing partnership with individual artisans in Haiti. Today is the 6th anniversary of the 2010 earthquake, and the Macy’s program is still giving back. Specifically, the Heart of Haiti artisans get 50 percent of the wholesale cost of their handmade goods, which helps them feed their families, send their children to school and help support their extended families.

The Heart of Haiti line is available online and at select Macy’s stores.

Disclaimer: This is a sponsored post for Macy’s Heart of Haiti line in conjunction with Everywhere Agency. Nichole was given a product from the Heart of Haiti line in exchange for the post. All opinions are Nichole’s own.

This is a menu plan

Monday: Chicken Parm Meatballs
These little fellas have become a regular feature on the Butterscotch Sundae dinner table. I’m serving them with angel hair pasta and salad this time.

Tuesday: Breakfast for dinner
I’m turning this week’s BFD over to Rockford, King of Pancakes.

Wednesday: Cheesy spinach wreath
I’m not sure whether or not this is going to be a great idea for dinner. I’m rooting for you, spinach wreath.

Thursday: Coconut curry chicken
I got a gift card to Whole Foods for Christmas, and I treated myself to a jar of Lavanya’s simmer sauce. It’s a splurge, but it’s so simple and delicious.

Friday: ???
We have a homeschool co-op event in the early evening, and my brother and his family will be visiting. I don’t know what time the co-op thing will end, and I don’t know what time Perry Mason & Co. are arriving. So dinner is a bit up in the air.

More Monday Menus at OrgJunkie!

This week in homeschooling: We get back to work

regularI was expected something between light gnashing-of-teeth and complete anarchy when the holidays ended and it was time to get back to work, and I was very pleasantly surprised to be wrong. Maybe the kids are maturing, or perhaps we were all just well-rested and ready to get back to normal, or maybe it’s the yoga I’ve been doing every morning. Whatever the reason, this year’s Return from Christmas Break was the smoothest transition we’ve ever had, and I’m grateful for it.


Social Studies

The kids finished Volume 3 of “Story of the World” before the holidays, and I decided to hold off on starting Volume 4 until next school year. We’re going to focus on US Geography for the rest of this year. I have several geography textbooks, teaching guides and notebooking resources, and I’m using a little bit of each of them to cobble together our own curriculum. We’re going to try to cover one state every week.

We kicked things off this week with a South Carolina study. We did some map work, filled out a fact sheet and started a biography of civil rights activist and educator Mary McLeod Bethune. We were going to try some basket weaving, but the yarn I thought I had in the basement had at some point been unraveled to serve as a cat toy and was subsequently trashed. So it goes. This afternoon we made sweet tea, which we’ll be sipping as we snack on the homemade cheese straws we’re going to make once the butter softens.


Language Arts

Reading

We didn’t read it at all over our break, so we’re still working through “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.” It’s beginning to feel like we’ll be reading it for the rest of our lives.

Pete has been reading his assigned books suspiciously quickly. I know he’s a fast reader, but I’m concerned that he isn’t taking the time to absorb what he’s reading. So we’re changing things up a bit. He started reading an adaptation of “The Jungle Book” out loud to me. I’m not sure how he feels about it, but I’m thoroughly enjoying it. I haven’t been read to in a long time.

Writing

Poppy asked repeatedly over the holidays if I’d ordered Level 4 of Writing Strands for her yet. I had, and she very happily started it this week. The kids are also working independently on mystery stories featuring our cats.

Grammar

We’ll be finishing “Grammar Island” early next week, and I still haven’t bought “Grammar Town” yet. The series has really clicked with both kids, so I’d love to continue with it. It’s $300 for the full package, though, and that’s a very big slice of my homeschool-budget pie.

Memorization

I was expecting to review Washington through Cleveland for awhile, since we didn’t do it at all over Christmas break, but both kids recited it with no problem on Monday to we moved on to McKinley through Harding.


Math

Poppy started factoring and Pete started division this week. They both picked up the new concepts pretty quickly.

Wanna read more about homeschooling? Check out the Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers weekly linky thing!