Jim and Bonny

Friday, May 29, 2009

Snoqualmie Falls May 29, 2009

The Rhododendrons were blooming everywhere!

This was taken at the top of the falls.

I think this may be one view of the falls that I haven't put on the blog. ha!
The mountain snows are melting and the water coming over the falls is snow white and the river is very high.
The Salish Lodge is at the top of the falls.

In the evening the sun it shining directly on the falls and the mist creates a rainbow.
It is interesting how the rainbow stops where the mist stops. If you look closely you will see a double rainbow!

The rainbow looks as if it goes right into the river. In reality it is VERY bright and you can see each color distinctly.

An awesome sight!

I will probably never get tired of taking pictures of the falls so stay tuned for more. ( :
(important to click on pictures to enlarge for a great view!!!)

Mother's Day 2009

My Mom's sister Joy with her daughter Debe

Monday, May 11, 2009

Happy Mother's Day

I want to share a very clever greeting that I received today!
I love it! XXOO to Olivia and Gavin!!
(Enlarge this picture and you can see what it say! )

Sunday, May 10, 2009

One week ago I was in CT

At that time the trees were just budding. Look at it today!
I can't believe it!
A Mother's Day hike on the Plank Walk.

This hike included a cave! It looks like Connor is loving it!!



Our trip to Connecticut - April 2009

On April 10th we flew from Seattle to Hartford, CT.
We had a lay over at Dulles in Washington DC and you will not believe who we ran into!
( :

Jodi and Larry's yard is filled with big boulders. It is a great play ground!

Awesome!!

Easter Sunday


We had gorgeous weather! 20 degrees above normal.

Family photo time!

Pa made a specially requested "Replica Cabinet" for Christen. It holds her tea set that is a replica of Martha Washington's tea set. It is made to match her bedroom set. It was fun to deliver it in person!

After doing some closet organizers the first part of the week.......Thursday we took a trip to Mystic Seaport. It is a preserved whaling village from the 1800's that reminds tourists of Connecticut's maritime heritage. It reminded us of Williamsburg. Several impressive historic ships still float in Mystic's harbor.
We all had a great day there in the sunshine.

There is lots of history in CT. Did you know that CT is the 3rd smallest state and can fit into Alaska 117 times!? The Bradley-Smith Co in New Haven, CT made the worlds first lollipop. It was named after a racehorse named Lolly Pop. These are people that were from CT.........Mark Twain, Charles Henry Dow (Dow Jones), Benedict Arnold, Nathan Hale, Katharine Hepburn, Paul Newman, Noah Webster (Webster Dictionary), Eli Whitney. You see Connor just did his Float project on CT so I learned all kinds of things from him!!!



C & C got to run a printing press like they used in the 1800's!
A lot of sayings we use originated here. They had a big case that held the letters that they used to set type. They put the capital letters in the top part of the case and the small letters in the lower part of the case, hence the term upper case and lower case. As you see Connor printing on this machine......some of the impressions did not always come out clear, hence the term good or bad impression. When the letters became mixed up............we get the term out of sorts.






Christen & Pa chose to take a carriage ride.......

I think this horse is looking for a treat!

While Connor chose to build a ship!
All kinds of fun!

A large anchor at the gate!

On our return we stopped at Hammonasset State Park that is a couple of exits from Guilford.
How handy is that!!
This is the shore of CT and one can see Long Island across the sound.
One part of the shore has a boardwalk and another section has a beach.

Then there is a section with lots of rocks to climb on!!
The shadows were getting long by the time we arrived here.

What a great ending to our day!!

Boston, MA

We spent one day in Boston walking the Freedom Trail.
We followed the red brick trail for 2 1/2 miles as it winds its way back into history along a route traveled by Puritans, Patriots, and generations since. Each era tried to establish, reform, or interpret its own notions of freedom. In trekking the Freedom Trail, one can visualize the scenes and hear the sounds of those times. Imagine the rich tones of church bells chiming, pealing, or tolling to muster Bostonians to worship or to fight fires, to witness executions or to attend funerals, to hear stirring Revolutionary oratory or to celebrate peace or simply to mark the time of day. Today's Freedom Trail has few traces of Puritan Boston; only its old burial grounds and it labyrinth of narrow, crooked streets remain.

Jodi, Larry, Connor & Christen in front of the Paul Revere Statue and the Old North Church in the background.

Jodi in front of Paul Revere's original home.

Paul Revere owned this house in North Square from 1770 to 1800. He lived there during his active involvement in the American Revolution. The house, built in 1680, is the only wooden structure surviving from the 17th century Boston. It was 90 years old when Revere moved her with his family. His 16 children were all born here.

In 1773 Revere left this house to go to the Boston Tea Party. Then on April 18th, 1775, Paul Revere, a Boston silversmith, left his North Square home, slipped out of the city in a row-boat, borrowed a horse in Charleston, and began his famous midnight ride. His mission: to warn Samuel Adams and John Hancock in Lexington that British troops were marching from Boston to arrest them and to seize munitions hidden in Concord.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow memorialized Old North's role at the start of the Revolutionary War in his poem that we all memorized as kids! On the night of April 18th, 1775, sexton Robert Newman hung two lanterns in the steeple to warn Charlestown patriots of the advance of British soldiers.

Paul Revere's Ride
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Listen my children and you shall hear Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere,On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-five;Hardly a man is now aliveWho remembers that famous day and year.
He said to his friend, "If the British march By land or sea from the town to-night, Hang a lantern aloft in the belfry arch Of the North Church tower as a signal light,--One if by land, and two if by sea;And I on the opposite shore will be, Ready to ride and spread the alarmThrough every Middlesex village and farm, For the country folk to be up and to arm."

As you know the poem continues.......it is amazing to think that we stood in the place where this took place.

Granny, Pa, Connor & Christen
The Old North Church was so awesome! In addition to the role it played in Paul Revere's ride, Christ Church or the Old North is notable for being Boston's oldest surviving religious structure. Box pews line the Old North Church, their high sides retaining the heat from foot-warmers filled with hot bricks or coals. It still is an active Episcopal Church.

The extremely old cemeteries were so interesting!!

Bunker Hill Monument, built between 1825 and 1843, marks the site of the bloody,
American Battle of Marathon."

Jodi and Connor by the Bunker Hill Monument.
The 6,700-ton 221-foot monument is 30 feet wide at the base, tapering to 15 feet near the apex. Inside, 294 spiral steps ascend to an arched chamber commanding panoramic views of the city through four small windows. Larry, Jodi and Connor were the only ones with the courage to make the trip to the top of the monument. ( :
We toured the Charleston Navy Yard, home of the USS Constitution, the oldest commissioned warship afloat in the world. Built of live oak, the ship was the strongest, heaviest, and fastest of its day. The name "Old Ironsides" described how cannonballs seemed to bounce off her hull. Her 24-pound long guns had a range of 1,200 yards. The Constitution carried 36 sails towering to 220 feet above deck, almost an acre of canvas on three masts and a 160-foot bowsprint of Maine pine. The crew of about 450 included 55 marines and 30 boys. The boys carried gun powder to the cannons.
Each 4th of July, the frigate ceremonially turns around in the harbor, exchanging artillery salutes en route with the Castle Island fort and with other vessels. I remember seeing this on the news last year. I will watch for it again. What an awesome sight that must be!!


Boston was a beautiful, clean city. I would love to go back for a longer stay.

We finished out day with dinner at the official "Cheers" restaurant.
Fun!

Thimble Islands in Guilford

We went on a brief cruise of the Thimble Islands. The official crusie hadn't opened yet.
There are 30 islands. People have homes on these islands, most with no water or power. The go out there by water taxi and spend the day. What a neat place!



I think I put the wrong picture on but one of these islands is completely covered with water at high tide and all you see is the home sticking out of the water.
It is just gorgeous our here. When the cruise is running it goes 1 mile out around the light house. We must go back!!


This store was on the way to the Guilford Shore. It reminds me of Short Pump in VA!!

Connor & Christen on their scooters on the Guilford Green!

Erin Turner was in CT on business and spent the night. It was great to see her and good for Jodi to see a friend!!

There are alot of interesting store, churches etc. surrounding the Guilford Green.
Interesting Hardware store!

Everywhere you look you will see homes, churches and businesses with a colored door.
I found this one interesting!! ( : Now I know why the Backes home is blue with a burgundy colored door. The while house across the street from them has a bright yellow door.
For some reason I don't have a photo of Cox School where C & C attend. It is probably because I was so interested in this story that I forgot to take one. As we drove to the school we were on "Three Mile Course" and then turned onto "Dunk Rock" road. It got its name from the days of witchcraft. They would tie a rock to the witch and if she sunk she was not a witch and if she floated she was a witch. Hence the name Dunk Rock. I love that story!

This is the winding road to 142 Denison Drive!
A gorgeous drive!
Beware if you get car sick!! ( :
By the time I was ready to leave the dogwood in the front yard was in bloom.
So we had to read the story of the Dogwood!

Do google it and read it if you don't know the story!
It was sad to leave! We hope to see these trees in the fall.........the color has to be phenomenal!
Thank you to the Backi for a wonderful stay in CT!
We miss you all!
Love, Granny & Pa