Friday, May 25, 2012

Better than Goslings and Foals

As much as we like our little goslings and Goldie's new foal, we received something much better recently.

On May, 15, 2012, at 12:48 p.m., we got a new grandson.  Omar Rafael Cobian is his name.  He weighed an even 7 pounds and was 20 inches long.  He was born in Salt Lake City.  Edgar and Olivia Cobian are the proud parents.  This makes grandchild number 21 for us and we are so thankful he is here and that he and his mother are healthy and doing well.

Little Omar Rafael Cobian


A more recent photo of Omar
Omar

Now there are five Cobian children.
Marcos, 3 1/2, Omar, Liliana, 9, Ammon 1 1/2, and Ruben, 7.
 How we love and miss this group.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

The Carriage Ride

In Nauvoo, there are two kinds of horse and wagon rides.  The wagon ride which goes throughout historic Nauvoo is narrated by a Sister missionary.  I have trained to do that and did my first two narrations this week.  The carriage ride goes into the outlying countryside and is narrated by the teamsters.  I have wanted to go on a carriage ride with Mark narrating, but he never knows if he'll be driving the carriage or wagon and due to my work schedule it is hard to coordinate.  Plus missionaries can't ride unless there happens to be an empty seat.  But on Saturday, May 19, we did it.  Mark was narrating the carriage ride and I was able to be a rider.
As we were getting ready, I was visiting with the folks and learned that these people were from Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.  Mark served there on his first mission from 1967-1969.  They know some people that Mark baptized at that time.    In the background are Bill and Bob pulling a carriage from an earlier ride.
Mark with Tim and Tom who are new horses here.  They are sporting new harnesses.  The driver of our carriage ride is Elder Meier from Hayden Lake, Idaho--at the right.
Mark first had to adjust the new harnesses.  Each of the horses weighs a ton and they stand 19 hands high.

Mark narrating.  It is against the rules to stand so I got this lady's head in my photo.  Mark has about a 45 minute narration that he gives.  He did a great job.
One of the stories he told was of Addison Pratt.  He was a native of New Hampshire.  He had worked on a whaling ship.  After joining the Church, he shared with the Prophet Joseph Smith some of his experiences.  He told the Prophet that he thought the people in the Pacific Islands would be interested in the Book of Mormon.  He and others were sent to the Pacific Islands as missionaries.  He left his wife and four daughters.  Before leaving he was given a blessing and told he would come back and be reunited with his family.  He served in the Pacific for five years and established the Church there.  He returned through San Francisco and traveled to the Salt Lake Valley with some of the Mormon Battalion.  When he arrived in Salt Lake, he was reunited with his wife and daughters who had gotten there four days earlier.  And that was without benefit of cell phones.  

We saw some beautiful scenery on the ride.  This may be how the land here looked before the pioneers came and drained the swamp and planted crops, built homes, and businesses.


Scenes along the way.


The equipment barn with Bill & Bob in front

The horse barn


This is a thorny honey locust tree.  The thorns are 3 to 6 inches long, very sharp and very hard.

A photo of the barns as we went by.

Mark narrating
Me with Tim and Tom
Elder Dahl, Elder Meier, Tim & Tom

Hooking up the horses for another go

Watering Tim & Tom
The wagon and carriage rides are very popular in Nauvoo.  We are getting to the busier time and there will be more rides each day.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Baby Animals

May has come and with it many May flowers and many showers.  We have had a lot of rain.  Last night we had so much thunder and lightning that it awakened us in the night several times.  Then it stops raining and is beautiful.  It all seems very changeable. 
Our closest neighbors are these Canada geese and their little ones.  There is an older batch and a younger batch of goslings at the left.



Another photo of the geese and their babies. 
 

Taken in our back yard.



I really like these geese and I know our grandchildren will also.

We have wondered what kind of tree is in front of our house.  It has been shedding cotton like a snowstorm for several days.  We get it on our car, our clothes and in our house.  We feel certain it must be a cottonwood tree.

The cotton on our sidewalk.


This is our back yard.  Luckily we don't have to mow it.  We just mow a few feet around the house.


Another view of our back yard.

Mark had a couple of things happen to him this week.  First the good.  Our draft horse, Goldie, who was left at home in Nevada, had a little filly a week or so ago. 


Goldie and Alazon
 
We appreciate Marianne and Enoch sending us photos of Alazon and Goldie.

Mark had one of his eye shots a week ago.  The person who put the clamp--speculum-- on his eye, scraped his cornea.  He was in terrible pain for several days.  After two more trips to the Dr. in Iowa City, he is doing better now.  His vision isn't completely back but it should come back when the swelling goes down. We certainly hope so.  One thing we have learned through it all is how good the people here are.  They have been so concerned and have offered to do anything to help us.  We have had so many offers, visits, prayers, phone calls, and concern.  We appreciate them so much.  We know Mark's eye will heal.

We are happy and enjoying life. 
Sunset by the Mississippi.  April, 2012
"Sunsets are so beautiful that they almost seem as if we were looking through the gates of Heaven."   John Lubbock