Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Halloween in Enumclaw




Check out these pictures of the three youngest Johnsons. I reminded Paul and Rebekah that they are eighteen and fifteen (almost) years old but that did not keep them from Trick or Treating this evening. Their mother says it is good to keep the child alive in you. It isn't often but this is a case where she is wrong.

Dad

Monday, October 29, 2007

Hi Everyone!

Hey everyone,
Julie and John thanks for posting the ultra sound of your baby adn I am so excited for both of you adn can;t wait to see our niece/nephew soon. And everyone else I am glad to hear everything is goign well. Sorry. I have to go to class now, so I will write more later. Just to let you knwo that Hi Risk died last thursday, I miss him. Kay and Sammy are doing well, and everyoen here is.
Love you all
Mels

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Preview of the baby



Hey everyone

A few weeks ago John and I went to the doctor for an ultrasound. We thought we'd post the picture here as a little introduction to the person we will all get to meet come February. The other good part about the ultra sound aside from seeing that everything looked healthy with the baby was the fact that the technician couldn't see the fibroid. So it is definitely not growing and looks like it won't be a problem in the delivery. With that said . . . we look forward to seeing you all at Thanksgiving.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

A Fish Tale

Perhaps some of you have heard this tale, but I thought it should be entered into our family blog because it is one to be remembered. Andrew has had an obsession with fishing this summer. He has spent endless hours over in the small tributary that runs near the white river across the street with his fishing pole. He has caught a number of small as in 2 inch little fish that have come home in a sour cream carton and put into the aquarium. Some of them have been relocated to our small pond above the waterfall. I have wondered how they have enjoyed Sam's bathing habits in that pond.
We made several trips to Deep Lake to fish this summer and took Sam and Trey Rodarte along to join in the fun. We discovered that Sam really doesn't like fishing because it requires standing still for long periods of time. But he is very good at running around on the dock looking for anything that looks remotely like a fish. (And in his excitement, warning any fish that might be caught that they should turn and swim the other way quickly.) Andrew and Trey would sit for hours and even though they never had a nibble, they didn't get discouraged, they knew it would happen any minute.
One morning on my early morning bike ride, I noticed a sign that invited children 10 and under to fish in someone's personal pond just down the road near the fair ground. Andrew and I rode our bikes down to see if we could see it later and it was gone. The next day it was back and so I asked Paul to take Andrew down to go fishing. The boys went and sure enough this man had a pond in his yard stocked with trout. Andrew excitedly caught a fish very quickly. Paul also caught a fish. They were good sized trout. But when Andrew asked if he could take the fish home in a bucket to put in his pond the man said, No way!" Drew then asked him if he could put him back and the guy told him that he didn't do catch and release. The man then took out his baseball bat and hit the fish over the head much to Andrew's shock and dismay. He made him promise to have his mom cook the fish so that it wasn't wasted. I don't think Andrew enjoyed or even tasted the fish we had for supper that night. The mighty fisherman a little humble!
I am wondering if it is the colder weather or cold hard facts of fishing that have slowed down that obsession.
With love,
Mom


Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Bron Bron





hey everybody. Happy Halloween! I hope everything is going so good for everybody. I wanted to show you some pictures of the pumpkin i carved last night, of my boy bron bron.....anyway i wanna talk to everybody! give me a call. i love you guys. your b-rother paulwall

Monday, October 15, 2007

Thanks for using this site Dad

I just wanted to say thanks to Dad for posting things. It is nice to see what everyone has been up too. I also wanted to mention that you can comment on what people post by clicking on "comment". If you scroll down to some of Dad's posts, you'll see that I commented. That lets people who post know that we are reading and seeing what they've written. So siblings - if you come and look let us know by commenting.

I wish I had a picture of the drive John and I took on Saturday. We went down to Louisville Kentucky to go to the temple and left pretty early in the morning. Southern Indiana is rolling hills and limestone cliffs cut into the side of the road and it was foggy and beautiful. Anyway - we love you all and look forward to seeing you soon!

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Crystal Lake -- October 13, 2007




The last couple of days have been gorgeous and they may be the last great days we see for a long time. So we wanted to take full advantage of them. I had a wonderful bike ride yesterday morning for about 80 minutes. Then Rosie and I went up to Mount Rainier National Park. We hiked up to Crystal Lake – the trailhead is right by the turnoff to Sunrise on 410.

It was a fabulous hike, mostly through woods with about 2,300 feet of elevation gain and 3 miles in length. We did it in a little over one hour so we were moving along at a good pace. Hiking in these woods is beautiful. As the sun filters through all the branches and trees it creates an almost magical feeling. Every quarter mile or so we would get a breathtaking view of Mount Rainier when there would be a break in the trees. All the rains from earlier in the week had left a new layer of snow on the mountains and Rainier was gorgeous as were the surrounding peaks. As we approached Crystal Lake we could see that it was in a bit of a bowl with beautiful mountains on three sides of it. The lake is quiet and pristine and the view reflecting off the lake of the snow dusted mountain tops was absolutely stunning.

I attached a couple of photos. This is a great family hike the next time you are here. They had some superb camping spots right by the lake and Rosie suggested we try that. I'm sure she'll get over that idea before next year.

Dad

Arches Photos






Marc, Steve and I had a great time last weekend in Southern UT. We went to the Greek Streak (picture attached) in Price on our way to Moab. Rob has been telling me for years that this is the "second best meal in the state of UT." Of course I told him that was absolutely impossible as Price has zero to negative culture and that was like saying that the best mountain you have ever seen was in Nebraska or Kansas. It was a bit of a dive. The food was not bad but definitely not the second best in the state. They had some good picture of Greece in the restaurant that brought back some good memories from this summer.

We spent one evening watching the sun set on Delicate Arch. It was a most unforgettable experience on a perfect evening. I posted a couple of pictures -- one with Marc and Steve under the arch.

The next day we went through the Devil's Garden -- a six mile hike that was gorgeous and then went in the Fiery Furnace -- an area where you must have a permit to enter. We were the only people in this surreal place with countless alternative routes through the fins and canyons. They allow no maps and not even a cairn can be put up. So you have to go through some "training" and a lecture before you can get a permit and they very much discouraged someone going in who had never been there before. We were persistent and finally they sold us a pass. It was a great place and I have posted a couple of photos from there. Steve and Marc thought it would be a good idea to spray paint some cairns on the rocks -- of course they were joking.

Arches is a place where we all need to go sometime. I'm sorry only Marc and Steve were able to make it.

When we get together in November for Thanksgiving we need to plan out our 2008 adventures. I'm thinking about Chile and Switzerland, your mom has the Oregon coast on her mind.

Dad

Acropolis Aritcle

I thought you all might be interested in the article below that was in todays papers about the Acropolis.

Dad

1st of Acropolis sculptures successfully transferred by crane to new museum at foot of ancient Greek citadel

By Nicholas Paphitis
Associated Press
Published: October 14, 2007
ATHENS, Greece — The first of the Acropolis' ancient sculptures was gingerly plucked from the top of the Parthenon temple and successfully transferred Sunday to a new museum at the foot of the hilltop citadel.

Culture Minister Michalis Liapis called the meticulously choreographed, 90-minute operation — the first of many in coming weeks — a "historic event of global significance."

Over the next few months, 4,500 antiquities, mostly marble sculptures dating to the sixth and fifth centuries B.C., will be shifted into the new Acropolis Museum 400 yards away.

On Sunday, crews in three cranes moved a 2.3-ton section of the Parthenon frieze: a 160-yard-long strip sculpted in relief with some 360 human and 250 animal figures from a religious procession.

Liapis called the transfer "both awe-inspiring and deeply moving. For the first time after 25 centuries, the sculptures are being transferred to the new Acropolis Museum."

Supervising engineer Costas Zambas said the move went off without a hitch, and faster than expected. He said crews had decided not to carry out any transfers if winds are higher than 24 mph — and Sunday was a windy day.

"But everything went off like a dream, totally safely," he said.

The antiquities — insured for $567 million — will be wrapped in padded harnesses and packed into styrofoam-filled boxes made of plywood and metal.

The Parthenon sculptures eventually will be exhibited on the top floor of the new, three-level museum with a view of the ancient temple. The works will be mounted in their original alignment on a model of the Parthenon's upper section.

Designed by U.S.-based architect Bernard Tschumi, the $182 million glass-and-concrete Acropolis Museum is expected to open in late 2008.

"The museum, which is empty in a sense, is now being populated — populated by those sculptures," said Tschumi, who attended the inaugural transfer Sunday.

Greek officials hope the gleaming new museum will boost the country's long-running campaign to wrest back the British Museum's collection of sculptures from the Parthenon.

The works were removed from the fifth century B.C. temple some 200 years ago — when Greece was still an unwilling member of the Ottoman Empire — by Scottish diplomat Lord Elgin and bought by the London museum, which has refused Greek demands for their repatriation.

Liapis said completion of the Acropolis Museum would repudiate British Museum officials' contention that Greece lacks a fitting venue to display all the Parthenon sculptures together.

Not everybody was happy Sunday. As the light-blue crate with its precious load dangled overhead, dozens of people gathered to protest the scheduled demolition of an Art Deco architectural gem — and its late 19th-century neighbor — that block the view of the Acropolis from the new museum.

A banner on the new museum's railings read: "Don't knock them down, we don't have enough of them."

The Parthenon was built between 447-432 B.C., at the height of ancient Athens' glory, in honor of Athena, the city's patron goddess.

It survived virtually intact — until a massive explosion caused by a Venetian cannon shot in 1687, when the Parthenon was in use as a gunpowder store by the Acropolis' Turkish garrison.

The old museum, built in the late 19th century, probably will be used for exhibitions on the Acropolis conservation program, the history of excavations on the site as well as drawings of the monuments by foreign travelers over the centuries.

© 2007 Deseret News Publishing C

Hi everyone!

Hey everyone,
Emilie it sounds like you and Xavior had an adventure running, and Julie and John I am so gald to hear you are both doing well, and the baby too. Marc adn Stephen how about you too? Everyone is doing well here in Enumclaw WA, I miss you all so much and can't to see you all soon at Thanksgiving adn Christmas, we are going to have so much fun! I am taking care of Kay and Sammy, family, horses, flute, soccer, ASL, babysitting, daycare, Kids BASE, Camp Berahah, pre-school, etc. Also, going to GRCC, taking two classes this quater adn I am loving it. love always,
Mels