Farmington Museum and the Park

We can’t live in Farmington for three months and not visit the Farmington Museum.  So this morning we decided on that as our adventure for today.  It was a small museum filled mostly with art work, of which the kids had me take pictures of the horses to show Cyrus.

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And this one “The Chrysalis” which is how I feel sometimes as the uncomfortable change/situations one must go through that make them into that better person.

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After that we hit up the military surplus store and bought some hats to keep the sun out of our eyes and maybe to prevent a little skin cancer on our heads.

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Hannah actually got hers at the Grand Canyon but she wanted her picture taken too.
Then we went to Walmart and got our oil changed and ate lunch, finishing up the day with several hours at the park, dinner, and a little Nintendo 64, and talking to Aunt Stephanie and Cyrus on Face time.

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Categories: Family Time, new mexico | Leave a comment

Mesa Verde

We have been waiting to go to Mesa Verde since we found out we were coming to Four Corners.  The kids wanted to stand on the corner of all four states and visit Mesa Verde.  The thing is that it isn’t very far from our apartment, so we were reserving it for a time when I had only a short break from work.  Well, today was the day.  It was a 45 minute drive to the visitors center where we booked two hour long walking tours and then we started up the steep windy road to the top of the Mesa ( which we learned later that because of the slight slope to the east it is actually an aquesta not a mesa).
Mesa Verde is more puebloan ruins but what is cool about these ruins is that like at Montezuma’s castle it is built into the sandstone alcoves of cliffs, but unlike Montezuma’s castle you can actually climb to the ruins and walk through them.

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We were in the park from 10:45-6:00pm so after all that climbing we were hungry for dinner.  The near by town of Durango, Colorado had been recommended as a cute little historic town, with a fun rail road museum, by the girls at work.  It was cute and a little too late for the train museum.  We filled up on pizza then walked around and looked at the shops in the historic downtown.

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Another late night but so worth the fun day.
Goodnight
-Sarah

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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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The Heart of Things

I told myself I would keep a journal for this trip and here I am 20 days into it and this is my first journal entry.  What a process pulling our family out of our rut and setting out in a new direction.

Five or Six years ago I decided that being ordinary was just fine and rather enjoyable.  I could be a domestic stay at home (mostly that is) Homeschool mom in our kid friendly neighborhood working part time at the same job for the rest of my life.  This was big for me … to be content with where I was in life and feel like I could do this indefinitely and be happy.  As a child, a teenager, and as a young person I was very driven.  My parents used to tell me ” you don’t have to do everything at once, slow down you have time.”  I was very driven and being ordinary seemed like a punishment of either laziness, lack of vision, or low IQ.  I was beginning to get a glimpse of the peace and happiness of the blessings of God’s greatest gifts: a good marriage, children, a home to call your own, and a church (and work) family that you love to do life with.  Things that my parents, grandparents,  aunts and uncles knew.  They weren’t lazy or hadn’t given up on their dreams, they hadn’t settled down because they lost their dreams or weren’t smart enough to do anything else.  This gave me a new appreciation for those around me doing life in the same day by day manner.  And in that same sense I felt like God was giving me that peace about where I was at because I was there for the long haul.  But, just as it goes all too often when we decide God really does know what he is doing and that we can chill because he’s in control, It’s OK I can be normal I don’t need to be great in anyone else’s eyes but his.  Then he changes the plans or probably more accurately he lets us see a little bit more of it.

Just over two years ago at the beginning of 2012 a dream started taking shape.  Small in scope to what it looks like today.  Could we see the whole country in one month? no it would take three.  What would our route look like?  We could spend a night in each state.  Would my job allow a leave of that kind?  I think so.  How can we work it out with the business?  I don’t think we can see everything that we want to see in a three month period, but we probably could in a year.  Ok let’s punch in some numbers…Whoaah!  Ok, no problem, we just need to save $20,000/year for the next 8 years and we can still do it.  Hmmm how is this going to work out?  This is where Chad says, “what do you think about travel nursing?”  Well at three months for each assignment we could maybe get four assignments in, in one year.  If we are going to travel the whole country we are going to need to be doing this assignment for longer than one year.

What started as a small idea grew and started burning in us.  What steps do we need to take?  How do we get ready and get going?  This is the part where Chad was very helpful, figuring out how much we needed to have in savings, booking us for the travel nurse conference in Las Vegas so we could rub shoulders with other travel nurses, meet some recruiters and attend the seminars and discussion groups on current travel nurse issues.  Knowing that there were other travel nurses traveling with their families gave us even more resolve.  Next on the list was making me marketable as a travel nurse by getting additional licenses and certifications.  Lastly, there was what to do with the house.

If we just focused on the tasks at hand we wouldn’t have to think about how it would feel to leave all our loved ones, work, and our support system and set off alone.

Now that it is done and we have left, I am glad that we listened, all those times when we wondered if we really were crazy and what were we thinking, we don’t have to go, do we.  We were scared of change, scared of coming out of our comfort zone and feeling uncomfortable, and scared of risking failure.  It isn’t as hard as we imagined, and I actually find myself wanting to be in situations where I have to do hard and uncomfortable things because I do want to be a stronger, better person.

 

Categories: Road Trip, Travel, Travel Nursing | 2 Comments

Caleb’s Journal From April 27th

I really need to write in my journal.  But, I can still tell you about this last week.  Okay, enough mish-mash, let’s get to the story.  I should probably start at the beginning.  So we left on our grand adventure (aka our trip) on 4-21-2014.  It was really hard saying good-bye to Grandma and Cyrus, but we went and it was basically drive, stop, eat, drive, stop, eat all the way there.  We saw a lot of Mom and Dad’s friends and made friends with their kids.  Yesterday we went to ARCHES NATIONAL PARK!  We got a badge for filling out the junior ranger hand book.  After that we stayed in two motels, tried to open the lockbox (we had to have help) and moved in. There is an upstairs, where the bedrooms are, and dads bedroom has a TV in it.  We have a drawer for books and two drawers from shoes.  One for regular-everyday shoes and one for church shoes.  We also have two drawers each for our stuff.  Our bed is pink everything, so I am sleeping in our closet.  There is a railing in our apartment that is so low (one foot above the stairs) that we use it as a slide.  There is two bathrooms, one upstairs, and one downstairs.  The one down stairs is a tiny bathroom consisting of a toilet and a sink and a few drawers.  The one upstairs the main bathroom, so it has a mirror, a sink, a bunch of drawers, and so on.  There is a linen closet right up the stairs.  There is three chairs in the living room and one couch.  The TV is so old that dad can’t put any good technology on it.  He can’t put Netflix on it!  The bathroom down stairs is in the kitchen/dining room, where the table is and four chairs and there is a lot of cupboards and four bowls (so we had to buy one) and a sink with a water filter (that we bought) with a garbage disposal!  We also have a washing machine and dryer, so we don’t have to go to a laundry mat.  We have in our kitchen a refrigerator freezer, stove top, oven, dishwasher, and the furnace and water heater by the fridge.  On the left in a closet.  There is two desks in the living room, one long one with books and schoolwork, and one with two glass shelves and one wood one and a drawer.  there is one window in the kitchen, one in the living room, one in mom and dad’s room, and one in our room.  Right now I am sitting at the table writing in my journal, Hannah is sitting on a chair because she is in trouble, and Eve is making noise by running up and down the stairs.

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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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The Grand Canyon

Brrrrr!  It is freezing in Flagstaff and there are a few snow flakes off and on.  We drove through the historic town of Williams AZ before heading up, as it had been recommended by some of the ladies at work.  It was very cute but so cold we didn’t really feel up to (all but Caleb that is) walking the historic streets and checking out the shops.

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After our drive through Williams we turned north for the <1hr drive to The Grand Canyon, one of the Seven wonders of the natural world.  Both Chad and I had been to the Grand Canyon before but it had been at least twenty years ago and the visitor center has changed a lot. They have several buildings and it is hard to tell what is what. There is a bus station too so after we got the kids signed up for the Jr. Ranger program, walked through the gift shop to get our passport stamp and hiked the short hike out to Mather Point we hopped on a blue line bus to the “village”.  After a bus exchange and a quick jog we landed seats on the red line bus with a canyon tour headed west. There were frequent stops where you could get off and enjoy the view and then get on the next bus because they came by every ten minutes. We rode all the way out to Hermits landing and then back in to the village for a late lunch/early dinner and to buy Chad a sweatshirt. Between the rain, fits of hail and wind he was freezing in his tee shirt and shorts.  We both thought it would be warmer than it was and I was glad that the kids and I had packed a jacket even though we didn’t think we would need them.  After we were all feeling warmer and full we headed out to a geological presentation at the geology museum which required connecting with another bus of the east bound orange route.  It was very interesting but it was nearly 5:00pm and we needed to be headed back towards Farmington.  The kids made one last stop to pick up their hard earned Jr. Ranger badges and pick out one thing at the gift shop and we headed out by taking the road along the rim heading east and a climb through the old watch tower.  On one of our trecks through the book store the kids were talking to a couple about the park and a few others we have visited and soon the couple reappeared around the corner and said that they were from Australia and would like to give the kids each a key chain that they had brought with them.  A boomerang, kangaroo, and a koala.  A new unexpected treasure from The Grand Canyon!

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Leaving the Grand Canyon we turned North East and made our way across the vast Navajo Nation.  Here are a few pictures from just outside of Tuba City.

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It was a late night and we are glad to be home.
-Sarah

Categories: Family Time, national parks, Road Trip | Leave a comment

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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Sleep, What’s That?

I have one longer break this month then the rest of the breaks are two or three days and this just happens to be that break. So, with family close by in Arizona, we couldn’t not see them so we headed out as soon as I got home from work on Monday morning across Arizona towards Mesa.  With one planned stop at the Petrified Forest and the Painted Desert, and a planned dinner date with family at 5:00 or 5:30.
Being quite tired from the night of work I didn’t see as much of the scenery on this drive but of course just like the other drives there was much to see.
The Painted Desert

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Historic Route 66

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Historic Santa Fe Railroad

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Puebloans and Petroglyphs

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Petrified Forest

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The kids take an oath at each park as part of the Jr. Ranger park program.
It took way longer to get through the park than the two hrs we were expecting so were relieved to realize that we entered another time zone and gained an hour.  We made it to Mesa and my Aunt Heidi’s house at exactly 5:00pm where my Cousin Heidi Marie and her Husband Matt and two adorable daughters Crystal and Savannah met us and we all went out to dinner at Nandos.  It was delicious and we had a lot of great conversation.  The two girls were having a blast and were very sad when 9:00pm came around and we had to say goodbye.
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Categories: Family Time, Road Trip, Travel | Leave a comment

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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