Saturday, May 28, 2011

What DOES she do with her time?

Thought I should start using this blog again...
I love reading Anna's every week.
My life is much more quiet than all of yours.

Eric is usually gone from Wednesday to Saturday criss crossing the country.
He is home Sunday thru Tuesday
with Sunday filled with meetings and home teaching
and Tuesdays usually are his days for interviews and missionary meetings.
We went to Westport together for a few days in March

We've worked around the house together
Like going to Home Depot together
When he's home he still finds time for projects
and he has become a business partner...
Weddings are much more smooth with him here.

This stage of life includes friends who will actually call...
who actually want to go "play"...
and like going out for lunch.
My book group has read some interesting books this year to include
Hunger Games
Romanov Bride
the Christmas Sweater
Left to Tell
Invisible Wall
and I have read some Josi Kilpack, John Grisham, Nicholas Sparks, Robin Cook, Luann Rice, Betsy Brannon Green, Mary Higgins Clark, Jeri Gilcrist, Lynn Gardner and Dan Brown.

I've done 5 weddings with 3 coming up
Martinsen-Espiritu in January











The Falter-Maughn wedding in March







The Lambert-Wike wedding in April...No photos but it was hot pink and black and a lot of work.


the Risk - Hughes wedding in April


And then a trip to Utah to stay with Ruby and Ellie while Anna and Jeff were in Hawaii...









We played at the park, went to the Aquarium in Draper, and played outside in both sunshine
and snow.




































The Hensley-Stine wedding was in May with the Abersold-Schneider wedding June 10th, the McClellan reception on July 4th, and the Bentley-Runolfson reception on August 13th.
There may be another Hensley wedding in July... Brandon.
And then is August will be our family reunion in Lincoln City.

I've loved having Sawyer and Kannon stay overnight while Heidi was in Arizona
and Calvin and Indiana while Leslie helped a friend move in Seattle.

I got to attend a program at Pioneer Elementary where all the children sang songs about the things they've learned about the earth...it was great.








Monday, March 8, 2010

Ellie's Baby Blessing

Sorry about the closed eyes Anna.
I didn't get very many good shots...
Can't wait to see yours!!!


New front door





When we put in the carpet and tiling we didn't replace the door stops and the front closet door handle decided to break a whole in the window next to the door....so...long story short we replaced the door and windows. It's a whole new look...'specially since the photos are in reverse order!!!

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Old house... New House







Major changes to the house this fall... and here are some of the photos to show the new carpet, sliding door and deck.

A Tale of Two Women Part I

In 2009 both of our mothers passed away... just a few days apart.
As in living their deaths couldn't have been more opposite.
They experienced the best of times and the worst of times.

Both were born on an April day in the 1920's.
Both were born in a home and not a hospital.
Both lost husbands when their children were young and their husband's families continued to stay in touch.
They both lived in Denver for many years.
Each had three children..and each had a child marry the other one's child.
Each lost a child.
In the end they were both buried in Colorado...days apart.

Eleanor Rice was born at home on April 17, 1924 in Provo, Utah and was a healthy 7 lbs 8 oz.
Gertrude Irene (Trudi) Davis was born April 4, 1926 in her grandparent's home in Edith, Texas and weighed only 5 lbs. small enough to fit in the palm of her grandmother's hand.

Eleanor was the oldest of three children: a sister Maxine and a brother Donald.
Trudi had 5 full brothers and sisters and 4 half sisters and brothers: Frank, Barbara, Frances, Sarah and Derwood Davis and Bessie,V ela, Sam and Helen Plumlee.

Eleanor's parents were both LDS and were born and raised in Utah.
Trudi's parents were god fearing people from rural communities in Texas.

Eleanor's father was a college graduate and a civil engineer for the federal government.
Trudi's father was once a real cowboy but later a welder and steam fitter.
Her step father was a cotton farmer.

Before thy were 20 years old Eleanor had lived in 5 towns and Trudi had lived in 7.

Eleanor remembered her grandmother always giving her big hugs and telling her how much she had grown.
Trudi remembered that her grandmother always scared her.

Both were good girls.
Eleanor was punished only seldom with a little willow branch.
Trudi was whipped, locked out of the house or put in the corner a lot by her step father.
She admitted that she was told not to limb the windmill, swim in the horse tank or ride the mule
but did. she got punished...even when she hadn't done something wrong.

Both grew up in the depression and it affected both their lives
Eleanor's father was always able to provide for his family. the children made their own fun and were very creative making scrapbooks, paper dolls, sandals, enjoyed building snowmen and sledding... even through hard times there were fun times.
Trudi's father struggled to provide for his family and there were no frills for the children... no sleds, no valentines, no paper. Dirt and sticks became their play things. There were just hard times.

Both were sick a lot as girls and had to catch up.
In Junior High Eleanor had a lot of friends and was popular.
Trudi had no friends but her brothers and sisters and was always teased at school for being poor.

Eleanor and her friends would learn to dance together, skate, play cards, and have parties. They went to movie matinees for 10 cents , attend football games or hung out together.
Trudi was never invited to birthday parties, never went skating...rarely went to a movie. Her favorite was The Wizard of Oz...Dorothy was about her age, 12, and was so brave.
Eleanor's favorite movie was Gone With the Wind... ironically about a brave young women from the south on a plantation.

They both had housekeeping chores but Trudi had the hard work of the farm...bringing in wood, gathering eggs and feeding chickens... milking cows...worked the cotton fields in the spring to plant and then pick in the fall. That was the chore she liked least...picking cotton.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Reorganization

Last year we thought we would sell the house and move but we had so much junk and so many projects to do that it just wasn't going to happen. So we tackled some of the projects (there are still two bathrooms to remodel, painting to finish inside and carpet to replace) and maybe we'll be here until the house is paid for in another 5 years, who knows.

So... the last de-junking we had t
o do was the attic...mission accomplished. Anyone want to come play up there now? We have costume boxes and toys, a few rugs and it lighted on both ends and in the middle now. Eric nailed up a lot of boards for more stable flooring and it's a nice place to hang out... if ...you like attics.

We have a section of Bart's stuff...
aquarium, books, star wars toys, records,
boxes of old memorabilia...











And a section for Anna's stuff...










We have dress up clothes, Barbie dolls, My little Ponies and house, two doll houses and more.

Come mplay!!!









Another cake Request


Hunter turned 6 and asked for a Kungfu Panda Cake with a vanilla head and belly, Chocolate arms and legs... so even though it's frosted... that's what he got.