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Got Me a Keeper

Look what I found in my new sketch book…

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50 Things I’m Grateful For

1. Chad
2. Caleb
3. Hannah
4. Eve
5. Mom and Dad
6. Chuck and Donna
7. Stephanie, Suzanne and their families
8. Being a labor and delivery nurse
9. Our dream
10. Silverton FBC
11. Midwives & Doctors
12. Salem First Church of the Nazarene
13. Dan & Robyn
14. CC group
15. This Job & being in 4 Corners
16. Being able to go to Honduras
17. Chad being able to go to Honduras
18. Being able to see Israel
19. Myra
20. Calls from managers who say they really want me.
21. The Grand Canyon
22. White Sands
23. Carlsbad Caverns
24. Beautiful lakes
25. Camping
26. The Navajo people
27. Homeschooling
28. The USA and democracy
29. Good health
30. A car that runs
31. Bowel control (hey sometimes it’s the small things)
32. Friends
33. Extended family
34. NNU and my nursing degree
35. Road trips
36. Amazing man made wonders like Mesa Verde
37. The beauty of Shiprock
38. That I grew up in Cambridge
39. An emergency fund
40. (This should be number one) Jesus lover of my soul.
42. Jehovah Jireh
43. Food to eat especially Chad’s cooking
44. An opportunity to be God’s hands and feet
45. Home birth
46. Kindness of others
47. Variety
48. Clothes
49. Books
50. Art
51. Marshmallows
52. Watermelon
53. Jalapeños
Oops I went too far here

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So Dissapointed

We have been planning to go to the Celebrate Recovery fundraiser at Chilies for a couple of weeks.  Not only did Chilies sound good but we really wanted to support Celebrate Recovery.  So after waking up every little bit all day to look at the clock and make sure I wasn’t over sleeping, I finally drug myself out of bed in what we thought was plenty of time to go get an early dinner and get back to the house before I needed to leave for work.
We arrived at Chilies at 4:30pm and I had to leave for work at 6:00pm…that should have been plenty of time.  There were only a handful of families at Chilies that early in the evening, so we thought we wouldn’t have a wait time and we would beat the rush. But when we checked in at the front desk and told them there were five of us they informed us that they didn’t have seating for a family of five right now and so it would be about a 15 min.  Wait.  Seriously!  They were practically empty.  I was playing out the times in my head.  It’s 4:30 in 15 it will be 4:45.  If we order our food at 5:00, and it comes at 5:20, and we have to leave at 5:30, so we have time to get home and changed, that means  10 min.  to eat.  So we decided that wasn’t enough time and ran across the road to Fudruckers.  After all that looking forward to Chilies and fitful sleep all day… Fudruckers was fast but completely disappointing too after being used to the one in Wilsonville.
-Sarah

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Code Talker: The First and Only Memoir By One of the Original Navajo Code Talkers of WWII

Yazzie, Begay, Nez, Bitah, and Tsosie are Navajo sir names that are seen frequently on posters and billboards on the Navajo Reservation.  The names of towns and mesas recall to mind their specific details and rock formations as we have driven by them on this trip.  We have been in a reconstructed hogan at Salmon Ruins.  Maybe these are the reasons in which I was drawn in and able to relate to Code Talker: The First and Only Memoir By One of the Original Navajo Code Talkers of WWII by Nez, Chester, Schiess Avila, Judith (2011).  The recollections of the Long Walk of the Navajo, The Live Stock Massacre, cruel matrons and life as an eight year old child at boarding school are just the beginning.  The detail in which battles in the pacific are recounted and the struggles to fight off battle fatigue as Mr. Nez attempts to reintegrate into civilian life after the war with no recognition for his heroism or even being cleared to tell his family exactly what he had done in the war.  

Code Talker is a fairly easy read and leaves you with a desire to learn more about World War II, the Navajo people, Code Talkers, and the Geography of the Pacific Islands.  As I finished reading this book this afternoon I decided to search YouTube for Chester Nez and it has quite a bit.  After watching a few recent news clips I was shocked to note the date of his death was so resent.  Wednesday June 4th, 2014, this very week.  I was reading his book on Wednesday as we camped in Colorado…now he is gone…the last living of the original 29 Code Talkers.  A piece of living history, Chester Nez, with the help of Judith Schiess Avila, has made a memoir that will allow the Code Talkers to continue to tell their story to the generations to come.

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History of the Fiesta and Burn Zozobra

History of Zozobrais best described by burnzozobra.com the hyperlinked words above will take you directly to the history.

YouTube videos of the burning Zozobra show examples of years of the different hair color and dress but the same basic premiss of a toothless brainless boogie man, with no feet to stand on.  Burning him with pounds and pounds of little papers filled with people’s troubles, represents burning all bad stuff and troubles away and the chance to start fresh.

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Enjoy

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Riverfest

Today I took the kids to riverfest in Farmington.  It is just a little community get together down by the river but was a lot of fun.  There was rafting tours, a petting zoo, horse rides, and a lot of other fun stuff to do.  It was big enough to cover two parks, but their is a green belt that connects them so it was a nice walk.  The kids really enjoyed the park and are eager for me to take them back so they can play on the equipment and in the fountains that we found in Berg park.  I am eager to go back and find some of the geocaches that are along the green belt.

The only downside to the day was that we went to a food stand for some lunch and it was a long line.  It took us 20 min to get up to order.  Then the guy said they were really busy so it would be another 20 min till our food was ready. After waiting an hour we finally had our lunch.  The food was good but nothing great.  Was really bummed that Sarah could not be there with us.

~Chad

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Family Time

I love watching our little ones play together.  Family bonding was one of the things I was looking forward to on this trip.  The kids are playing well together and there seems to be a lot less arguing than when we first started out.  It is fun to watch them make up new games and throw stuffed animals at each other from the top of the stairs.  We are definitely blessed.  It is a quiet family time night as we have dinner together and then all snuggle into our bed to watch Cars.

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We Have Internet!

After almost two weeks we have internet, and can actually upload pictures from our cameras with out using all of the media on our cell plans! Sometimes it’s the little things.
-Sarah

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What’s That …A Rattle Snake Whoa Whoa A Oh Whaooh.

Fist thing is first, after breakfast that is.  As we have been making are way around to see all of the sites we have been making a special point to see each of the Capitol buildings.  So, since we were in Phoenix it only made sense to stop in.  The Arizona Capitol building is actually called the Capitol museum and it is exactly that.  The staff at the visitor stations were beyond helpful they gave us a map and information on the exhibits.  The kids were quite taken and talked to them extensively, then we walked around the Capitol.

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After we checked out the Capitol and visited each floor we returned to the visitor center/gift shop.  The clerk there had put together some “school group” bags and offered them to the kids.  They had two post card,s a pencil, two stickers of the state seal, and a little copper pot and small pebble of turquoise in them.  The kids were thrilled.  They explained that they are usually for school groups but since the kids were homeschooled they wanted to offer it to them too.  She also stamped a copper print paper with the Capitol passport stamp for us to put in our passport book. We bought a few extra postcards and state seal stickers and left.
I wish I had more pictures but it was the perfect time to visit as a lot of the cacti were in bloom especially the saguaro which is the Arizona state flower.

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Our first stop after the Capitol was in Cape Verde at Montezuma’s Castle.  It is a whole community of pueblo style homes built 50 feet up steep wall in little nook in the lime stone.  They believe the community was there about 700 years ago and chose to build in the side of the cliff to be out of the flood plane and for protection.

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Tuzigoot ruins also in Cape Verde

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Then we took the scenic route up to Flagstaff through Sedona, which was AMAZING!!!

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The kids kept saying that, “we need to get an apartment here mommy!”  “Are you going to bring us back here to play, we need to live here and have an apartment here mommy.”
God sure did know what he was doing this amazing planet and people he created is so diverse and amazing!
– Sarah

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To Taos and back

After a late night in Albuquerque we headed north up to Santa Fe for the night.  I didn’t even think about the Capitol building being closed on the weekends, but we did enjoy walking around it and the neighboring visitor’s center.

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We had heard from a former resident that if we were ever to go through New Mexico the thing to see is Taos Pueblo where the Puebloan Indians still lived in the 1000 year old adobe ( mud and straw brick) three story tall (in parts) ancient pueblos.  Here are a few pictures from our drive and lunch.

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I think we found the best place in Taos to eat.  We were outside in the open air with fun Spanish music giving it a very vacationesc feel, and the food was amazing.  That put us out at Taos Pueblo about 1:45 which was perfect for unbeknown to us it was a feast day (a holiday), and there were traditional festivities on the reservation.  This did mean though that we were forbidden to take any pictures.  The Corn dance started at 2:00pm in front of the small Catholic Church.  A large group of young women in traditional dresses clutched in both hands what appeared to be corn sprouts. While a smaller group of traditionally dressed young teenage boys shook a hand made maraca.  A larger group of village elder men sat on stools in a circle off to the corner of their dancing and beat drums and sang.  They continued in this fashion all the way around the walls of the traditional boundaries of Taos Pueblo.  It was fun to watch but by two hrs into it (and maybe the beating sun had something to do with it too) the kids were ready to check out the old cemetery and leave.  It is the U. S.’s first living heritage center.  You all should look it up.
We decided to take a different route home to Farmington that took us over the mountains and that turned out to be an amazing drive.  First was the Rio Grande only miles outside of Taos.

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A lady selling trinkets at the Rio Grande tipped us off to the Earthship off the grid subdivision just up the road so` we made that our next stop.

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We got there just after the visitor center closed but they said we could look around.  All of their buildings are made of recycled material.  They kids were totally amazed as we tried to explain what living “off the grid” means.
From there we climbed up into the Sangre de Cristo mountains.  If the beauty didn’t take your breath away the altitude would have.  It almost looked like we were back home in Oregon with the mountains full of conifers and green grassy valleys.

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I didn’t have quick enough reflexes to get a picture of the black bear we saw but he was pretty cute.  It is hard to believe they live in as low of latitude as northern New Mexico.
The sun went down just a short time before getting back to our apartment.

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And upon arrival we discovered our first package from home (Salem,OR) from Grandma and Grandpa Owens. Efficient Carpet Cleaner t-shirts that the kids have been asking for!

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-goodnight
Sarah

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