Wednesday, August 19, 2009

23 Days Across the West

This summer Gaye and I took a trip across the western USA. In 23 days we traveled 6000 miles across six states and one Canadian province. Our journey took us from blazing hot Mesa, Arizona through Utah and into Idaho then further North into Montana and Canada. We ventured East across Montana into the Badlands of South Dakota. We followed the Oregon Trail across Wyoming and the Mormon route into Salt Lake, arriving in time for the celebration of the emigration into that once-desolate valley. And we visited seven state and national parks in the US and Canada.

It was my goal to provide one picture for each day of our travels as a summary that would not be lengthy. I have discovered that this will not be possible. We often visited several significant places in a single day. However, I still have the daunting task of providing less than 50 pictures from the more than 2000 that Gaye and I took. The narrations will be brief so as to not bore you too often.

These pictures are stored in full resolution and can be viewed in full size by clicking on them. Use the "back" button on your browser to return to this blog after viewing a photo.

Day 1 - Friday, July 3, 2009 - Travel from Mesa, Arizona to Montpelier, Idaho
We drove a rental car, a 2009 Chevy Malibu, that we thoroughly enjoyed and hauled a couple of bicycles with us which we used regularly along with hiking and walking to be sure that we were getting our exercise each day.







Day 2 - Saturday, July 4, 2009 - Bear Lake Fourth of July Festival
We drove over to Paris and watched the parade, enjoyed a pretty good concert in the Paris Tabernacle, had raspberry shakes to celebrate raspberry days and drove out to the wildlife refuge to see the birds. We went through Dingle, which amused Gaye for several days.






Day 3 - Sunday, July 5, 2009 - Montpelier, Idaho
We spent the day in church and recovering from the last two days. We made the trip of a thousand miles to Montpelier in one day, in 16 hours. When we arrived it was pouring rain.








Day 4 - Monday, July 6, 2009 - Travel from Montpelier to Butte, MT then to WhiteFish, MT

After we arrived at Whitefish and got settled in our condo, we headed through Whitefish and on to Hungry Horse where we saw "My Ball and Chain". They used to use these 8-ton balls to clear forest land by hooking each end to a good-sized tractor and rolling over everything. The trees would come down with the roots pulled up so that no stumps were left needing to be pulled out later. They could clear land at the rate that a man could walk. Pretty impressive.


Day 5 - Tuesday, July 7, 2009 - Glacier National Park
The day that we spent in Glacier National park with Drew and Bethany was soooooo cool. I really did limit the number of pictures but there was so much that was really magnificent that I kind of over did this day.

The pictures for this day are not in order and are actually closer to backwards as the events really transpired.

Us at the bridge over the last falls.

Just another beautiful face - cliff face. (oh, my)











The second of the three falls . We hiked into see these falls. It was a great hike and had a deer encounter along the trail.














The bridge over the river at the first falls.











The first falls.


















































The view back from Logan's Pass.












Gaye holds up the glacier. (It wasn't carrying any cash so she came away empty-handed. -gasp!)




























































As we stopped near Logan's Pass we saw a mother mountain goat and her kid on the trail. As you can see, she still has not lost her winter coat in July!








Drew and Beth.
























Rich and Drew.
























Entering the park.













Day 6 - Wednesday, July 8, 2009 - Hike Big Mountain near WhiteFish
Somebody decided that we should hike big mountain. They figured it would be easier going down than up. So we took the ski lift to the top of Big Mountain for the seven mile hike to the bottom.

I have to tell you that hiking down is not the same as hiking up nor is it easier. And all those muscles were screaming at me for the next three days!

Gaye makes the decision to take a break and sit while the rest of us wandered around the peak to snap pictures of the view.

Drew and Bethany pause on the trail.











At the look out point we stop to have a snack and a peek at the view below us. I think that we were probably about half way down the mountain at this point.








The Whitefish valley below us.











We pause to admire the Buffalo flowers along the hillside.

You know, I could have bicycled down this mountain and saved my muscles a lot of grief . . . if I didn't biff big time somewhere.








Day 7 - Thursday, July 9, 2009 - Travel from WhiteFish to Banff, Alberta, Canada
As we traveled from Whitefish, Montana to Banff, Alberta I stopped to admire the scenery with the railroad running along the river beneath the sandy bluffs.













What a wonderful view as we drove through Banff National Forest in Alberta, Canada.









Fishing and site-seeing, anyone?













The mountains are so rugged and the clouds are so low that it seems like they reach right up to the heavens. No wonder the Native Americans and the Jews used the mountain tops as sacred places.













Maybe we could make a movie called "A Road Runs Through It". We might not even need Robert Redford to make it a hit. :)









Day 8 - Friday, July 10, 2009 - Lake Louise, Lake Moraine and the 10 Sisters
We left Banff about 7:00 AM to visit Lakes Louise and Moraine. It was chilly - at least to we thin-blooded Arizonans and apparently to the clouds and mountains along the way. The clouds were barely up and floating but they made the mountains look magnificent.




Another one I just had to add here.












Lake Louise is this perfect alpine setting. It reminded me very much of when I lived in Switzerland.










The Ten Sisters are ten mountains that surround Lake Moraine and, as can be seen, are covered in glaciers of various sizes. It makes for a gorgeous setting.








I just had to put one more picture here. This is Lake Moraine and a few of the Ten Sisters.











Day 9 - Saturday, July 11, 2009 - Travel from Banff back to Butte through Cardston
This is a shot from Tunnel Mountain on the east side of Banff looking west into Banff National Park.









We are leaving Banff and heading south to Butte. This is the road toward Cardston.










In Cardston, Alberta we caught a quick view of the Mormon temple there. This seems like a sleepy little cattle town and is better known for its rodeo and then, on a hill appears this majestic looking building. It is pretty awesome.






As we passed through Helena I had to stop and get some shots of this majestic cathedral.















I had often heard of the term but never actually seen one until I caught this actual photo of a . . . Helena Hand-Basket (gasp!)









Amy Stagnoli, our friend and Gaye's co-worker, made arrangements for us to stay at her uncle's cabin near Butte. It was a wonderful place on the river and he met us and we had diner and breakfast together at his favorite place. We will have to try Amy's favorite place just down the road the next time we are in town.





Day 10 -Sunday, July 12, 2009 - Butte Folk Festival
We had to rush back from Canada so that we wouldn't miss this National Folk Festival totally and we caught the last day of it and wished that we had been able to squeeze in another day or two of it. it was phenomenal! We began at the top of the festival since that was the best available parking (and we didn't really know where we were going anyway) and worked our way down to the other end.

It is only proper that, Butte having been a mining town, that such a festival would be located under the mining rigs.




The flowers were in lushious blooms all around us and it was very enjoyable just to view the scenery.

Much of the music was Celtic, Arcadian or western. There was food to eat (buy) as well as merchandise being sold.




My favorite artist was a man named Jeff Little. His group was called the Jeff Little Trio and he had someone playing the guitar and someone playing the bass fiddle. He also had a couple of guest players sit in for a tune or two, one who played the banjo and another who was also a noted guitar player.

His piano playing was just amazing. It made you want to not just tap your foot while listening but to jump up and start dancing - and several people did just that after they got past the shock of how good he plays.


This is Jeff Little doing a little (no pun intended) of his music. If you want to hear more oof his music or buy his CDs, go to Jeff Little's web site. Here are also a couple of YouTube shots of him playing a couple of pieces: Orange Blossom Special and at the American Folk Festival where he had to improvise while the guitarist replaces a broken string!




Day 11 - Monday, July 13, 2009 - Butte
We actually went out with Beth's family to go boating but by the time we got to the lake it was beginning to rain and blow. So we all piled into the truck and Bill showed us around the area and some of the projects that he is working on. As we were driving it actually began to snow on us.

When we got back into town the weather had cleared up (of course) so I took some shots of Our Lady of the Rockies, a humongous statue of the virgin Mary which is located at the east end of Butte.



Day 12 - Tuesday, July 14, 2009 - Virginia City and Nevada City
We took a day trip over to Virginia city which was, at one time in Montana's history, the state capitol. Nor it is a touristy ghost town that is not even on the freeway to somewhere. It was an interesting place to visit.

Just down the road is Nevada City which is much less touristy and much more interesting. It was once a mining town and has ninety buildings which have been moved nearer the town center and have been restored. There is also a train depot with a narrow gauge train that runs between Nevada City and Virginia City as well as a standard gauge rail with a steam engine that was being worked on while we were there. Gaye and I sit here at the depot in Nevada City.
Drew and his fiancee, Bethany Berg, are here in the train yard.



























Day 13 - Wednesday, July 15, 2009 - Travel from Butte to South Dakota
On our way from Butte, across the expanse of Montana, we made a stop at the Little Big Horn, the location of Custer's last stand.

It is a solemn place where the national forest service has tried to represent both the US Calvary and the native Americans appropriately.

In the top photograph one can see the grave marker of George Custer (in black) with the many other men who died during this battle and could be identified. Their markers are white. An attempt has been made to place the markers in the locations where the men fell during this battle.
Notice the sweeping panorama with the trees below, where 8000 warriors were camped. This was the force that fought against Custer's 2500 men. And to add insult to injury, the US Troops usually had inferior weapons to that of the native American warriors.

This second photo is at this same location and is in recognition of those native Americans who fought for what the US government had promised but could not guarantee once gold was discovered in the Black hills to the south.







Day 14 - Thursday, July 16, 2009 - Mt. Rushmore and Crazy Horse
The visit to Mount Rushmore was an outstanding adventure. You come around a corner in the road and there is in full size. The pictures will never do justice to the size of this monument.

While there we also visited the work shop of the sculptor and heard his story, saw his models and discovered the "extended version" of the vision that he had for this monument. But his death and a World War curtailed those dreams and forced the conclusion of this mighty project.

The Crazy Horse Memorial is a publicly-funded project, meaning that there is no government funding support because the sculptor and his family want the people to control this project. It is felt that far too often, and perhaps more so with the Native American story, the government has controlled how the story is told. The original sculptor has passed away. He had 10 children and all but one or two have taken up the project. It has been going on for some 48 years. To give you some indication of the enormity of this project, the Mt. Rushmore sculptures could fit in the space between the mountain face of Crazy Horse to the cleared rock to the left of the face.

In keystone, near Mt Rushmore, we stopped for some food (and ice cream). This statue was in front of one of the stores and I just had to take a less-than-reverent pose with the man, Mr. Lincoln.












Day 15 - Friday, July 17, 2009 - Travel to Casper, Wyoming
As we were attempting to leave South Dakota, I think we made a wrong yet fortuitous turn which took us through Custer State park a second time. As we were traveling through, Gaye was making comments regarding the lack of buffalo like, "I think they have entered the witness protection program" or "Perhaps they are dressed as Antelope today." Suddenly we spot a herd of the beasts in a meadow and, of course, there is nowhere to pull off of the road to observe and take pictures. A couple of hills and curves further down the road I am finally able to stop. Since the road had curved, the location of the buffalo was only a hundred yards or so ove a couple of rises. As I exited the car with my camera, Gaye is following while quickly entering panic mode. By the time we locate the "witness protection" suspects she is in full blown panic attack and certain that we will soon be Darwin Award recipients as they circle us and cut us off from our vehicle. But note: this picture is on 7X zoom. We are in no danger of anything worse that stepping in meadow muffins. :)

This is Devil's Gate, a distinct location along the Oregon Trail that marked how far down the trail they were. It is 375 miles from Salt Lake City and also the location of the famous Willy and Martin handcart company disasters. These two companies of pioneers pulling hand carts for their speed and low cost, started late in the spring and were caught at this location by early snows. When word got back to Brigham Young, he sent people and provisions out immediately to rescue these unfortunate land travelers.






Independence Rock was also along the Oregon Trail. It is actually located about twenty miles before Devil's Gate. It was named Independence Rock because it was the point that you should be to before the 4th of July if you were going to be sure that you would not get snowed in along the way. There are also some inscriptions that travelers over the years have carved into the rock.


Day 16 - Saturday, July 18, 2009 - Travel the Oregon Trail back to Montpelier, ID
Sorry, but once again I could not give just one picture of this beautiful country that we were passing through. and these were just ones that I had to pick to not force you to spend weeks looking at our pictures. These are the Grand Tetons in western Wyoming.



















































Day 17 - Sunday, July 19, 2009 - Montpelier again


Sunday we went to church and had a quiet day at the house. We read, played games and generally rested up from our vacation before it continued in earnest.








Day 18 - Monday, July 20, 2009 - Montpelier Pickleville Theater
In the morning we went to the Oregon Trail Museum in Montpelier, since the Oregon Trail continues right along the main highway through town. They have a wonderful tour back through time and great visual and audio displays about how it was to travel the Trail back in the 1870's from the guns and supplies to the wagons and critters.

Mom and Dad took us down to Garden City at the southern end of Bear Lake to see a melodrama in the Pickleville Theater. The featured play was "The Hanging of El Bandito" and was hilariously entertaining. They also served dinner before hand and we were amused by the "Palace of Necessity", as the restrooms were labeled.


Day 19 - Tuesday, July 21, 2009 - Fishing
We took a day to go fishing at the reservoir east of town some twenty miles. It was a lovely day spent mostly biking by me further on up the canyon to see what was on the other side of the mountain. It took me 30 minutes to ride up the canyon and 10 minutes to ride back.

At that point, Mom and Gaye, who were doing the fishing, were done since the fish were not biting. We moved on down to the lower reservoir and I spent my time baiting Gaye's hook and removing the fish that she caught. I guess that Dad was doing some of that for Mom, too.


Day 20 - Wednesday, July 22, 2009 - Soda Springs
We took a drive to Soda Springs in the afternoon. Some years back the community decided to tap these natural hot springs to heat a community pool. However, the effect of turning this water loose was that that it changed the timing of Old Faithful in Yellowstone. So, to restore the damage that was done, they capped the springs allowing only a minimal flow during most of the day and turning it loose to give its potential once an hour, thus restoring Old Faithful to its faithfulness . . . or something like that.






Day 21 - Thursday, July 23, 2009 - Travel Fort Bridger to Salt Lake along the Mormon Trail
As we traveled across southern Wyoming following the route of the Oregon Trail we made a stop at Fort Bridger. This was originally a mountain man and pioneer trading post established by Jim Bridger. Jim eventually sold the fort to the Mormons who maintained it as a support for Mormon and other pioneers crossing the expanse of this country. This first picture is what the fort looked like when purchased by Brigham Young. They made improvements and expanded the fort. However, when Johnson's Army was sent to take control of the territory of Utah, the Mormons, having had enough of government assistance in Missouri, burned the fort so that

it could not be used by the Army and abandoned it. This stone wall is all that remains of the fort that was burned. The Army eventually rebuilt the fort with officers quarters, a school, laundry, barracks, Quartermaster store and many other buildings.





One of our favorite surprises was finding this, at first, shocking book in the book store. "The Donner Party Cookbook" is a very humorous title to the idea of how to organize parties where wild game is served with fresh edible plants.






Day 22 - Friday, July 24, 2009 - Salt Lake City
You can't visit Salt Lake City without seeing the Salt Lake temple which took 40 years to build. It used to be the tallest building in Salt Lake and could be seen for miles around but the age of high-rise office buildings has taken it's toll and now it is difficult to get any picture without buildings in the background.




While in Salt Lake we were privileged to find an art show going on in the conference center. We had visited the Church History museum, which, among many other things, had the church art contest winners from last year. The docent informed us that the top 200 entries from this year were being displayed in the Conference center.

This particular piece, though not the most striking, caught my attention. It was not even the most interesting piece. It depicts a pioneer woman and her baby in the worn out clothing resulting from a trek across this nation. In the icy winter weather she is looking toward heaven for her strength to go on. Part of the painting's description reads, "...the price we paid to become acquainted with God." It made me wonder what price I would pay in dedication and suffering to become more closely acquainted with God.


Day 23 - Saturday, July 25, 2009 - Travel Home to Mesa, Arizona
We traveled the back roads of Utah on the return trip to see what we had been missing by taking I-15 for all these years. One of the great sites we had been missing materialized as we entered the valley of Manti, Utah and could see the Mormon temple sitting on the hill. This was one of the first temples completed by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the west, along with the one in St. George, being completed even before the Salt Lake temple.
One person viewing my photos asked me what the "castle" was. It does look much like a castle.

This picture of Bryce Canyon in southern Utah is looking out across the valley with the "Hoodoos" in their various shades of amber and rust in the foreground. Bryce Canyon is not actually a canyon but the erosion of a chain of mountains.

As with many places we visited, we were told that these will not continue to last and be available to generations to come due to their continued erosion.

As we continued south from Page Arizona, the highway leads you out over the edge of the mountains before descending into the deserts of the Navajo reservation. On this day the clouds were churning and the rains were pouring themselves into the arroyos of the high desert.

Thursday, July 02, 2009

Total Money Makeover

I just finished listening to Dave Ramsey's "The Total Money Makeover". I must say that, in spite of his brash and brazen way of presenting the information, I am quite enthusiastic about doing some of the things that he proposes. He seems very much in line with others I have read regarding what to not do but he also lays out the steps to take in order to get yourself out of debt, to build a security nest egg, to build wealth and then to maintain that process.

Despite my age I figure that I can do this and have some wealth to live on as well as to pass on to others. So I am developing a plan.

He talks about a show he watched where they were showing a herd of gazelle that are calmly grazing. But, as you already know, no one watches a heard of gazelle grazing. That is boring. Then the focus moves to a cheetah hiding in the tall grasses of Africa. Then the wind changes a little and one gazelle's head comes up. He is on alert. Then the other heads come up. They don't know where the danger is but they know it is out there. They don't dare run for for fear of running into the danger so they stand alert. The cheetah is the fastest animal on land accelerating to 45 mph in just four leaps. When he moves the gazelle yells "CHEETAH!" Not really, but they run with extreme intensity. They know that they cannot outrun the cheetah so they run to out maneuver the cheetah. Because he runs so fast he cannot make turns as fast as the gazelle can and statistically, Mr. Cheetah only takes a gazelle to lunch in 1 out of 19 attempts.

In our pursuit of removing debt we need to be "gazelle intense", as Dave Ramsey puts it. We have to run from debt as if our lives depended upon it. Once debt is under control then you focus on removing it. Finally it is time to refocus our monetary efforts on building weath that will allow us the freedom to enjoy life.

We often believe that having a home is the American dream, or that having lots of "stuff" is the American dream. But so often the true dream eludes us. The true American dream is freedom. And one of the freedoms is monetary freedom. The freedom to know that whatever happens that we will have no worries. It does not matter who is in office, how they "tax the wealthy", how the market is doing. If your car catches fire, your house needs a new roof or medical emergencies come up, these are minor inconveniences because you have an emergency fund, appropriate insurance and investments that allow all to be taken in stride.

So, here are the steps, according to Dave, to becoming wealthy:

  • Make a budget
  1. If you don't know where your money is going you won't know what things that you want to trim or need to trim to accomplish your goals.
  2. If you don't control your money it will control you then vanish.
  3. Your money should be a wash every month, paying agreed upon expenses and the remainer, down to the last penny, being funneled into your financial goals which follow.
  • Build an emergency fund of $1000
  1. This is the first step because if you do not have an emergency fund every minor inconvenience will be an interruption to your plan.
  2. Immediately after you start to do this saving you will have a test to see how focused you are on your decision to do a total money make over. Without your fund you will put something on "the card" and become discouraged.
  3. Stay gazelle intense - your life depends on changing your habits regarding money.
  • Start the snowball rolling
  1. Pay the minimum on all of your debts
  2. On your debt with the fewest remaining payments, focus all of the money you can scrape together each month to to add to the minimum to get this paid off as fast as possible.
  3. When you get the first debt paid off, focus the money you were paying on the first debt plus any money that you can possibly spare each month on paying off the next debt.
  4. Continue this until everything but your mortgage is paid down to nothing.
  5. Have a card-ectomy - now cut up all of the plastic because you are on your way to never needing them again.
  • Next build your nest egg
  1. It is important to grow beyond the $1000 emergency fund.
  2. Depending upon the security of your job, save between three- and six-months of what it would take for you to survive without any income. Now that you have no bills except your mortgage you will be able to survive on much less.
  3. This should be saved in a form that is easily converted to ready cash. Do not put it into stocks or long-term investments which may be at a low when you need it or may take time to get into a liquid format.
  4. With gazelle intensity, put all of your resources toward doing this as quickly as possible.
  • Start long-term investments
  1. If you get matching dollars thorough your work, max that out.
  2. Invest in long-term index funds as a secure place for long-term investing.
  3. Invest remaining money in a Roth IRA.
  4. You should invest NO LESS than 15% of your gross income each month at this point.
  • Start paying ahead on your mortgage
  1. Now that you have your investing started, no credit debt and your emergency funds in place, focus your total spare monies on paying ahead on your morgage. This is the biggest challenge so far but you are now practiced at being gazelle intense with your money.
  2. Continue with this step until you have paid off the mortgage. This will take some time (on avarage, as little as $125 extra each month will bring your mortgage from 30 years down to 15 years and save you about $85,000) but this will bring you to a point of financial stability beyond 92% of people in this country.
  3. More money brings it down faster and saves you more money.
  4. When you pay off the final payment, have a mortgage burning party.
  • Now that you have no debt, do not back off. How fast do you want to become free? When you have sufficient wealth in investments that you could live comfortably on 8% then you are there. Statistically, over the long haul, stocks and bonds make 12% per year. Considering times when the market will not do that well, 8% will allow you to live without the fear of the market dropping a bit.
  1. All additional funds at this point should be placed into a Roth IRA so that you have no tax liability when you begin withdrawing from your investments.

That is the basics. I recommend that you read or listen to his book. There are more details that are worth gleaning from his writing.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

My Children (and Grand Children) Can be Millionaires

As I reach an age where our children have moved out on their own I have begun to think of retirement and doing things that were not possible with children at home. One area of thought that has consumed much of m time over the past several months has been money. Not the lack of sufficient income because we live comfortably, but the lack of my understanding of the rules of becoming rich.

I have to admit that, even as a child, my lifestyle was to spend more than I earned. During high school, my brother Stan and I both worked for the same fast food business. I probably made more money per hour than he did but each payday, I noticed that I was always out of money a few days before the next paycheck while Stan still had his previous paycheck pinned to his bulletin board.

To overcome this "disability" of mine I got a college degree in a field that was well paid and worked hard. But the propensity to spend what I earned never seemed to be topped by earning more. Finally, in order to keep me from being mad about finances all of the time, my wife took over the books and bill paying. That solved one of the problems (my anger whenever I had bills to pay) but it did not resolve the other problem, the lack of financial wisdom and discipline.

A few months ago, while searching for some gardening information on the internet, I came across a blog about a family who was tracking their costs of running a garden to see if they could save money by growing some of their own food. It was a blog called Get Rich Slowly and I found a lot more than just savvy gardening information. J.D. posts a couple of times each day about his financial life from having been broke and $35,000 in debt three years ago to having paid off all of his debt except his house. He talks about saving and investing what he used to spend. He talks about what he is saving for now (he recently paid cash for a used Mini Cooper, his dream car) and the habits and tendencies that he has had to deal with, and still deals with, so as not to return to the debt-ridden person that he used to be.

J.D. also has from time to time provided information regarding finance books that he believes are worth reading as well as reviews of these books he has read. One such list had "The Millionaire Next Door" on it and I found it at the local library. Amazingly, none of the other books on his list were there so I may need to check my favorite used book store next.

The point of all of this gibberish is that I have started reading "The Millionaire Next Door" and I am finding it fascinating. The old adage that the way to wealth is to save more than you spend is true but it is not the whole story. The questions that I have also had regarding wealth are, "How do you save more than you earn?" and "What do you do with the money you save?" This book addresses the first question. It is a study of those people in America who have assets valued at over one million dollars compared to those with similar incomes who do are not millionaires.

Get Rich Slowly has motivated me to get started looking more closely at where my money goes and what to do with what I save. It has reminded me to grow that emergency fund. It inspires me to buy quality for less and to do well with less stuff. And mostly, it inspires me to help my children to learn these lessons while they are young so that they will all be millionaires, not just look like ones.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Bird Condo Established

I have finished another gourd project, the first of potentially several bird condos. This one was a typical project meaning that it was mostly experiment. I like trying out new things and learning how far I can take some skill be it a technique, a color or whatever. You see, nothing really does what you expect, although it is much closer to the expected the more you are patient and the more you learn from previous experiments that went . . . different.

As an example, there are a myriad of options for coloring your gourds including leaving them their natural color, varnishes (including polyurethanes), paints, stains and dyes. I have been working with leather dyes. So I chose a color that I thought would look just the way I wanted it to. But then the tone becomes lighter as it soaks into the wood or it gets darker as it drys. It bleeds into areas where you didn't really want it to go and it changes once again when you put a coat of poly on it. So the result is always a bit of a surprise. The idea is to get enough experience and be patient enough to achieve a result that is pleasing if not exactly what you had in mind when you began. And, occasionally, you get a piece that exceeds your expectations.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

My Birthday Tradition

Over the past few years I have watched as my children have struggled a bit financially. They were doing well enough to cover the bills but often had to sacrifice in order to make those ends meet. But then came the holidays or birthdays and they had concerns of how to get something for family members and still not kill their finances.

Then, about a year ago I got this brilliant idea - at least I thought it was brilliant (it nearly blinded me.) I thought, what if we could celebrate my birthday in a way that wouldn't cost them any money. And what if that method still allowed them to give something? Finally, my brain being close to exhaustion, I concluded that I could host a work breakfast.

A work breakfast is where everyone shows up early in the morning before the heat of the day sets in and we work on a yard project of my choosing for a couple of hours and then we have a great breakfast. The spouses and the grand kids also come but they just enjoy the breakfast.

When the task and the breakfast are done then people can leave or just hang out - whatever they want to do is fine.

Last year was the first annual Dad's Work Birthday. Last year I ordered a few tons of gravel for the front and back yards and the kids helped me haul it and spread it as well as clearing an area in the side yard for a place to construct a jungle gym for the grand kids. Then we had a marshmallow fight with marshmallow guns that we built. There were marshmallows all over the yard and trees and everywhere. The breakfast was barely less exciting. It went so well that we opted to to try the experiment again this year.

This year was also a grand success and so I think that it has become a tradition. There was one hitch, however. My daughter Jennie somehow determined that her husband, Kyle, should be the personally involved party in the work project rather than she, herself. Hmmmm...

The project this year involved the removal of the terracing blocks which surrounded the lawn and trenching around the lawn so that a liner could be put in to contain the lawn. The blocks were moved to the west side of the yard so that they can be used in another project. Here are the pictures.


This is the before picture of the southeast corner of the yard featuring a garden hidden by much stone.











This is the southeast side of the yard before the inquisition began. Notice the stones bordering the lawn and the area beyond just begging for a project to be done there.










Check out this motley crew ready to do the work of two or even three good men. From left to right:
Ben (oldest son), Kyle (Jennie's husband), Quentin (youngest son), me and Paul (second son). Drew (third son) is absent because he lives in Montana. I guess that just living where the weather hovers below zero for weeks at a time is excuse enough for not being there. He has mostly likely not thawed out yet.





The work of prying up the stones and hauling them to the west begins.












Everyone does their part and the work progresses fast and smooth.












"Use your entrenching tool," he says.


















The blocks accumulate, somehow, right where we want them.












Digging those trenches isn't as much fun as it seemed at first but Ben and Kyle make the best of it.











Look! our own version of Stone Henge!


















The girls enjoy the morning weather without getting all sticky and dirty - Jessica with Hero in her lap and Jennie.












Enjoying the shade now that the work is all done.
























































And now time for the family photos.