Montezuma National Monument – Montezuma Castle

Here’s a stunning view of Montezuma Castle National Monument, a remarkable cliff dwelling in Arizona.


What’s So Special About Montezuma Castle?

1. What and Who Built It

  • Montezuma Castle is not really a castle but a prehistoric five-story, approximately 20-room “apartment complex” built by the Sinagua people, a pre-Columbian culture related to the Hohokam, between around AD 1100 and 1425, possibly over three centuries .
  • The name is a misnomer: early European-American settlers wrongly believed it was tied to the Aztec emperor Montezuma, though it was abandoned over 40 years before his birth .

2. Location and Structure

  • Carved into a limestone cliff about 90 feet (roughly 80 ft / 24 m) above Beaver Creek, it’s situated just northeast of Camp Verde in the Verde River Valley .
  • The cliff’s natural alcove shielded the structure, greatly aiding its remarkable preservation .

3. Architectural Innovation

  • Built using limestone chunks and mud-based mortar, with wooden beams (from local trees like sycamore) and thatch ceilings—walls were ~2 ft thick at the base, narrowing to ~1 ft at the top; doorways were about 5 ft tall, ceilings around 6 ft high .
  • Located high above the flood-prone valley, it offered safety from Beaver Creek’s seasonal flooding, a clever environmental adaptation .

4. Historical Importance & Protection

  • Declared one of the first U.S. National Monuments by President Theodore Roosevelt on December 8, 1906, under the Antiquities Act .
  • Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1966 .
  • Early visitors once climbed ladders to enter the ruins, but access was halted in 1951 to prevent further damage .
  • Restoration efforts have taken place since the late 19th century, including in 1897 and the 1930s; more recently, mid-1990s efforts addressed carpenter bee damage. Preservation uses traditional Sinagua-style techniques when possible .

5. Visitor Experience

  • The monument spans about 860 acres .
  • A 0.3-mile paved loop trail from the visitor center leads to views of the castle; over 95% of the visible structure is original .
  • Features include a museum displaying tools, grindstones (metates), bone needles, ornaments, pottery, and artifacts reflecting their craftsmanship and trade networks .
  • Castle A, another nearby cliff dwelling, is visible from the trail but closed to protect it; it suffered fire damage between 1375–1395 from conflict .

6. Natural and Cultural Legacy

  • The surrounding area hosts a rich ecosystem, where a survey recorded around 784 species, only 11% non-native including bats, birds, reptiles, mammals, and more .
  • At least 14 bat species, including endangered ones like the Western Red Bat and Townsend’s Big-eared Bat, inhabit the site. Hummingbird studies are also ongoing .

Montezuma Well: The Water Source Connection

  • Montezuma Well is a detached unit of the National Monument, located about 11 miles northeast, near Rimrock, Arizona .
  • It’s a large limestone sinkhole approximately 386 ft across and continuously fed by ~1.5 million gallons of spring water daily, even during droughts; water is highly carbonated and contains arsenic .
  • The Well supported early irrigation systems used for agriculture from as early as the 8th century, with parts still in use today .
  • Hosts endemic species, including unique snails, leeches, amphipods, and others, a biodiversity hotspot .

Amazing experience for $10 adult pass. Children enter free.

The children loved it and it was very educational.


Eve

Ancient Greek History and Resources

From the Ancient Greece Images ebook on Etsy

I have a fascination with ancient Greece and its history. It frequently intersects my art and poetry.

My oldest daughter Lizzie has a cool ancient history class on Outschool. I think culture is important. I also teach the kids ancient history myself. They receive it well.

Free Ancient Greece Learning Resources

Free document. Ancient Greece Learning Ideas with images and 49 ideas for learning about Greek history and ancient Greek culture. Download yours through this link:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1an5mTp23F_p8ZPaFeu0OkQCGj71GpMJi/view?usp=sharing

Read our blog as we have shared ancient Greek inspired poetry, lesson plans, mythology, art, paper dolls, and more.

Follow us as I will be creating more materials based on these stunning images. I created this ebook to use it in my daughter’s home education, so you will see much more on this topic.

Thank you for your visit,

From the Greece Images ebook on Etsy

Eve

Scroll Backgrounds – Stationery – Journal Pages

I will use these as poetry backgrounds and print them for the girls to write on something cute and interesting. I have been creating journal pages on Canva and you will see more coming int he future.

I also have an exciting announcement: I used an art tablet for calligraphy, and it worked so great that I will be showing you some handwriting exercises.

I will be sharing my first awesome journal page in January.

Eve

Ancient Greece Learning Ideas – Free Homeschool Parent Download

Image from Ancient Greek Images on Etsy

Unlock the Wonders of Ancient Greece! 🌟

I’m so excited to share a special FREE resource with you today! This parent guide is packed with creative ideas to help your kids dive into the beauty and history of Ancient Greece. It’s perfect for homeschoolers who want to spark curiosity and make learning come alive through art, history, and storytelling.

Download for free through this link:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1an5mTp23F_p8ZPaFeu0OkQCGj71GpMJi/view?usp=sharing

But wait—there’s more! 🏛️ If you love this guide, imagine pairing it with stunning, high-quality photographs of Ancient Greece. Our Greek Images eBook, available on Etsy for a super affordable price, offers 39 captivating images of ancient ruins, famous cities, sculptures, and more. These pictures are the perfect complement to your lessons and will immerse your kids in the magic of the past while making your homeschool space even more inspiring!

What You’ll Get with the Free Guide

  • Creative activity ideas tailored for ages 10–12
  • Ways to use art and storytelling to engage your kids
  • Tips on how visuals can transform learning into an unforgettable adventure

Why Pair It with the Greek Images eBook?

Our eBook includes vibrant, carefully curated photographs that go beyond what you’ll find online. They’re perfect for:

  • Classroom decor to set the mood for your Ancient Greece lessons
  • Inspiring art and writing projects
  • Creating digital or physical history presentations

And if you’re ready to bring Ancient Greece to life with gorgeous visuals, check out the Greek Images eBook on Etsy. Every purchase supports our growing library of homeschool resources, and there’s so much more to come!

Let’s make history fun, beautiful, and unforgettable—for your kids and for you. 🏺✨

This free document also contains some high quality images

This document is included in my bundle for sale on Etsy. Get the Stunning Ancient and modern Greece images on Etsy through this link:

https://www.etsy.com/your/shops/me/listing-editor/edit/1829590686

Eve

Our Etsy Shop – Poetry, Art, History, Worksheets

EveLovestar.etsy.com

Welcome to Our Homeschool Haven!

At our Etsy shop, you’ll find a treasure trove of creative, inspiring, and educational resources for homeschoolers of all ages! From activity pages for toddlers to captivating Ancient Greece printables, mandala coloring books with poetic twists, and even bilingual materials and Spanish lessons, we aim to make learning fun, engaging, and unforgettable.

For parents, we offer mindfulness and growth tools, with even more exciting resources to come.

But this is just the beginning! Our mission is to make poetry cool again and to inspire a lifelong love of learning.

Can’t purchase today? Don’t worry—we’ve got you covered with supplemental free content on this blog, videos, and a homeschool world domination plan (yes, really). Join us as we make education an adventure for the whole family!

Current Homeschool Offers

Let’s Learn with Fruit – Toddler Interactive Activities (2 – 5 year olds)

https://www.etsy.com/your/shops/me/listing-editor/edit/1829248086

Mandala Coloring Pages with Poetry – (10 – 12 year olds)

https://www.etsy.com/your/shops/me/listing-editor/edit/1843441197

Spanish Class for Children with a Poem – Beginner

https://www.etsy.com/your/shops/me/listing-editor/edit/1780462505

Thank you for your support!

We have a full schedule for 2025 when we will be blogging and creating extensively. Follow us to not miss a thing.

Eve

Athena paper doll and Greek historical fashion

Dear reader,

I didn’t want to share my Athena paper doll because the fashion illustration was historically inaccurate.  It was silly, so here it is in its imperfect glory.

Athena paper doll by Eve

Minerva was Athena in Rome

Atenea is Spanish

Atena in Italian

Since Athena’s name is extremely ancient, the sound of the letter Eta (uppercase Η, lowercase η) has changed in the thousands of years of Athena’s reach. This is why she has been Athena, Athene. I have to look more into this because I also saw her name spelled with an Alpha at the end, which corresponds to our modern Athena.

This dress turned out wrong, attempted a tied look on the waist, but the skirt should be pleated and fall at her sides.

Now that I have shown you my defective work, I will have to finish it. I have a second page where I stopped. It has a shield and another dress that also made me feel I had done a poor job.

Ancient Greek fashion

The ancient Greeks didn’t have sewing machines. They used fabrics and tied them into dresses.

Even in Rome, dresses called Stolas in Latin (the equivalent of togas for males) were very large tied fabrics.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothing_in_ancient_Greece

The reason why my design is wrong is that it doesn’t look tied, which should give a very pleated look that fell very close to the body.

I tried, but I created a modern look, which is alright, but I will try my hand at this again.

Lizzie’s Athena
Lilli’s Athena
This image of Athena was AI created. Lilli put this together on Canva.

I will perfect this design, and we will talk more about ancient Greek clothing. The next paper doll will be better, I promise.

Of course, you can print this one and use it in your homeschooling practice.

With Love,

Eve

Venus of BoticeLilli. Boticelli by Lilli

We loved learning about Athena, and we drew lots of Athena images. I did not share with you, my Athena paper doll. I have a bad excuse. It was imperfect… I get it, it is not a good trait to teach my daughters, to be a perfectionist, so, I will show you on my next post. I will re-create my Athena paper doll until it is perfect. Those are opposing statements, but I will show you the imperfect job, then I will recreate and perfect.

But this is not about me, or my perfectionism.

This is about Lilli.

I sent Lilli to the computer to work on her Duolingo lesson. But I got distracted by a funny picture of one of the Duolingo characters “dressed” as the Venus of Boticelli. I had been meaning to show Lilli because of how funny it looks and the fact that Lilli knows about Venus and that painting (I am a bit obsessed with the goddess).

Since we learned about Athena, the next goddess we were going to learn about was Aphrodite. Of course, Venus is the Roman name for Aphrodite. Lilli likes Aphrodite even more than Athena, she said. I realized that we must not forget Artemis….

I started with Athena on purpose. I intended to initiate the ancient goddess club with the wise one. Obviously.

About Lilli’s Boticelli inspired Venus:

I was making fun of this hilarious Venus inspired character when I started talking to Lilli of the famous painting which she already knows and considers sus(picious), because, well, Venus is undressed in the painting and covering up with her fabulous hair, just like this hilarious character is covering up with his beard.

The painting is of her birth. According to myth, she was born fully grown like Athena, with one difference, Athena was born in full armor, Venus, was born fully grown and without clothes. Int he very gorgeous Boticelli painting, Venus is being offered a gorgeous cloth to cover herself up.

Duolingo’s Oscar as Venus (Inspired by the famous Boticelli painting)

Between one joke and the next, we were looking up the famous Boticelli picture. We saw that there were countless pictures of it for sale and Lilli was amazed at how expensive they were, and I told her that is really nothing for a copy of one of the most famous paintings in the world. One of the most reproduced paintings ever.

I realized that the original painting is so old that it precedes copyright laws and thus it is completely free to be copied and used in any way and even to sell. I immediately told Lilli that she should draw her, not thinking anything of it. I opened Duolingo and went to work with Lizzie on her story, I will write about that story as soon as she is ready, but it is a marvelous project.

While I was sitting with Lizzie at her computer, Lilli calls me, and she shows me this incredible Venus art! I was speechless.

Venus of Boticelli by Lilli

Lilli dressed her Venus! That was sweet. Something about her wearing rags, though, she said since the Greeks tied their clothes. But I am not certain why she dressed Venus in rags but for a child, it is much better than in her birth suit. So, I take her creativity, and I loved it.

I am simply in love with that hair, and you bet I will spend the better of the next 5 years drawing my Venus of Boticelli. That was a joke….

Boticelli and his birth of Venus painting

Take advantage and learn some art history through the links below:

https://www.britannica.com/topic/Birth-of-Venus

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandro_Botticelli Learn everything about Boticelli, the painter.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Birth_of_Venus Learn everything about the painting.

(How are the kids’ language learning going? Lizzie did her first ever Duolingo class today, that was a huge success, and she noticed what she didn’t know, of course, but I noticed how much she actually knew. Perspectives.). Lilli and Vivi both do Duolingo Spanish. I have to remind them, but they understand so much. I am getting Alex (4) to understand what it means that other language Spanish, huh, he doesn’t fully get it yet, but he likes papas fritas (fried potatoes)….

Meanwhile, I am learning three languages. I will have to go back to the drawing board with my initiative for teaching the children languages. However, the children have learned Spanish, they simply are not language “nerds” like me. The thing is I love language learning. They love art and games. To me language is art and fun.

NOTE: I used the word nerd full of love and with no judgement. I think language nerds are some of the coolest people ever. Perspectives.

Let us talk again soon,

Eve

Learn Italian With Music, Update. Language learning tip.

Dear reader,

I stopped learning Italian on Duolingo because the Duolingo Italian course is not fun. Italian is a gorgeous language and Duolingo does not do it justice.

After I almost lost my streak because of the Italian course, I started a new language, Greek and started learning Italian by listening to Italian music and interacting with the language in a fun and relaxed way. I do not have to learn this language anyway.

Using Music for Language Learning

What is a fun way to learn a new language if traditional methods don’t quite resonate with you? If you’ve ever felt frustrated with a language learning app or textbook, it might be time to consider an alternative approach: music.

Music can transform the language learning process into a game of wonderment and exploration, making it not only enjoyable but also highly effective. Here’s how you can harness the power of music to learn a new language, drawing on my own experience with Italian music.

Discovering Language Through Music

1. Anchoring into Favorite Tunes

One of the most engaging ways to learn a new language is by immersing yourself in music you already love. For instance, I enjoyed the Spanish songs of Laura Pausini and Eros Ramazzotti. By listening to these artists’ Italian versions of the songs I know and love, I learned. This familiar territory provides a comforting anchor, helping you recognize and remember phrases and words more easily.

I fell in love with a new Italian song, started singing it in karaoke, then found translations to Spanish and English. I learned expressions and words as well as recognized words that are the same as in Spanish, my first language. Now I used the vocabulary I learned on my karaoke song in a different song.

A fun Italian story on Duolingo
Io o bisogno di (I have a need for) is a phrase I heard in music, so through music, I practice what I learned on Duolingo.
The woman asks the worker for help at the store. She is buying a new jacket. He helps her choose the red jacket, then tells her he does not work there.
Jacket = giacca, elegant = elegante, very = multo, help = aiuto, store = negozio.

2. Pattern Recognition

Music is an excellent tool for pattern recognition. Pay attention to recurring phrases, themes, and lyrical structures.

For example, in Italian music, I noticed themes such as “Il mare” (the sea), “Parole” (words), and “il cuore” (the heart). I learned all three words because of music and since they’re themes in Italian music, they’re in so many songs. Noticing these patterns helps you internalize the language structure and vocabulary. The rhythm and melody also make it easier to remember new words and phrases.

3. Exploring New Sounds

Spotify and other streaming services offer a wide range of Italian music that can introduce you to the rhythm and intonation of the language. Fast-paced European-style songs with poetic lyrics can be especially engaging. These songs often blend beautiful singing with intricate language, providing a rich auditory experience that helps you get used to the language’s sounds and patterns.

Italian Party Music Spotify Playlist (Adult)

A Game of Wonderment

Learning a language through music is akin to being a baby in an Italian-speaking environment. Just as a child absorbs language by hearing it spoken around them, you absorb Italian by listening to its music. Embrace the process of trying to understand without judging yourself. It’s natural not to grasp every word or sentence at first. Over time, you’ll start recognizing familiar words and phrases, which will naturally expand your vocabulary and understanding.

Benefits of Music-Based Learning

1. Enhanced Listening Skills

Listening to music helps improve your listening skills and pronunciation. You become more attuned to the nuances of the language, such as intonation and stress, which are crucial for effective communication.

2. Emotional Connection

Music often evokes emotions, making the language learning process more personal and memorable. The emotional connection to a song can make new vocabulary stick better. Similar to my pitch for poetry for language learning.

3. Cultural Insight

Music is a reflection of culture. By listening to Italian songs, you gain insights into Italian culture, traditions, and values, enriching your overall learning experience.

Conclusion

I still do not speak or understand Italian but I am learning and it is fun. I do not have to learn it anyway but I take any opportunity I get to learn.

Incorporating music into my language learning routine was a powerful and enjoyable method to familiarize myself with my new language. By anchoring myself in familiar tunes, recognizing patterns, and exploring new sounds, I transformed language learning into an engaging game.

My goal is to become comfortable with the language’s sounds and rhythms. As I continue to listen and immerse myself, I found that I understood some words and the knowledge of the language grew naturally, much like a child absorbing their mother tongue.

Embrace the melody of learning, and let the music guide you to fluency.

Phrases I just heard in music

I listen to this playlist all the time.

My favorite song is my karaoke song

  • Dove sei tu? Where are you?
  • Podemo escapare
  • Per favore, non piangere.
  • Ho bisogno di te
  • Me lo merito
  • Ma quale verita
  • Non capita
  • Cuando piango
  • Grazie per existere
  • Sinceramente Tua

I recognize a word such as it happened with “parole” (words) in music after listening to it many times in several contexts, looking up the meaning and remembering it.

And you, what language are you learning or teaching and what tools are you using?

Thank you for your time,

Eve