
To get ready for BYU Football Season I made this poster!

This chance meeting seemed to make all of Savannah's nervousness melt away.  I'm grateful the kids have good friends, I'm always reminded at times like these what an influence they have on my kids' lives.
Heather is enjoying her class.  She tells me her teacher yells a lot but I think she is a good teacher.  Heather told me she has a lot of "girlie girls" in her class.  She doesn't care much for them and so chooses to play with the boys.  She asked if that was OK, I informed her that it was.  The second week of school, Heather celebrated her Un-Birthday.  She will be off track when it is her real birthday so she gets to celebrate at the halfway point.  She got to take treats, make a poster, (pictured here, we had it printed out poster size) and take things that told about her.  I don't think it is quite as exciting as an actual birthday but it was still fun.


.  The much anticipated finale of the parade is the big fire truck that sprays all the kids as they follow it down the street.  I know Luke really looks forward to that part.
  It is always fun to get together with so much family.  There is usually about 40 kids and about that many adults as well.  It is really nice of my cousin to host this every year.  The annual volleyball game  of Yardleys vs. in-laws was held in the backyard.  The in-laws like to talk themselves up but we manage to beat them--most of the time.  There were many more games of volleyball throughout the evening.  Luke had a lot of fun playing and got quite good at serving.  As night fell the fireworks began.  The city puts on quite a show and they are shot off from the park just down the road from my cousins so they are quite close.  Then we did fireworks in the backyard.  Luke and his cousin Jacob got to light them and they had a blast.  Matthew and Savannah loved the sparklers, I think this is the first year Matthew has done sparklers.  It was an eventful and great day.  There's no better way to celebrate our state's heritage by spending it with part of your own heritage.
my sister, Melinda, and her husband, Mark, and my cousin, Alison, and her husband, Jim.  We went on the trails up behind their house and eventually came to the top of a mountain peak where we could look out over the whole valley.  James and I had a great time doing this.  It was so beautiful up in those mountains.  I gave everyone a scare when I revved my four wheeler up the side of a hill only to realize too late that the other side of the hill was a drop-off.  I'm sure the look on my face was quite startling but it all ended well.  I landed the jump and continued on after waiting for my stomach to come out of my throat.
I don't know if they thought this was fun but it was a good experience for them.  Luke also got to ride the four wheeler down at the farm.  He is insisting we get one now.  I got to tell my kids the story of how we got the first four wheeler down there.  When I was in sixth grade my dad promised us that if one of us (me, Richard or Ronald) won the spelling bee he would buy a four wheeler.  Richard and Ronald wanted that four wheeler so badly they would come to my house every night and we would practice.  After the first round and they were placed in the B & C groups (you have to be in the A group to win overall) they would come every night and continue to practice--quizzing me.  As luck 
would have it, I did win that spelling bee but my dad never got around to buying the four wheeler until I was in college.  My kids heard a lot of fun stories about how we grew up this trip because we took them through the house we grew up in.  I think we were all surprised at how small it seemed with no furniture or people in it.  Now my kids have a reference point when I say things like  "When I grew up. . ."