Sunday, July 29, 2012

July Adventures

We have had lots of fun this month hanging on to the last few weeks of summer and trying to outsmart or just escape from the heat.  Here’s some proof with a few things we’ve been doing:

Crawdad fishing in Eagar over the 4th! (Savannah was napping so she missed it…)

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Hiking and going to the beach at San Diego…

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Yes my mom got in the water…for about 5 seconds…

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(The older girls were there, they were just in the water so much I forgot to get a picture of them!  I think my mom did though…)

 

We also took the girls to serve in the San Diego temple.

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And back at home we couldn’t miss Chick Fil A’s Cow Appreciation Day where you dress as a cow and get a free meal—we actually went for lunch and dinner—yup, we’re that cheap!  Come on, we have six hungry kids okay!

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We also have frequented many a dollar movie day at the mall….Of course, every time we go I end up buying something at the mall so don’t know if that has really saved us much money…

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And if we get really bored or grumpy from the heat, we can always look at our baby girl and enjoy her sweet smiles.

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And school is starting tomorrow!

Monday, July 2, 2012

Caesar Rodney—a Patriot

Here's a story you may or may not know about the signing of our nation's Declaration of Independence. You see, before it was written and signed, the delegates from every state had to vote to write and sign it..make sense? Anyway, here is the great story taken from a wonderful book we have The American Patriot's Almanac:

This is the story of Caesar Rodney, one of Delaware's three signers of the Declaration of Independence. Rodney was a well-to-do planter who served in Delaware's legislature, led protests against the Stamp Act, and organized the Patriot militia before being elected to the Continental Congress. Despite such activity, he was a man of poor health. He suffered from asthma as well as skin cancer that had left his face so disfigured he often hid one side of it behind a green silk scarf. Yet, as John Adam's noted there was "fire, spirit, wit, and humor in his countenance."

Rodney was in Delaware on the evening on July 1, 1776 when he received an urgent message from Philadelphia. Congress was ready to vote on the issue of independence. Of the two other Delaware delegates, one favored and one opposed a break with England, so Rodney's vote would decide which way the colony would go--if he could get there on time.

He rode through the night, in thunder and rain, to cover the 80 miles to Philadelphia. The next day, just as Congress prepared to vote, the delegates heard hoof beats on the cobblestones, and a mud-spattered Rodney strode into the hall, still wearing his spurs, exhausted but ready to brake the tie in his state's delegation by voting for independence.

On July 2, 1776 the Continental Congress made the momentous decision to break free from England. "Resolved, That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent states." Two days late, it adopted the Declaration of Independence.

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This is Ella, only a few months older than Savannah at the time…crazy how time flies!

 

God bless America, and God bless the men and women who were willing to live their lives in such a way that they had enough courage and integrity to do what needed to be done when it needed to be done. Happy 4th!