Planners for Moms: My Other Favorite Planner

July 6, 2006 @ 7:40 am | Filed under: Day Planners,Organization

It seems I’m not the only one with a planner obsession. I’m getting tons of feedback on this topic. Keep it coming! If you have found an organizational tool you love, do tell!—I’ll collect all the comments I’ve received in a future post. Sounds like there are some more nifty planners out there I should investigate…including, and this news has me so excited I can hardly stand it, yesterday I read that Small Meadow Press is about to launch its own planner. Cue the exclamation points! If you know me, you know I am a huuuuuge fan of all things Small Meadow. The notecards, the illustrated quotations, the house garlands—really, there is nothing Lesley Austin creates that doesn’t make my heart go pitty-pat. A Small Meadow planner sounds too good to be true.

Now on to another fine planner. This is the one I have used this past year and it served me perfectly. It’s the Catholic Woman’s Daily Planner from Family-Centered Press. All you FranklinCovey fans will be happy to know the Catholic Woman’s planner is available in a 7-hole-punched version that fits in your FC or DayRunner binders (FranklinCovey’s “classic” size). There is also a spiral-bound version, which is the one I used. If you prefer a larger size there is an 8 1/2 x 11″ version available in both spiral-bound and 3-hole-punched editions. Mine is the smaller spiral one and I loved its compactness (but there was still plenty of room for writing Lots of Stuff).

My favorite thing about this lovely planner: printed on each day are the daily Mass readings and saints’ feast days and Holy Days. It’s a beautiful way to keep tuned in to the turnings of the liturgical year. There are also quotes from the Church fathers on each weekly spread.

The format is a little different this year: click here for a look. Like the momAgenda, each month begins with a two-page month-at-a-glance spread and proceeds to week-at-a-glance pages. (Samples of both at the link above.) The extra pages include daily prayers, prayer journal, address book, web log and year-at-a-glance calendars. You can also choose versions with lesson planning pages, menu planning pages, or both. Lots of options!

I liked the protective plastic cover that doubled as a firmer surface for writing on. Of course a huge advantage to the spiral-bound and hole-punched formats is that the planner always lays flat, unlike sewn bindings.

Designing a planner can be a difficult job, because everyone has such decided preferences. I think the old format (week at a glance on the left-hand page, space for notes, shopping lists, and menu plans on the right) probably suited me better than the new layout, but a lot of people prefer the new version with more space for each weekday. This year’s model comes with stick-on plastic tabs, too, for demarcating the months of the year and other sections.

As for aesthetics, well, the momAgenda’s pretty colors are hard to beat. But that beauty comes at a price: the momAgenda is considerably more expensive. The Catholic Woman’s Planner (there’s a men’s version too) is affordable, functional, edifying, and inspirational, and I have thoroughly enjoyed using it.

More reviews to come in the days ahead! That’s my plan.

Other planner reviews:
momAgenda
Small Meadow Press — Circle of Days
BusyBodyBook

Motivated Moms Chore Planner

Comments

Comments RSS | TrackBack URI

  1. Jennifer says:

    Thanks for another thrilling post!
    I have been looking at this planner for months. (When I found out you were moving, I honestly panicked a little bit and thought, “What if she’s too busy to review the planners like she promised?”)

  2. Wendy in VA says:

    Oh! Oh! Oh! A planner from Small Meadow Press! When will it be ready, do you know?? I’m *so* glad I haven’t gotten a new one yet. You just made my day, Lissa. :o )

  3. Melissa Wiley says:

    Wendy: Any day now, maybe even today! I heard from Lesley yesterday and she is almost ready to put it on her site. SO. EXCITED.

    Jennifer, LOL! You just made *my* day. I am definitely a little off schedule–I meant to have the Charlotte Mason post up days ago, but this moving decision has been such a tornado, touching down unexpectedly, and everything will be a little off kilter for a while. The planner series may slow down, too, but I wanted to talk about those two ASAP since they both start with August and people are planner-hunting now.

  4. Wendy in VA says:

    Hee hee… My inner geek is giddy. :o )

    I don’t know how you’ve kept up like you have. Maybe it’s that no laundry thing… lol

  5. Wendy in VA says:

    Aaaarrgghh! I meant to say “thank you!” before I hit post. Your blogs are my daily must-reads.

  6. Melissa Wiley says:

    Aw, thanks, Wendy. :) BTW, Lesley’s planner is apparently something out of the ordinary–not a typical day-planner but something different. I’m intrigued and can’t wait to see its debut in the near future. I used the lovely Small Meadow calendar last year to record (with prismacolors–so pretty on her nice papers) some little adventure or event for each day of the year. It became SUCH a beautiful memory book for us, and I so enjoyed sitting down every evening after the children were sleeping to think about what I wanted to draw or write in that day’s square. Lesley’s things always inspire me so!

  7. kristina says:

    Lissa,
    Thank you for all of your research on planners! I have been so delighted with my Catholic Women’s Daily Planner. This current style is just right. It is time to order refills for me, yet now that it has changed, I cannot find anything like it online. I am planning to order a Jan-Dec 2006 planner just finish out the year. Then hope something just as good comes along next year.

  8. Kat Patrick says:

    I’m with you guys re: Catholic Planner. It just isn’t as good this year, but I’m afraid I’ll have to buy it in its new format afterall, with the menu planning and homeschooling additions. It had been lovely before to have the menu planning and appointments, etc. on the same page as the weekly calendar. Maybe they’ll go back to it next year?????

  9. Mary McCarthy says:

    Hi Melissa,

    First, thank you for such an informative blog…love the day planner stuff and so many other things I’ve seen over the past year!

    Just wanted to ask about palm pilots… have you covered any of those for using as day planners? I ask because I was a Franklin die- hard for years. In November of 2005 I purchased a Palm z22 and kept my receipts, box, etc. because I planned on returning it. I knew that I would NEVER want to use a digital form of a day planner, but had wanted to try for years. Imagine my surprise when I absolutely LOVED it!!! Will probably never go back to a paper system again. I could not fine a search feature on your blog, so forgive me if this is a redundant question and you’ve already covered palms! Thanks a bunch and God bless your work and your homeschool!

    P.S. I like to journal and was wondering if the Small Meadow press calendar could be used a daily journal of sorts?

  10. Day Planners for Moms | Melissa Wiley says:

    [...] planner reviews: Catholic Woman’s Daily Planner Small Meadow Press — Circle of Days BusyBodyBook “For the lover of truth, discussion is always [...]

  11. Planners for Moms: Circle of Days | Melissa Wiley says:

    [...] planner reviews: MomAgenda Catholic Woman’s Daily Planner BusyBodyBook “For the lover of truth, discussion is always possible.” Care to leave a comment? [...]

  12. Another Mom Planner Review: The BusyBodyBook | Melissa Wiley says:

    [...] planner reviews: MomAgenda Catholic Woman’s Daily Planner Small Meadow Press — Circle of Days “For the lover of truth, discussion is always possible.” [...]

  13. Day Planners for Moms | Melissa Wiley says:

    [...] Catholic Woman’s Daily Planner [...]

  14. Planner Review: Motivated Moms Chore Planner | Melissa Wiley says:

    [...] Catholic Woman’s Daily Planner Small Meadow Press — Circle of Days BusyBodyBook “For the lover of truth, discussion is always [...]

Leave a Reply

Comment a lot? Register here. Already registered? Login here.

Want your own gravatar? Get one here.


Welcome to

the Bonny Glen—

the online home of

children's book author

Melissa Wiley




In the Archives

you'll find posts about:


and much more!





Contact Me


Where to find unabridged Martha & Charlotte Books


My Bonny Clan

Jane, 15 yrs old
Rose, 12 yrs
Beanie, 9 yrs
Wonderboy, 6 yrs
Rilla, 4 yrs
Huck, 19 months

and Scott, the love of my life



Every Face I Look at Seems Beautiful






Book Log 2010



Book Log 2009



Book Log 2008



chestertonbaby



My Maudly Books


My Big List of Booklists


Boy with the Perfect Heart


My Bosom Buddies


The Green Ways of Growing


Some Breezy Open


Scary Junkyard Dogs


The Quiet Joy


Way Leads on to Way


At the Museum


Balboa Park Posts


Favorite Fictional Families


The Barcelona Journal






How We Learn

“Exploration,” says John Stilgoe, author of Outside Lies Magic, “is a liberal art, because it is an art that liberates, that frees, that opens away from narrowness. And it is fun.”

Yes: it is so, so much fun, and that is why I write these posts all chattery with excitement over this or that connection the kids made today. (Or that I made myself!) I know I get carried away, but that’s the point, isn’t it, that way leading on to way has carried me away?

And yet—and yet—I think we are at once ‘carried away’ and made more fully present in the now, more rooted, by these relationships between ideas about things past and future. The joy of connection makes me want to celebrate this moment, this brief encounter with wild-haired child and broad-trunked tree, bus going by, sign on church wall, Scottish warlord creeping over the tower wall and startling the English soldier’s wife who has just put her babe in arms to sleep by crooning that the Black Douglas won’t get him. Child, laughing, shouting “Dinna ye be sae sure aboot that!” across the courtyard outside the library. How can I not celebrate this freedom?

(from a post called Way Leads on to Way)




snidely200

boys


rosebaby

3littles

rillachin

3932141947_a5a702c941








Search This Blog


 Subscribe to my feed




Coming in October with a foreword by yours truly


Recent Comments



Twittered

Twitter Updates



    Recent Posts



    I Heart the Kidlitosphere

    Check out this big list of children's-book-related blogs at Kidlitosphere Central

    Author and Illustrator Blogs







    A Word about How I Blog

    Every day is complicated, messy, and full of friction. And every day has glorious or cozy moments worth celebrating. I seldom bother to chronicle the friction and the mess because writing time is fleeting and precious—and childhood even more so. I’d rather capture the small joys that I might forget—or take for granted—if I don’t take time to set them down in words.

    (Excerpt from this post about Real Life, quoted here because I don't want anyone to be under the impression that things are always perfect around here! Heaven knows we are anything but. Perfect, frictionless, orderly? Nope. Happy? Most of the time!)




    Be Like the Bird

    Be like the bird
    Who, pausing in flight
    On limb too slight,
    Feels it give way beneath her,
    Yet sings,
    Knowing she has wings.

    —Victor Hugo




    From My Feed Reader



    Find my books at IndieBound

    Shop Indie Bookstores