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Chincoteague Island, Virginia

October 6, 2011 Ticia 11 Comments

Like most 10 year old girls I was horse crazy.  Unlike most girls, my Mom indulged me and at 13 years old I visited Chincoteague Island and saw Pony Penning.  I visited the home of Misty of Chincoteague, and spent most of my vacation money buying Breyer horses.

Fast forward a few years and I have a horse crazy daughter, and we’re studying Virginia for our homeschool geography, so I had a perfectly valid excuse to teach about Chincoteague Island.

Chincoteague Island and the wild ponies

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Our Chincoteague Island books

Okay, technically the books we read are about Assateague Island, but still…….

I checked out a couple of books about Chincoteague Island and Assateague Island, but I liked Wild Ponies* the best.  The artwork appealed to me more.  Though Pony Island is a perfectly valid book if you can find it.

 

Both books talk about the Assateague ponies and their lives.  I find the story of the Assateague ponies fascinating (probably because I obsessively read every Marguerite Henry* book I could get ahold of as a kid, and Misty of Chincoteague* in particular, my regret is not being able to convince Princess of the joys of her books)

One of the things that stood out to me as we read the book was the many different colors of horses on the island, so we each colored what our horse from the island would look like.

Chincoteague Island activity

Chincoteague Island and Assateague island activity

While we colored I asked them which of the legends for how the horses got there they liked best.

Most of us agreed we liked the Spanish Galleon legend, but there are other ones briefly mentioned here.  If you read “Misty of Chincoteague” you get a much extended version of how the horses got there.  I hadn’t realized until I was doing background info for this project that there was more than one theory.

Chincoteague ponies activity

They all had fun coloring the horses.  It amused me that our friend colored a nice normal horse.  That Superman started with a normal paint horse and then after Batman created his blue monstrosity, Superman’s very quickly changed into a multi-colored “horse of a different color.”

Yeah, I totally had them backwards.  Superman had the blue monstrosity, and Batman started off with the paint.

See, Superman wore the Star Wars Lego shirt later in the week also, so that’s going to be my excuse for getting them wrong.  That and I can’t clearly see the faces……….

Yeah, that’s it.  I always know the difference in my kids.

Seriously ya’ll, I’m so screwed if they ever seriously try to pass themselves off as their brother, as long as they don’t open their mouths they might pull it off.  I still have my UBER-humiliate back-up plan.

I’m gonna link this over at All Things Beautiful and Start

 

Want some more information to virtually visit Virginia?

  • George Washington lesson
  • Patrick Henry lesson
  • Mount Vernon
  • Monticello
  • Colonial Williamsburg
  • Thomas Jefferson

reading and writing book and activity

Comments

  1. MamaTea says

    October 6, 2011 at 11:36 am

    I love it when I am researching for a project and find out something I didn't know before. It's proof for the boys that you never stop learning. 🙂

    And as far as being able to tell your kids apart…are you supposed to be able to do that? 😉

    Reply
  2. Nicole says

    October 6, 2011 at 12:46 pm

    I always said I'd get a colored dot tattooed on the big toe of my twins, if I ever had them, just in case. I used to watch IDENTICAL twin girls and their mom told of spending an entire day thinking they were the other.

    Reply
  3. Ticia says

    October 6, 2011 at 12:47 pm

    Everyone else who has twins claims that their twins are “so different” and they can always tell the difference.

    That may be, but I sure can't in pictures always.

    This is God's payback for all of those twins growing up that I could never tell apart and all the twins I know now who I still can't tell apart……

    Reply
  4. Megan says

    October 6, 2011 at 1:14 pm

    I've seen those horses and their version looks a lot more fun!

    Reply
  5. Raising a Happy Child says

    October 6, 2011 at 1:21 pm

    You definitely know so much about US history/geography and always manage to find good books to read. The horse color story cracked me up!

    Reply
  6. Debbie says

    October 6, 2011 at 2:51 pm

    I absolutely love the way your children think. The horses are so cute.

    Reply
  7. MaryAnne says

    October 6, 2011 at 3:49 pm

    What's your uber-humiliate back-up plan?

    Your boys are the most identical-looking of any identicals I've ever seen. I think the short hair makes it even harder, because you can't see variations in the way hair lies/hair thickness.

    Reply
  8. An Almost Unschooling Mom says

    October 6, 2011 at 10:59 pm

    What island? Now I have another thing to go look up!

    Reply
  9. babies, toddlers, and preschoolers, oh my! says

    October 6, 2011 at 11:34 pm

    i just stumbled upon your blog and LOVE your title! How adorable is that!?! cant wait to read more and get some great ideas for my daycare!

    Reply
  10. Susan @ learning ALL the time!! says

    October 7, 2011 at 2:34 am

    I loved reading the books in the “Misty of Chincoteague” series when I was younger. I think their horses are quite lovely!!
    Too funny that you have trouble telling the boys apart 🙂

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. 50 State Study: Virginia state study | Adventures in MommydomAdventures in Mommydom says:
    February 26, 2014 at 10:20 pm

    […] Chincoteague pony- or in the boys’ case, the amazing Technicolor pony […]

    Reply

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Ticia Adventures in Mommydom Hi, I'm Ticia! This is the adventures of my family in life and learning. Follow along with us as we share our adventures. We're having a lot of fun and learning as we go.

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