After all our traveling, this week has flashed by with lots of getting our lives back in order stuff.
Also--Andrew attended his first overnight camp! He went to the SUU summer science camp (this year's theme was CSI) and I think he even liked it, though he said it was hard to sleep. (Sigh. Some things are just genetic.) We got to go up and have dinner with him Tuesday night. Evelyn and Oliver were thrilled to see him after two days away, and it was fun to watch the video they put together of the camp activities. Bubby and Poppy were there for dinner too--perks of being the dean. ;)
In other news: I got pass pages for my book, which means I got a copy of what each page will look like and I have to review each page to make sure there are no mistakes and the wording is all exactly as I want. This is my *last* chance to change things before the book goes to print. No pressure, right?
On the plus side, I got the go-ahead to reveal my book cover this week. If you follow me on any kind of social media, you've already seen it, but if not, here it is!
Andrew still has swimming most mornings and Evelyn had another sewing class this week (she made a cute stuffed owl). Dan came home early Wednesday to make a fancy dinner: ribs on the grill and homemade bread. (It was delicious).
Oliver had his well-child check up on Tuesday. I persist in thinking he's small, because he was so small for so long--but he was 50th percentile in height and weight! So, perfectly average. He did have to get all his vaccinations this week, which was a little sad for him (so that he'll have them done before kindergarten registration next spring, since he has a summer birthday).
Oliver has also been trying to kill himself: in the last week or so, he's ended up with huge scrapes on his side (collision with a plastic container of toys) and under his chin (collision with a tree in our front yard). Luckily, neither seem to be lasting damage, though his collection of bruises is pretty nice.
A good week, if a little crazy. Here's to summer!
Sunday, June 26, 2016
Sunday, June 19, 2016
More shenanigans
After the world's longest post, I'll try to be brief.
We stopped in Utah Co on our way back from our trip. Monday, Dan and I planned on some car-shopping, as our current single vehicle had 190K + miles on it.
It was time.
We did some research, found some reasonable prospects--and at the first dealership decided we didn't want another minivan after all, as ours is still perfectly serviceable for around town. So, we settled on a Toyota Camry instead. The dealer had one in good condition that had just come in--only catch, it needed to replace part of the breaks.
No big deal. We signed the papers, paid our money, and returned home, expecting to pick up the car later that day, or at the earliest, Tuesday morning. Dan and Andrew wound up driving home Monday night, and I was going to follow the next day with Evelyn and Oliver.
Well, Tuesday, they found another part in the brake that needed to be replaced. At that point, I gave up on going home, because I'd have to come back Wednesday anyway for a writing conference I was participating in.
Wednesday, still no car, but the dealer gave us a rental (the AC didn't work, but at least I didn't have to keep bumming my parents' car). This time, they were trying to figure out why a warning light had gone on.
Thursday, still no car. It being Oliver's fourth birthday, we drove up to SLC and met Sarah and kids for a rousing round of bowling and glow-in-the dark mini-golf.
I presented at my conference and it was awesome. I got to hold an early copy of my book in my hands for the first time! Also glorious.
Friday--still no car. I'd hoped to get home by Saturday for Andrew's taekwon do tournament at the Utah Summer Games. I went in to the dealer and talked to the mechanic who explained that they'd basically taken the engine apart to deal with the light, but the part they'd originally put in turned out to be the wrong part (the car was part of a split year, where half of that years' cars had one part, half had the other), which had, in turn, affected another part that now needed to be replaced.
I think Dan and I have the anti-Midas touch when it comes to cars (if you'll remember, we had to replace the entire transmission after buying our minivan).
Anyway, I wound up driving home with a different rental car (we needed something with AC) from the dealership, late Friday night.
Saturday, we got to watch Andrew compete in the Summer Games. There were only three kids in his category, but it was a good experience for him (he came away with two silver medals).
Had a wonderful alfresco dinner with Bubby and Poppy today, topped off with DQ cake.
Still no word on the car.
We stopped in Utah Co on our way back from our trip. Monday, Dan and I planned on some car-shopping, as our current single vehicle had 190K + miles on it.
It was time.
We did some research, found some reasonable prospects--and at the first dealership decided we didn't want another minivan after all, as ours is still perfectly serviceable for around town. So, we settled on a Toyota Camry instead. The dealer had one in good condition that had just come in--only catch, it needed to replace part of the breaks.
No big deal. We signed the papers, paid our money, and returned home, expecting to pick up the car later that day, or at the earliest, Tuesday morning. Dan and Andrew wound up driving home Monday night, and I was going to follow the next day with Evelyn and Oliver.
Well, Tuesday, they found another part in the brake that needed to be replaced. At that point, I gave up on going home, because I'd have to come back Wednesday anyway for a writing conference I was participating in.
Wednesday, still no car, but the dealer gave us a rental (the AC didn't work, but at least I didn't have to keep bumming my parents' car). This time, they were trying to figure out why a warning light had gone on.
Thursday, still no car. It being Oliver's fourth birthday, we drove up to SLC and met Sarah and kids for a rousing round of bowling and glow-in-the dark mini-golf.
I presented at my conference and it was awesome. I got to hold an early copy of my book in my hands for the first time! Also glorious.
Friday--still no car. I'd hoped to get home by Saturday for Andrew's taekwon do tournament at the Utah Summer Games. I went in to the dealer and talked to the mechanic who explained that they'd basically taken the engine apart to deal with the light, but the part they'd originally put in turned out to be the wrong part (the car was part of a split year, where half of that years' cars had one part, half had the other), which had, in turn, affected another part that now needed to be replaced.
I think Dan and I have the anti-Midas touch when it comes to cars (if you'll remember, we had to replace the entire transmission after buying our minivan).
Anyway, I wound up driving home with a different rental car (we needed something with AC) from the dealership, late Friday night.
Saturday, we got to watch Andrew compete in the Summer Games. There were only three kids in his category, but it was a good experience for him (he came away with two silver medals).
![]() |
| The black is from his new mouthguard |
Had a wonderful alfresco dinner with Bubby and Poppy today, topped off with DQ cake.
Still no word on the car.
A wedding, a funeral, a vacation--oh my!
I'm well aware that we've been MIA for a couple of weeks. With good reason!
(WARNING: This post is going to be long. Skim the pictures if you'd rather!)
The first week of June was insane, in good and bad ways. Dan's beloved Uncle Phil was dying, so we spent as much of Sunday and Monday in SG as we could--he passed away early Tuesday morning, May 31st. Wednesday I was back in SG, with just the kids, to visit my parents who were staying in a condo down there. We spent the night and the kids had a wonderful time swimming and hanging out. Thursday we were back home, but not for long. On Friday, we were back in SG again, this time for the wedding of Dan's cousin's oldest son (this, for those who don't know the family, is also Uncle Phil's oldest grandson). The wedding was lovely, and we enjoyed visiting with everyone during the luncheon.
Trisha, Sarah and I ended up sending the kids off with their dads between the luncheon and the reception so we could help set up for the reception. Everything went well, but we did leave the reception early to get exhausted kids to bed. Thank goodness for my parents, who were still in SG and took the kids that night! Dan and I went home, because we had a million and one things to do the next day, as Saturday was Evelyn's baptism, and Sunday we left town for our first vacation of the summer. (Whew. This makes me tired just writing about it!)
Evelyn's baptism was lovely, though it was a little surreal to be there as both a mother *and* the primary president. (Luckily, the bishop's wife was there to pick up my slack!) We're so proud of her!
After the baptism, we had dinner at our house--soup, at Evelyn's request--but the best part was spending more time with people we love. We were so grateful Dan's Aunt Carolyn could make it, along with Tony and Jaye and their kids.
Sunday, we set off on vacation. We spent the first night at my parents' house, then drove up to Vernal, for a day in dinosaur land. (From here on, you get my notes from my vacation journal)
Then we continued on into Yellowstone National Park. Our first major stop was Old Faithful, where the parking lot was so crowded we circled 2-3 times before waiting 5 minutes for someone to pull out. Luckily, this meant that we arrived just as Old Faithful was erupting—no wait time at all! Then we hauled the kids around geyser hill, where Andrew complained about the walk and Oliver took pictures of everything that hissed or burbled (we had to delete some pictures so he had room on his camera).
(WARNING: This post is going to be long. Skim the pictures if you'd rather!)
The first week of June was insane, in good and bad ways. Dan's beloved Uncle Phil was dying, so we spent as much of Sunday and Monday in SG as we could--he passed away early Tuesday morning, May 31st. Wednesday I was back in SG, with just the kids, to visit my parents who were staying in a condo down there. We spent the night and the kids had a wonderful time swimming and hanging out. Thursday we were back home, but not for long. On Friday, we were back in SG again, this time for the wedding of Dan's cousin's oldest son (this, for those who don't know the family, is also Uncle Phil's oldest grandson). The wedding was lovely, and we enjoyed visiting with everyone during the luncheon.
| Set up for the wedding: Jaye Eves and I did this wall. :) |
Trisha, Sarah and I ended up sending the kids off with their dads between the luncheon and the reception so we could help set up for the reception. Everything went well, but we did leave the reception early to get exhausted kids to bed. Thank goodness for my parents, who were still in SG and took the kids that night! Dan and I went home, because we had a million and one things to do the next day, as Saturday was Evelyn's baptism, and Sunday we left town for our first vacation of the summer. (Whew. This makes me tired just writing about it!)
Evelyn's baptism was lovely, though it was a little surreal to be there as both a mother *and* the primary president. (Luckily, the bishop's wife was there to pick up my slack!) We're so proud of her!
After the baptism, we had dinner at our house--soup, at Evelyn's request--but the best part was spending more time with people we love. We were so grateful Dan's Aunt Carolyn could make it, along with Tony and Jaye and their kids.
| This picture cracks me up: not just because Tony is expertly holding the floor, but b/c my mom is in the background dealing with my weeds. So characteristic of both of them! |
| Andrew's new favorite small person: Juliette. |
Sunday, we set off on vacation. We spent the first night at my parents' house, then drove up to Vernal, for a day in dinosaur land. (From here on, you get my notes from my vacation journal)
Day 1: Drove to Vernal in the am, then went to Dinosaur
National Monument. The wall of dinosaurs was impressive—crazy to think of all
the dinosaurs they found when the dig was originally discovered. We walked back
down to the visitor’s center, which turned out to be very hot. Everyone was red
and sweaty when we arrived back (and some of us a bit cranky).
We drove back into Vernal (and took pictures with D—the pink
dinosaur. Dina?) Went to the Natural History museum and learned about dinosaur
digs and saw a bunch of dinosaur statues. Oliver took pictures like crazy
(pretty sure he’s up to 300 pictures in the first day). Back to hotel to hang
out; got allergy meds for Dan. Dinner was at a homestyle, local restaurant with
crazy portions. Dan got chicken fried steak, salad, scone, mashed potatoes,
soup and a vegetable (peas). The steak was okay; I liked my chicken strips
better. The kids tried American scones for the first time and while they liked
them the verdict was pretty unanimous: Dan’s scones are better. After
recovering from dinner we went swimming; Oliver clung to me like crazy. But the
swimming worked—the kids conked out pretty quickly after going to bed.
| Oliver likes the one-foot pose for some reason. Note the omnipresent camera. |
Day 2: Drove up toward flaming Gorge, then through S.
Eastern Wyoming and Star Valley to Jackson. We stopped at Jim Bridger's trading fort in Wyoming. Andrew wasn't too excited, but it was actually pretty cool (though somehow I took no pictures of the actual fort). I was really interested in the military barracks, since part of my dissertation dealt with them. Spent the night in Jackson Hole.
| Inside the head officer's house |
| A blurry picture of the Star Valley temple as we drove past--for my mom |
Day 3: Up early, drove through Teton village intending to
take a back country road through to Grand Teton National Park, but the road was
closed for finishing June 7-9, so our timing was perfect. Drove back to
Jackson, resumed our trek towards Grand Tetons. My guide book raved about a
chuckwagon breakfast, so I dragged the family out hungry—and we hit the
chuckwagon before it opened for the season (on the 11th).
Undeterred, we continued forward, stopping in Colter Bay where we found a
breakfast establishment that *was* open (and offered an all-you-can-eat bar, so
Andrew was in hog heaven). We then took a short hike to swan lake, where no
swans were in offering. But the hike took us alongside the bay, which reflected
the snow-capped Tetons, so most of us were happy. Evelyn was unhappy with all
the horse poop on the trail (truth be told, so was Andrew), and Andrew was
nervous because of all the signs saying we were in bear country. We didn’t see
any bears (at least, not then).
| Swan Lake sans Swans |
Then we continued on into Yellowstone National Park. Our first major stop was Old Faithful, where the parking lot was so crowded we circled 2-3 times before waiting 5 minutes for someone to pull out. Luckily, this meant that we arrived just as Old Faithful was erupting—no wait time at all! Then we hauled the kids around geyser hill, where Andrew complained about the walk and Oliver took pictures of everything that hissed or burbled (we had to delete some pictures so he had room on his camera).
After Old Faithful, we drove up around the loop to the Grand
Canyon of Yellowstone—after a short but intense series of switch backs, we got
a spectacular view of the lower falls and the canyon. As penance, we had to
carry Evelyn and Oliver back up the switch-backs.
We’d hoped to have dinner further up the road at one of the lodges—but the lodge was closed for the season. (The downside of trying to beat all the summer crowds). Luckily, I had overpacked lunch supplies, so we had a nice picnic dinner and then drove to the Lamar valley, looking for wildlife. We saw a bunch of antelope and tons of bison—including a few that crossed the road right in front of us. On our way out of the park, we even saw bears: a solitary black bear, and a half mile or so later, a sow and her cub (this one was easy to spot because of all the rubber-necking at the side of the road). I was a little disappointed that we hadn’t seen any elk—and then we drove through Mammoth, where they were parked on almost every lawn. Still no moose or wolves though.
| The backdrop looks fake--but I promise, it's the real deal. |
We’d hoped to have dinner further up the road at one of the lodges—but the lodge was closed for the season. (The downside of trying to beat all the summer crowds). Luckily, I had overpacked lunch supplies, so we had a nice picnic dinner and then drove to the Lamar valley, looking for wildlife. We saw a bunch of antelope and tons of bison—including a few that crossed the road right in front of us. On our way out of the park, we even saw bears: a solitary black bear, and a half mile or so later, a sow and her cub (this one was easy to spot because of all the rubber-necking at the side of the road). I was a little disappointed that we hadn’t seen any elk—and then we drove through Mammoth, where they were parked on almost every lawn. Still no moose or wolves though.
| That's our car mirror, for some context on how close they were. |
Day 4 Bozeman
Quieter day today. We hoped the kids would sleep in, but no
such luck. (O didn’t go to bed until 9:30 or so—turns out he didn’t sleep in
the car b/c he was sitting on a toadstool [our euphemism for poop in his
pants]). We had breakfast at the hotel, bathed children and ourselves, and then
we drove out near Hyalite canyon to look for the house my parents built, where
I grew up.
Memory is a funny thing: my memories from 11 don’t quite map
onto what I find is the reality as an adult, but I did remember the long
sweeping drive out of town through fields (most still there), and the long
right-angle drive that takes us to the school I attended. My house, though, was
missing. Either completely rebuilt or remodeled. (Later confirmed with parents: remodeled). Weird feeling, even though
it’s been almost 30 years since I lived there. The woods behind the
across-the-street neighbor’s house didn’t seem nearly so wild as they had when
I was a kid either.
| The house that used to be ours--it looked MUCH different then. |
| My old elementary school: K-8th grade, some grades combined |
| Original little red schoolhouse across the street; my sister had 2nd grade here |
We went to the Museum of the Rockies where we saw a cool
planetarium show (though O got bored) and some fascinating dinosaur museums. I
learned T-rex might actually have been a scavenger and some think he might not
even be the top Cretaceous predator, given how often they’ve found its skeleton
in relation to other dinosaurs (though the docent explained their might be
other things at work too—preservation bias, which favors dinosaurs living near
streams and lakes, etc.). Upstairs they had an interactive children’s exhibit
on Yellowstone which is just Oliver’s cup of tea.
We had lunch at the Roost (Bubby and Poppy had raved about
it from their last trip to Bozeman, though they had called it the
Coop, so we weren’t sure if they meant the local Co-op instead. Luckily, a docent at the museum suggested they might have meant the Roost). But they had
wonderful fried chicken and mashed potatoes, though we ordered the family meal
and it was so much it fed us for dinner as well!
Back to the hotel to swim (and play devices) before
venturing out again after dinner (leftovers) to the Pickle Barrel for ice
cream. After trying nearly a dozen flavors between us, 4 out of 5 settled on
mint-chocolate chip. Let’s just say the apples don’t fall far from the tree. (I
had buffalo chip: chocolate with caramel and peanuts and peanut butter and
chunks of something like snickers. Yum.)
| Bozeman sunset |
Day 5:
Started with some early excitement. After not sleeping
particularly well because of a painful spot in my chest/lower ribs, I ended up
in the emergency room at 6 am. (Given my medical history, I always worry about
chest pain, and this had been persistent all night and uncomfortable enough
that I kept waking up. I also didn’t want to spend the next 8 hours in
Yellowstone without access to medical care, if something really was wrong.)
Luckily, it was early enough that there wasn’t much wait time and the blood
work came back negative and we still managed to be on the road by 8:30 am. Saw
a couple bald eagles on the way to Yellowstone.
We stopped first at the Mammoth terrace. Andrew wasn’t super
happy about more boardwalks, but even he conceded that it was pretty cool. We
drove through some scenic byways.
Our next prospective stop (near Norris geyser area) was closed off, so we drove on to the Lake, stopping along the way at Sulphur springs, one of the most acidic springs in the park.
I didn’t realize there was a big freshwater lake in Yellowstone, but we had lunch at a lodge near the lake where we could see the water, and afterwards sat on the terrace in rocking chairs. We also tried to mail a letter, but our timing worked against us here too: we hit the post office during the hour it was closed for lunch.
Drove further around the lake to the West Thumb and explored some geysers just alongside the lake. This was one of my favorite spots—the boardwalk along the beach had a festive feel to it and the cool air blowing off the lake counteracted the hot steam from the geysers.
Our next prospective stop (near Norris geyser area) was closed off, so we drove on to the Lake, stopping along the way at Sulphur springs, one of the most acidic springs in the park.
| The very stinky sulphur spring (explaining my kids' pained expressions) |
I didn’t realize there was a big freshwater lake in Yellowstone, but we had lunch at a lodge near the lake where we could see the water, and afterwards sat on the terrace in rocking chairs. We also tried to mail a letter, but our timing worked against us here too: we hit the post office during the hour it was closed for lunch.
Drove further around the lake to the West Thumb and explored some geysers just alongside the lake. This was one of my favorite spots—the boardwalk along the beach had a festive feel to it and the cool air blowing off the lake counteracted the hot steam from the geysers.
After vowing we wouldn’t go back to Old Faithful, we ended
up there again anyway because the kids wanted ice cream and there wasn’t
anywhere else close. But parking wasn’t as bad this time, and the peach ice
cream was pronounced excellent.
Further up the road we stopped at the Grand Prismatic
Spring, which was insane—a waiting line just to get to the parking lot. But the
springs were lovely, even if billows of steam occasionally meant I couldn’t see
much! All the geysers were a little nerve-wracking. Oliver was usually good to
hold our hands or ride on someone’s shoulders, but Andrew can be a little hurly
burly, and the way he tried to squeeze through crowded boardwalks nearly
stopped my heart. (If you haven’t seen the news, a 23-year-old kid died on
Tuesday in Yellowstone after falling into a hot spring. To be fair, he’d
clearly left the boardwalk, but still. I didn’t want to have to deal with
anything like that).
| This is pretty accurate about how happy Andrew was. |
| This one cracks me up. All the heat and steam: this girl is in her element. |
By this point, the kids and grownups were pretty tired, so
we wrapped up our Yellowstone visit and headed for the exit. We spent the night in Idaho Falls.
Day 6:
We spent the entire morning with friends from graduate school at Penn State, Corrie and Natalie Nichol. (It says something about how much we enjoyed ourselves that we took no pictures). We'd thought about spending some time in Idaho, but when we realized we were only four hours from Provo, we decided we'd rather spend the night in a familiar setting.
We did stop for a brief detour at the Golden Spike historical site: the kids especially liked riding the hand-car.
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