We will soon have another grandchild. And it’s a boy!
Here is a preview of little Easton:
We will soon have another grandchild. And it’s a boy!
Here is a preview of little Easton:
We have seen very little rain in the last year and a half. Our land is extremely dry. The monsoons are upon us. They are bringing gusting winds and lightning, but no substantial rains. Most of these recent wildfires have been caused by lightning strikes.
We are so sad. We know these deserts, mountians, and high plateau forests intimately. We have lived in their beauty for years—all by ourselves in our little home (our slide-in camper, teardrop trailer, and tent). And we have hiked over 4,000 miles exploring these lands and marveling in their beauty. We have the gift of unbelievable memories from our years spent in these amazing isolated deserts.
Now they are burning up. We commend our National Forest for closing these desert forests. The temperatures have been 115 degrees, and we have many brave fire fighters working in this intense heat trying to save our forests and the communities that are in danger of being swallowed by the roaring fires.
We pray for their safety and thank them with all our heart.
This sounds like an awful lot of model cars. But considering that he has already made 46 cars in the past year, he is actually going to run out of all these vintage, unique, and beautiful cars in about three years. And the new modern cars are just not beautiful. (Note: three of these 212 model cars are the ones that Grandpa Dan is building with our grandsons.)
Meanwhile, all these boxes of cars have to be stored somewhere. And that somewhere is in our garage—in cabinets, on shelves, and in the attic.
We get up at 2 am when we are at Nuestra Casa. We head out in the pitch dark to swim, cycle, and walk. It is still relatively cool at that time of the morning. And even better, we have this paradise that we live in all to ourselves.
At about 4:30 am we start to see the sky brighten up in the east, and the birds begin to serenade us.
After breakfast, we immediately head out to our back patio to enjoy our birds and all the beauty that surrounds us. In the mornings we live on our patios every day.
We had never imagined that anything could be as special and wonderful as sitting on our porches on Whidbey Island during June and July—and watching and hearing the birds. But we were wrong. Nuestra Casa is just as special. Except here at Nuestra Casa, we enjoy this music every day, all year long. We love it!
This is what we see and hear when we relax on our patio.
It is summer here in Mesa. And by noon it is hot! So, a little before noon, we head inside to the haven of our cool stucco home. Since we get up at 2 am, by noon it is actually our late-afternoon.
Amazingly enough, we can still hear the birds singing to us. In fact, when we head to bed it is still light outside, and our birds sing us to sleep with their lullabies.
I call Vicky my Flower Girl. It started when we first met, because her email address was lupinelady.
She loves flowers, grew them at our home on Whidbey Island, and grows them at our home in Arizona. She has made our yard here into something special--a garden of flowers, flowering cacti, and flowering bushes. It is a thing of beauty, and we sit outside on our patio about every day appreciating it. She gets compliment after compliment from people walking by or driving by on the golf course.
When we hike she is always on the look-out for flowers. She can spot them when I can't. Sometimes our hikes take a long time because she has to run over to a flower she has spotted and take a photo.
One could look out at the desert and not really perceive or see flowers. They don't seem to fit in the desert. But she sees them.
She finally realized that she had to point them out to me. I tell her I don't see them because, as the he-man that I am, I am always on the look-out for grizzlies so I can throw myself in front of her to protect her. (sometimes I'm not sure she believes me)
So, on our last trip I tried to get a shot of her every time she stopped to take a flower photo.
First, shots of the flowers that she took. She found these in about 20 hours of hiking. Amazing.
Even the Dandelions are spectacular:
She just naturally spots all of this beauty. Here are shots of the beauty I see:
....my flower girl.
For my 71st birthday celebration we headed north to the Mogollon Rim in the Coconino National Forest. Since it is June and getting hot in the desert lowlands, we wanted the cool temperatures we would find at 7000’ elevation on the rim. And we wanted the shade that the high desert plateau trees would provide.
We found the perfect spot for a celebration....and it even had a “dance floor!”
The first thing we noticed was an eerie silence, although it was not really quiet. The sound of wind blowing high above us through the tops of the pines was soothing. When we talked our voices echoed from the hills on both sides of us, and although there were no human noises, we had to be close together to hear what the other was saying. But we have NO problem being close enough to touch the other at all times.
This trip to the rim was absolutely perfect, and Dan gave me the most wonderful birthday to celebrate me and the life that we have created. Here is our blog entry for my birthday, “Vicky’s seventy-one(derful) birthday.”
We thoroughly enjoy camping in an area where we have never been before. There is a special thrill in hiking and exploring a new desert at 2-3 miles per hour where the world unfolds before us slowly. We are continually amazed at what unusual, strange, and beautiful things we find when we slow down and stop to “smell the flowers!”
And this high desert plateau did not disappoint us.
We left on our hikes as the sun was rising over the treetops. It was cool and fresh with the smell of the mountains in the air.
I discovered patches of mountain wildflowers along the rocky dirt road. What I didn’t know until we arrived back at the Turtle (i.e., our camper) was that Dan took a picture of me every time that I headed happily off the road to get a photo of my latest flower find.
Dan enjoys watching me when I am so thrilled to find a new variety of wildflowers. When we met ten years ago he started calling me “Flower Girl,” because my email was LupineLady (after my favorite children’s story Miss Rumphius, The Lupine Lady, that I have read to my children and our grandchildren countless times). Dan still calls me his “Flower Girl.”
The very first morning I found hillsides covered with tiny lupines!
Dan made some discoveries also.....hundreds of spiderwebs in the grass shining brightly in the morning sun!
One thing we didn’t expect to find out in the middle of nowhere was a porcelain toilet—but we did. Wasn't it nice for the Forest Service to provide a toilet for hikers? :)
Dan caught a ray of light illuminating me as I admire the beauty and glory that nature has given to us.
On this plateau where we were hiking there is evidence of at least two forest fires in fairly recent history. The fires appear to have been separated by many years. Most of the trees are new growth, but there were also many majestic towering pines that have survived previous fires.
Dan is in awe of this gnarled, ancient stump. This tree would have been hundreds of years old.