Tuesday, December 17, 2013

One Month Older and Wiser Too!

Here are some more baby photos. Paul isn't doing any fancy tricks yet. He insists on trying to hold his head up all by himself, which means he ends up doing a little bobble head before face-planting on my shoulder. He's also getting much better at sleeping at night, which is really more exciting to me than anyone else. Since we have no exciting stories to tell, instead we'll share some pictures of Paul's newly acquired chubby cheeks.

Paul plays on his blanket on the floor. By play, I mean kicking and punching the air.

This is the same outfit Paul wore home from the hospital that he was drowning in a month ago.

Thug Life.

Mamma and baby snugglin'

My faux-pro photos


Paul has already mastered the art of stylistically staring off into the distance instead of at the camera.


Thursday, November 21, 2013

New Arrival

Paul Albert Phillips was born in the evening of Thursday November 14. He came home on the afternoon of Saturday November 16.

Dad is slightly sleep deprived and back at work, Mom is very sore and enjoying time at home. Grandma Jamie and Pa Duane have been a great help changing diapers and making meals so I don't have to get up and hobble around trying to get too many things done.

Now our little sweetie is a week old, here are a few pictures from his first week of life:
First family photo in the Labor and Delivery room.

Brand new, 6 lbs 15 oz.

Daddy gets to hold baby Paul for the first time.

We didn't want him to get cold, so we tried to put him in pajamas. They were too big.

Mommy and baby Paul resting up in the Hospital bed.

Getting ready to go home! This outfit was also too big.

Two peas in a pod! Grandpa and Paul take a Sunday nap.
Grandma and Grandpa with Grandbaby #19

Pa Duane, Grandma Jamie, Mom, Dad, and Paul.

Our happy little family.

What is he so scared of? Probably the camera flash.

Thank you Sarah Allred for the beautiful blanket, Paul loves it. And thanks for the rattle cousin Katie!     

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Trunk-or-Treat

I certainly hope everyone had a great Halloween, we did! On Halloween we had goodies and friends and on Saturday a ward party and trunk-or-treat. Tragically, we still have too much candy leftover. I think Lee used Mad Radagan too effectively to scare the kids. (Mad Rad is the giant creepy rat who lives in our shed most of the time.) We went with pretty simple costumes this year, but hopefully you can figure them out. Now it's time to look forward to all the fun and changes November will bring!

Yes, it is a very impressively decorated trunk.

Mad Rad is creeping up behind me. Shudder.

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Some Music and Spoken Word

As some of my readers may be aware, last month Lee and I performed in a Stake Choir fireside. We are please to share this performance with you through the magic of youtube! It's a good Sunday listen, you might enjoy the music and I certainly hope you appreciate the message.
Please keep in mind this is an amateur ensemble, not a professional choir, so cut us some slack for not being perfect! You will find the whole production at the following link:

Cantata: Come Unto Christ

Enjoy!

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Baby Bump

Having been harassed for maternity photos by no small number of friends and family members, we decided to take some. They are not professional by any means, but between Lee's photography and my photo editing, they turned out okay. I hope you are inspired by my rotundity.





There you go! It's nice to know that I've got less than a month to continue feeling like an ever inflating balloon. Then I can start feeling like a stretched out, popped balloon! I've mostly survived this past little while by doing crafty sewing projects. Here are the fruits of my labors:

BEHOLD! A collection of burp cloths, a blanket, and a car seat cover. Next I think I shall fashion myself a burp cloth poncho, just to be on the safe side.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

This is Halloween!

I love Halloween. I mean REALLY love Halloween. And, I flatter myself, I really know how to get into the spirit of the holiday and have fun with it all October long. Here are a few activities that might enrich your Halloween experience this year:

1. Read some classic horror stories

Thanks to project Gutenberg, all the old classics can be downloaded and read for FREE! A few that I recommend for your spooky readings this year:

A Picture of Dorian Gray By: Oscar Wilde
The Curious Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde By: Robert Louis Stevenson
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow By: Washington Irving
The Phantom of the Opera By: Gaston Leroux
Frankenstein By: Mary Shelley
Dracula By: Brahms Stoker
Any given volume of work by Edgar Allen Poe (I downloaded one called The Raven ed., Vol. 2 as it contained some of his most recognized works)

Most of these classic stories are quite short, Sleepy Hollow could easily be read in an afternoon. And they aren't so scary that you couldn't read them before you go to bed!

If you have a library card, you have some more free options. You could pick up a Stephen King or any other modern classic. Not long ago I read Carrie (Stephen King) and, if I'm lucky, my hold on The Shining will be up before Halloween.

2. Halloween movies

For the whole family, I recommend The Nightmare Before Christmas, Coraline, and Hocus Pocus, The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad, and Disney's Halloween Treat. You can rent, buy or borrow most of these, but you can also follow the links for the last two and watch them on youtube!

If you are more into mild-moderate scares for grown ups, Alfred Hitchcock is the way to go: Psycho, The Birds, Dial 'M' for Murder, and Vertigo, are all great. If you like zombie flicks, the 1968 controversial classic Night of the Living Dead is pretty great. It is also in the public domain, so you can watch for free. It's the granddaddy of zombie flicks and has far less gore and profanity than it's descendants. What about The Haunting? (not the 1990's crapfest, I mean the REAL one.)

If you want to just laugh, there are some great B-movie horror flicks that will fill your heart with joy...and confusion. Plan 9 From Outer Space, Troll 2,  and The Wickerman I have pushed for before and I will continue to encourage you to watch these movies.

If you are looking to be scared out of your pants, I am not sure I can help you. It's hard to be pee-your-pants-don't-go-alone-to-the-bathroom-to-change-em  scared by PG-13, and that is where the vast majority of my experience lies. I suggest you ask someone who likes still being scared after the movie is over, I am not one of those people.

3. Scary Listenings

Music to set the mood is a must! Just pop onto Pandora and create a Halloween playlist. A lot of great stuff will come up! "Thriller," "The Ghostbusters Theme," "Witchy Woman," "The Addams Family," "The Monster Mash," "Witchcraft," "I Put a Spell on You," and so many other songs that only crop up this time of year. Well, Monster Mash is horrible, but the rest are great! I also recommend you listen to some bits from Sweeney Todd (or just listen to the whole thing, it's great music!) "Night on Bald Mountain," and no Halloween is complete without Bach's "Toccata and Fugue in D minor"! If you don't know which piece that is, it's the one you know.

Lee introduced me to another great listen: Three Skeleton Key, an old time radio program starring Vincent Price. It's fairly kid friendly, runs about 30 minutes, and can be found by following the link above. It did leave me kind of humming the song from The Great Mouse Detective for more than one reason, but it's a fun listen. (you don't have to download it, there is a streaming option that works great on the upper right side of the page.)

Please share with me what your Halloween celebrations might include so I can expand mine as well. I can't wait to get my costume ready so I can show off my creativity and how exceedingly rotund I am.




Saturday, September 21, 2013

Desert Adventures!

This weekend we visited the Sonoran Desert Museum. It's kind of a zoo and a botanical garden and a museum rolled into one. There were native desert animals in habitats, but you might run into wild life just out and about because, well, you are in the middle of the Sonoran Desert.

We started seeing wild animals right away! Actually, we started observing these critters before we even left our apartment. Look what we found right next to our apartment building:

Don't worry. We were about to climb in the car and drive off if it became hostile.
We have more unusual neighbors than we originally thought. Let's add Mr. Javalina to the list that includes dozens of hares and a pack of coyotes that howl in the middle of the night.

Here are some of the fun exhibits we saw:

A fox in her hidey-hole. And me.

Lee and the Black Bear.

Can you spot the coolest snake you've ever seen? He's camouflaged pretty well!
There was a lovely humming bird habitat. From certain angles his neck looks red, other angles it looks black.

Taking a rest on a giant tortoise.

It was much easier to climb in these shell things as a child...

The Aviary had some very friendly birds!

This little guy let us get really close.

A huge falcon we got to "interact" with.

Lee, a docent, and an American Kestrel (sparrow hawk)

No glass betwixt me and this diamond back! I am told we were "out of striking distance" though.
We'll take you exploring this fun little spot if you come visit us! You might even get to see some of these fantastic specimens running about on their own. I'm hoping I don't run into Mr. 3 foot Diamond Back any where but the Sonoran Desert Museum.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Disney Animals

Disney princesses get a lot of credit for their inexplicable ability to communicate with forest critters and vermin. Snow White won over birds, deer, tortoises, and squirrels with her squirrely little voice; Sleeping Beauty charmed whole flocks, even got an owl to dance with her; Cinderella had a bunch of rats...mice...probably lice as well. But, with the exception of Jasmine, the critters that befriend the heroine are lame sauce compared to the villain's animal sidekicks.

Iago the parrot can talk, to impressions, and make jokes. Maleficent's raven is crafty enough to find Sleeping Beauty when hordes of monsters and magic fail. I'd take that raven over all those chirping nitwits any day!

Ariel had a chubby flounder fish, Ursula got two creep-tacular eels. Flotsam and Jetsam could eat Sebastian, Flounder, and Scuttle for breakfast!

Though, honestly, the villains of The Rescuers films have the most awesome evil sidekicks. Madame Medusa has TWO GARGANTUAN ALLIGATORS. Alligators that do her bidding. I cannot even fathom that level of awesome!

However cool the alligators are, the poacher from Rescuers Down Under has the most hilariously crafty and disloyal monitor lizard in the universe. I would become a Disney villain if it meant I could hang out with Joanna the Goanna. She is the best animal character ever created.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Arizonian Labor Day

We spent our Labor Day at The Kitt Peak National Observatory. I don't know if you know this, but Astronomy is kind of a big deal down here. Tucson has city ordinances to limit light pollution, there aren't really street lights...yeah. Kitt Peak is a bit of a drive west of Tucson, but it was worth it to be at a high enough elevation to be out of the heat. Only 70 degrees! The National Observatory is a couple dozen large telescopes on a mountain top on a reservation. Apparently the local tribe was persuaded that the best way to honor the heavens was to built an observatory on their sacred tribal land. We got a guided tour of the solar telescope, and we walked ourselves around the 4 meter telescope, the largest on on the mountain. We enjoyed the scenery and the visitors center. Sadly, it was cloudy so none of the telescopes were being used. It would have been fun to see astronomers in their natural habitat! We took a few snapshots, ate all the snacks out of our cooler bag, and headed home. Nice way to spend a morning/afternoon.

You can see several domes in the distance, each one an enormous telescope.

Lee and the largest telescope. The 4 meter measurement refers to the size of the lens in the dome.

An awesome view of the "Belly Button of the World."
The solar telescope. That angled ramp is only the top half of the shaft, it's mostly underground. It has a big track in it so the lens can be adjusted. It looks like the beginning of the worlds largest, scariest roller coaster. For giants.
Sorry, no profile shots. I'll let you guess how grossly huge this growth on my abdomen has become. Suffice it to say, bending over is the worst and I'm really starting to waddle now.

Friday, August 23, 2013

A Break from Summer

Today we went hiking. You might be thinking "are you crazy? Isn't it a bajillion degrees there?!" Yes it is. In Tucson it is a million degrees, but in the Catalina mountains it is significantly cooler. In fact, our car thermometer claims the temperature to have gotten as low as FIFTY TWO DEGREES at the summit of Mount Lemon. It was Heavenly! It's all pine trees up there, we even stumbled upon a ski resort! Well, a single chair lift and one restaurant (no public bathrooms, those monsters.) It takes about an hour to drive from our house to the tippy tops of the mountains where it is so pleasantly cool, but I might insist we do it fairly frequently.

Since you wouldn't believe me if there were no pictures, here are a few lovely shots of our short hike. It's a good thing we found a short easy one, baby belly is starting to be a torment to my back!




Monday, July 29, 2013

Samoa Trip: Part III



Here we go again!

On Tuesday we went with the whole group around to the back of the island and saw some beautiful beaches and waterfalls. We took a mountain road that brought us this stunning view:
Banana, Coconut, Taro, and Papaya as far as the eye can see.

Lee amongst the mountain peaks.

We also stopped at Sopoaga waterfall. There was a lovely garden there with some traditional Samoan tools, instruments, and structures; and of course there was the amazing waterfall itself.
Sopoaga waterfall

Here's Lee, ready to scrape out a coconut.

I am ready to rock on this ornately carved percussion instrument.
We saw some loverly beaches on the other side of the island:
Mum tests the white sand with bare feet.

we pose with one of Samoa's smaller islands.
We stopped at Sauniatu, a church owned village where we were treated to a magnificent feast and a swim in the beautiful pool. This is the place David O. McKay once declared the most beautiful on earth, resembling the garden of Eden. Though the village itself is pretty ordinary, the waterfall and pool are stunning.



Standing right in the waterfall with Elder Wilson.




On our way back to the hotel, we caught some fabulous sunsets off the beach!



Wednesday morning we wanted to do a temple session, but the temple was so busy we couldn't get into one! Instead, my mom and I did initiatory while my dad and Lee chatted with some of the temple workers. Pops found a sister he had served with on his mission. Small world!

That afternoon, we visited the Robert Louis Stevenson Museum. Robert Louis Stevenson--author of Treasure Island, Kidnapped, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde--lived the last part of his life in Samoa with his family. He built a mansion on the hill and a substantial plantation. His wife, Fanny, introduced the cocoa bean to Samoa (now a major export) and Stevenson was very well respected by the people of Samoa. They called him Tusitala or storyteller. In addition to a lovely tour, our guide, Margaret, sang for us a rendition of Stevenson's Requiem. Samoans still sing it today as a mourning song. Stevenson is buried at the top of the mountain, having been carried there by an honor guard of chiefs. We wanted to hike up to his tomb, but the dirt trail was muddy and completely impassable due to the heavy rainfalls. Maybe next time!

Villa Vailima: The Stevenson Mansion.
Margaret, Claire, and Lee

Lee and the Lion we found in the museum. It was like that when we found it, i swear!

The never used fireplace that the Stevenson's built. Why? I don't know

Lee rocks on the old piano, RLS looks on disapprovingly.

We decided that in order to see everything we wanted to, we couldn't just depend on taxi drivers (though most of those guys were pretty nice) we got a rental car. Samoa has, since 2009, driven on the left side of the road. I certainly wasn't going to volunteer to drive at any point on this trip, but my mom decided she could handle it. The rest of us just back seat drove. A lot.

We got an early start Thursday so we could see Luatuanu'u, an area where my Dad served. There we saw the waterfall and pool the missionaries used to bath in--not swim of course--and met some people who remembered from their childhood that little Palagi who boxed with the branch president.
The legendary waterfall of Luatuanu'u 
Elder Burnett poses with the daughter of the branch president he lived with.


We also stopped at Solo Solo, home to one of Samoa's black sand beaches. There isn't much left of the beach now, but we collect some black sand as a souvenir.
Lee at Solo Solo
We stopped off at another little waterfall, just for a few pictures:
This is just off the side of the road. NBD. 
Just have to prove I was there!
Then we headed for the To Sua Ocean Trench. The trench is really two craters connected by a large cave. The trench is filled with water from the ocean, you can feel the current pulling in and out as you swim in this stunning spot. It was low tide, so no diving! Lee was more disappointed by this than I was.
This is a real, actual place

Be careful on the gigantor ladder. Slightly slippery.


Lee paddles off towards the tunnel connecting the two craters.

We met up with the tour group at a small resort on the back side of the island. The place had been hard hit by several tropical storms, but the beaches were lovely!
Lee at the Virgin Cove Resort
We continued round, now having seen almost the whole island, and made one last stop before heading to our hotel: feeding sea turtles at the Malua Turtle Preserve. It was just a little pond for turtles to live in, safe from predators and poachers, and they swarmed like crazy to eat our bread!

Watching this little guy struggle for a chunk just out of reach is truly adorable:

We headed back to our hotel to rest up and get ready for another big feast, this one accompanied by a floor show. If you've never seen Fire Dancing, you don't want to miss out on this:
We spent Friday, our last day in Samoa, picking up the other little items we'd missed out on. We visited the Apia fish market, I am so glad it was open air or the smell might have been quite terrible!
Too brightly colored to eat. 
There should be a sign: Don't Kiss the Eels
The only sharks we saw on our trip were on dry land.
We also visited the Piula Cave Pool. The local kids just use it as a swimming hole, but the really neat part is the cave. It goes back about 20 feet, all full of water. There is also an underwater tunnel leading to another cave behind it, but I was far to chicken to swim in an underwater tunnel of unknown length in pitch black darkness to a cave that may or may not exist. We couldn't really get photos inside the cave--too dark, too wet!--so you'll have to be satisfied with pictures of the mouth of the cave. And a short video of Lee doing what the natives do--jumping off the cave into the pool!
Piula  Cave Pool
We're ready for some swimmin'!

Here are a few other assorted shots of our excursion in Apia:

Mum and the clock tower in downtown Apia

My father at the Museum of Samoa.

Claire and Lee at the Museum of Samoa

The old fogies with a traditional fale, the kid my father claims to have lived in.

Lee and Pops with a large official looking seal at a government building.
And thus concludes our Samoan adventure! We hoped on a plane early Saturday morning (July 13th) and found ourselves in Honolulu early Friday morning (July 12th). Yes, it's very confusing.

We spent our day in Hawaii at Pearl Harbor looking at monuments, battleships, and submarines:

Lee mans the controls of the USS Bowfin

The USS Arizona Monument

Lee, Thing 1, and Thing 2 prepare to board the USS Missouri

Here I am armed with the big guns of the USS Missouri
We arrived back in Salt Lake Saturday morning, exhausted, stinky, and ready for a little vacation from vacationing. Thanks for reading, hope you enjoyed our adventures!

Next post we'll tell you all about Tucson and how we've been enjoying a nice, hot, Arizona summer and monsoon season!