Granby Getaway

In addition to Logan’s first s’more this month, he also had his inaugural camping trip. Over memorial day weekend, we headed up dem der hills to Lake Granby for a weekend off-grid.

First order of business before setting up camp was to remove all the moose scat from the tent pad. Welcome to Colorado, folks!

MooseScat

GranbyCampsite

The lake was a bit dry, unfortunately but it didn’t diminish from our great views of the the mountains and some beautiful sunsets! I truly think Colorado has some of the best skies in the country!

GranbySunset

Logan had a blast camping! He slept well (other than freezing one night, thanks for the false forecasts Weather Channel), loved fishing and playing in the dirt with his tractors. Of course, Miss Priss, Lava felt it was her job to lay inside protect the tent from invaders.

 BaconFace

LavaTent

In fact, our camping trip went so well that we’re going to do it again Labor Day weekend!

FamilyPhotoOp

In the event of a bombing…Step 1: Immediately report it on social media

It’s always a bit disconcerting when you come home and see a street in your quiet neighborhood blocked off with fire trucks, police cars and crime scene tape. That’s what Noah saw as he rounded a turn headed to our house yesterday afternoon. I happened to be on the phone with him at the time and he noted that the incident was by our friends’ house and wondered if we should be concerned. I explained that our friends were at work, so as long as their house was not aflame, probably not, but they do have elderly neighbors. I was thinking that it was probably a medical emergency and hopefully not a murder. No one wants a murder in their neighborhood.

I told Noah that I was going to pull off the road and check Twitter to see if there were any news stories posted that could offer an explanation (It’s a small town, even the most mundane events make news). Whilst I was parked on the dirt shoulder/hillside of a semi-rural road, with my hazards flashing, a cop pulled up behind me. I didn’t even notice him until I caught his reflection in my side mirror as he approached my door. I rolled down the window, greeted the Man in Blue and told him that I was merely checking my phone, when he asked if everything was alright. The police officer beamed and told me I am “awesome” for pulling over to check my phone. That I am “the one person” who actually does that. He stated again that he wanted to ensure I was not broken down; I reiterated that I was just checking my phone and all was well. He again told me I was “awesome” and thanked me for pulling over. Once he left, Logan realized it was a police man and then wanted to me to follow the patrol car so he could see the flashing lights (of which there were none). May that be a lesson to you, not only is it safe to check your phone whilst parked, but you may make a policeman’s day and be told repeatedly just how “awesome” you are. 🙂

Fast forward 10 minutes, it’s my turn to drive through our neighborhood. I decided to take a slight detour to be a subtle lookey-loo with all the police activity. I did not get to see much as driving between two firetrucks made the road narrow and there was an oncoming vehicle. However, what I did see directly across the street from my friend’s house was a bomb squad truck (which, at first glance I thought was a CSI vehicle), two men in bomb-protection clothing, and the bomb-detonation robot. Okay…NOT a medical emergency! I drove around the block to get a view from the other side of the  closed off section of road, but was stopped by a policeman before I could turn out of the way onto another cross street. He informed me that, although I was not trying to get to the area that was closed off he needed me to turn around because he didn’t want me close to the “corner” when the bomb squad worked. I asked him what was going on and he said that the bomb squad was going to detonate a suspicious package. At that point I had no choice but to make a U-turn, wave at the friendly policeman and head the the 1-1/2 blocks home.

At that point I scoured Twitter for information and tweeted to local news agencies. My curiosity peaked more than anything. My nextdoor neighbor thought it was a meth lab bust until I told him what the police officer informed me. I’ll take the suspicious package over a meth lab or murder (I want our house value to increase). By the time I headed to the gym 15 minutes later all but a couple of police cars were left. I never heard a boom from the detonation. By the time our friend returned home, everyone was gone and you could not even tell an event had occurred.

Finally around 7:30 last night, a local newspaper reporter tweeted back to me, stating he was waiting for a call back from the police department (and then responded that he had found out what was amiss). He asked me if I wanted to tell him what I saw, but I didn’t see anything useful and he never called me. No big loss there.

Noah and I never expected the suspicious package to be an actual bomb, although there have been a couple of instances in recent years (2010, 2012) in our town. Noah even joked that someone probably had just set out their recyclables a day early. Turns out, the suspicious package was a unexpected, oddly wrapped, gift from a homeowner’s friend that was placed in their mailbox (full details here). Noah then quipped that this is what happens when the mail comes early (our mail typically arrives after 5:00 p.m. and the incident occured around 2:30 p.m.). I guess with all of the domestic terrorism of late, especially in CO, people are a bit on-edge and unnerved. Better safe than sorry, however.

In light of the 2012 bomb incident, the city started making use of a social networking site called “Nextdoor”, where news stories specific to your subdivision are posted and neighbors can community with each other on neighborhood issues. You’d think the city would send an a civic alert through this media, or perhaps texts. Guess not. One neighbor, other than myself, did comment on the site about the incident. Oh well, at least it was all a big misunderstanding and not something more serious.

First Snow of the Season!

In the metro area, the first snow typically falls around the middle of October. Since I moved here in 2006, that has been the case (+/- a day or two) with the exception of 2008, where our first snow did not fall until November 14th and 2010 where the first snow fell on November 9th. This year, however, the seasons first snow came about two weeks early and fell this morning! We didn’t get more than a dusting, but we are expected to get around 1″ more tonight!

In the summer our garage typically gets taken over with pet projects and Noah and decide that it needs to be cleaned out by mid-October, or the first snowfall, whichever comes first. Well, the first snow has come and my garage has a pallet of concrete sitting in the middle of the floor, plus a few of the old kitchen cabinets that need hung still. Thus, my car looked like this, this morning:

 

This tree is outside my office and looked so pretty!

 And, if you would like to keep tabs of this season’s snowfall, check here periodically.

Georgetown

Just a few shots of some of the buildings in Georgetown because I love history and architecture:

 

 

 This is the most beautiful post office!

 

Jailhouse c. 1870

On the Tracks…

This weekend we headed up the hills to Georgetown to take a ride on the Georgetown Loop Railroad. Logan loves trains but had yet to actually ride on one. Not too shabby for his first train ride to be with a coal-fueled steam engine. 🙂

Logan loved the train ride and watching the cars move along the track. The weather was pretty nice for late May, which in Colorado is pretty unpredictable. It was warm, a bit smokey (from fires in New Mexico) but got increasingly WINDY as the day progressed. By the time we left, there were 70 mph gusts blowing through the canyon!

Our excursion was also newsworthy! A fault of the wind, a small-ish pine tree (5″ diameter / 20′ tall) was uprooted and hit a passenger sitting in one of the open air cars on the head. The ride came to a very abrupt emergency stop and rumors of what happened began to pass through the cars. I think we originally heard there was a deer on the tracks, then we heard a tree fell on the train or the tracks, and finally that a tree had hit a person. It was like a one-sided version of telephone. The person who was hit, was in a car three or four ahead of ours, but by the time the train stopped, the tree was just past our car. I got a photo of it being moved, but it’s not very easy to see, so I won’t post it.

The person was not seriously injured yet when the train stopped in Silver Plume, paramedics were brought aboard and the individual was taken off on a stretcher as a precaution. We were glad we chose to ride in one of the enclosed cars.

After our ride, we had lunch at a great Euro restaurant (German food for the win!) and checked out the donkey race. Bet you didn’t know that donkey racing is the official indigenous sport of Colorado? All of the donkeys were adorned with mining or other frontier supplies:

 

Egg-Extravaganza! – Part Two and Three

Logan was not limited to one egg hunt this year, but three (or four if you count the two we had in our yards…more on that later).

Our church holds a community egg hunt each year, but one that teaches the resurrection story. Logan was pretty cranky and uncooperative during most of it. Again eggs were thrown and tantrums were had. For his sake, he was very ready for a nap and was entering meltdown stage. Pretty sure he didn’t absorb much of the lesson this year, but thank goodness the volunteers had LOTS of patience!

Also, do to the various stages of 2-year old shenanigans, I didn’t get to take any pictures. Oh well.

On Easter, we had hosted our potluck dinner/egg hunt. When we started this tradition there were only a couple of children. This year we had seven!

Because of that we held two egg hunts, a small one in the front yard just for the children with age-appropriate prizes in the eggs, and then one in the backyard for the adults. We also try to do something different with the adult hunt each year. We’ve done a treasure hunt into the open space (on a very wet and rainy Easter), special golden eggs, camouflage eggs and this year we did a giant egg

The weather was great this year, too – near 70! No chance of tracks in snow leading up to the hidden eggs!

Before all of our friends came over, Logan opened his Easter basket. Crackers, a new Veggie Tales DVD, a stuffed lamb from Gramma, and his favorite item – blueberries!

 

 Wishing you a happy Easter from our family to yours. A day to remember the Ultimate Sacrifice made for us by our Lord and Savior!

Egg-Extravaganza! – Part One

Have I mentioned how much I love living in a small town? Things are much more quaint and activities are free! The city puts on an annual Easter egg hunt. One at the lake for the older kids, and one in Old Town for the younger. This year Logan was up to the challenge, so we walked to the downtown hunt with the Feiglands (Noah was at work). There were probably 100 children (guessing), half of which were in line for the opportunity to seat on the Easter Bunny’s lap!

Logan was very excited to see the bunny – until it was actually our turn to meet him. I had to pick up Logan and carry him over to the bunny.

Shortly thereafter everyone circled around the lawn as the volunteers/city employees tossed out hundreds of eggs, packages of  animal crackers, gold fish, Rice Krispie treats, etc. It was nice that there were options offered other than candy! We were initially expecting the kids to only grab three or four eggs, but both Logan and Jocelyn filled their baskets to the brim!

And, of course, Logan had to have a two-year old meltdown during the hunt. He overturned his basket and pulled away from him. That then led to a massive scramble on my part of righting the basket and trying to find my child in a sea of other children! That is a panic I would like to never experience again. Thankfully, I found him a minute or less later, making his way to the bunny! Apparently he had regained his courage, but I was not about to reward his behavior by allowing him to see the bunny again, let alone by cutting in front of other children!

It was also 85° on the last day of March! That’s unheard of here! March is typically the snowiest month, and yet, we did not receive any measurable snow!

Since I was in single mom mode, I didn’t take a lot of photos and must rely on Larry for the one’s he took. When I get those from him, I’ll upload them here, along with the pictures I did manage to take.

The Rest of December!

Last year we drove to California for Christmas. This year we opted to stay at home. Logan was old enough to enjoy Christmas, I wanted a tree and we have been having plenty of snow so I was very hopeful for another white Christmas.

Instead of us going to see Gramma, Grampap, Aunt Gretna and the dogs, they came to see us (really, just Logan).

gma-cook
Helping Gramma make cookies

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Reading books with Aunt Gretna

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Hanging out with Grampap on Christmas Eve

The trend for snow continued, and three days before Christmas we received 24-inches of fluffy white powder! We were all ecstatic for the snow (except for maybe Noah, who helped his brother plow and shovel). Gretna was able to experience her first white Christmas. We all enjoyed playing in the snow, and Logan helped Gretna and me build a snowman in the cul-de-sac, a dangerous location. The snowman had many close calls with Death in the forms of: neighbor’s minivan getting stuck, the mail truck, the garbage truck, and a neighbor’s cheep turning donuts. We eventually set cones around it until the weather warmed up enough where he was already starting to melt away.

To top off the snowfall, we even received another 1/2-inch on Christmas Eve!

Logan was not overly excited with opening gifts on Christmas morning. He had already been up for a while, had grown quite cranky and was ready for a nap. Alas, he enjoyed his presents after he had taken a morning siesta.

It was a great Christmas with all of the snow and family.