Sunday, December 11, 2011

2011-12-11 Lunar Eclipse


I forgot to get up Saturday morning to see the lunar eclipse as the moon set in the western sky before the sun came up. If the eclipse would have occurred on a weekday I would have been up to see it, but with bad planning the eclipse was scheduled for Saturday morning. This is the last total lunar eclipse for a few years.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

2011-12-10 Sarah's dance recital


Sarah's dance recital was short and sweet. Sarah loves to perform and shines on stage among her peers.


Here is Sarah's small dance troupe after the concert during photo time.

2011-12-09 Kurt Bestor Christmas concert


We attended the Kurt Bestor Christmas concert with Greg and Suzanne Seal. He always performs jazzy versions of traditional Christmas carols, and they all start to sound alike after awhile. This year was 'jazzier' than usual, but we enjoyed it. We ate dinner at The Red Iguana prior to the concert, leaving our stomachs somewhat uneasy.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

2011-12-07 Bonneville Glen Nativity


Michael and Thomas were in costume for this year's Bonneville Glen live nativity. They looked the part of villagers, guiding the pilgrims to see the new born Christ child. The pageant was well done as usual, and it was very cold as usual. The cold was tempered somewhat by hot chocolate.

2011-12-04 A Christmas Carol


During the First Presidency Christmas devotional President Monson said that every year he reread 'A Christmas Carol' by Charles Dickens and 'The Mansion' by Henry Van Dyke.

I downloaded these short stories to my Kindle and started reading. I also bought the 2009 Disney version of A Christmas Carol to watch sometime during the season.

I recently finished 'David Copperfield' by Dickens which I started in China. While it's a soap opera it's enjoyable and thought provoking.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

2011-11-26 Thanksgiving in St George


We spent a relaxing weekend in St George for Thanksgiving with the Ford family. Brian and Natalie were not up to the long, traffic congested drive from LA, and I don't blame them one bit. We had a traditional turkey dinner, touch football game, TV football, games, bike riding, tennis, basketball, etc.

2011-11-24 Golfing in St George


It's difficult to adjust to life back in the US. But, on the other hand, I did golf with Mark Cohen and Mike Archer at Entrada in St George and really enjoyed myself. So it's not all bad to be back.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

2011-10-25 Heritage Park


We wandered around a heritage park by the Big Wild Goose Pagoda or Dayanta. (Da for big/ Yan for wild goose/ Ta for pagoda). The park is full of bronze statues including this one of woman holding a sword gracefully. There is much Buddhist and Tang dynasty history in Xi'an. We left our apartment intending to visit the biggest museum in the province, but it was closed on Mondays. We had a walk about around the pagoda and a Tang Dynasty open mall for as long as Paula's legs would last. Then we took a taxi to a hot pot restaurant for an extravagant (for China) dinner.

Friday, October 21, 2011

2011-10-21 Qu jiang Park


We rode our bikes to Qujiang Park on the opposite side of town from our apartment. The park has this large hot air balloon ride, but we avoided the temptation to get a better view. After all it was smoggy.


The park surrounds a large lake. No stone throwing or swimming is allowed. There is a wide path around the lake, but we needed to rent bicycles to ride it. Our bikes were not allowed. We were stopped by a friendly by insistent teenager in uniform who asked us to park our bikes in the bike lot.


Just south of the park is a wonderful mall (in the sense of the Washington DC mall) dedicated to the Tang dynasty, China's most powerful and prosperous. These flowers were stunning.

Monday, October 17, 2011

2011-10-17 Paula's MRI

We had planned to send the MRI to Utah with Paula's friend Amanda, but Amanda was in Beijing to sort out her visa issues and ended up going straight to Utah without a visit back to Xi'an for this or her luggage for that matter. After retrieving the MRI from Amanda's orphanage, I was able to talk the post office into packaging it securely for the ransom of 7 yuan ($1.20). My English department supervisor will now hand carry the MRI to Washington DC where she will mail it to Utah. We can only hope.

Update - the MRI film arrived in SLC and Jeff delivered it to Steve Aslami who looked at it with a radiologist. Their recommendation - get treatment as soon as possible. It looks like this will end our China experience. Now - how to get us out of our contract?

Sunday, October 16, 2011

2011-10-15 Li Shan


We spent the day taking a taxi to Li Shan (shan means mountain) where we enjoyed beautiful views, clean air, local culture, our friends, the taxi driver, and this Buddhist shrine for Lao Mu (Heavenly Mother) with her first and second counselors and apostles. Lao Mu formed man from the dust of the earth, instituted marriage to allow for procreation and established seven rules for conduct between humans.


We kept our taxi for the day and the driver needed to stop for propane. We had to get out of the taxi just in case. A fiery blast would have ruined our day.

Saturday, October 8, 2011

2011-10-08 Taiping National Forest


We went to Taiping National Forest Park near our university with Chen liu, a senior physics major who plans to attend UC Berkeley next year. The river came down a steep canyon gorge with waterfalls and pools. We walked to the first waterfall and you can see by the map that we only went a limited distance. The place was beautiful and reminded us somewhat of Big or Little Cottonwood Canyons.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

2011-10-07 Snow at Home


There is beauty all around when there's snow at home. We're enjoying sunny days in Xi'an while it snows in Salt Lake. Melanie called to tell me it was snowing, and Carl Sarahs (the asst. pro at Willow Creek CC) sent this photo looking down the first fairway.

2011-10-07 A Day with the Thelers and Butlers


We spent the day with the Thelers and Butlers, co-owners with us of our new house in St George, who were in Xi'an at the end of their Silk Road tour. We went to the Xi'an Horticultural Expo which we enjoyed immensely on a prior visit, and we rented bikes to save Paula's back and Jeff Butler's plantar faciitis from too much exertion. In this photo we are standing in front of a sand sculpture of the founders of the People's Republic - this being National Day holidays in celebration of the founding of the country. Our tickets to the Expo were provided by our university, but we found out that for National Day we need a more expensive ticket. In our discussions with the ticket folks we discovered that since we are all over 60 years of age we could get into the park for free, but we had to prove our age. The Butlers and Thelers had copies of their passports, I used my Utah driver's license, and Paula used my insurance card.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

2011-10-05 Xiao Yen Ta

I hiked up 13 floors at the small wild goose pagoda or Xiao (small) Yen (wild goose) Ta (pagoda) and took this panorama shot looking west. Nix and Christiana, two of my better English students, took us for tour of this park and pagoda and the Muslim Quarter section of Xi'an. The pagoda was damaged by earthquake in 1400 something, and has never been repaired. The park around the pagoda and the museum are remarkably beautiful.

In the Muslim Quarter, at the insistence of our guides, we ate mutton at a local restaurant. The dish was a mystery to us, but our fear of offending our hosts lead us to eat and enjoy (at least a little).

The Muslim section of town is notably chaotic and crowded, but with local students guiding us we managed to navigate around and sample some of the local cuisine.

Friday, September 30, 2011

2011-09-26 Andrew's essay


My Grandpa Gazette
About my grandfather
By Andrew Conley
September 27, 2011

My grandpa is a tall man with curly grey hair and blue eyes. He is a hard worker with a cheerful attitude. He wears a variety of different shirts. He cares about people a lot. He is also very considerate.
Every day when I wake up he is either gone, in his office, or making breakfast. He makes pancakes some mornings and sometimes we do. He always helps make dinner. I never see him in pajamas. I wonder if he sleeps in his clothes.
I do not know much about my grandpa’s history. His looks have changed in the past twenty to thirty years only by switching from blond to black to grey in hair color. His brother is a good friend of my grandma’s who works in Reams. A lot of his pictures are in blue backgrounds.
Right now he is tall and looks young for his age. His wrinkles are barely noticeable and he is very likable and caring. He goes by Tom, although his full name is Grant Thomas Heath. Even if he looks young, he is old. He is sixty one years old.
Exactly right now he is living in an apartment on the fifth floor of a building in China. He will come back in about eight months. I hope he is happy! My grandpa is truly a superior person.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

2011-09-26 International Horticultural ExhibitW


We spent the evening at the Horticultural Expo surrounding a lake outside of Xi'an. Very impressive! After dark the lights came on all over the park. We enjoyed a brilliant water show in the lake. The size and scope of the expo were beyond what I expected.

Friday, September 23, 2011

2011-09-23 Our fellow teachers and friends


Our fellow teachers and friends are Roger and Donna McEvoy from Logan, Utah. They are childhood sweethearts who married others, raised big families, suffered the loss of their spouses, reconnected, married, and now enjoy life together. They have 19 children and 50 grandchildren combined. They recently returned from a mission in Ykaterinburg, Russia and now teach English with us at XiGongDa. They have been a great support in getting adjusted to life in Xi'an.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

2011-09-19 Paula has a Chinese MRI


We went to a hospital in Xi'an for an MRI to see what is going on in Paula's back to cause her so much discomfort. The MRI machine was made by GE and looked new. Two radiologists who spoke some English operated the machine with two assistants. The verdict - herniated discs that press on the nerves going down her right leg. Hip joints are 'no problem'. The report is in Chinese, but we have the film which is very clear. All this for about one tenth of the cost of an MRI in the US. In fact you could fly to Xi'an, have your MRI and fly back to the US for about the same cost as having an MRI in the US.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

2011-09-15 Searching for a bike seat


I went on a quest to find a taller stem and saddle for Paula's new bike. The original stem was about 1 inch too short to be fully comfortable, and the saddle broke when our fellow teacher sat on the bike. On the way I walked through the city wall and saw this group of food vendors, and plenty of other interesting things.

The folks at the store where we purchased the bikes were very unhelpful and an old guy even suggested I should give money to the young fellow who was trying to find a longer stem, even though he was unsuccessful. At the bike shop next door an employee took pity on me, and I followed him up stairs and around a corner to another bike shop where they provided a longer stem. The helpful fellow then berated the guys at the store where we bought the bike and forced them to give me a new saddle. Mission accomplished!

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

2011-09-11 District Conference


The Xi'an branch gathered in our 'zero star' hotel around a conference table to listen to a broadcast from Beijing. Our new branch presidency is sitting in the front. According to the district president, Steven Toronto, there were about 975 people listening in to the conference from all around China. All present are foreign passport holders since we are not allowed to fraternize with Chinese nationals in religious activities. There are about 25 members in our branch, 11 are BYU China teachers like us.

Monday, September 12, 2011

2011-09-07 Natalie's grandmother passed away


Luene Leifson Ludlow
1923 ~ 2011
On September 7, 2011, Hannah Luene Leifson Ludlow, 87, surrounded by family, left this mortal life to reunite with her eternal companion, Daniel Hansen Ludlow, whom she dearly missed.
Born November 1, 1923, to J. Victor Leifson and Mary A. Bradford Leifson in Spanish Fork, Utah. Luene was extremely proud of her Icelandic heritage. She spent many years searching hand written records to find her ancestors and will be greeted by thousands who were blessed by that work. Graduating from Spanish Fork High, she married her high school sweetheart, Dan Ludlow on June 10, 1942, in the Salt Lake Temple. This began her true legacy.
Mother was devoted to her family and raised 9 children whom she dearly loved, and who in turn dearly loved her. She is survived by her son Victor (V-Ann) Ludlow, daughters Sandra Ludlow, Diane (Doyle) Asay, LuAnn Rothe, Carolyn (Brent) Sweeny, Kathy (Mark) Smith, Shauna (Darrell) Smith, and Michelle (Garr) Judd; as well as 42 grandchildren and 73 great grandchildren. Also survived by her siblings Freda McKell, Thor (Loyce) Leifson, Allen (Mary Lou) Leifson, Afton Rosenbaum, June Leifson, Elaine (Dee) Pullman, and Mark (Freda Kaye) Leifson; and sisters-in-law Ruth Leifson and Marilyn Leifson. She also considered her husband's family as her own.
Preceded in death by her husband of 66 years; both parents; a daughter Ruth (Nate) Pierce; a son-in-law Ed Rothe; her brothers Glen, Ted, and Jack Leifson; and brothers-in-law William McKell and Var Rosenbaum.Her life was full of love, kindness, and compassion for all. Everyone left her home with a full heart and stomach. She blessed the lives of so many while serving with Dan all over the world: the Holy Land, Egypt, Australia, Central and South America, Nauvoo, Hawaii, and more. She became the mother to hundreds of missionaries while Dan presided over the Australia Perth Mission, and also many students while Dan directed three BYU semester abroad groups to Israel.
Luene served faithfully during her life in many positions within The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She had a deep love for the gospel, a fervent testimony she bore often, and she lived her life accordingly. She enjoyed reading, art, traveling, learning, and being with friends, family, and loved ones.
Special thanks to family and many aides and nurses from Alpine Hospice and Aspen Senior Care. We were truly blessed to have many compassionate and kind individuals who lovingly cared for Mom the past two years.
Viewings will be Sunday, September 11, 2011, at the LDS Church located at 2400 North 1060 East, Provo, Utah, from 5:00 to 6:30, as well as Monday, September 12, 2011, from 9:00 to 10:30 a.m. Memorial services will follow at 11:00. Interment in the Benjamin, Utah Cemetery.
Condolences may be left at www.serenicare.com

2011-09-12 Fengqing Park


We rode our bikes to Fengqing Park which is near us past the RT Mart and My Fun Hospital. There is a lake with paddle boats, many trees and greenery, and families walking around enjoying a beautiful day with sunshine. In one corner of the entrance courtyard a group of musicians were performing, adding to the ambiance.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

2011-09-12 Mid-Autumn Festival

Today is the mid-Autumn festival where people get together with their family and eat moon cake. We've received a couple of boxes of mooncakes which we plan to eat today, well at least one.


My supervisor in the English department wrote in an e-mail: "Hope you enjoy your first Chinese Festival---Mid Autumn Festival here. Generally it’s a family get together. We Chinese would like to sit outside, enjoy the full moon and eat the Moon Cake. Sometimes we will read the ancient Chinese poems relating to romantic stories. In Chinese culture, the moon represents a lot implications: the mood of one person; the romance etc. However, this year Xi’an has a lot of rain. We are told that tomorrow will still be raining. What a pity!"

The LA Times says - "According to custom, one is supposed to eat the cakes under the full moon on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month, which this year falls on Monday. Often extravagantly expensive, they are about the size of a hockey puck and just as dense. Fillings range from red bean with salted egg yolks to cheesecake to Peking duck.

Back in the era of scarcity, they were a rare calorie-rich treat to fill the chronically hungry belly. Nowadays, the mooncake has become the Christmas fruitcake of China, passed around and regifted ad infinitum.

A typical 6.3-ounce mooncake has about 800 calories. By contrast, a McDonald's hot fudge sundae, which weighs the same, has only 330 calories."

Friday, September 9, 2011

2011-09-09 Xi'an traffic

During Paula's ride to the acupuncture appointment - I'll let her tell the story because it's her adventure, and quite an adventure it was - she saw this tired pedalist taking a rest. The road chaos is entertaining. The cars, cyclists and pedestrians are like a flock of birds all seeming to easily merge and turn together in a chaotic dance.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

2011-09-07 Visit to the Big Pagoda


The Dayan pagoda (Big Pagoda) is a major tourist site in Xi'an, but seems a spot for locals as well. There are thousands of people in the square and park surrounding the pagoda, much traffic and chaos. There were some people in traditional ethic minority dress, and the family of this girl allowed me to photograph her.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

2011-09 China has peanut butter!


Wandering through a modern grocery store in Xi'an is intimidating. Much of the food is a mystery to us, but we recognized peanut butter. We haven't eaten peanut butter in years so we don't plan to start now.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

2011-08 China teacher's training


Midge and Kirk Evans are directors of the China Teachers program and organized the two weeks of training. They are volunteers (missionaries) who do this out of love.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

2011-06 School's out


After talking to my daughters, it seems to me that when school gets out there are a set of new issues and challenges, not the least of which is keeping children gainfully occupied. I went to work and left this challenge to Grandma.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

2011-06-07 Why I won't be seeing 'The Book of Mormon - the Musical'


I agree with Michael Otterson, head of the church's public affairs when he wrote the following in the Washington Post:

Reviews of “The Book of Mormon” musical have been all over the entertainment media in the past few weeks. According to the reviews, the play sketches the journey of two Mormon missionaries from their sheltered life in Salt Lake City to Uganda, where their training and life experience proves wholly inadequate to the realities of a continent plagued by poverty, AIDS, genital mutilation and other horrors. While extolling the musical for its originality, most reviewers also make reference to the play’s over-the-top blasphemous and offensive language.
Dealing with parody and satire is always a tricky thing for churches. We can easily appear thin-skinned or defensive, and churches sometimes are. A few members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who have seen this musical and blogged about it seem to have gone out of their way to show how they can take it. That’s their choice. There’s always room for different perspectives, and we can all decide what to do with our free time.
But I’m not buying what I’m reading in the reviews. Specifically, I’m not willing to spend $200 for a ticket to be sold the idea that religion moves along oblivious to real-world problems in a kind of blissful naiveté.

Somewhere I read that the show’s creators spent seven years writing and producing “The Book of Mormon” musical. As I reflected on all that time spent parodying this particular target, I also wondered what was really going on with Mormons in Africa during those same seven years.

So I checked.

•The World Health Organization estimates that 884 million people worldwide don’t have access to clean water. This is a huge problem in Africa, not only because of water-borne diseases but because kids who spend hours each day walking to and from the nearest well to fill old gasoline cans with water cannot attend school. According to church records, in the past seven years, more than four million Africans in 17 countries have gained access to clean drinking water through Mormon humanitarian efforts to sink or rehabilitate boreholes.

•More than 34,000 physically handicapped African kids now have wheelchairs through the same Mormon-sponsored humanitarian program. To see a legless child whose knuckles have become calloused through walking on his hands lifted into a wheelchair may be the best way to fully understand the liberation this brings.

•Millions of children, meanwhile, have now been vaccinated against killer diseases like measles as the church has sponsored or assisted with projects in 22 African countries.
•More than 126,000 Africans have had their sight restored or improved through Mormon partnership with African eye care professionals in providing training, equipment and supplies.

•Another 52,000 Africans have been trained to help newborns who otherwise would never take a first breath. Training in neonatal resuscitation has also been a big project for Mormons in Africa.

•Then, of course, there is the tragedy of AIDS. A couple of weeks ago I attended a dinner where the Utah AIDS Foundation honored James O. Mason, former United States Assistant Secretary of Health. When he was working for the Center for Disease Control in 1984, a project to research the epidemiology and treatment of AIDS was established at the Hospital Mama Yempo in Kinshasha, Zaire. After visiting the hospital and examining the children and adults with AIDS, Mason described the death rate and the associated infections from AIDS as “horrific.” Mason, a Mormon, knows quite a bit about AIDS and a great deal about Africa.

•None of this includes responses to multiple disasters, like the flooding in Niger, where the Church provided clothing, quits and hygiene items to 20,000 people in six inundated regions of the country.
Of course, parody isn’t reality, and it’s the very distortion that makes it appealing and often funny. The danger is not when people laugh but when they take it seriously – if they leave a theater believing that Mormons really do live in some kind of a surreal world of self-deception and illusion.

A couple of weeks ago a review about the musical appeared at the New York Times from a Jewish writer who simply listed himself as Levi. “As someone of Jewish faith,” he began, “I take personal offense at this show….I cannot believe that New York, MY New York, where I was born and raised, would ever do such a thing. Shame on you, New York Times, shame on Broadway, and shame on all of us who stand idly by and do nothing while the faith of others is mocked. Religious and cultural Jews need not support such bigotry.” Levi’s point was echoed by some reviewers, but by surprisingly few. So why hasn’t there been a huge outcry from Mormons?
In my opinion, three reasons. The first is that in the great scheme of things, what Broadway does with “The Book of Mormon” musical is irrelevant to most of us. In the great sweep of history, parodies and TV dramas are blips on the radar screen that come and go. Popular culture will be whatever it will be.
The second reason is related. Jesus’s apostle Paul put it rather well when he said that Christians seek out the positive and virtuous things in life. His New Testament phraseology was adapted in the early years of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in this formal Article of Faith:
“We believe in being honest, true, chaste, benevolent, virtuous, and in doing good to all men…If there is anything virtuous, lovely, or of good report or praiseworthy, we seek after these things.”
Finally, if we Mormons really do follow Jesus Christ in our lives and look to him as an example, then it’s hard for us to ignore the injunction to turn the other cheek. There were times, to be sure, when Jesus roundly criticized others, but it was almost always for hardened hypocrisy. He dismissed the criticism he received personally and told his followers: “Do good to them who despitefully use you and persecute you.”
It takes strength of character to do this, but it’s the Christian mandate. Sure, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints pushes back when the record needs correcting or when legal rights need defending, but the world of popular entertainment is more likely to be met with a collective shrug than by placard-waving Mormon protesters.
Meanwhile, what of those thousands of remarkable and selfless Mormon missionaries who opted to pay their own expenses during the past seven years to serve in Africa while their peers were focused on careers or getting on with life? They have returned home, bringing with them a connection with the African people that will last a lifetime. Many will keep up their Swahili language or their Igbo dialect. They will keep in their bedrooms the flags of the nations where they served. They will look up every time they hear Africa mentioned on the evening news. Their associations with the people whose lives they touched will become lifetime friendships. And in a hundred ways they will become unofficial ambassadors for the nations they served.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/on-faith/post/why-i-wont-be-seeing-the-book-of-mormon-musical/2011/04/14/AFiEn1fD_blog.html

Saturday, June 4, 2011

2011-06-03 Paula's high school friends


We had a nice dinner with Paula's high school friends and their husbands. Susan Hertz was back from teaching in Saudi Arabia, and we heard a little about her experience.

From left to right - Susan (Schade) Hertz, Marsha (Beazley) Quist, Debbie (England) Nelson, Marian (Petersen) Perrier, Julie (Lloyd) Baker, Bonnie (Menlove) Yeates, and Paula (Roylance) Heath.

Ross Quist was one of my missionary companions in Sweden, and retired as an elementary school principal in Davis County after 10 years of teaching and 28 years of being a principal at 5 different schools. Marian Petersen was in my ward growing up.

Friday, June 3, 2011

2011-06-02 Elsa's eye


Elsa woke up with a swollen eye. Could it be a bug bite? She tried benedryl and an ice pack with little relief. Unfortunately she had to perform in her annual school play. What to do? Sunglasses? Call in sick? She went forward bravely and performed despite her swollen eye. You can see part of her performance, thanks to Brian, at

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ptdrNVS37EY

Monday, May 30, 2011

2011-05-30 Snow on Memorial Day


We woke up to a dusting of snow. It was 35 outside, cloudy and threatening to snow some more. It seems we've been cheated out of a spring. When it gets hot in a week or so we'll have water everywhere. Water content of the snow pack above is us 436% of normal. Yikes!

Sunday, May 29, 2011

2011-05-29 Grant's gravesite


We drove to Ogden to place flowers on Grant's grave. There were a few flowers already on Ruth Pierce's headstone. It was cloudy and rainy, but the cemetery was beautiful and there were flowers on nearly every headstone.

2011-05-25 Jack's school program


Jack took us on a tour of Bonneville Elementary and displayed some of his work during the year.

2011-05-29 Little Cottonwood Creek


Despite plenty of rain, the creek is running at a low level. It has been cool (cold actually) delaying the spring run off. We lost our trees and fire pit on June 6 last year, but the temperature was in the 90s. If it warms up fast, we could be in trouble.

The photo is a 'panorama' series, and this is the cause of the quirky turn in the creek at our backyard.


The Colorado River Basin Forecast Center (http://www.cbrfc.noaa.gov/) predicts that Little Cottonwood Creek will stay below its banks and below flood level.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

2011-05-26 Mothers of twins are 'robust'


It looks good for a long life for Grandma. She dislikes the term 'robust' however.

A recent study of 4603 mothers who bore twins and 54,183 who had not, showed that mothers of twins exhibit lower postmenopausal mortality, shorter average inter-birth intervals, and higher lifetime fertility than their singleton-only bearing counterparts. From the largest historical sample of twinning mothers yet published, they concluded that "bearing twins is more likely for those with a robust phenotype and is a useful index of maternal heterogeneity."

Sunday, May 22, 2011

2011-05-22 Flowers


Finally our yard is blooming. We are often travelling when the ornamental apples trees bloom in May, but this year we get the full glory.

2011-05-22 Sunday dinner with Grandma's friends


We invited Rita Smith (we are her home teachers), Marylou Unice, and Suzanne Housley for dinner of grilled chicken, corn on the cob, roasted vegetables, and salad. They all seemed thrilled with our invitation and with the dinner, artfully prepared by Grandma.

2011-05-21 Salt Lake Century Bike ride

The bike ride is really 106.8 miles (not the 100 promised miles). Michael, Coray and I started at 7:30 am along with Rob Whetton (Jennie Smock's husband). Michael and Rob finished in about 6 hours, but it took Coray and me closer to 7 hours. The weather was wonderful, and it was fun to participate. We saw Barry Packer and Ray Hanson from our Cottonwood Heights 1st ward. We also saw Marlin Parry from our current ward. These three guys are old like me.

The most difficult part of the ride was the 7.5 miles into the wind across the causeway to Antelope Island.


Coray was tempted to turn around before the ride around Antelope Island, but he kept at it and rode his longest distance ever.

Monday, May 9, 2011

2011-05-08 Little Cottonwood Creek is rising

The snowpack is melting, and we expect some heavy run off. The county engineer assures us that we will be more fortunate than our downstream neighbors. Let's hope we stay high and dry this year.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

2011-05-05 Jack's Africa School Program

We attended Jack's 2nd grade program about Africa. It was enjoyable and extremely well done and well attended. Mrs Brown, Jack's teacher, had high praise for Jack.