Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Past Blasting

The last few weeks, Roger and I have been sorting through old slides, then scanning them and putting them in iPhoto. I have a long, ongoing project of writing my personal history, so I have had my head back in the past, trying to remember. 
HUGE challenge!
Just for fun, here are some pics of a horse-packing trip we took in the wilderness from Old Faithful in Yellowstone National Park. 
Kurt Loosli, a friend and fraternity brother of Roger from Ashton, Idaho, provided all of the gear, horses, food, etc. Our goal was to reach Shoshone Lake, but a big rainstorm stopped us from our original destination, so we stopped and set up camp.



West Yellowstone
(Now, don't laugh at those boots - I think I borrowed them from Roger!)


Loading up at Kurt's 


Are the matchsticks convincing that we're real cowgirls?


Mosquito-proofing


Getting out of the rain in our quickly-assembled shelter


 Carol and I were in good hands with two frontiersmen!








Ah, to be young again!





Friday, October 12, 2012

Two Birthdays and a New House in Mesa

The builders are telling Stacy and Tom that their house will be ready in just over a month. 
Roger has been dying to go check it out before it's all finished (it's the great attention to detail he has from his Woodside Homes and Sunbrook Homes days!).
With Conference weekend coming up and no Church responsibilities for Roger or me, we left for Mesa in the morning on October 3.
He took a quick shot of it after we arrived, in the late afternoon before sunset.
Isn't it beautiful?


When we got back to their rental house, Luke was busy "preparing dinner," complete with his onion goggles. 
Both boys truly aspire to be chefs. 
This has not been a passing fancy. 
 Ever since they were toddlers, they have wanted to "cook" with Mommy.




Max and Luke have seen Ratatouille countless times, and they are watching it in their chef coats, 
spellbound, yet again!



We watched the Romney/Obama Debate that night and loudly cheered for Mitt!  
He was fantastic and we are all huge fans!
We are crossing our fingers, praying, and telling everyone we know about his goodness and his suitability for President of the United States!

Next day was a busy one. We went over to the new house with Stacy and we helped her make several detail decisions about tile placement and garage door color.  We then headed to downtown Mesa to pick out material for the countertops in the garage.  We grabbed a quick sandwich at Urban Picnic. 
This cozy (it is cement!) hot pink chair is out front.  
The boys are holding their left-overs from lunch in their lunch boxes.



Next day was Londyn's 11th Birthday!  
We were so excited to get to be with her!



Londyn had nine friends (including cousin Anna) over for a fun birthday party.  Stacy made lemon cupcakes (Londyn's favorite), they had Italian ices, then were taken to the new cartoon movie, Hotel Transylvania.
Roger and I took a carload and enjoyed the movie - it was cute for kids and adults.

iPhone pic after the movie


Hangin' out with the twins is pure joy!



That night we went out for dinner at Londyn's pick restaurant for a bloomin' onion, wedge salads and steaks. Yum!





Happy Birthday, precious Londyn!


When we returned home, we watched the USU/BYU game.
Groan! 
Neither team played very well, except both of their defense teams!
BYU squeaked out a victory!

Roger got some cute shots of Max and Luke driving their car.




These boys live in costumes. 
I mean, every day they are a different character. 
 Doesn't matter if it is 110 degrees outside, they wear their costumes. 
 All day. 
 Every day.
With one exception. 
They do wear church clothes to church.

Saturday we enjoyed watching both sessions of General Conference together. 
Ryan and Emily were leaving for Disney World with their kids the next morning, so the adults went out to eat after General Priesthood meeting for Stacy's birthday to a wonderful pizza place. So good!


The kids are hard at work making birthday cards for their Mom.





On Sunday, Stacy's birthday, Tom and the kids served Stacy breakfast in bed.
Then her kids treated her to a leg massage/pedicure/hair styling parlor.



We watched both wonderful sessions of General Conference, then served Stacy her birthday dinner.
Tom barbecued fresh salmon and veggie shish kabobs and Londyn helped me make a tossed salad with homemade gorgonzola dressing and cheesy garlic bread.  She has serious knife skills!
We also had salted baked potatoes and I made Joe's Stone Crab Key lime pie.
When Stacy was growing up, she always asked for Key lime pie instead of a birthday cake.


Stacy is holding the Le Creuset jumbo baking dish we gave her for her birthday.


We love our precious daughter Stacy!


Early Monday morning, Tom, Jake and Roger golfed and Stacy ran over to the new house.
When she got back, we went shopping for kitchen appliance handles, then checked out the new Nordstom Rack.
Roger met us for lunch at Fresh Choices, then we headed for home.


Stacy took these pics just before we left.



We love to visit Mesa and see our two wonderful kids and families there. 
We hope next time we can spend more time with Ryan, Emily and family.
He was in Chicago attending a national meeting of the American Urogynecological Society, of which he is a board member and treasurer, all week, and he got home Saturday night.  
We're glad that we got to see him briefly and also Emily and the kids at least a little bit, anyway.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Karleen Came!

Two years ago, Jan Noyes, Karleen's and my good friend, cooked up a plan.
  
Jan was in the U.S., visiting from Belgium, where she and Dave were living then, and she had never been to the Shakespeare Festival in Cedar City.

She contacted Karleen and I about when she would be in St. George and asked us if we wanted to go to three of the performances of the Festival with her.

Karleen has moved to Eagle Mountain from Ogden to be near her daughter after her husband, Joe's, passing, so she came and stayed with us and Jan had arranged to stay in a condo with her son.

We had so much fun - we were close friends in Ogden and were in a little dinner group that got together every month. We were delighted to be with each other again!

We had enjoyed it so much, Karleen and I decided to make it an annual event (Jan recently moved to Texas and is invited anytime!). So, last year, Karleen came in September and we went to all three fall plays. 
As we did this September. Yaah!

Roger picked her up from the St. George Shuttle on Monday, September 24, just in time for lunch. I prepared a pesto and chicken pasta salad and we had coconut cream cake (it's a poke white cake with sweetened condensed milk mixed with coconut cream poured in the holes, then frosted with light Kool Whip and shredded coconut) for dessert.


We talked our heads off all afternoon, catching up.


We surprised her by inviting some Ogden mutual friends for dinner.  I recently posted about Kathy and Jim Jensen recently moving to St. George from Ogden (they were in our dinner group, too), and Mindi Johnson, who used to live in our ward in Ogden, lives in our branch. Karleen and I were her visiting teachers. We love her! Phil, her wonderful husband, was out of town.



We barbecued marinated flank steak and had mashed potatoes, corn, summer tomatoes with garlic bruschetta and a roasted pear and toasted almond green salad. Kathy brought delicious dessert from Kneaders.


 What a great couple these two are! Jim was Karleen's bishop after Roger was released. We have been going to a Book of Mormon class with them taught by our beloved Wayne Brickey.



Mindi's got the best laugh ever!


Next morning, we took the long way to Cedar City. Roger had to conduct some business in Panguitch, so we drove through Hilldale and Colorado City, checking out the Polygamist communities, had lunch in Kanab, then drove on scenic Highway 89 to Panguitch, then by Panguitch Lake over the mountain to Cedar.

The leaves are changing in the mountains and it was gorgeous!






 We had dinner at Milt's Stage Stop, one of two well-known restaurants up Cedar Canyon, the other being, Rusty's. Kay and Ken told us about Rusty's, and we have had yummy food there, with them and a few other times. We tried Milt's when we first moved to St. George, didn't love it and haven't been back, but I kept hearing about it, so we decided to give it another try.  They have a good salad bar, which we enjoyed, and we decided that they are about sixes.

Then we went to see, Les Miserables. Though we have all seen it several times, including on Broadway, we thrilled to this performance. The music in it is so glorious and the voices were outstanding.


Roger took our pic by posters of the three performances that we saw. On Wednesday, we came back to Cedar City for the matinee of Stones in His Pockets, then saw Hamlet that night.


On the way to Cedar on Wednesday morning, we got off I-15 and drove through Kolob Canyon to show Karleen.  It was a beautiful day!




We had a tasty lunch at Sonny Boy's Barbecue, then went to Stones in His Pockets, a  two-man-show comedy/drama that was masterfully performed, tragic and funny all at the same time.

We had a couple hours after the matinee, so Roger took us on a drive high atop the mountain above Cedar City.  He's been curious about how people got to their homes that we can see high up on the mountain from I-15, so we found the road and drove there.

The mountainside was gorgeous!  When we got to the top, we found the dirt road to Kolob Reservoir and the one to the LDS Girls' Camp.






Roger stopped the car several times to take pics of the beautiful scenery.




As we did last year and the year before, we had dinner at The Garden House.  They have such good homemade soups and yummy salads.


We were so excited that it was Fred Adams, the founder of the Shakespeare Festival, who gave the pre-show briefing outside of the theater for Les Miserable and Hamlet


His knowledge is so vast and he is a master of presentation.  His info really enhanced our enjoyment of Hamlet.  This play is so famous and Roger and I had never seen it.  
Some of the famous quotes that come from it are:

To be or not to be: that is the question.
Something is rotten in Denmark; 
This above all: to thine own self be true.
Not a mouse stirring;
Neither a borrower nor a lender be . . .
Though this be madness, yet there is method in it.
That it should come to this!
What a piece of work is man! . . .
The lady doth protest too much, methinks!
Brevity is the soul of wit.
Rich gifts wax poor when givers prove unkind.
And it must follow, as the night to day, thou canst not then be false to any man.
In my mind's eye

. . . and several others. 

It is amazing to me how many turn of the phrase quotes we have heard our entire lives and didn't realize that they come from Shakespeare.  I majored in English in college 100 years ago, and my proudest grade was an A in a Shakespeare Histories class.  It was the only Shakespeare class offered the quarter I needed to take one, and I learned a lot about European history studying King John, King Henry IV and King Richard III. But I always wished I had studied Shakespeare's Comedies and Tragedies. Now I have a chance to see them come to life!
Fred, your idea to keep Shakespeare alive in Southern Utah for all of the world to see is brilliant!




Next morning, we just hung out in our home, then went to lunch with Roger at Player's Grill for their wedge salad.  Karleen had emailed us before she came, telling us she wanted to treat us to that salad, having had reoccurring memories of it's deliciousness ever since we had it last year together! It is one of Roger's and my favorite lunches.

Then we dropped her off at the shuttle, having thoroughly enjoyed our time together.

Can't wait 'til next year!