Monday, February 25, 2008

What to Do When School is Out

So, with school out 2 days last week,
and it is snowing again this afternoon (3"-6" expected),
I'm about ready to order some home-schooling materials!
But we did use our time well last week. I purchased some fabric and Elizabeth cut out, sewed, and stuffed four pillows for our futon. I got to do the hand stitching after they were stuffed. I also sewed a ruffle for the futon to hide the genealogy boxes that are stored underneath.
We also did a lot of painting. I repainted all the white trim in the TV room, and painted this chest of drawers. We bought it at a garage sale several years ago, with the idea that it needed to be painted, and just had never gotten around to it. Now that room looks superb! I even had enough of the maroon floral fabric to make a slip cover for the office chair that is so comfortable to sit in, but it was BLACK.
We also touched up the paint in the room the missionaries will be moving into (on Thursday). The room is completely cleaned out and ready for them. We painted the half-wall going down the stairs. The kitchen counter has had lots of cans of paint on it this week.
The home is looking pretty good right now!

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

School is cancelled, again!


I think we will be getting out of school about mid-June now, as all these snow days are tacked on to the end of the school year. I know that it might be hard for our tropics-living family members to even imagine, but school wasn't cancelled for snow--it was cancelled for COLD. It is -9 this morning, with a strong north wind (wind chill of -30). But the day is sunny and bright--very deceptive!

A perfect day for Elizabeth and Alice to learn how to repaint closet doors and other trim!

Monday, February 18, 2008

Anyone tired of snow yet?

Another winter storm hit over the weekend, beginning with rain on Saturday night, then freezing rain (making all the trees look sparkly and pretty), and finally snow and wind on Sunday morning. I think church would have been cancelled, but the bishop made the mistake of calling Kevin for advice. And you know Kevin. He just looks at adverse weather conditions as a type of challenge. We went to church one time when the wind chill was -80 degrees. And the bishop is from Canada, so this doesn't faze him either.
(This is the wind-sculpted snow in the back yard.)
After Sacrament meeting, which was actually well-attended (if you count all the people who came in 10-20 minutes late), the rest of the meetings were cancelled, and the afternoon ward cancelled their meetings.
Kevin and I came home, changed into snow-shovelling clothes, and cleaned out the driveway.
We also spent quite a bit of time cleaning out the "irrigation ditches" so the slushy water could drain off the road (it was about 5 inches deep).
The snow was VERY heavy to shovel, and often would stick to the shovel. Then you have to knock it off before going for the next shovel-full. Quite a work-out for a Sunday! But it was good that we did that, because an "arctic airmass" came roaring in from the north last night and dropped the temperature down to zero.
Guess what all those slushy tracks in the road turned into!
(We hadn't realized that putting in the fence would cause a drift there.)

School was cancelled this morning, and so Alice is at one friend's house and Elizabeth at another's. Funny. I can drive the roads just fine in getting the girls to their friends, but the school district didn't think we could make it to the school (which is closer). The roads are very bumpy!

(With all the blowing snow this morning, we had sun dogs!)

I've been using the day working on all the STUFF that is contained in Deborah's bedroom, getting it ready for the missionaries to stay. She gets to go through ALL these containers when she comes home for a few weeks this summer. I don't envy her having to make all the hard decisions of what to do with it all!

Sunday, February 10, 2008

we found one!!!!!

WE FOUND ONE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

After long months of searching we finally found one. That's right, we got a Wii!

It's so much fun!

- Alice

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Hydrology, Iowa-style

Ryan is studying hydrology in the islands as the emphasis for his Masters Degree. I grew up in the West where irrigating and moving water where it needs to go is an everyday part of life. Thus, when we had a nice thaw, I couldn't resist going out with a shovel and making channels so all that water could drain off into the storm sewer. It is satisfying seeing water go where you want it to go.
Kevin first dug this channel--our own version of Etretat (on the coast of Normandy).
The day after this thaw, the temperatures dropped again below zero, and any leftover water turned into ice. I was glad our area of the street didn't have that problem!

Friday, February 01, 2008

Sunrise, sunset, and in between...



...including Alice's speech as she portrayed Gerald R. Ford, in her 5th grade class.

Friday, January 18, 2008

The view from up here...

...from the top of the stairs, with Grandpa Bailey and Alice. ...from piggyback rides in Grandma Bailey's living room. (Look, we caught Connor on camera!)

...or from another piggyback ride at Uncle Kim's.Do I know these last two girls???

Monday, January 14, 2008

New blogs

Let me introduce two new blogs: Aunt Terry is now up and running with "Terry's World" at tarlady.blogspot.com (Theresa Ann Ryan).

The second blog is done by some women in our ward (myself included), to answer some of the political questions brought up by the current campaign as related to Mormonism. One of the women is a journalism major (Master's degree), and the other is an attorney. I'm the voice of the common person, I guess. I really don't know how I got included, other than having an interest in the topic. www.truthandreason.typepad.com

Check them out!

And the Christmas memories keep rolling...

Brenna and her great-grandpa looking through a seed catalog...Or Brenna enjoying Christmas oranges...
Great-grandpa holding Alastair (who is obviously teething--lots of drool at current time!)
Or catching Catherine playing with Alastair. Funny. Not too many pictures of Connor. That could be because he runs whenever a camera appears.
Or he sticks up his hand to cover his face.
And interestingly, not too many pictures of Great-grandma Bailey. Despite our efforts to order pizza or Chinese food, to make things easier, she was ALWAYS in the kitchen, just whipping up something "easy" like peach cheesecake, or apple pie, or homemade chicken noodle soup.
We've discovered that if you want to spend time with Grandma, help out in the kitchen. She appreciates the help and you get to hear some great stories from her life.
Such as:
The time on her 1st mission when the mission president had exhorted the missionaries to open their mouths in any situation--in the grocery line, on the street, etc. She was being transferred to a new area and had to ride the bus--a couple of hours. So she began talking with the man seated next to her. He wasn't really interested in her gospel message, but she "unloaded" (in her words) and gave him the whole story. When she got off, she thought he looked relieved! End of story? No.
At the next Zone Conference, another set of missionaries
asked her if she had been on the bus on such-and-such date.
Yes, she had.
Well, the woman sitting in FRONT of her had been listening. She looked up the missionaries
and was baptized!
I'm just glad I was helping peel potatoes!

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Two weeks ago today...

Yes, we had plenty of snow while we were in Idaho. The normal picture here is of a lovely plum tree with green grass under it. Not so in December!I was just reflecting. Two weeks ago, right about this time of afternoon, we were trying to drive in the lane to the Bailey home. Usually, that quarter mile lane is traversed in a matter of a minute or less. Not so this time! One hour. Yes, one hour! The wind had been blowing, and all that beautiful, powdery, 12 inches of snow started moving around... drifting... filling in the lane. Justin and Darcy barely made it in with their 4-wheel drive an hour earlier. Catherine and Aaron, with 3 unhappy children, had taken 20 minutes, a few hours earlier. Here's Justin, running back to the house for another shovel. And maybe a warmer hat. It was bitterly cold with the wind!
It was a matter of shovel out under the wheels, rock the car backward and forward (with lots of yells, "don't spin the wheels!") and then move forward 10 feet before repeating the actions.
One of the major problems is that the Honda minivan has a low clearance--we were constantly high-centering on the snow drifts, and the chassis has NO place to hook on a towing cable. That would have made it all too easy--Grandpa could have just got the tractor and hauled us through all those drifts. But the owner's manual states: towing is definitely NOT recommended.

Once we made it to the house, Grandpa took the tractor out with a blade, and then later with a snow blower to clear things out. He was up at 4:30 Sunday morning to get it ready for us to go to church at 9 a.m. We were the first out. Stuck again. After 30 minutes of work, we were able to get back to the house, then go in shifts in the 4-wheel drive vehicles. We were only 20 minutes late for church, and we were providing the special musical number (Kevin-piano, Deborah, Elly and Alice on string instruments--it was beautiful!)

We'll always remember this Christmas vacation!

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

Images of Christmas

Whether putting together a puzzle with Grandma Beth,
gathering with the extended family at Grandma and Grandpa Bailey's,
wearing new Christmas clothing, or

waiting with anticipation for the unwrapping of gifts, Christmas brings such great memories. And Justin, sorry about making it look like you were still sleepy. I'm SURE that wasn't the case, was it?

Saturday, January 05, 2008

Christmas Giving--2007

With the theme of "Variety is the Spice of Life," the sibling gift recipients of 2007 were as follows:

Catherine gave to Justin
***
Aaron gave to Elizabeth
***
Justin gave to Ryan
***
Darcie gave to Jamie
***
Ryan gave to Darcie
***
Jamie gave to Aaron
***
Deborah gave to Alice
***
Elizabeth gave to Catherine
and
Alice gave to Deborah
***
We saw varieties of hot chocolate; a gorilla variety of tri-pod (that Elizabeth hasn't stopped playing with yet); a variety of air fresheners for Deborah's car; a variety of Pride & Prejudice Soundtrack (there are so many different ones out there?); and a variety of photos and frames. I'd like to hear what the other gifts were. Aaron, what did you get? Ryan and Jamie, what spicy variety of things did you receive?
***
And, who wants to come up with next year's theme???

Friday, January 04, 2008

Did Someone Mention Snow?

Snow, snow, snow... winter has technically just begun, but snow has been around for quite a while now. Here in Cedar Falls......and on Interstate 80 between Laramie and Rawlins in Wyoming... (and this was before it got scary and Kevin took over driving)...
...at Hoback Junction, near Jackson Hole, Wyoming. This part of the journey was SO beautiful!
And the bighorn sheep didn't seem to be bothered by all the snow, though they were feeding near the roadway. It was thrilling to see them!
We were happy to make it to Idaho, safe and sound. The roads were snow-covered the last fourth of the way (about 300 miles). But the Christmas holidays were totally worth it all!

Friday, January 04, 2008

Well, it's over, and I’m looking forward to peace and quiet!
You think I’m talking about the holiday season? No. I’m talking about the Iowa Caucuses. (I’d say Hawkeye Cauckeye, but I’m not sure how to spell that.) When we returned home from vacation, the answering machine was full with political calls. The mail was full of political mailings. The airwaves had back-to-back-to-back political ads. Here in Iowa, we’ve been deluged with politics--the first ads began last January, about 30 days after the last general election. The rest of you should be grateful you don’t have to go through that!

But we do appreciate being able to see the candidates up close. Last night, our county held all our caucuses at one location (which was not nearly big enough). For an hour before the caucus starting time, candidates could speak, and they did. First came Mike Huckabee (huckster is a better term), passing himself off as a conservative, with multiple scriptural references to make sure people remember he is an evangelical Christian. Then came Ron Paul, with his fiery defense of the Constitution, followed by Ann Romney, Mitt’s wife. These were IN PERSON, and Kevin and I were in the third row. Where else could you have national presidential candidates parade by like they were local mayoral candidates??? We also heard from Dr. Hugh Cort, a presidential candidate who either is a nut-case or has a really scary scenario about suitcase-nuclear bombs being smuggled in by illegals. The other candidates had a surrogate to speak for them, except Rudy Guiliani who didn’t do anything.

We were disappointed in the preference tally, and the setback to Mitt Romney. Although not a perfect candidate, we thought he would do a good job as president. After seeing some of the campaigning Huckabee has done, if he became the Republican candidate I’d ALMOST rather vote democratic. The ugly head of religious bigotry has come forth again (I thought that was relegated to the 19th century), and Huckabee is at the front. Even more troubling is that there has been no outcry from the other candidates or the general populace. It will be interesting to see if the Huckster can delude the voters of other states.
* * * * * * * *

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

An Early December Sampler

Instead of chocolates, I'm sending out some photos of what our first few days of December have been.
Decorations....
Chipping away the ice from the weekend ice storm. It was good that we had afternoon church, because all four of us spent nearly two hours getting the driveway and front sidewalks free of most of the ice. I spent an hour yesterday working on the deck. Since we don't have any ice skates, it was a bit hazardous. One family on the street built a circular igloo (or in my childhood, we would have called it a fort, since it didn't have a roof) with all the chunks of ice from their driveway. School began 2 hours late yesterday morning with the leftover ice, and it is supposed to snow/rain/etc, again tomorrow. I'm getting tired of ice...

Last night, Alice took part in her school's 5th & 6th grade musical. (Alice is wearing the blue hat on the second row). She also had a small solo on one number. It was fun to watch!

Friday, November 09, 2007

A few notes

A busy week or two, and suddenly I'm way behind on my posts! The October/November time is like that. With our anniversay, birthday, Halloween, stake conference, and all the yard work to tuck things in for the winter, there just hasn't been much extra time.

First, I had to include Kevin from the ward Halloween party. Someone had an afro wig, add a mustache, etc., and voila!
Second, the jack-o-lantern--design by Elizabeth, workmanship--Kevin, pumpkin preparation--Alice and me. A real family affair with a pumpkin that had lots of character.

We had almost 100 trick-or-treaters here on Halloween night. Although it was a chilly night (40 degrees with a north wind), it didn't seem to keep people home. If Halloween had been one night earlier, we would have had 60 degree balmy weather! We would have been able to leave the coats at home.

The girls and I went to a ward member's home Halloween party for an hour, then joined some of their school friends for the last hour of trick-or-treating, in a ritzy area of town. They got king-size candy bars at some of the homes! I haven't seen Elizabeth's stash of candy lately, but I'm sure it is diminishing rapidly. Alice has had a bad cold, and has held off eating her candy, since sugar suppresses the immune system and she wants hers to be as strong as possible. She asked me to put her stash up out of sight so she wouldn't be tempted to indulge.

Then a few days later we had stake conference. Since there was no General Authority or broadcast, the stake presidency had the whole show; Kevin had three talks to prepare. He did well with all of them! For the Sunday session, Elizabeth and Alice, along with another young woman from our ward were asked to provide string music for the prelude. So we worked up a number of hymns and hymn arrangements (I accompanied), and they provided 15 minutes of music. They sounded so nice! Lots of people complimented them after the meeting.

The day before, it was the Young Women's turn to clean the chapel, so we were able to inspire them "we get to make the church look super for all the visitors at stake conference"! And they responded. Elizabeth even got a flower arrangement out of the Relief Society closet to dress up the women's bathroom. It was fun to participate with them in the extra-special cleaning.

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!