Monday, September 30, 2013

Montana - On the Way Home

Driving home from Patrick's, we drive north on I-15, turn west onto I-90 - 
and turn 579 miles later to go up I-405 to go a few miles up to Kirkland

When you approach Ellensburg, Washington wind turbines become a major part of the landscape. They are part of the Wild Horse Wind and Solar Facility.


From the Wild Horse Wind & Solar website
Total height of each tower with blades fully extended is 351 feet. 
Total weight is approximately 223 tons.
Towers are 221 feet high and weigh 104 tons.
Each turbine blade is 129 feet long and weighs over 7 tons.
The diameter of each rotor is larger than the wingspan of a Boeing 747.

Cell tower & wind turbines 
newer technologies join telephone & other utility structures


Click on the Montana & Washington labels on the right to see additional pictures



Peace


Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid. John 14:27

It's amazing to me how it is possible to feel great peace in the midst of the chaos, sadness, frustrations, disappointments and so forth that we encounter in our individual and family lives. Relationships with Jesus Christ, Heavenly Father, and the Spirit enable us to keep an eternal perspective. This helps us deal with the challenges of life on earth. 

“Peace comes from knowing that the Savior knows who we are and knows that we have faith in Him, love Him, and keep His commandments, even and especially amid life’s devastating trials and tragedies.” Quentin L. Cook, “Personal Peace: The Reward of Righteousness” 

“I invite you to walk confidently and joyfully. Yes, the road has bumps and detours and even some hazards. But don’t focus on them. Look for the happiness your Father in Heaven has prepared for you in every step of your journey. Happiness is the destination, but it’s also the path. ‘Peace in this world, and eternal life in the world to come’ is what He promises (Doctrine & Covenants  59:23).” Dieter F. Uchtdorf, “Your Wonderful Journey Home



Saturday, September 28, 2013

The Power of Family Prayer


We included with the September 22, 2013 letter to our children. The whole talk is 4+ printed pages. We’ve taken out 2+ pages telling of an experience on Elder Groberg’s mission to Tonga. Click on the title above to see the whole talk. We added the italics below.

From John Grobert - 
"... we consider a vitally important key to our happiness and success in life. I speak this morning on the importance and power of family prayer.

Our Father in Heaven wants us to have strong, loving families. One of the great helps he has given us to achieve this is family prayer.

All of us, single or married, are eternally part of some family—someway, somewhere, somehow—and much of our joy in life comes as we correctly recognize and properly develop those family relationships. We come to this earth charged with a mission: to learn to love and serve one another. To best help us accomplish this, God has placed us in families, for he knows that is where we can best learn to overcome selfishness and pride and to sacrifice for others and to make happiness and helpfulness and humility and love the very essence of our character.

We learn that friends and neighbors come and go but family is forever, and as we learn this, we find that we are eternally our brother’s keeper and we begin to realize how much help we need. How we should thank God for the opportunity of family prayer!

Listen to the admonition of the Savior in Third Nephi: “Pray in your families unto the Father, always in my name, that your wives and your children may be blessed.” (3 Nephi 18:21.)

Can you detect that if we do not pray in our families always they may not be blessed—or at least not so fully? If we truly love our families we will constantly pray for them and with them. I know of no single activity that has more potential for unifying our families and bringing more love and divine direction into our homes than consistent, fervent family prayer.

Think of the power for good as you gather your family together and thank God for all of his blessings. Think of the eternal significance of daily thanking him for each member of your family and asking him to guide and bless and protect each one. Think of the strength that will come to your family as, daily, one member or another pours out his or her soul in love to God for other family members.

Of course, our prayers must be more than words, for as President Marion G. Romney has so clearly stated, “The efficacy of our prayers depends on how we care for one another.” (Ensign, Nov. 1980, p. 93.) Family prayer is fully effective, then, only as we rise from our knees and, with increased love and understanding, take better care of each other.

We all want more love and unity in our families. We all need more help with some who may be wayward or in special need. We all desire more assurance of divine guidance and direction.

I promise you that as you consistently and fervently pray as a family, and as each member takes his or her turn and sincerely prays for others, impressions will come as to what you individually should do to help others. Thus, you can, in family prayer, receive personal and family revelation as to how to love and serve one another.

Now, Satan will do everything he can to keep us from family prayer, or at least to see that our prayers are only intermittent and mechanical and without sincerity. In Daniel’s day, Satan influenced evil men to pass laws against praying. In our day, Satan’s efforts seem a little more subtle (although he is trying a little of that law business, too).

But remember, the greatest schools on earth are individual homes. Yet how many homes voluntarily give up family prayer by allowing other less important things to take priority.

If Satan can get us thinking that our children are too young or too old, or if he can get us angry with one another or preoccupied with TV programs or over-crowded schedules or caught up in some other aspect of the press of modern life so that we do not have family prayer, he has effectively won on that point—even though many of the other things we do may be good in and of themselves.

Satan doesn’t care how he stops us—just so he stops us. Ask yourself: How many times did you have family prayer this last week? Who is winning in your home? What’s the score? Don’t let the evil one win. You can overcome him with God’s help.

I appeal with all the fervor of my soul to every family in the Church, every family in the nation, every family in the world, to organize your priorities so that God is first in your lives and to show this by having regular family prayer. There may be extenuating circumstances occasionally; but as a rule, we should have family prayer every morning and every evening.

Oh, if we would do this, if we would show our families and our God on a regular basis how much we love them, how much we appreciate them, how much we need their help, and how much we rely on His protection, one of the greatest changes for good to ever take place in the Church, in the nation, and in the world would occur. Don’t let anything stand in the way of consistent, fervent family prayer! Think of what you teach by having family prayer. Then think of what you teach by not having family prayer.

I testify to you that there is real power in family prayer. I testify that families can be brought together and can help and strengthen one another through family prayer.

………… [missionary experience here. See talk here]

... I testify that there is great power in loving, consistent, fervent family prayer. Don’t deny your families this blessing. Don’t allow the strength that comes from family prayer to slip away from you and your loved ones through neglect.

No matter what other inheritance you leave your family, give them the inheritance of knowing through experience that, forever, you will be praying for them and they for you.

Call your families together. Make your family prayers a top priority item. It may be awkward at first, if you aren’t doing it now; and since Satan doesn’t want you to do it at all, he will throw all sorts of excuses and roadblocks at you; but just proceed and be persistent, and I promise you great blessings.

Remember, all that we are commanded to do in this life is patterned after that of a better life. Do you think it a strange thought that maybe part of the power of family prayer is in the fact that we are part of a heavenly family, that they are interested in us, and that by tying in with them some way we get hold of something much bigger than ourselves?

Think of the power of the thousands of prayers of parents and grandparents and back and back even to Jacob and Isaac and Abraham and beyond, all requesting essentially the same thing: “Bless my children. Bless my children. Bless my children.” Can you hear it as it rolls and echoes throughout all eternity?

Let us all be part of that great power for good.

I testify that time and space are no barriers to these righteous influences, and no matter where we are or what our situation is—even in the depths of discouragement, far from our loved ones—we too can feel and be strengthened by [family prayer] ………

May we all gather our families around us and consistently and fervently pray for one another and thus, in righteousness, feel the needs of others and then fill the needs of others, thereby fulfilling much of our mission in life, I do humbly pray in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.









Friday, September 27, 2013

Montana - Patrick & Smeagol

Our son lives & works in the Grasshopper Valley, about 3 1/2 hours southeast of Missoula. It's about 10 miles further down this road and 10 or so more miles up into the Grasshopper Valley.
Smeagol & his man
Cattle graze in the mountains. 
Many times they are on or near the road.

 Grasshopper Valley

Smeagol waits patiently outside the restaurant. 
He's often rewarded with leftovers as people leave. 

Smeagol wants some of the huckleberry ice cream too!

Success!

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Click on the Montana label on the right to see more pictures from this trip

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Tall Ships in Kirkland

Late one afternoon we heard booms and knew the tall ships were "battling" on Lake Washington. We put our dinner in containers and drove down to the lake in time to watch the battle. The ships then came past us on their way back to the dock at Carillon Point
Water craft of all types joined the tall ships on the lake. 
If you look closely, you can see people on the rigging on the left. They've taken up the sails. You can also make out passengers on the boat. 

"Winter" sculpture - taken towards the east and into the setting sun
I tried to capture the sun in the middle of the sculpture


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Click here for a post about Colin Woodard's "The Republic of Pirates." It's an interesting history of life aboard these kinds of ships. 


Monday, September 23, 2013

Book - The Secret Keeper

When we moved, we gave away many, many books. It was hard to leave so many of our beloved books behind. We were glad to help other people start or add to their libraries. Once we settle in Kirkland, as a space saving (and money saving) measure, we decided not to purchase so many books and become frequent patrons of the nearby library. If I start a borrowed book and like it so much I want to mark it up, I stop reading, purchase the book and then continue reading. Certain authors are on my "must have" list. 

Kate Morton has become one of my "must have" authors. I enjoyed Kate Morton’s other books so much that I didn’t want to wait for “The Secret Keeper” to come out in paperback. I justified the expense by saying it was a way to support Kirkland's wonderful independent bookstore


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The Secret Keeper

1961 England. Laurel Nicolson is sixteen years old, dreaming alone in her childhood tree house during a family celebration at their home, Green Acres Farm. She spies a stranger coming up the long road to the farm and then observes her mother, Dorothy, speaking to him. And then she witnesses a crime.

Fifty years later, Laurel is a successful and well-regarded actress, living in London. She returns to Green Acres for Dorothy’s ninetieth birthday and finds herself overwhelmed by memories and questions she has not thought about for decades. She decides to find out the truth about the events of that summer day and lay to rest her own feelings of guilt. One photograph, of her mother and a woman Laurel has never met, called Vivian, is her first clue.

The Secret Keeper explores longings and dreams, the lengths some people go to fulfill them, and the strange consequences they sometimes have. It is a story of lovers, friends, dreamers and schemers, play-acting and deception told against a backdrop of events that changed the world
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There are major mysteries and secrets in this book. Can you figure them out before they are revealed? 

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Certain themes seem to run through Morton's books - 

Different social classes and the expectations individuals have for themselves and others. I'm amazed at the way the "lower" classes help the "upper" classes keep up the pretenses even when there isn't money to maintain the "upper class" life style. 

Family secrets - how accurate are our family trees that are supposedly based on biological relationships?

Houses that are almost main characters in the story - This is true somewhat in this book and even more so in "The Distant Hours" and "The House at Riverton." I've known some houses that have their own personalities - you can feel it.

from "The Secret Keeper" -  Laurel goes back to her childhood home. She looks at it from afar and "The thought came suddenly: the house remembered her."  On page 43 ...  Laurel's mother Dorothy, had described the house to Laurel - "The house, she'd explained to them many times, had spoken to her; she'd listened, and it turned out they'd understood one another very well indeed. Greenacres was an imperious old lady, a little worn, to be sure, cranky in her own way - but who wouldn't be? The deterioration, Dorothy could tell, concealed a great former dignity. The house was proud and she was lonely, the sort of place that fed on children's laughter, and a family's love, and the smell of rosemary lamb roasting in the oven. She had good, honest bones and a willingness to look forwards rather than backwards, to welcome a new family and grow with them, to embrace their brand-new traditions. It struck Laurel now, as it hadn't before, that her mother's description of the house might have been a self-portrait."
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More thoughts when reading this book - 

War and its effects ripple through the lives of many. There are people who don't come home. What happens with the people who live on at home? Then there are the people who come home but are forever changed. 

The devastation of the Blitz in WWII forever changes the lives of the people in this book. 

Mom's high school boyfriend, red headed StanT, went to England to join the Royal Air Force during World War II. Was the course of her life (and ours) changed when his letters didn't reach her? Was the timing of Mom's and Dad's wedding affected by Dad's military commitment and going on active duty after college at the tail end of World War II? What would have happened if they had waited to get married after Dad was discharged? For one thing, I wouldn't have been born - or at least not born in May 1946 - and that would unwind a whole bunch of stories and lives. 

Grandpa and Poppie were both in World War I. Grandpa and Grandma Celia married before he went to France. Poppie and Gram weren't married until after Poppie served in France. How did the war figure into their decisions?

A shirt-tail cousin in Michigan told me that John Bowman (Idah Bowman Browne's father & Mom's maternal great grandfather) returned from the Civil War a totally changed man - in a negative way. I didn't ask enough questions to get the details. 

I know the Vietnam War affected decisions John and I made as it did so many of our high school and college classmates. 

The Korean War affected decisions Joe made about college and enlisting in the Navy. 

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This book is definitely on my "read again" list. 

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Read a post about Kate Morton's "The Forgotten Garden" here




Sunday, September 22, 2013

Agents of Change

"It will be your responsibility to teach them and to help them discover who they really are. Once they discover their divine origins and their great destiny and potential, they will be filled with Christlike love and the desire to serve Him throughout their lives."

M. Russell Ballard spoke of the importance of being "agents of change" and helping others learn how to "become changed by the Spirit." 








Saturday, September 21, 2013

David & Carol & Skies & Haystacks

On our recent trip to Montana we enjoyed 
dinner and our visits with David & Carol

It's interesting to observe the different ways hay is 
baled, stacked, and stored across Washington & Montana. 
Click on any picture for a larger image
 Rectangular bales are covered with these colorful tarps
Round bales were stacked in various configurations
The old way and the newer way - round bales sit in front of a beaverslide. 
Hay stacked with the beaverslide looks like a giant loaf of bread. 
Read more about beaverslides here (at the bottom of the post). 

On our recent drive to Montana we encountered 
quite a bit of fog and drizzle going through Snoqualmie Pass

Missoula skies were filled with smoke from forest fires

Driving home - pink skies and Moroni atop the Seattle Temple 
proclaiming Christ's gospel to the world
The setting sun creates beautiful colors. This is taken looking west on I-90 in Bellevue, 
just before we turned north on I-405 to go to Kirkland






Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Rhubarb

A friend gave us some rhubarb in midSeptember. In Ohio rhubarb is definitely a spring crop. In this area you can get two crops of rhubarb. 

Rhubarb brought back some memories. When I was a child, one of our Oak Street neighbors frequently gave us rhubarb from his extensive gardens. Mom would cook it up with HUGE amounts of sugar. 

After Mom died, we discovered that rhubarb was something Dad really enjoyed. We cooked some up for him and then he learned how to prepare it himself. There weren't too many things he cooked "from scratch" in quantities for one person (His Navy and Scout experiences provided ample opportunities to cook for large numbers of people). After Dad died we found quite a quantity of rhubarb that he'd cooked and frozen in the basement freezer. 

Dad had some definite opinions about food - what combinations were acceptable. Click here for his comment about a salad Mom's mother made for him (only one time). If I'm remembering correctly, Dad felt chocolate pudding didn't belong in a pie and neither did rhubarb. 


Monday, September 16, 2013

Book - The Republic of Pirates


"In the early eighteenth century a number of the great pirate captains, including Edward "Blackbeard" Teach and "Black Sam" Bellamy, joined forces. This infamous "Flying Gang" was more than simply a thieving band of brothers. Many of its members had come to piracy as a revolt against conditions in the merchant fleet and in the cities and plantations in the Old and New Worlds. Inspired by notions of self-government, they established a crude but distinctive form of democracy in the Bahamas, carving out their own zone of freedom in which indentured servants were released and leaders chosen or deposed by a vote. They were ultimately overcome by their archnemesis, Captain Woodes Rogers—a merchant fleet owner and former privateer—and the brief though glorious moment of the Republic of Pirates came to an end. In this unique and fascinating book, Colin Woodard brings to life this virtually unexplored chapter in the Golden Age of Piracy."
Summary & image goodreads.com


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Why do you pick up a particular book? I read “The Republic of Pirates” after thoroughly enjoying Woodard’s book “American Nations.” Click here for post. I noticed he’d written a book about Caribbean pirates. Pirates were a major part of the history of The Bahamas. With our love of the Bahamas and its people, I had another motivation to read this book of Woodard’s. 

Covering the period from 1696-1725, the author gives us a glimpse of how brutal living conditions were in many parts of the world – life in the “big” cities of the world, life aboard ships whether pirate ships or England’s Royal Navy vessels and life for slaves wherever they were.

Good guys and bad guys – then, as now, it was sometimes difficult to tell who was who – depended on a person’s side of a political situation and/or personal interest. 

Sailors, indentured servants, runaway slaves and others revolted against conditions they suffered on ships and plantations by fleeing to Nassau and becoming part of the “pirate republic” there. From the book jacket – “Together they established a crude but distinctive democracy in the Bahamas, carving out their own zone of freedom in which servants were free, blacks could be equal citizens, and leaders were chosen or deposed by a vote.” When Woodes Rogers, from Britain, went to Nassau in the 1720s to run out the pirates and establish “order,” he destroyed this democracy and set up a colonial system that would last for centuries. Equality would not return to the Bahamas until the people secured their independence from England in 1973.

I knew pirates created havoc with trade between countries but I didn’t realize how they absolutely paralyzed commerce. I was somewhat aware of the way rich and influential people from Europe used the Caribbean islands for their own ends - then and now. Woodard pointed out how the political situation in Europe, especially between France, Britain, and Spain affected what went on in the Caribbean. Sometimes whether you were labeled a pirate or privateer depended on who you aligned with politically – and who you wanted to see on which thrones.

Reading history can give us a better understanding of current events. I found this explanation of succession to the British throne interesting. British Queen Anne died childless in 1714. “Under normal circumstances, the crown would have passed to her half-brother, James Stuart, the next in the line of dynastic succession, a situation that, to the thinking of many at the times, was ordained by God himself. James was a Catholic, however, and under a law passed in 1701, no Catholic could sit on the throne. Unfortunately, there weren’t any other members of the House of Stuart who weren’t also Catholics. The best Protestant that anyone could come up with was one of Anne’s second cousins, George Ludwig, Elector of the German state of Hanover. Although he didn’t speak English and wasn’t interested in learning, George Ludwig was brought over to England and crowned King George I, becoming the founding member of a new ruling family, the House of Hanover, which still occupies the throne today.” (page 101) George has been the name of six British kings; the newest royal baby was recently named George.

Crowning George I  was a slap in the face to the Scots. The Scots lost their independence to England in 1707. The Stuarts/Stewarts had been the royal family of Scotland. With the union of Scotland and England in 1707 the English and Scottish monarchies were merged. Now just a few years later a German prince had been placed on the throne instead of the “legitimate” heir. Landowners, politicians, pirates, and privateers in the Caribbean took sides on this political issue and it created havoc for commerce between Europe, the Caribbean, and the Americas. Relations between Scotland and England are still testy at times. 

I’ve already started on another of Colin Woodard’s books, “The Lobster Coast: Rebels, Rusticators, and the Struggle for a Forgotten Frontier.” It’s about the settling of Maine. Should be interesting reading. Our ancestors were in Maine from a very early time. This book will give me insights into the land they helped settle - and what was going on with the people and the land at the time our ancestors moved to this area. 

author's website







Sunday, September 15, 2013

Hope


“Hope deferred maketh the heart sick” Proverbs13:12

An Irish proverb states, “Hope is the physician of each misery.”

“Ye shall have hope through the atonement of Christ and the power of his resurrection ...” Moroni 7:41

"... wherefore man [and woman] must hope ..." Ether 12:32

“... the visitation of the Holy Ghost, ...  filleth with hope” Moroni 8:26

"The doctrine of hope is based on faith and trust in a benevolent, omniscient, and omnipotent God. The principle of hope can be applied both spiritually and psychologically. We can do much to establish habits of hope and an optimistic orientation. Hope is the anchor for the soul, the sail for our dreams, and the balm for our pains." Vaughn Worthen.

Click here to read Worthen's article on hope.


Friday, September 13, 2013

Hard & Significant


 “The effort we put into strengthening our families is the hardest and most significant work any of us will do on earth. Keeping a peaceful home and putting others' needs first has a refining effect on us, and it is no coincidence that these things can sometimes be grueling. God meant for us to be tested so we could grow and master skills we wouldn't learn any other way—skills like patience and unselfishness that will help us become more like God and prepare us to live with our families throughout eternity.

We shouldn’t get discouraged. No matter how hard we try, our marriage and home won’t be perfect. But if we build them around Christ’s principles including faith, prayer, repentance, forgiveness, respect, love, compassion, work and wholesome fun, home can be a place of refuge, peace and immense joy.”  http://mormon.org/values/family


Thursday, September 12, 2013

Montana Trip - Grandfather Cuts Loose the Ponies


Can you see the horses up on top of the mountain?
This picture is taken from I-90 going west just after going over 
the Columbia River in Washington. 

The fifteen horse sculptures were constructed out of welded steel plates by Spokane artist David Govedare. They were installed in 1989 for the Washington State Centennial Celebration. source  The official name of the monument is "Grandfather Cuts Loose the Ponies."
On this trip to Montana we stopped to see the horses "up close." We took a look at the steep, rocky path from the parking lot and decided not to go up any closer. 
The zoom lens got us a bit closer
From the parking lot we had this amazing view of the Columbia River

Click here and here to see close up photos of some of the horses

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Not far from here we noticed signs for the town of "George." Wouldn't it be fun to say you were from "George, Washington!" The town was created/dedicated in 1957. Read more of its interesting history here. Many people travel to George, Washington for concerts at the Gorge Amphitheater. 






Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Doing Good

    
Jesus "went about doing good, ... for God was with him. Acts 10:38  We can do the same - and God will be with us. 

This scripture brings a hymn to mind - "Have I Done Any Good?"


Have I done any good in the world today?
Have I helped anyone in need?
Have I cheered up the sad and made someone feel glad?
If not, I have failed indeed.
Has anyone's burden been lighter today
Because I was willing to share?
Have the sick and the weary been helped on their way?
When they needed my help was I there?

(Chorus)           
Then wake up and do something more
Than dream of your mansion above.
Doing good is a pleasure, a joy beyond measure,
A blessing of duty and love.

There are chances for work all around just now,
Opportunities right in our way.
Do not let them pass by, saying, "Sometime I'll try,"
But go and do something today.
'Tis noble of man to work and to give;
Love's labor has merit alone.
Only he who does something helps others to live.
To God each good work will be known.

(Chorus)
Then wake up and do something more
Than dream of your mansion above.
Doing good is a pleasure, a joy beyond measure, 
A blessing of duty and love.

Text and music: Will L. Thompson, 1847-1909, alt.



Click here to hear the Mormon Tabernacle Choir sing this hymn


Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Loving & Serving Others

Joe gathered these words of counsel about serving others.

“A new commandment I give unto you, that ye love one another, as I have loved you, that ye also love one another. By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to another.“ (John 13: 34-35)

“A friend loveth at all times, ...” (Proverbs  17:17)

 Thomas Monson’s perspective is very helpful.

“Remember that when you help another up a mountain, you are a little nearer the top yourself. Try to look at your brother or your sister in the right perspective. One man said, “I looked at my brother through the microscope of criticism, and I said, “How coarse my brother is. I looked at my brother through the telescope of scorn, and I said, “How small my brother is. Then I looked into the mirror of truth, and I said, - - - - - - - - “How like me my brother is.”  

“An attitude of love characterized the mission of the Master. He gave sight to the blind, legs to the lame, and life to the dead.”

“Perhaps when we have face-to-face contact with our Maker, we will not be asked, “How many people did you help?” In reality, you can never love the Lord until you serve Him by serving His people.”