Today is an A.A. Milne day, it truly feels like Winnie the Pooh and
the Blustery Day! A good day for staying in and working on the blog!!
Great week! Moving forward in the work and learning a lot,
always learning a lot! Our family had some significant Birthdays to celebrate
last week. Michael our youngest turned 31 on Monday the 14th and
Bill’s mother had her birthday on the 17th ; let’s just say she
graciously earned every year of her life! Even more mind boggling however is
the fact that my own mother was born 100 years ago this past Monday also on
Oct. 14th. She passed away 32 years ago and would probably not be
here today regardless but just the thought that one generation back from myself
could possibly have begun 100 years ago is kind of sobering!
On Monday to commemorate these Birthdays, well mostly
because it was P-day, we visited the museum in Bristol which is the SS Great
Britain. It is a huge iron side ship that was built in about 1843. It was very
innovative for its time. It was a passenger Steam Ship with a single screw propeller instead of a wheel. It sailed from Liverpool to NYC in 14 days. It was the first iron steamer to cross the Atlantic. Voyages to the
US did not work out as well as they planned so it was refitted and turned into
a Windjammer and made many voyages from Liverpool to Australia during the
Australian gold rush. In all before it
was purposely retired in a deserted bay in the Falkland Islands it had sailed
over a million miles. In 1970 it was recovered and towed home to Bristol where
it had been built. This part of the story is amazing to me, they towed her on a
barge until they got to the mouth of the Avon River and then they sealed her
hull so she could sail up the river via tug boats to her final resting place.
| Avon River at high tide |
| Avon River at low tide |
Now the Avon River is
a tidal river, I am totally fascinated by this phenomena. It means that the
river fills and empties twice every day with high and low tied. The whole
excursion had to wait for spring tide when the river could support the whole
operation. Many people gathered on the cliffs, suspension bridge and banks to
watch her come home. Brother Evans remembers watching it as a youngster. Wow!
It is very well restored and it is actually in dry
dock though they have made it look like it is still in the water. To keep the
hull from further deterioration they keep fans blowing to maintain a humidity
much like the “Arizona desert”. Now we know where to go when we get homesick!
| S S Great Britan |
| Dry Dock |
| sleeping quarters |
Monday night we just had FHE with the two of us. We did get
some SKYPE calls from family members, the birthday boy, Lindsey and Uncle Dan, so
it was a nice evening!
Tuesday was a long day… We did have some appointments in the
evening but not during the day. We do read and study our institute lesson and
plan and try to make appointments but would much rather be busy than not!
When I taught Kindergarten I used to teach patterns, reading
readiness. Well last week here in Bristol would be a perfect week to illustrate
that to the children: rain one day, sun the next, rainy day, sunny, rainy
sunny! If this pattern maintains I will be fine this winter!
Wednesday District meeting and YSA Dinner. Busy day, good
day. Dinner was an English Fry up, breakfast for dinner! Very English! Very
fun! Toast, Bacon (more like Canadian bacon), sausage, potato ‘waffles’,
scrambled eggs, mushrooms and tomatoes! Of course served with brown sauce and
red sauce (catsup) and ‘squash’ to drink.
Thursday we got to drive out to Taunton for some mission
business and it was one of those wonderful Sunny days. Except for the
interesting way our Sat Nav brought us back to the Stake Center it was an
enjoyable trip. It a few weeks we will be attending Ward Conference at that
chapel so we are glad we know how to get there now.
Institute was great. There was a sweet feeling in our little
class and teaching the Book of Mormon is the best. After classes the activity
was: World Food Night. The YSA members brought food from around the world,
either from ancestral origins or missions etc. It was great fun. We had a hard
time coming up with something that is uniquely American. Most of our food comes
from some other nation since we are a ‘melting pot’. With some coaching from
Mimi and Lindsey we decided that Corn bread was pretty American. After all the Native
Americans taught the Pilgrims how to grow and use corn! We also found some
British made Root Beer. It is really hard to find it over here unless you pay
an arm and a leg. Both were big hits! Many had not tasted either before and
some were really excited about the Root Beer!
We ended the evening with a special YSA leadership meeting
with President Webb of the Stake Presidency. It was a very inspiring meeting
with much good council given. These Young leaders are marvelous people,
certainly the church leaders for a coming important time!
| 3 members of YSA Council Presidency and President Webb (he is a firefighter!) |
Friday we drove to the Visitors center and mission office
for Senior Couple’s meetings all day Saturday, including a talk from President Millar.
The trip was enjoyable. It is a lot of driving and the traffic as you get
closer to London does teach patience. We were able to just make it to the
distribution center 5 minutes before closing Friday night so we could pick up
the things we needed and find most of the items on the list that came from the
missionaries in our district! Whew!
The meetings with the other senior couples and President
Millar were very helpful and up lifting! We returned home with time to relax a
little Saturday night.
Sunday was a very busy day. We left about 8 am to drive
to the Bath Ward to meet with their PEC. They meet in a former Methodist
church. It is quite unique! There are some lovely people in that ward and they
are having great success with missionary work so it is growing fast. The Bishop
had served a mission in Escondido CA in 1982, that was the same time we lived
in Vista. Small world!
There are a lot of Young Single Adults that are active and
we got to meet them and get a list of others that we need to start visiting. We
felt such a good supportive feeling from all the members and leaders that we
met. There is a lot to do but it is such a good feeling when we are moving
forward!
Last evening we had two YSA council meetings and FHE. A fun
moment in the evening was when all of us, YSA Presidency brother Evans and
ourselves, were watching a ‘Prezi’ (like power point) presentation from the
Digital zone and Uncle John called on SKYPE. He was a little surprised when he
was greeted by so many happy faces!
Hannah has been sick so we have not seen her for a week. We
are having FHE here tonight with Georgia and Rebecca the University of Bristol
students that we mentioned before. They want to talk about families; that is a
good subject!!
I am ready to start listening to the Conference talks over
again. I get so inspired when I hear these words from the leaders of this
glorious church. A couple of thoughts I would like to leave with you come from
President Monson. I loved when he used the term: “The Heavenly virtue of patience.”
And I loved his closing remarks which I would leave with you my wonderful
family and beloved friends!
“May we ever be found doing the work of the Lord.”
Thomas S Monson
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| Elder Hagadorn after hours |
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| We talked the Elders into coming to dinner with us, they met someone while in line at the buffet and now have a new person to teach! |







Sounds like you were inspired to talk the Elders into coming to dinner with you. Love it! And I love the sun, rain, sun, rain, sun, rain pattern. I will have to tell the girls about that. They will love it.
ReplyDeleteOh & I love how the Brits always have to shorten everything and then add and "ee" to the end. Prezi, Telly, Navi...
ReplyDelete