Saturday, July 31, 2010

A Good Day

Here's what happens when you say no to electronics:






It only took them half the summer, but they found their imaginations.  They are playing medieval times and they each set up shop.  They played for about 4 hours outside on a really hot day.  I made sure I told them how happy I was to see them play so nicely!  I also let them know I'd post their pictures so their big sisters would be happy too!

Monday, July 19, 2010

Home and posting!

Honduras was great and we had a safe trip home, but I haven't uploaded my pictures yet and I figure I'd better finish up with vacation!

The last part of our vacation was spent in the White Mountains in New Hampshire.

Psalm 90

 1Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations.

 2Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting, thou art God.


It is definitely awe inspiring to walk among the mountains.  I love to see the peaks rising all about me and look down into the valleys and rivers below.  It has always astonished me that a person could look on these beautiful manifestations of God's greatness and not believe in the creator.




While we certainly noted and enjoyed the grandeur of our surroundings we also enjoyed some much needed exercise and GORP eating!




It was really windy at the top of Mount Washington.


We hiked from the summit down to the AMC Lake of the Clouds hut.


From the road we hiked to several waterfalls and 'the Basin', more beautiful, natural wonders :-)






Thursday, July 15, 2010

Hola from Honduras!

Sorry I have not yet finished posting my pictures from our vacation and I'm on to a new adventure, but we only had 10 days between getting home from vacation and leaving for our short term missions trip to Honduras.

This is a trip Kai and I are on with our church's children's ministry, Awesome Adventure or in the case of this trip to Honduras, Adventura Asombrosa.

We came down to share the love of Jesus and the Good News of salvation with the children of Honduras. We've been to 4 schools, the hospital clinic (where we are staying), a nutrition center and a church. We've shared with about 2000 kids--thats about 1500 more than we'd expected. God has been so good.

We come home tomorrow and I hope to have a few pictures and stories posted soon!

Prayers for a safe journey are appreciated!

Dios les bendiga.

Monday, July 05, 2010

Heifer International

We enjoyed our day at Heifer International with our daughter Rebecca.  We milked goats, fed a bottle fed lamb and toured Overlook Farm’s great ‘Global Village’ which has been constructed to show us how people in other parts of the world live and work and play and eat.   I would like to say my kids were most interested by seeing the rich culture and material disparity between these cultures--but really--they mostly liked the goats!!!

Click on the title to link to Heifer’s homepage.


Watching the sheep and feeding the lamb:



At the Goat barn:











Saturday, July 03, 2010

Boston Freedom Trail and Cape Cod Bay

Our kids did  great spending the day walking and touring through Boston.  We started at the USS Constitution and made our way as far as Faneuil Hall and Quincy Market.  The kids were as interested in the USS Constitution Museum, the elegant diners at the really cool North End restaurants with the windows that open right into the streets, as they were in the various street theater groups, jelly fish, crabs and even baby lobster in the ocean!  It was fun to see them enthusiastic about so many things. Paul Revere's House

Living sculpture--if you gave a dollar, she blew a kiss--think we gave $3 or $4!
USS Cassin Young kitchen--I'm "cooking"
USS Constitution Muesuem--Sailors 'berths'
USS Constitution aka Old Ironsides


Jellyfish in the bay in Plimouth Harbor  and kids at the beach Cape Cod





Friday, July 02, 2010

Plimouth Plantation

A Blast from the Past


Located just outside of Plymouth, MA, Plimouth Plantation  is a wonderful living history site.  (Click on the title of this post to visit their website).  It does a great job taking  the visitor back to the past.  In the Wampanoag home site the interpreters, all Native Americans themselves, share with the visitor both the culture of the 1620’s tribal people as well as the assimilation of Native American culture with American pop culture--if you care to ask.  

If found myself more interested during this trip about one culture’s assimilation into another’s.  In the past I had not realized there were still native people in the northeast.  Having grown up in CT. I’d only had contact with people who might tell me, “I’m part Indian” the same way I might have shared, “I”m part Italian”  An important part of my ethnic heritage and a large part of who I am--but it was no longer  very relevant to my everyday American girl school life.  When my family traveled west in the 1960’s I saw many people of Native heritage and naturally, at 9 years old,  I was intrigued.  But modern day native cultures in modern day eastern seaboard states--I just didn’t realized they existed.  And to be honest, when I heard of the Foxwoods Casino, allowed to be built on tribal lands I really did think--oh, here are some people of Native American decent trying to cash in on a good deal.  Now however,  I see I was wrong.   There really is a people group in CT. who remember their native, cultural past and feel a loss for it.   I spoke to a Native American man last week who had a grandparent who had spent the first 6 years of his life in a Wetu (the Native American ‘wigwam’ of the Wampanoag people)right there in Massachusetts at the same time my own dad’s parents were starting their family in suburban Philadelphia.  He talked to me about the loss he felt for the way of life of his grandparents and people and he spoke about the desire and goal to keep his culture alive and thriving for future generations.


I guess, with all my thoughts recently of my own children, coming to terms with who they are and how their past and ethnic heritage will fit in with their present and future, I have a lot more interest in these types of things.  And I guess  a bit more sensitivity too.


My pictures of Plimouth Plantation are not great.  I guess I didn’t want to take pictures of the actual people, since they are real people and it’s not some kind of zoo!    The interpreters in the 1627 village, a replica of the original Plimouth, stay in character as they talk and  answer questions about their life and times.


Here is a picture of Kai checking out the dugout canoe at the Wampanoag site, the kids posing on a cannon from the fort (are you supposed to let your kids sit on the 400 year old cannon?), my family in a typical Plimouth home and the kids playing in the hands on area inside the visitor center(no problem photographing these living history interpreters). Top picture is  the colonial village from the fort--note the beautiful bay in the distance.