Wednesday, October 31, 2007

So, it was my birthday...

After a leisurely-spent day, doing what I wanted to do rather than what I should do, we went to Black Hawk Park for a picnic. That's where the ward often has their 24th of July event. It was nice that daylight savings hadn't ended, so we still had a bit of sunshine. Still, it was chilly as the sun set. (But there were still mosquitoes out!) After Kentucky Fried Chicken, we went for a walk. There is actually a roadway here--we weren't walking on water, though the river was very high, with lots of overflow in low areas.
Back home, we indulged in my traditional orange cake, this time with chocolate drizzles. It was delicious!
And the maple tree in the back yard has finally turned colors--just in time for my birthday.



Monday, October 29, 2007

Dedicated to Deborah, our Optimist




An Optimist fell ten stories,
And at each window bar
He shouted to friends
and family below...
"Well, I'm all right so far!"

And the amazing thing is, that somehow she always lands safely!

Deborah, are your guardian angels working overtime, helping with all the things you've got going on in your life right now? (Master's studies, teaching, performing, church calling, dating and occasionally sleeping......)

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Things we learned last weekend

We learned a few things on our trip last weekend...

...don't forget my overnight case. (A trip over the river and into Wisconsin, to a Walmart, and crisis solved!)

...don't build an all-wood cabin for our home in Idaho. (We had been thinking of doing that). There is NO insulation in the walls--they look beautiful but you can hear people talking in the other rooms even though doors are closed. I had plenty of time to ponder this as I lay awake far into the night. Some of the other guests were a group of women on a husband-less-antique-and-quilt-shopping weekend. They stayed up late talking yet that wasn't keeping me awake. It was the occasional bursts of cackling or exclamation that would come just as I was about to drop off. At that point, I wasn't sure I ever wanted to go to a bed & breakfast again.
If we had a home like that, with visiting grandchildren, if one cried in the night, everyone would hear it.

...take more weekend trips!!

Monday, October 22, 2007

Weekend Retreat

Something new to do: stay in a bed-and-breakfast. We found one that sounded nice--a cabin setting. I've always liked rustic Americana.
And we had SUNSHINE! Glorious blue skies, vibrant colors of leaves. Not a sign of civilization, either on our side of the Mississippi, or on the Wisconsin side. And I was glad that I had read first, the Red River Girl book, as it gave lots of background for the settling of this area.
It was fun chatting with another couple as we waited for breakfast, which was a huge affair--fried potatoes, bacon, sausage, scrambled eggs, thick slices of decadent french toast. Good thing we were planning on doing a lot of hiking! (And we weren't hungry until mid-afternoon). Pike's Peak State park was a couple of miles away and the trails and lookouts over the Mississippi River were spectacular. Why haven't we taken the family here before?
(It's less than two hours away).

The morning was chilly; pleasant by noon. And the sunshine felt soooo good! We also visited Effigy Mounds National Monument. It has been 24 years since we last visited here--Ryan was a 1-year-old toddler. We saw a bald eagle flying over the water below us. We saw large V's of migrating birds.


But best of all, was just being with my sweetheart. It is hard to believe we've been married for 30 years--how time flies when you are having fun!

What's with all the rain???

October. Blue skies, autumn leaves, crisp nights and bright days.
Except for this year. We've had twice the rain in the first half of the month that Idaho has had in the last YEAR.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

I'm grateful today...

...that Kevin is home tonight! He was able to get on an earlier flight from Chicago to Cedar Rapids than the one he was scheduled to fly on, and as he drove out of the CR airport to come home, he got one of those automated phone calls from the travel agency: the flight he was booked on had been cancelled due to bad weather and the next flight was tomorrow morning. (I'm grateful he is such a savvy traveler!)
...that the rain is supposed to stop tomorrow and the sun is going to shine on Saturday! Kevin and I are going to a bed & breakfast tomorrow night, in Macgregor--a little town on the Mississippi where there are hills and hardwood forests, and maybe the leaves will be at their peak for color! This is our big hurrah for our 30th anniversary.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Time to decorate for Halloween?

Once upon a time, we created "Mitch", who watched over our front porch. That must have been the time that Kevin was in Japan, because we took his jeans, an old shirt, a John Deere hat, and even his gloves and shoes, and stuffed them with leaves--lots of dry leaves!
I won't comment on the costumes (?) Justin, Ryan and Deborah are wearing.... (Justin was still recovering from his broken arm).

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Thumb-sucking runs in the family...

Seeing Marta, my granddaughter, with her thumb in her mouth reminded me of her father..

.

Monday, October 15, 2007

You asked for it--you got it!

DEATH BY CHOCOLATE ("DER TOD VOR SCHOKOLADE")

First, the actual recipe:
1 9x13 Pan of brownies, baked
2 pkgs chocolate Mousse, prepared
1 large container Cool Whip
8 Heath Bars, crushed (or a pkg of Brickle Bits)
1 c pecans, chopped
Crumble the brownies and place 1/2 in a large bowl. Spread 1/2 of the mousse over the brownies pieces, then 1/2 of the Cool Whip, then Heath bar pieces then the nuts. Repeat all steps. Refrigerate for several hours or overnight. Serves 12-15 people. This is fun in a clear-glass bowl, so you can see the layers. I often do it in three layers instead of two.

Now, my reality:
  • instead of Mousse, I use instant chocolate pudding.
  • I like mini-chocolate chips instead of the Heath Bars, simply because I am more likely to have them on hand.
  • I don't usually put the nuts in.

This is probably the Death By Chocolate that you remember. I should have taken a picture of it on Friday night, but wasn't thinking! And I'm not going to make it again just for a photo. My waistline couldn't take that!

Sunday, October 14, 2007

I am grateful for...

...laying in my snug, warm bed this morning, listening to rain on the roof. We have such a comfortable home!

...the convenience and swiftness of email so I don't have to worry if Kevin made it safely to France. I wonder how, in centuries past, those wives endured when their husbands went overseas for missions, or war, and didn't have communication for months!

...the ease of photography and how many pictures we have of the children (more now than when Catherine was the baby and we were poor students being careful with our money--and getting slides developed was "expensive".) I think we have more pictures of our grandchildren already than all the pictures of our children!

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Just another Saturday

First of all, Happy Birthday to my mom! She is 88 years old today! (And doesn't look a day over 65). I just hope I have the same ability to live long and prosper!
***
Second, a group of us (5 couples) went to the community theatre last evening to watch a fun play--a murder mystery, with some laughs and a twist in the plot at the end. Thoroughly enjoyable! A woman from our ward is in the play and we thought it would be fun to support her. Afterwards, it was "Death by Chocolate" at our house. Having company is nice as then the house gets extra clean.
The only glitch in the evening was that Kevin wasn't there. Alice went with me as my companion, since Kevin was over the Atlantic, on his way to France. This trip came up suddenly--too suddenly for me to arrange to go with him (which would have been fun to do as our 30th anniversary is coming up!).
By the way, he made it safe and sound this morning.

Friday, October 12, 2007

And still more things that have been keeping me busy...

For Emma's birthday, I FINALLY got the book finished that relates our experiences together during our visit to Guam and Japan. I hope it has arrived safely! It was super fun to do and made me remember just how much I miss her, and Marta, and Ryan and Jamie. I am so looking forward to them living back on the same continent next year! Another thing that has been keeping me busy is doing name indexing. I am still doing some name extraction work as well, but eventually that will be done away and everything switched over to indexing through FamilySearchIndexing.org. (See the article in the August Ensign for more information). I have done over 2500 names since the last week of August. In our YW program, we are doing this as a service project. The girls have been challenged to do 500 names by Christmas. Then a Scout in our ward has incorporated it as part of his Eagle project. So I am keeping track of my hours to report to him. So far in October: 13 hours. (Hmmm, maybe that's why I haven't got my books read yet...)

Thursday, October 11, 2007

A post a day...

I was inspired by Jamie's "post-a-day" showing what the girls were doing. And Justin said since we've been doing blogs, we haven't been writing letters. So taking these two random bits of information, I've decided to be more consistent in sharing what's happening here in Baileyville. Tune in daily!

Other things keeping me busy

Gardening still keeps me busy--fall is the time for clearing out, cleaning up, and reorganizing the flower beds. Then there is mowing the lawn, as much to mulch up the fallen leaves as to cut the grass, which is growing slower these shorter days. (It is now dark when we get up in the morning.)
The roses are moved (gardening keeps Kevin busy too, as he did all the digging here). I've loved having them in front of the house, but now that the tree is getting larger, there was too much shade. They will be happier in their new spots by the fence. And I planted new daffodil, crocus, and hyacinth bulbs in the yard, looking forward to their spring blooming! And of course, the thing that keeps me busiest is parenting. We're at the stage where my advice and comments are not welcome, where "I can do it myself!" is just as fervent as at the two-year-old stage. And almost as untrue. Then humility comes back, with an apology, and then niceness. Parenting seems to be a roller coaster experience.

I was reading in the newspaper last night and this short piece caught my eye: The Sound of Music: Tune up your brain.
"You know those seemingly endless hours your parents made you spend practicing the piano or learning to play the violin?
"Time to say thank you, because all that practice did more than tune up your recital skills. It may have made the language areas of your brain more efficient, too. If you never took music lessons, here's why you should start.
"Researchers recently asked a group of musicians and nonmusicians to listen to--and reproduce--tone sequences. Not surprisingly, the musicians performed better on the task. But this was a surprise: As the musicians reproduced the tones, scans of their brains showed major activity in areas linked to language, leading researachers to conclude that building music skills may bolster language areas of the brain as well. In other words, studying music is like doing push-ups for your brain."
Maybe that's because music IS another language! (But they are right--it is very beneficial.)

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Things keeping me busy lately...

With the publishing in the Ensign of a pamphlet on food storage, I was reminded that we were not very organized in our storage. I'm pretty sure we have enough of the basics--wheat, beans, rice.
But then it was mentioned that we should have a 3-month supply of the things we normally use, and I knew we didn't have that. Thus, a project was born. Kevin "loves" it when I say something on the order of , "Honey, I think we need more shelves downstairs."

We already had shelves (built by Kevin several years ago) but they were spaced widely, for holding big boxes. So, if I began to put in cans and small boxes, I could only stack it part-way up and a lot of space was wasted.
So Kevin immediately got out his tape measure and began the plans. Within a few days, the new shelves were in (you can see the lighter, newer wood inbetween the old shelves). Wow, now I can fill them up, and I did!
The only problem is keeping my system intact. I've already noticed that stuff put away by others is in different spots than what I had planned. Do I just do all the putting away myself, or do I periodically straighten it up?
At General Conference, I take out all the foods in the 72-hour kits (backpacks!), and we get to eat it! (This is an idea I picked up in Relief Society a couple of years ago). It's fun snacking on the special things (trail mix, granola bars, juice cans, even candy) as we listen to Conference.
Then I replace those items, so that if we ever do have to use those kits, the food will actually be edible. I also try to put in items that have the furthest-away expiration dates--hopefully, a year or longer. That way I don't have to replace everything, every six months.
It has been educational doing this, as we've found things that I wouldn't want to have to eat. For example, don't make your own trail mix--the nuts go rancid! Keep the nuts, dried fruits, etc. in their original packaging.


So, this fall, we're a little closer to being ready for the future!

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Which to read first....

Hmmm. I hate dilemmas! The book interest group chose a book by Sheri Dew to read.
















But then, Aunt Ida and Aunt Jeannine were talking about "Sink Reflections" this summer, and when I saw it at the bookstore, I grabbed it.


















Then, I saw a book at The Book Nook, published in 1893, with that delicious smell of an old book. And it looks like a romance. That's intriguing!



















But at the library I saw a new youth book about the French/Indians who settled St. Paul, Minnesota. Ooh, I love historical fiction! (And I never knew that the Red River Valley--in an old song--was in Minnesota & Manitoba, Canada!)

So, which do I read first?






Monday, October 08, 2007

A Bit of October

October!
Time to bring out the fall decorations, for my second favorite season, after Christmas. I love crisp mornings, warm afternoons, the earthy smell of leaves on the ground, the crunch as I walk through them. But maybe you noticed the green outside the windows. Fall is a little late arriving this year! Maybe that's because we've had a good amount of rain.
And a good amount of heat--86 degrees yesterday.
A couple of times in the past week, we've been warmer than Las Vegas!

Don't look too closely, as Alice still has wet hair from her shower. We were just out stretching our legs a bit before watching General Conference.

That reminds me of another reason I love October. I've always loved listening to the Conference. It is such a peaceful time. And this was no exception.
I prayed for Elder Wirthlin to be able to finish his talk; I thought Elder Holland's talk on the Trinity was one of the best explanations I'd heard; and I want to be known as a mother "who knows", and to have clean hands AND a pure heart.
Yes, General Conference was good.