Monday, October 31, 2022

Halloween

Now that I work and the kids are older, Halloween has lost some of the fun. I don't decorate the house like I used to, even though Blythe would like me to. It's too much work and takes too much time. The kids don't dress up or trick-or-treat, so I'm largely involved with Mikayla's children if I do anything. 

This year, in an effort to get with the holiday, I went to worked as milk and cookies. Mikayla and Guy went as milk and cookies to a Halloween party thrown by friends, and Mikayla generously let me use the cardboard milk and cloth cookies she had. I pinned the cookies to my back and had the milk hanging in the front. It was something of an inconvenient bother and by early afternoon, I had taken both off and left everything by my desk. No one else had dressed up at work. Party poopers.

Our neighborhood is big into Halloween and for the hot dog party hosted by Nelson and Hilary Davis, we normally make homemade root beer. It's hard to do that when I work, so I bought all the ingredients and asked Mikayla if she would make it. She did, so all I had to do was deliver. When I made it over to the Davis', I found the root beer to be as delicious as homemade root beer always is.

Kent cooked hotdogs with Mike Phillips all night. He visited with all the neighbors who passed by, and I warmly greeted all the neighbors with children who knocked on the door while trick-or-treating. It wasn't too cold so the whole evening was much more nice than spooky. 

 The only picture I took all day.

Sunday, October 30, 2022

Remembering Papa Scott

Today we gathered with the Nortons on the anniversary of Papa Scott's death to remember him and be together. Grandma Dawn had a bunch of paper lanterns. We wrote short messages on some of them, then lit them and sent them skyward. We were at Grandma Dawn's house and worried a bit as one of the lanterns floated into a tree across the street and burned in the branches. Fortunately, no harm was done. The lanterns lit up the sky. It was nice to be with the Nortons and to feel a part of their family. We love Papa Scott and miss him.





The lantern on the right got stuck in the tree.




Saturday, October 29, 2022

BYU Women's Volleyball Date

This afternoon, Kent and I went to a BYU Women's Volleyball game at the Fieldhouse on campus. We had such a good time. BYU was playing Portland and won in three sets. The energy was high, the Fieldhouse was rocking, and it was nice to be together on a Saturday afternoon date.  




Bug Collection

After much collecting, killing, identifying, and labeling, Brandt and Ruth's bug collection is finally finished. He will turn it in tomorrow. I think it looks terrific! I helped him with the final putting together, making sure bugs were grouped according to type of bug, with males and females by each other. Each label had to say where and when it was collected, who captured it, and what the order was. He and Ruth got an A for the project but while it was a great work, I didn't have him bring it home to put in his "special things" box. The pictures more than suffice.



Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Friday, October 21, 2022

A 'Nuggle with Freya


I stopped by Mikayla's house before work today as I do most days. Freya wanted a 'nuggle, and as Freya is one of my very most favorite people ever, I was happy to have a snuggle with her.


Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Fall Break Trip to South Dakota, Day 6

Our activity for today, the last day of our fall break road trip, was to visit the Frontier Prison Museum in Rawlins. The former state penitentiary, the prison was opened in 1901 and closed in 1981. You can take tours and I thought it would be interesting to wander through before getting on the road. Again, due the time of year, we were out of luck in being able to visit. The museum was being prepared for a Halloween something or other and was closed to the public. Drat!

Instead of seeing anything, we just carried on in the car, driving and driving and driving home. It took about four and a half hours to get home, and we made it by 3:00pm. We arrived to find that Blythe had cleaned and organized all over the house, including the game closet, the linen cupboard, the pantry, and tidied up the whole house. As nice as it was to find the house in tip-top shape, we missed Blythe on our trip and wish she would have been with us.

Now back to school and work.

Monday, October 17, 2022

Fall Break Trip to South Dakota, Day 5

There were two activities I wanted to do in Hot Springs before we hit the road headed for home. First, I wanted to visit the actual hot springs, and second, I wanted to go to the Mammoth Site.

The hot springs aren't actually hot, they are warm, about 87 degrees, which is as warm as my mom's pool most of the time. They are delightful to swim in, and we had a lovely morning dip at Evans Plunge, opened in 1890 and the oldest attraction in the Black Hills. They have a couple of water slides, some rope swings, a hot tub, and sauna. The water in the pool comes from a mineral spring and 5,000 gallons of water flow through the pool every hour, completely refreshing the water in the pool numerous times a day. It has a pebble bottom and is incredibly clear. I loved it! Brandt kept complaining that it wasn't really hot, but I thought it was terrific. There were very few people there, so we practically had the pool all to ourselves. We stayed about an hour and a half, went down the slides over and over, and enjoyed moving our bodies before sitting in the car for hours. 






See? Practically the whole pool to ourselves.
You can see hanging rings that go across the pool.
Both Kent and Brandt tried to cross on them. 
I've got incredibly funny video of their efforts and both cracked me up.
Kent spent nearly two minutes working himself up to start, 
and when he finally swung out, he missed the ring and plunged into the water.
Brandt did the same thing, but in about twenty seconds.

We stopped for an ice cream after our swim and then went on to the Mammoth Site, the world's largest collection of mammoth bones. It is WOW! The museum encloses a prehistoric sinkhole that formed and was slowly filled with sediments during the Pleistocene era. Here is what Wikipedia says about the site.

Likely enticed by warm water and pond vegetation, mammoths entered the pond to eat, drink or bathe. Because of the steep sides of very slippery Spearfish Shale, mammoths were occasionally trapped as they were unable to find a foothold and climb out of the sinkhole during periods of low water. Trapped in the sinkhole, the mammoths ultimately died of starvation, exhaustion, or drowned in the pond. 

The majority of the mammoth remains have been identified as those of Columbian Mammoths, although the remains of three Woolly mammoths have been found as well. Mammoths that slipped into the sinkhole found it difficult to escape. Researchers measuring the pelvic bones of the remains have determined that most of the victims were young males.

The excavation is amazing. Paleontologists have dug down 60 feet in some places, unearthing whole skeletons in some spots. It was fascinating to see the bones lying all jumbled together and to think about how the animals all got there. There were recordings you could listen to all around the sinkhole with fascinating details about what you should take note of at that spot. I was astounded by the whole thing.


Brandt is only as tall as a Pygmy Mammoth.
Most of those at the Mammoth Site were the size of the fourth one up, 
the Columbian Mammoth.
The second and third ones are Asian and African elephants.

This is the side of the sinkhole where the mammoths fell in.
It has steep slopes.
Many skeletons were found here, including other animals.


The site remains an active excavation and research site.






The skull with full tusks to the right of our heads is the same one we were 
looking down on in the picture above.







Brandt is as tall as a modern American Bison.

The mighty Brandt, lifting huge bones!

This stream table was quite fun to play in. 
Water trickled in from the top, acting as a river, 
and you could divert it through the sand.

Having seen the mammoths, we began our five-hour drive home. When researching what to do and where to go on our trip, I discovered there is a Provo, South Dakota, just off the freeway at Edgemont. How funny is that?! "We must visit our sister city," I told Kent and Brandt. So at Edgemont, we turned off the freeway and made a visit to Provo, South Dakota.

There wasn't much to see in Provo, which Wikipedia describes as " An unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Fall River County, in the U.S. state of South DakotaThe population was 10 at the 2020 censusA post office called Provo was established in 1904. The community's name is derived from Bill Provost Sr., an early resident." We did not see any of the ten people who live in Provo, or much else. Lots of abandoned homes, several large groups of rusting cars and tractors, and prairie grass was about all there was there. We didn't see the post office or any other sign of habitation anywhere. 








We left Provo and drove and drove and drove, passing prairie and not much else. Wyoming is boring, at least the part we drove through. We headed to Rawlins, but it didn't feel at all like we were going in a direct route. Turns out, there isn't really a direct route from Hot Springs, SD to Rawlins, WY. But we did make it, eventually. We had dinner at a Japanese restaurant and drove around the neighborhoods near our hotel (another dive). We saw many deer sitting in yards which looked fake, but were actually real. 

Tomorrow, we're for home.

Sunday, October 16, 2022

Fall Break Trip to South Dakota, Day 4

As today was Sunday, I planned for activities I felt were sabbath appropriate while still doing interesting things. We were making a turn for home, but I again planned for us to do thing along the way.

We started the day off at church, attending both meetings of the Rapid Valley Ward. It was a nice ward with friendly people. 

My plan was to head south, travel through Custer State Park along the Wildlife Loop Road, and drop down to Wind Cave National Park. That's what we did.

The Wildlife Loop Road was terrific. Animals roam freely on the plains and we saw lots of wildlife: bighorn sheep right by the side of the road, pronghorns, prairie dogs, wild turkeys, bison, and burros. It was exciting to see so many of these animals up close.

I could almost touch these bighorn sheep.




These bison were not close to the road.
I hope it would raise its head, but it didn't.


Lounging in the tall grass

Pronghorns



These were much easier to see both because there were more of them,
and because the grass wasn't tall.




There were many, many prairie dogs in this dry prairie.





A flock of roaming wild turkey


The most surprising animals we encountered were the burros.
Burros are not native to the Black Hills.
They are descended from the herd that once hauled visitors 
up to the top of Black Elk Peak. 
The rides were discontinued and the burros were released into the park.






I think Brandt just said, 
"Look! It's burro bum!"

Having driven through the park, we continued south to Wind Cave National Park. Doesn't a cave tour seem like an appropriate Sunday activity? At least when you are on vacation? I thought so. Kent was less sure, but he came along anyway.

Wind Cave is one of longest and most complex caves in the world. It is known for its calcite formations called boxwork which was very unusual. It is also one of the best examples of a breathing cave. Our tour guide was great, sharing lots of interesting facts and stories, taking his time, and keeping us longer than the advertised tour time. I don't think any of us minded. We discovered some of our fellow spelunkers were from Lindon and in South Dakota on fall break too. It's a small world. It's also a dark world in the cave, so the few pictures I took are terrible. I'll pilfer some from the internet.











These two are not my pictures



Kent was our designated last person, bringing up the rear

What the Yellowstone (or Wind Cave) am I doing with my neck?


Our destination for the night was Hot Springs, South Dakota, a small town close to the southwest corner of the state. We arrived while it was still light and hung around our hotel room for a bit. We looked at places to eat dinner and set out to find something. Because it is October, it is off-season and we had a hard time finding any place open that served food. We went into one place but there were lots of people, it was dingy, and there was only one waitress. We got up after a few minutes and opted for something else. What we found was pizza. It was good pizza, but we had had pizza the day before, so it felt like a lot of pizza. When I asked if they had salad, the woman working the register just looked at me like I was speaking a foreign language. We didn't get salad. 

We ended our day watching a bit of TV.


Drive to Hot Springs; unable to find dinner, had pizza again