Well so much has happened over this last month that I haven't found time to write about it. So here we go. Sadly, Grandpa Mark passed away at the end of August. His funeral was on September 4th in Pocatello Idaho. We drove up in time for the viewing the night before the funeral. Although Mark has been ill for some time now and is in a better place, it was still emotional to say goodbye. He has been a good grandfather to my kids, and was certainly full of lots of advice for them and for Trent and I! Trent will miss playing cribbage with him. I will miss his love of birds, fishing and the great stories he liked to tell. He was buried with full military honors as he was a vet of WW II. He shared a story with us about when he had been called up to serve. He wanted to be a pilot but it turns out he was color blind and the military was picky about things like that. They wanted their pilots to be able to tell the difference between enemy uniforms. Well Mark waited in line to take his test and proceeded to memorize all the answers to the questions the soldiers ahead of him were asked. When it got to be his turn he answered all the questions the nurse asked. She laughed and told him that he got all the answers right, but it was for the wrong test. She had switched to a different test right as it was his turn. So he got to serve as an office clerk instead of a pilot during WWI.
We will miss him.
We had a lot of school activities leading up to the fall break. Savana had her 4th grade musical. It was all about being good to the earth. It was cute and fun. Gavin had a choir concert the same week and that was very enjoyable. He has a great low voice now, and unlike the rest of his family, he can carry a tune.
We will miss him.
We had a lot of school activities leading up to the fall break. Savana had her 4th grade musical. It was all about being good to the earth. It was cute and fun. Gavin had a choir concert the same week and that was very enjoyable. He has a great low voice now, and unlike the rest of his family, he can carry a tune.
On September 25th Carver turned 7! It was a fun day and we love him so much! He had two birthday cakes because he couldn't decide vanilla or chocolate:). Here are 7 great things that happened to Carver this year!
1....Carver learned to swim this year! Like a Fish!
2....Carver gets to go to school full day and eat lunch in the Cafeteria!
3.. Famous Carver expression this year "That's weak dad".
4...Got the Family award for riding on the tube the longest at Lake Havasu.
5...Favorite meal is still Pasghetti!
6...Turned 7 and gets to go to bed at 8PM!
7...Is a great brother with a huge sense of humor!
We love you Carver.
We love year round school because it gives us a fabulous 3 week Fall break! We just got back from Lake Havasu last weekend. It was an enjoyable vacation just for our little family. We camped at the state park right at the beach on the lake. There was hardly anyone else there, and hardly any boats on the lake. The first day we hung out by the lake, swimming in the water ever time we got hot. It was so relaxing. We rented a boat for day two and three. The kids had a great time letting us pull them around the lake on a tube. Any time we got hot, we stopped the boat and jumped into the water. Lake Havasu has sand bars in the middle of it where you can pull your boat right on top of. We anchored on one of them and played in the ankle deep water. It difficult to describe the sensation of standing on a piece of sand, completely surrounded by deep water.
The only problem we had was when we tried to crash the boat by a lighthouse. Well we didn't exactly try. On day two of the boat, we backed it off the beach where we had "parked" it for the night. We got about a quarter mile from the beach and the boat cut out. No matter what we tried, it wouldn't start. We dropped the anchor, but soon noticed that the anchor was dragging along the bottom of the lake as we were dragged back toward the shore, yup toward the lighthouse and the rocks. Well, we decided to call the company we were renting the boat from to see what they would like us to do. The had us try a couple of different things, nothing worked. They then told us not to worry, they'd send someone over to help us.
It was hard not to panic as the boat kept being steadily swept to the shore and rocks. We drifted past some buoy's marking off a swim area, and I managed to grab a buoy and slip a rope around it. I held onto the rope for about 15 minutes, but the boat eventually just pulled away. It was probably a good thing as I don't know how much the state park was going to charge me for dragging off their swim area. Finally we saw someone pull up on the shore to help, right as the boat was minutes from the rock. A man got out of his truck and started running down to the light house. He was dropping car keys, wallet and whatever else was in his pocket as he ran. He climbed down the rocks and waited for us to get to the rocks. I'm not sure what his plan was, maybe to push us back of the rocks after we hit them? At this point, the boat takes one last swing sideways into the rocks and just stops. Apparently the anchor finally caught. Then the boat swings the other direction, away from the rocks, and away for the guy that's supposed to help us. He just wades into the water and swims out to the boat. At this point, relief is starting to set in. We were about 40 minutes into the ordeal and I am trying not to cry, when the guy gets on the boat, sits in the driver seat, and yup, starts the boat right up. Now, Trent and I had been frantically trying to start it every few minutes and it never worked for us, so we both felt a little upset when the boat started right up. The guy explained that since it had cooled down from the day before, the boat was cold and hard to start. Not for him apparently. He drove us around a bit and revved the engine a lot and then jumped back into the lake and swam back to shore. We then proceeded to drive right to the middle of the lake as far away from any light houses as possible! So there you have it. No crash, no sinking to the bottom of Lake Havasu, and we can't wait to try it all again next year.
Now we are just enjoying the last two weeks of our break. Pretty good stuff.
We love year round school because it gives us a fabulous 3 week Fall break! We just got back from Lake Havasu last weekend. It was an enjoyable vacation just for our little family. We camped at the state park right at the beach on the lake. There was hardly anyone else there, and hardly any boats on the lake. The first day we hung out by the lake, swimming in the water ever time we got hot. It was so relaxing. We rented a boat for day two and three. The kids had a great time letting us pull them around the lake on a tube. Any time we got hot, we stopped the boat and jumped into the water. Lake Havasu has sand bars in the middle of it where you can pull your boat right on top of. We anchored on one of them and played in the ankle deep water. It difficult to describe the sensation of standing on a piece of sand, completely surrounded by deep water.
The only problem we had was when we tried to crash the boat by a lighthouse. Well we didn't exactly try. On day two of the boat, we backed it off the beach where we had "parked" it for the night. We got about a quarter mile from the beach and the boat cut out. No matter what we tried, it wouldn't start. We dropped the anchor, but soon noticed that the anchor was dragging along the bottom of the lake as we were dragged back toward the shore, yup toward the lighthouse and the rocks. Well, we decided to call the company we were renting the boat from to see what they would like us to do. The had us try a couple of different things, nothing worked. They then told us not to worry, they'd send someone over to help us.
It was hard not to panic as the boat kept being steadily swept to the shore and rocks. We drifted past some buoy's marking off a swim area, and I managed to grab a buoy and slip a rope around it. I held onto the rope for about 15 minutes, but the boat eventually just pulled away. It was probably a good thing as I don't know how much the state park was going to charge me for dragging off their swim area. Finally we saw someone pull up on the shore to help, right as the boat was minutes from the rock. A man got out of his truck and started running down to the light house. He was dropping car keys, wallet and whatever else was in his pocket as he ran. He climbed down the rocks and waited for us to get to the rocks. I'm not sure what his plan was, maybe to push us back of the rocks after we hit them? At this point, the boat takes one last swing sideways into the rocks and just stops. Apparently the anchor finally caught. Then the boat swings the other direction, away from the rocks, and away for the guy that's supposed to help us. He just wades into the water and swims out to the boat. At this point, relief is starting to set in. We were about 40 minutes into the ordeal and I am trying not to cry, when the guy gets on the boat, sits in the driver seat, and yup, starts the boat right up. Now, Trent and I had been frantically trying to start it every few minutes and it never worked for us, so we both felt a little upset when the boat started right up. The guy explained that since it had cooled down from the day before, the boat was cold and hard to start. Not for him apparently. He drove us around a bit and revved the engine a lot and then jumped back into the lake and swam back to shore. We then proceeded to drive right to the middle of the lake as far away from any light houses as possible! So there you have it. No crash, no sinking to the bottom of Lake Havasu, and we can't wait to try it all again next year.
Now we are just enjoying the last two weeks of our break. Pretty good stuff.
Nice catching up, sister.
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