Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Larry turned 60!

Why is turning 60 so such a weird feeling!  Larry turned 60 on November 13th and the next day, he hiked down from the South Rim of the Grand Canyon to the Colorado River and back up in seven hours - and he felt great!  Larry demonstrated to me that old is merely a state of mind! 

He wanted to spend this birthday at the Grand Canyon.  We stayed at the historic hotel - El Tovar.  We had a great dinner the night of his birthday.  He had a great hike the following day.  I did the easy version which is the rim trail that is paved and easy and allows for multiple great views of the Canyon.  It was a great place to turn 60 and for me, to be there with that terrific person who turned 60!  He wears it well!


And his requested reward when he hiked out of the Canyon was:


The El Tovar is at the South Rim of the Grand Canyon.  It was opened in 1905 as one of a chain of hotels and restaurants owned and operated by the Fred Harvey Company in conjunction with the Santa Fe railway.  It is an early example of the style that would evolve into National Park Service Rustic architecture.  It was built before the Grand Canyon was a formally protected Federal park.  The Grand Canyon National Park was established by Congress in 1916.  The El Tovar was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1987.





Uncle Ron from Omaha informed us earlier this year of a veteran's memorial near us in Anthem, AZ.  It is a monument dedicated to honoring the service and sacrifice of the United States armed forces.  The five marble pillar monument was designed by Anthem resident Renee Palmer-Jones.  The pillars represent the five branches of the United States military.  They are staggered in size (from 17 ft. to 6 ft.) and ordered in accordance with the Department of Defense prescribed precedence, ranging from the United States Army, the United States Marine Corps, the United States Navy, the United States Air Force and the United States Coast Guard. 

Anthem chief engineer, Jim Martin was responsible for aligning the memorial accurately with the sun so that on each Veterans Day, 11/11, at precisely 11:11 a.m., the sun's rays pass through the ellipses of the five Armed Services pillars to form a perfect solar spotlight over a mosaic of The Great Seal of the United States.

Our plan was to visit the memorial on Veterans Day but those plans were foiled.  So we visited the memorial on our return from the 60th birthday Grand Canyon trip. 





 The weekend before Thanksgiving, we traveled to San Diego as guests of sister-in-law Liz and brother Jim at their time share.  Liz's sister Marilyn and her husband Mel joined us as well.  We haven't visited San Diego since we lived in Yuma - nearly 20 years ago.  We enjoyed wine tasting in Temecula and a visit to Coronado Island and the Hotel Del Coronado.









The Saturday following Thanksgiving took us to Tucson for nephew Jimmy's high school football team Division II championship football game.  They won!! and we made television!


Early December we hosted a small gathering of our Friday night football group and Jimmy and some of his friends joined us as well.  We've now adjusted to having our Friday nights free but certainly miss watching Jimmy football!


The following weekend we joined Jim and Liz as their guests for Jimmy's football banquet.  It was a pleasure listening to the coaches talk about these young men and their accomplishments on the football field as well as in the classroom.  Jimmy was recognized for his 4.2 GPA, along with several other of the football players with GPAs of 3.0 and above.  Jimmy (I might have to really consider starting calling him Jim?) plans to pursue admission to West Point.  He graduates May 2016. 

Larry is doing well.  I'm doing well.  Life is good!  Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Fall 2015

September took us to Reno for Larry to present a paper at a conference but it also allowed us to see friends Alex and Lisa from our Yuma days (can't believe I didn't remember to get a picture) and Julie and Joost from our Bolivia days.  Cell phone cameras don't always do a very good job....



 We traveled to Christopher Creek in the White Mountains (north and east of Phoenix) for a Labor Day weekend stay with Jim, Liz and Jimmy.  We were on the road before the sun came up to drive about an hour from their cabin to watch early morning wildlife (deer, elk and turkey).


We then met up with friends Mike and Sue and Allison and Brian for a hike - great day!  We ended the day at Liz's sister and her husband's home for dinner.  Thanks Marilyn and Mel for inviting us all over!



L-R: Sue, me, Allison, Liz and Marilyn
 


Liz, Jimmy, Larry and I went to a Diamondbacks game.



We enjoyed the lunar eclipse.




Larry had business in Rapid City in October so we added some vacation time allowing for a drive through Colorado to see fall colors.  We drove to Telluride for the first night - beautiful.
























Next day took us to Frisco near Aspen and the following day found us in Estes Park including a drive through Rocky Mountain National Park.  We saw a lot of elk on that drive but I most enjoyed all the elk we saw on the golf course in Estes.



We then headed to Harrison to winterize Dorothy's home while she is in Wichita  recovering from her knee replacement surgery.  We were able to spend some time with friends John and Terry.  Okay, so my camera doesn't always do a good job either....


Following an extremely quiet stay in Harrison (we're usually back during Fair when nearly all of the family is back) we headed for Angostura near Hot Springs, SD, to visit Virginia and Dennis in their new home.  Larry headed onto Rapid City for his business and I stayed with Virginia and Dennis - enjoyed some nice walks along the lake.



We missed two of nephew Jimmy's football games but they were able to overcome our absence from the crowd and win anyway!  Sister Jackie had arrived in Phoenix and was able to see Jimmy play allowing us a family photo.


The following Friday was senior night.  Jimmy invited me to walk with him and his parents when he was introduced - gad, what an honor.  They won their game for a regular season record of 8-2.  Playoffs begin this Friday, November 6.  Go Cats!!


The back yard remodel that began in late May:  One of the features we liked about this house when we moved here four years ago was the back yard.  We spend a lot of time on the back porch and we liked the back yard...but now we love the back yard.  The remodel idea started because we wanted to move the outdoor grill to a shadier area (imagine July and 115 degrees and using the grill) and we decided a fire pit was more practical than the beehive fireplace feature and we wanted to replace the tile on the under roof patio.  Well, those ideas morphed into a total back yard remodel. 

The before picture:



The after picture:


Larry has been working on the landscaping and I need to take care of some touch up painting but in the meantime, we're very much enjoying the final product!


Larry's job continues to go well.  He has been able to incorporate a reduced hour work week to a four day work week for the most part.  Most of his travel is in Arizona and New Mexico.

On the health front, I haven't been able to shake a cough for several months so Dr. Paripati decided to take me off the chemo oral drug therapy and is sending me to a pulmonologist.  My recent scan showed something going on in the lungs but she is thinking it is infection vs. cancer.  I've been off the drug for less than two weeks and the cough has pretty much resolved.  Interesting that the Temodar can cause lung infection in only 1% of the population.  I meet with the pulmonologist on Nov. 11, and oncology again on the 18th at which time I'll find out when I'll start up on the drug again. 

Thanksgiving is around the corner!  We'll be going to San Diego the days before Thanksgiving spending it with Liz and Jim and Liz's sister Marilyn and her husband Mel.  Looking forward to the trip - I can't remember the last time we were in San Diego.  We'll spend Thanksgiving with friends Mike and Sue and their family.

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Utah, Colorado, Nebraska and South Dakota Trip

Gotta love a road trip.  We left Carefree in early July with a destination our first night in Moab, Utah.  We arrived in time to drive through Arches National Park as the sun was going down.  Moab is turning into one of our favorite places to visit and that is even when it is so hot!  We have to make it there in the fall one of these times to enjoy some hiking.


























The following day, we left bright and early to be in Denver in time for lunch with stepfather Marvin and his wife Jennie.  Following a nice visit, we then headed for Greeley to collect Larry's mom Dorothy who was staying there with nephew Joel and his wife Lauren.  Following a tour of the new home of Joel and Lauren, we were off for Harrison - long day!

After a few days in Harrison and enjoying one of the very best 4th of July fireworks displays I've ever experienced in a small town!!!, we headed east and then north with a destination of Badlands National Park.


























We then drove onto Rapid City for a few days stay visiting friends and participating in Larry's college class reunion activities.




We drove to Deadwood one day and visited the Deadwood Mt. Moriah Cemetery.  I went searching for possible family burial sites and we also found Wild Bill's (James Butler Hickok) and Calamity Jane's (Martha Jane Canary) grave sites.

The cemetery was established in 1878.  By the 1930s, many of the plots in the cemetery were either filled or purchased resulting in a limited amount of revenue being generated for the perpetual care.  The City of Deadwood began to promote the Mt. Moriah Cemetery as a tourist attraction.  As a means of acquiring revenue for the cemetery restoration, the City of Deadwood began charging an entrance fee in the mid-1980s.  The name has a religious affiliation with the Christian Bible and the Jewish Torah.  The real Mount Moriah is located within Jerusalem, Israel, and is the location of Solomon's Temple. 

This pic is the White family plot...just don't know for sure if it is relatives or not?  My paternal grandfather's family lived in Deadwood for a period of time.










Rocks on the grave act as a remembrance to the deceased.  The origin of this practice is not clear; however, evidently, the placement of stones on graves has gone on for thousands of years.  When rocks are not available, coins and bits of glass (and pinecones?) are sometimes substituted.  The below picture is of Calamity Jane's grave. 







































We drove to Chadron following our Rapid City visit arriving in time for the Fur Trade Days Parade which we enjoyed from the comfort of friend Virginia's mom's front yard.  Fur Trade Days in Chadron is when class reunions are held but also serves as a time for people who formerly lived in Chadron to come back for a visit.  Always fun to see those people from those early years in Chadron.

Below are friends Virginia and LeAnn.



I always like seeing the Pine Ridge countryside.  This year in particular because they've received so much rain allowing us to see green along with wild flowers our entire trip.  This area is west of Chadron on the way to Harrison near Ft. Robinson.



And then it was time to head back to warm Arizona.  The picture below is of the Colorado River heading into Moab.  I love this drive both ways: heading north and then returning going south.




























Leaving Moab, our other favorite drive is through Monument Valley - just beautiful country.

























I think I've posted this picture in previous posts but I've not yet tired of stopping to get this picture which is a popular spot because it is the place, in the Forrest Gump movie when he decided to stop running.

























Nephew Jimmy's Eagle Scout Court of Honor was held last evening recognizing his attainment as an Eagle Scout.  I wasn't sure what to expect.  I liked the ceremony which included the presenting the colors (bringing out the flag) and all audience members (there were around 80!) saying the Pledge of Allegiance.  We're proud that he is our nephew - great kid!  It will be fun to see what his future brings.

 
 
The below picture is of Jimmy with his aunts and uncles.



Proud mom and dad.


Larry continues to enjoy his job.  My health continues to be good.  Our backyard remodel project is still in process but almost done

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

West Point, Washington D.C. and New York City

Nephew Jim was accepted into a week long leadership training experience at West Point (50 miles north of New York City) providing Larry and me with the opportunity to travel with him to New York, deliver him to his West Point experience and then allowing us to finally visit Washington D.C. and New York City! 

We spent a bit of time coming up with the logistics of getting Jimmy to West Point, getting us to Washington D.C., getting us to New York City from Washington D.C. and getting us back to West Point to pick him up.  We flew non-stop from Phoenix to Newark, NJ, airport.  We rented a car there and drove north to West Point staying at the West Point Inn that night.  We drove into West Point that evening to have an idea of where to deliver him for check in the following morning and just to see the grounds, the housing and building architecture - beautiful.

The following morning we arrived at West Point before the 9 a.m. check in time to visit the historic West Point Cemetery with a goal of finding Custer's grave.  Initially buried on the battlefield of the Battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876, Custer's body (an 1861 West Point graduate, who graduated at the bottom of his class of 34 cadets by the way) was relocated to the West Point Cemetery (officially established as a military cemetery in 1817) in 1877.  Interesting though is a myth that it isn't really Custer's body buried at West Point.  The question is, are those his bones - the family refuses an exhumation to confirm it is Custer's body. 





































West Point! In 1801, Thomas Jefferson was responsible for establishment of West Point as the United States Military Academy, which was authorized and funded by Congress in 1802 as a result of the Military Peace Establishment Act.  West Point admitted its first female cadets in 1976 following Congress' authorization for their admission in 1975.  Women currently compose approximately 15% of entering new cadets. 


After Jim checked in for the leadership experience, he was given reading material and directed where to wait to be taken to where he would be storing his gear for the next six days.  He is 5th from the right. 

We attended a briefing for parents/guardians and then made the return trip to Newark Airport where we took Amtrak to Washington D.C.  Bye Jim...see you next Friday for the closing ceremony.

The Amtrak trip took about 3 1/2 hours (with many stops along the way) and was a relaxing and comfortable way to travel to D.C.  We stayed at the Hilton Garden Inn a short few blocks from the White House.  We used the metro system to travel to our hotel upon arrival in D.C., checked in to our hotel, dumped our luggage and headed out to see the White House.  I loved finally seeing the White House.  There weren't a lot of people but there was a police presence and we could see snipers on top of the White House.  This was the view from the south? and the following picture is a view from the north?.






We walked and walked on this vacation - even using the metro - we walked and walked...but it was great!  I loved getting to see all of these monuments after having seen pictures.  The White House was probably my favorite...just because.

So, we took off walking for the Washington Monument, onto the National World War II Memorial, onto the Reflection Pool, onto the Vietnam Memorial, onto the Vietnam Women's Memorial, onto the Lincoln Memorial, onto the Korean War Memorial (a favorite), onto the Jefferson Memorial and then it was time for some air conditioning so we headed for the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum.  That would have been a good experience except there were a lot, a lot! of people and kids!  School was still in session there and evidently all of the schools had field trips to the Smithsonians!  Think...loud and crowded!




Construction of the Washington Monument began in 1848 and was completed in 1888 due to funding issues, the Civil War, etc.).  A difference in shading of the marble approximately 150 ft. up, shows where construction was halted.




































Onto the WW II Memorial and Reflection Pool.

 


The National World War II Memorial opened in 2004.  It includes pillars inscribed with the name of one of the 48 U.S. states of 1945 as well as the Freedom Wall that has 4,048 gold stars, each representing 100 Americans who died in the war.  In front of the wall lies the message, "Here we mark the price of freedom."




The Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool was constructed in 1922-1923 following the dedication of the Lincoln Memorial.  It is over 1/3 mile long.



The Vietnam Veteran's Memorial was special to see as well.  It was dedicated in 1982.  A name I remember to this day is of a young man from Chadron who died 1968 in the war.  I would have been 7.  I think it is interesting that it impacted me to that degree...that his name and his sacrifice continues to be remembered.  We were able to find his name. 

 
Danny Hudson's name is on the 6th row in the center.


The Three Soldiers Statue near the Vietnam Veteran's Memorial.



















The Vietnam Women's Memorial was dedicated in 1993.
 

 
 
The Lincoln Memorial is majestic.
 






 









































You see the Washington Monument almost every where you go. 
 
 



I'm tellin' ya...I find selfie sticks annoying.  What, you can't be bother to ask a fellow tourist to take your picture!?  Really, that is a better picture!?  Okay, I'm done....





 

The Korean War Memorial was captivating.  It was dedicated in 1995.
 


It felt like a long walk to the Jefferson Memorial.  It was warm that day and we'd already done a lot, a lot of walking.  The Thomas Jefferson Memorial was dedicated in 1943 with Jefferson's bronze statue installed in 1947.  We'd love to visit when the Japanese cherry trees surrounding the area are in bloom - a gift from the people of Japan in 1912.
 

 
 
I'd had my fill of walking by this time but we still had to make our way to the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum.  I enjoyed the museum - just a lot of people and noisy.  We returned to the hotel to rest up a bit - me longer than Larry.  He took off for the Smithsonian American Indian Museum.  When he returned, we went for dinner and then walked to the United States Capitol. 
 
Construction of the United States Capitol began in 1793 and, I think, continued until 1826.  The Capitol was expanded in the 1850s including the "wedding-cake style" cast-iron dome that stands today.  Rebuilding to support the weight of that dome occurred in the early 1900s with another major expansion occurring in 1958.  The dome underwent a restoration in 1960.  The current dome restoration project began in 2014 with completion scheduled before the 2017 presidential inauguration. 
 
 


 
What a first day!!  Our first two days, the weather was warm and humid.  I even resorted to using an umbrella the second day for shade from the sun.  Our second day took us back to the National Mall to visit the Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Martin Luther King memorials, the White House Store and more museums.
 




 
 
The White House Store was fun.  Sister-in-law Liz had put in a request for a White House Christmas ornament which is what took us in the store.  We had fun.
 
 
 
 
Our third day brought rain!  Temperature dropped and we loved it.  We went to Arlington Cemetery, the Pentagon 9/11 Memorial and the botanical gardens.
 
 
Visiting the grave site of President Kennedy was high on our list of things to do in Washington D.C.  We were impressed with the respect displayed by all the tourists (young as well).
 
Being present for the changing of the guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier was important to us.  Again, we were impressed by all of the tourists show of respect.
 
 
 
 
We visited the National 9/11 Pentagon Memorial - there was hardly anyone else there.  Each monument (called memorial units) had the name of the person who had died (184).  Those monument facing away from the Pentagon were people who died in the Pentagon.  Monuments facing towards the Pentagon were people who died on American Airlines Flight 77.  Monuments are clustered as to the year the person was born beginning on one end with the youngest people who died moving towards the other end with the oldest.
 
 
That evening we took a bus tour to view the monument at night.  It was chilly and drizzly but truly pretty to see.
 
 
 
And then it was time to make our way to New York.  We again took Amtrak and enjoyed the comfortable, relaxing means of travel only to arrive at Penn Station and the amped up volume of people in a hurry and the noise of Manhatten.
 
We braved the NYC metro system and were glad we had gained some experience while in D.C.  But this was a whole different level!  We arrived within blocks of our hotel, checked in and then went out to experience...Times Square.  We were able to get discounted tickets to Beautiful - The Carol King Story and then experience Times Square as the night wore on.
 

We ventured to Central Park and the Museum of Natural History the following day but most importantly, we visited the tourist area outside of where they film Good Morning America.  Larry tolerated it and I loved it.  We enjoyed meeting the friendly tourists all around us.  Nephew Joel took this picture from his television.





 
Friday we took the metro to an area near the George Washington Bridge - another interesting experience.  We rented a car there, crossed the bridge and were on our way to West Point to collect nephew Jim.  We had to be there by 9 a.m. for the closing ceremony.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The three of us reversed the trip, dropping off the rental and then taking the metro back to Times Square.  The following day our agenda was to take the Staten Island Ferry to see the Statue of Liberty, we stumbled upon Wall Street, we visited the 9/11 Memorial, the church near the Memorial, we admired the architecture of the One World Trade Center, walked the Highline, saw the Empire State Building and visited the Intrepid Museum - a busy day. 
 





 
 
 
 
 Whew!  What a trip...for all of us.  We loved delivering nephew Jim to West Point and being able to visit that historic institution.  We loved visiting Washington D.C.  We liked the New York City Times Square experience but won't need to repeat it!  We'd return to Washington D.C. and incorporate tours into that trip as well as visits to the surrounding area.  We'd return to New York but would rather visit the countryside and neighboring states.  Thanks Jim for getting us to these destinations as a result of your achievement!
 
We returned home after 10 days and were glad to feel that Arizona dry heat!  A few days following our return, Larry left for southeastern Arizona for a business trip and I went with sister-in-law Liz for two nights at a time share in south Phoenix to celebrate her birthday with her friends, Lisa and Patti. 
 
 
 
Next trip: road trip to Nebraska and South Dakota via Colorado.  In the meantime, we're watching progress on our back yard remodel.