Tuesday, July 25, 2023

4th of July

Independence Day is always a fun time to celebrate America with family and friends. This year, my parents brought back the 3rd of July festivities in their backyard before the Logan fireworks. Aunts and uncles and neighbors and grandparents and siblings and nieces and nephews and friends all gathered for yummy pulled pork sandwiches and all the potluck salads and treats. We actually ended up inside the garage (thankful they have one now!) for dinner and most of the party because we got a huge downpour that sent us all under cover. We left before the fireworks so we could get home and get some sleep before our 4th of July festivities in Huntsville the next day.

I made sheet pan apple pie.

With frosting!

We got to meet and hold baby Natalia!

She's the sweetest little bundle ever!

Grandma had lots of pop its for all the kids.

Thank goodness for a big garage!


These two hooligans are a hoot. They were making a bed
on the ottoman and "going to sleep".

The sky put on a nice show as we left town!


I've heard for years that Huntsville has a great small-town (but huge crowd) parade and celebration, but we've never been to it in 8 summer of living here. So I decided (and thankfully my family agreed) that this was the year to check it out. Sam loved running a mile before the Hyrum parade last year, so he was on board for this plan closer to home when I told him there was a fun run in Huntsville, too. I got him and Cal both signed up for the mile run, which started at 8 am, so we had to be up and at 'em early that morning (hence the early exit the night before from Cache Valley). The race was cute, but a little confusingly organized. For one thing, there were three different lengths of race: around the park, one mile, and 5K, and we were told that the signs marking the course corresponded to the sticker on the bibs, which corresponded to the race you signed up for, so that's what I kept telling the kids: "look for the green signs!" But right as they were lining up to race (which was hard to hear in the first place), we heard that the mile was supposed to follow pink signs, or was it blue?. I don't know now, but it wasn't the same color as their sticker and we were all pretty confused for a bit. Even with the wrong colored signs, I think the mile course was only 3/4 mile in length because the kids crushed it! I don't know their exact times, because some volunteers were sitting right in front of the clock that I was counting on to get their time, but it was definitely faster than last year's time for Sam for both of them. Luckily everyone still had fun.




Ready to run!


Here comes Sam!

I spy Cal!


I just love her enthusiasm!

We hadn't eaten breakfast yet (and were bummed to miss our cute little Eden breakfast that we love), but we staked out a table at the library and set up our camp stove to make pancakes, sausage and eggs. Yummy feast!



My parents and Megan wanted to come watch the parade, so we found a spot towards the end of the route on the corner of the park so they would have time to get there and see the parade, even if they were a little late. The parking was crazy in Huntsville, but they found spots a couple blocks away, and everyone made it in time to watch the cute parade go by. I loved the lack of businesses that bugged me in Hyrum last year ("it's just a crummy commercial!"). And it was fun to see people I knew from young women or just around the valley.



Some really cool, really old tractors in this parade!


After the parade, we wandered through the car show and had fun looking up close at all the cool cars. We got to vote for our favorites, too, which was fun. We wandered around the park and glanced at the booths set up there, but it was mostly food and cowboy hats, and by then we were ready for our own picnic lunch, so we set up chairs in the field (it was so cloudy and cool and even sprinkled on us a few times!) and sat and ate while we listened and sang along to Eden's Yellow Rose (a band consisting of folks from our ward). They played for over three hours! Mom and Cal and I wandered across the street to Hunstville Square to the art show there, and ran into the kids' art teacher, Jenny Harris, who gave Cal a coupon for a free slice of Lucky Slice pizza from the food truck. That was a fun treat!

I really don't know what this is all about. Ha.

We didn't even have to sit in the shade since the whole
field was shady thanks to the clouds! Delightful!

Eventually we packed back up and made our way back to our house. We had planned/hoped to play on the lake, but it was cool and cloudy and breezy and rainy, so we just watched the highlights from the Nathan's Famous Hot Dog Eating Contests on youtube and then everyone went home. We made hotdogs (what's more American?!) for dinner and watched The Emperor's New Groove (because The Sandlot isn't on Disney+ anymore?!) while we waited for the fireworks to start. We drove up near Nordic to watch the show in Liberty from our car in our jammies, which was perfect. Then home again and right to bed.




Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Photos from Phones - June 2023 Round Up

I don't have much to say as an intro . . . I'll just let the pics and captions tell the story of the "leftovers" of June.

6.6.23
(This is a collection of short stories about the Muslim
Eid celebrations. I knew basically nothing about Eid before, so I learned a lot!)

6.7.23
(we were at the library (surprise, surprise!)
and a big storm blew through - crazy wind and
rain for a few minutes and then it was done by
the time we were leaving.)

6.8.23
(My latest (and legitimately cool this time) prize from the summer reading program for adults at the library. Something I’ve heard of forever but never actually tried: book darts! They’re little metal arrows that you slide onto a page to mark a line or quote you want to remember. So excited!)

6.8.23
(Winner winner chicken dinner! I get Chris Barton’s monthly newsletter and he always has a giveaway, which I entered recently and actually won! We love this true story of the inventor of the super soaker and are so excited to have our own copy now!)

6.12.23
(Also: update about the book darts! They are a dream!! They are not thick, so they don’t make your book bulge out weirdly. They are easy to slide onto the page to mark the exact line of the quote you want to remember. And my favorite part is that I can read without my phone again! Let me explain: instead of copying a quote from a book into a journal or something, I just like to snap a quick pic of the page on my phone and keep reading. The problem is that sometimes I get distracted by said phone, and forget to read. This way I can mark all my favorite parts with the darts and then come back later to take the pictures. 🏆)

6.12.23
(We’ve been on a bit of a baseball kick this month, and not just with books! ⚾️) 

6.12.23
(I went searching in her room for a library book (actually three) that was due ...
(This is not the first pic I have snapped of her bedside book situation, but it still makes me happy.))

6.12.23
(Heard about this one on a podcast (surprise, surprise!) and promptly put it on hold. It is a memoir of an npr reporter trying to make the most of her son’s senior year before he leaves for college. To be at every soccer game, etc. That is what I expected going into it, and it definitely is mostly about kids growing up. But there’s a lot more of life included, like friendship, work (those parts where she was off in a foreign country reporting about a war or talking with government officials were super fascinating to me), writing, hearing loss, mothering young kids, aging/dying parents, and (spoiler alert!) divorce (which I was not expecting or seeking out, especially after my latest divorce memoir!). It was really well written and gave me a lot to think about.)

6.15.23
(womp, womp!)

6.15.23
(spotted on my way to the old highway beach . . .)

6.15.23
(I got going down a rabbit hole of old pics
and I just couldn't help resaving this one. Aren't
they stinkin' darling?!)

6.16.23
(Sam's latest AT-AT walker out of LEGO - 
I like how colorful this one is!)

6.17.23
(Gregg recommended this as a quick, well written, highly engaging story, so I started reading it after he finished and wow! What a tale! I have listened to many Sherlock stories, but I don’t think I’ve actually read one in print, so that was fun. This one starts out like any other Sherlock, and I actually thought I had heard the story before. But then you get to the second half, which is a backstory, not told by Watson and doesn’t have Holmes in it at all, and all of a sudden things start clicking! So fun. I must say, I’m not a Moriarty fan, so I was kind of annoyed at the epilogue, but overall really enjoyed this.)

6.18.23
(Happy Father's Day! He's the best dad!)

6.18.23
(Oh, hello baby! Natalia Jane was born
on Father's Day, June 18th at 7:05 pm)

6.20.23
(This one is sad. (I cried silently while reading and sobbed crazily while telling Gregg about it after I finished.) It’s a story of friendship and love between a terminally ill 17 year old and an 83 year old who meet at an art class in a hospital. They work on a project together to commemorate their combined 100 years, and through that you find out their beautiful and hard backstory lives. Not a linear timeline, which makes it seem like a puzzle as pieces click into place as the story progresses. I really loved it. But keep your tissues handy if you read it!)

6.20.23
(We’ve loved Jabari Jumps for a couple of years but just heard about the brand new sequel! Both are adorable, real life stories of a kid working through fears  (jumps) and frustrations (tries). Fun illustrations, too!)

6.27.23
(look what Cal won!) 

6.27.23
(this was the draft of what she entered . . .
we don't have a nice printed copy because
she just typed it right into the online submission
form.)

6.27.23
(here's the letter included in the envelope.
a few issues: no check was enclosed (because
honorable mention doesn't get money), they
maybe want an original physical copy of her work
(mostly that is just for the art winners), but she should
be for sure part of the online show. We will see. . .)

6.30.23
(when Dad has a $25 gift card from work and he's home
alone for Friday pizza and a movie . . . this is what he comes
home with)



Every other round up here (whew!):
2023: MayApr | Mar | Feb | Jan 
2022: Dec | Nov June | May | Apr | Mar | Feb | Jan (I got really behind last year, but I'm working on catching up!)
2021: Dec | Nov | Sep | Aug | July | June | May | Apr | Mar | Feb | Jan
2020: Dec | Nov | Sep | Aug | July | June | May | Apr | Mar Quar + Mar | Feb | Jan
2019: Dec | Nov | Oct | Sep | Aug | July | June | May | Apr | Mar | Feb | Jan
2018: Dec | Nov | Oct | Sept | Aug | July | June | May | Apr | Mar | Feb | Jan
2017: Dec | Nov | Oct | Sept | Aug | July | June | May | Apr | Mar | Feb | Jan
2016: Dec | Nov | Oct | Sept | Aug | July | June | May | Apr | Mar | Feb | Jan
2015: Dec | Nov | Oct | Sept | Aug | July | June | May | Apr | Mar | Feb | Jan
2014: Dec | Nov | Oct | Sept | Aug | July | June | May | Apr | Mar Feb | Jan
2013: Dec | Nov | Oct | Sept | Aug | July | June