Winter. Finally.
It was like spring in January. No snow. Warm temperatures.
Now we have some snow and cold temperatures, and have had them all week.
It is as it should be.
That doesn't mean my tulips aren't still poking their leaves up in the yard. :-|
Saturday, February 24, 2018
Valentine sweets
That's not a BIG box of chocolates. It just looks big.
MY box of chocolates was even bigger! Like about three times bigger. Huge. Immense.
Oink.
I feel loved.
And we are so practical (and cheap) that we buy them after the holiday. So much more thrifty, yes? I certainly don't mind. Obviously, we are not so much about quality of chocolate at this time. It's just the sugar we love. ;-) So very much.
And I took treats to work, too.
I would like to say they looked like this. It was . . . sort of close. There were no more chocolate melts left in the store. The strawberries I found didn't have such lovely green tops (but they did taste just fine). They were dipped in pink and red and white! Those were the only bags of melts I could find. Very festive. Some I even managed the swirly-effect. But most were kind of frumpy and lumpy and not very perfect.
It's the thought that counts, right? We have a couple of folks in my department who don't eat sugar, so they got plain berries. And I had some red/white/pink caramel M&M's too. Mmmmm. Candy.
Valentine's Day is a good day if you
And don't mind waiting till the day after :-)
Oh, and I also wrote love letters to each of my children. Too bad the Post Office didn't deliver them on time. They were mailed in plenty of time for deliver by the 14th. Plus, most of my kids don't check their mail boxes regularly, anyway. Good thing they check email, messages, facebook and video chat!
MY box of chocolates was even bigger! Like about three times bigger. Huge. Immense.
Oink.
I feel loved.
And we are so practical (and cheap) that we buy them after the holiday. So much more thrifty, yes? I certainly don't mind. Obviously, we are not so much about quality of chocolate at this time. It's just the sugar we love. ;-) So very much.
And I took treats to work, too.
I would like to say they looked like this. It was . . . sort of close. There were no more chocolate melts left in the store. The strawberries I found didn't have such lovely green tops (but they did taste just fine). They were dipped in pink and red and white! Those were the only bags of melts I could find. Very festive. Some I even managed the swirly-effect. But most were kind of frumpy and lumpy and not very perfect.
It's the thought that counts, right? We have a couple of folks in my department who don't eat sugar, so they got plain berries. And I had some red/white/pink caramel M&M's too. Mmmmm. Candy.
Valentine's Day is a good day if you
Have Someone Who Loves You
Love Candy
Enjoy Flowers
And don't mind waiting till the day after :-)
Oh, and I also wrote love letters to each of my children. Too bad the Post Office didn't deliver them on time. They were mailed in plenty of time for deliver by the 14th. Plus, most of my kids don't check their mail boxes regularly, anyway. Good thing they check email, messages, facebook and video chat!
Friday, February 23, 2018
Thursday, February 22, 2018
Denver on Presidents' Day Weekend, Feburary 16-19, 2018
The drive to Denver. We left on Thursday afternoon. Mike was done with work by 3 or so, I tried to leave work at three, and by 4:30 we were on the road. Just me, Mike and his Mom. We took our car. Mike would have liked to take his truck, but he would have had to clean it all out. My car was already cleaned out. Plus, after the last winter time trip we took in the truck and Berenice slipped on his running board and hurt her leg, she's been pretty gun shy about getting into that vehicle. We'd planned to stay the night in Grand Junction, Colorado, since that is half-way between Cedar City and Aurora. Mike and his Mom had just driven up to Salt Lake the day before, so two long days of driving in a row is a bit much. And you know what? Mike even made the hotel reservations for us online. I was supposed to do it, but never got around to it. He did it just before we walked out the door. And I think we even remembered to pack and bring everything we were supposed to bring.
We did spend the night in Grand Junction, Colorado. Rodeway Inn. Old, but not bad. And the beds were VERY comfortable. We accidentally left the room way too warm for us to be comfortable, however. We didn't get up terribly early, but did manage to grab the last of breakfast in the hotel lobby and headed on our way. There was a LOT of wind! We stopped for lunch at a Burger King in Denver while I tried to figure out my phone and maps, etc. It's always a happy little accident when I get the navigation to work for me. We went directly to Katie's house and spend the afternoon visiting, watching those crazy babies. My, they are busy ones! The boys came home from school, Casey was even home from work early. Troy Gardner came by early in the evening to pick up Grandma as she was spending the night at their house. They have a main floor room to accommodate Grandma with minimal stairs, and Katie does not.
Katie fed us all dinner and we mostly watched Winter Olympics on TV during our visiting time. The babies had a wonderful time jumping on the air mattress that we set up for our bed that evening.
I wish I would have taken a picture of the picture/painting that we took to Katie and Casey. She bought it while in Utah this past summer and it's a lovely picture/photo of the St. George Temple, where she and Casey were married. She's been saving a place over their fire place for it, so she got it hung while we were there and it looks lovely. But there's no picture to show you, Dear Reader. Maybe Katie will send me one. Shoot, it was in my basement all these months on the dresser in the guest room. I should have taken one then. ;-)
THIS picture, below, is another story. The top or first apple picture was taken while we were there. It is a painting I gave Katie. I did it in one of my art classes. I am taking a class this semester on Food and Culture (ANTH 3200) and there was an assignment that I thought I might want to use that painting in, so I asked Katie to please take a photo of it and send it to me. In the one below, you can see the reflection of the tv on in the background, and Katie holding up my phone and taking the photo. She is actually standing on her kitchen counter top! The ceilings in her whole house are very tall.
This picture, below, is the one she emailed to me last month. Can you see the dinosaur eye reflection just over the apples???? That creeped me out for so long. I kept trying to figure out how it got in there. Thus the duplication of the photography session, above. I think it's just a reflection of the ceiling can lights. But that is weird. Either that, or their house is haunted by the ghost of a dinosaur. Possibly a blue-eyed porpoise. ha.
And that was about all the photos I took! We wanted to go do something that day (Saturday), but we just never really got up and going. Katie and Casey left the kids with us in the afternoon and they took care of some car repair stuff, and went out to lunch together. I just watched the kids play and watched Mike fall asleep on the couch while watching sports on TV all day long. Toward late afternoon, however, we did step it up. I had the boys clean their disgustingly dirty bathroom (it sparkled when they were done!) AND we started getting babies changed and dressed to go out. We had a dinner date at Troy and Ecstacia's house at 6 pm! They live about 10 to 20 minutes away from Katie and Casey. Casey didn't end up going with us to their house for dinner, and I don't know why. He helped load kids in the car and Mike and I just went in ours since there wouldn't have been room for everyone in one vehicle. Then Casey just went back in the house and we followed Katie over to Troy's. Oh well.
Troy had grilled meats and there were salads. We played games, the kids all ran around and played with the two dogs that live there (which didn't make it very pleasant for Berenice staying there as she rather dislikes indoor animals and all the hair they leave behind. She'd only brought black slacks to wear--both dogs are light-haired and very sheddy.).
As soon as we all came home, it was time to get kids into the bath. Katie and Casey got things started and then left me to finish that and they went to the grocery store. I'm sure they don't get to do that very often without kids! Hayden has rather severe allergies to dogs, so it was imperative to get him out of the dog hair contaminated clothing and right into the shower , and he did. The next day was Sunday, so everyone else followed. The babies do NOT like to have their hair washed in the tub. At all. Hailey screams. But they were clean by the time I was done with them, mean ol' Grandma that I am. ha.
Corbin has really itchy skin and required a soothing oatmeal bath, so I had to clean all the bubble bath and soapy stuff from the twins' bath out of the tub before it was Corbin's turn. It think Katie said it is excema or however that is spelled. Poor kid.
Everyone stayed up late, but I was fading fast.
Sunday morning, I made some pancakes for breakfast. Some people ate them. Chocolate chip and banana ones, too. ;-) Church was not until 1 pm...the mornings just drag on, don't they? We tried to watch "Freetown," but that didn't go over really well. Katie had to run in to see the bishop extra early Sunday morning. She has a new calling and is now the secretary in Primary. With church beginning at 1 pm, that is when twins start to fade and get grumpy, but I think Katie was the most tired in Sacrament meeting. I do believe she would have nodded off if she hadn't been tending to children.
I knew that we (well, Katie and Casey) were hosting Troy's family for Sunday Dinner after Church, but I assumed that it was at 6 pm like we did on Saturday. Nope. Turns out it was right after church at 4:30. So we did do a lot of meal preparation that morning. Katie had stuff in the crock pots, I made a salad and peeled potatoes. She made some yummy BBQ ribs. Mmmm.
We all went to church at 1 pm and stayed for the whole block of meetings. The house smelled really good when we got home. The Gardner's came, we all ate (Grandma was there, too), all the kids were there. Saturday evening at Troy's, only one of their three kids were home. It was a wild and crazy afternoon/evening with kids running and screaming through the house on Sunday afternoon. But they were happy and really did play together well for the most part.
We decided, after watching the weather reports, that it would be best for us to leave that evening and get out of town before the snow storm hit the following morning in Denver. So we did. We quickly packed, said our Goodbyes and followed Troy and Ecstacia and family back to their house to get Grandma's things and then we left. We'd initially planned to leave early Monday morning and drive the whole way home (10 hours!) to Cedar City. But you know what? Leaving Monday morning would have been so much worse. We wouldn't have been able to see anyone because they would have all been asleep. It snowed that day all across Coloradao, so we would have been going much slower. So it was just better to get on the road Sunday night. That meant we had to stay another night in a hotel so we just went back to the same one in Grand Junction. There's no way we could do all 10 hours after leaving Denver at 7:30 pm. We knew we'd have to break it up again, and I was glad for that, actually. The Rodeway Inn had a decent price (less than $60 per night) and we knew the beds were comfy. It wasn't snowing when we got up to go Monday morning, so that was good.
But --BOY!-- was it ever windy! Yikes. It about blew us off the road. There were many clouds and storms were rolling in, but it wasn't snow that we had to drive through until we reached Salina Canyon in Utah, so that was a good thing. AND northern Iron County was kind of snowy and wet . Those were the only areas. But considering how bad it could have been, we were very pleased. Driving on snowy roads all the way from Denver would have taken way more than the usual 10 hours going the speed limit. As it was, we were home by about 1:30 pm on Monday and had to shovel about 7 inches of heavy wet snow off of Berenice's driveway that had fallen the previous night and that morning. That was a nice workout for me and Mike after sitting around for a few days. We didn't bother to shovel our driveway when we go to our place. We just came in, ate lunch, unpacked, and I read some newspapers and took a nap. I was bracing myself for going back to work the next day. BUT--it's only a four day work week!
We did spend the night in Grand Junction, Colorado. Rodeway Inn. Old, but not bad. And the beds were VERY comfortable. We accidentally left the room way too warm for us to be comfortable, however. We didn't get up terribly early, but did manage to grab the last of breakfast in the hotel lobby and headed on our way. There was a LOT of wind! We stopped for lunch at a Burger King in Denver while I tried to figure out my phone and maps, etc. It's always a happy little accident when I get the navigation to work for me. We went directly to Katie's house and spend the afternoon visiting, watching those crazy babies. My, they are busy ones! The boys came home from school, Casey was even home from work early. Troy Gardner came by early in the evening to pick up Grandma as she was spending the night at their house. They have a main floor room to accommodate Grandma with minimal stairs, and Katie does not.
Katie fed us all dinner and we mostly watched Winter Olympics on TV during our visiting time. The babies had a wonderful time jumping on the air mattress that we set up for our bed that evening.
I wish I would have taken a picture of the picture/painting that we took to Katie and Casey. She bought it while in Utah this past summer and it's a lovely picture/photo of the St. George Temple, where she and Casey were married. She's been saving a place over their fire place for it, so she got it hung while we were there and it looks lovely. But there's no picture to show you, Dear Reader. Maybe Katie will send me one. Shoot, it was in my basement all these months on the dresser in the guest room. I should have taken one then. ;-)
THIS picture, below, is another story. The top or first apple picture was taken while we were there. It is a painting I gave Katie. I did it in one of my art classes. I am taking a class this semester on Food and Culture (ANTH 3200) and there was an assignment that I thought I might want to use that painting in, so I asked Katie to please take a photo of it and send it to me. In the one below, you can see the reflection of the tv on in the background, and Katie holding up my phone and taking the photo. She is actually standing on her kitchen counter top! The ceilings in her whole house are very tall.
This picture, below, is the one she emailed to me last month. Can you see the dinosaur eye reflection just over the apples???? That creeped me out for so long. I kept trying to figure out how it got in there. Thus the duplication of the photography session, above. I think it's just a reflection of the ceiling can lights. But that is weird. Either that, or their house is haunted by the ghost of a dinosaur. Possibly a blue-eyed porpoise. ha.
Friday we just relaxed and Saturday, too. They have big squirrels that come into their yard. Below is Katie and Corbin looking out the back door at one. Katie has been putting nuts or food out for them. I think she can kiss the garden grow boxes in her backyard goodbye next spring! She's just going to be feeding the squirrels her fresh produce, whatever she plants. ha.
Below is (Lindsey Vonn ion the TV, and) Hailey. She is wearing only a diaper because that child will not keep her clothes on. Pink cowboy boots and a batman mask. Perfect fashion statement, don't you think?
And that was about all the photos I took! We wanted to go do something that day (Saturday), but we just never really got up and going. Katie and Casey left the kids with us in the afternoon and they took care of some car repair stuff, and went out to lunch together. I just watched the kids play and watched Mike fall asleep on the couch while watching sports on TV all day long. Toward late afternoon, however, we did step it up. I had the boys clean their disgustingly dirty bathroom (it sparkled when they were done!) AND we started getting babies changed and dressed to go out. We had a dinner date at Troy and Ecstacia's house at 6 pm! They live about 10 to 20 minutes away from Katie and Casey. Casey didn't end up going with us to their house for dinner, and I don't know why. He helped load kids in the car and Mike and I just went in ours since there wouldn't have been room for everyone in one vehicle. Then Casey just went back in the house and we followed Katie over to Troy's. Oh well.
Troy had grilled meats and there were salads. We played games, the kids all ran around and played with the two dogs that live there (which didn't make it very pleasant for Berenice staying there as she rather dislikes indoor animals and all the hair they leave behind. She'd only brought black slacks to wear--both dogs are light-haired and very sheddy.).
As soon as we all came home, it was time to get kids into the bath. Katie and Casey got things started and then left me to finish that and they went to the grocery store. I'm sure they don't get to do that very often without kids! Hayden has rather severe allergies to dogs, so it was imperative to get him out of the dog hair contaminated clothing and right into the shower , and he did. The next day was Sunday, so everyone else followed. The babies do NOT like to have their hair washed in the tub. At all. Hailey screams. But they were clean by the time I was done with them, mean ol' Grandma that I am. ha.
Corbin has really itchy skin and required a soothing oatmeal bath, so I had to clean all the bubble bath and soapy stuff from the twins' bath out of the tub before it was Corbin's turn. It think Katie said it is excema or however that is spelled. Poor kid.
Everyone stayed up late, but I was fading fast.
Sunday morning, I made some pancakes for breakfast. Some people ate them. Chocolate chip and banana ones, too. ;-) Church was not until 1 pm...the mornings just drag on, don't they? We tried to watch "Freetown," but that didn't go over really well. Katie had to run in to see the bishop extra early Sunday morning. She has a new calling and is now the secretary in Primary. With church beginning at 1 pm, that is when twins start to fade and get grumpy, but I think Katie was the most tired in Sacrament meeting. I do believe she would have nodded off if she hadn't been tending to children.
I knew that we (well, Katie and Casey) were hosting Troy's family for Sunday Dinner after Church, but I assumed that it was at 6 pm like we did on Saturday. Nope. Turns out it was right after church at 4:30. So we did do a lot of meal preparation that morning. Katie had stuff in the crock pots, I made a salad and peeled potatoes. She made some yummy BBQ ribs. Mmmm.
We all went to church at 1 pm and stayed for the whole block of meetings. The house smelled really good when we got home. The Gardner's came, we all ate (Grandma was there, too), all the kids were there. Saturday evening at Troy's, only one of their three kids were home. It was a wild and crazy afternoon/evening with kids running and screaming through the house on Sunday afternoon. But they were happy and really did play together well for the most part.
We decided, after watching the weather reports, that it would be best for us to leave that evening and get out of town before the snow storm hit the following morning in Denver. So we did. We quickly packed, said our Goodbyes and followed Troy and Ecstacia and family back to their house to get Grandma's things and then we left. We'd initially planned to leave early Monday morning and drive the whole way home (10 hours!) to Cedar City. But you know what? Leaving Monday morning would have been so much worse. We wouldn't have been able to see anyone because they would have all been asleep. It snowed that day all across Coloradao, so we would have been going much slower. So it was just better to get on the road Sunday night. That meant we had to stay another night in a hotel so we just went back to the same one in Grand Junction. There's no way we could do all 10 hours after leaving Denver at 7:30 pm. We knew we'd have to break it up again, and I was glad for that, actually. The Rodeway Inn had a decent price (less than $60 per night) and we knew the beds were comfy. It wasn't snowing when we got up to go Monday morning, so that was good.
But --BOY!-- was it ever windy! Yikes. It about blew us off the road. There were many clouds and storms were rolling in, but it wasn't snow that we had to drive through until we reached Salina Canyon in Utah, so that was a good thing. AND northern Iron County was kind of snowy and wet . Those were the only areas. But considering how bad it could have been, we were very pleased. Driving on snowy roads all the way from Denver would have taken way more than the usual 10 hours going the speed limit. As it was, we were home by about 1:30 pm on Monday and had to shovel about 7 inches of heavy wet snow off of Berenice's driveway that had fallen the previous night and that morning. That was a nice workout for me and Mike after sitting around for a few days. We didn't bother to shovel our driveway when we go to our place. We just came in, ate lunch, unpacked, and I read some newspapers and took a nap. I was bracing myself for going back to work the next day. BUT--it's only a four day work week!
Sun on the mesas in the distance in Eastern Utah. It was quite stunning.
Snowy Salina Canyon. Mike followed a big diesel truck down the canyon, so they kind of helped clear the way for us.
Oh, and we listened to a couple of audio books on this trip, too. Going there, we listened to "The Teacher's Funeral." Coming home, we listened to "Chasing Vermeer." Neither were spectacular, but we enjoyed the first one more.
When we left Cedar City on Thursday afternoon, I had a really bad lower back ache. I'm not really sure what caused it, but it required ibuprofen. I also used the seat heating feature in the car. It's very warm and isn't just the seat bottom, but also was like having a heating pad on my lower back. it was lovely. It felt fine, as long as I didn't move. It didn't start to feel better until Sunday. It's fine now (Thursday the 22nd), but was kind of bad for a couple of days. I had to be very careful about how I moved or lifted. And even getting in and out of the car was difficult. I think perhaps my too-tight-pants waist band from Thursday at work may have caused part of it, but perhaps it began on Wednesday at Water Aerobics when I did some different wall exercises that may have strained some muscles back there. Ouch. I won't be doing those again any time soon.
It sure was fun to spend time with Katie and her family. We didn't accomplish anything (except that one clean bathroom and a few loads of laundry folded) like projects, but we did get to read stories and wrestle with and tickle little ones, so that was nice.
Till next time!
Saturday, February 10, 2018
Robert O. Sorensen Funeral, Feburary 5, 2018
Cousin Bob passed away January 30, 2018 due to complications following surgery for an anuerism. He was 84 years old.
Above are Ord cousins. Susan Ord is in the center. She made the arrangements for the graveside service. I believe she had one sister there, and three cousins. But I'm really not sure. Bob's mother, our Aunt Blanche, was an Ord.
Cousins on both sides, along with a good friend, were the pall bearers. They did not have an easy time of it, as it was up hill.
I do believe Robert nearly slipped into the grave! Most pall bearers were expecting to set it down and have it roll forward on rollers, but it had none. It was up to them to place it properly and centered, so it required extra lifting and moving. It was not an easy task and some were quite elderly (like 93) !
Me and Robert at the gravesite after the service.
There was not a large crowd of people there, a few cousins from the Ord side with spouses (some of them), one friend, and four of us from the Sorensen side. It was our first time to meet Kim and Cindy Sorensen from Murray, Utah. Kim is Fred Sorensen's son, and Fred is Bob's cousin. That makes Robert Autrey and me second cousins to Kim.
We gathered at the Larkin Sunset Gardens mortuary, Robert Autrey said the family prayer when the casket was closed, then we made our way out to the gravesite. The service was short. Susan shared a few remarks. I wasn't aware that Bob was visiting both sides of his family when he traveled to California as a youngster, but he also had Ord cousins there and he and Susan were quite close as youngsters and renewed that friendship and relationship when she moved to Salt Lake in the 90's (I believe that's when she said). He helped her with her yard. I also never knew that Bob was a member of the Iris Society and was a judge. He was very good at what he did and excelled in growing prize iris flowers. I wish I would have known earlier! I shared a few thoughts about what a great friend and mentor he was to our cousin, Christine, in California, with a lively correspondence, thoughtful letters, kind wishes and cute articles about animals that Bob knew Christine's child would enjoy. He was very thoughtful of both of them and always remembered their special occasions. He was loved and will be missed.
After the pall-bearers left their carnations on the casket, Kim Sorensen gave the dedicatory prayer for the gravesite. We all made our way back to the Mortuary once more. Susan had made a lovely display in the viewing room (and Bob looked very good, by the way), of many of his photos and family history items. She had them mostly divided between Ord and Sorensen, with some "unknown" in the middle. We had all been instructed to help ourselves to whatever we wanted, as she wanted to take none of it back home. I took a few of the items shown below.
Bob's good friend (whose name escapes me) took this lovely watercolor painting of irises.
Above is a floral arrangement "From the Sorensen Cousins." I believe those were the only flowers there. I did leave a nice pot of white mums on his gravesite. (I wish I would have known how much he adored irises! Not that I could have found any around at this time of year.)
In the viewing room with one small table. The other tables were larger, and there were easels with framed photos and paintings, as well.
At the Cemetery. It was a small group.
A leather belt with silver buckle. Inlaid turquoise and coral-color stones. It's about a size 31 inch waist. The buckle is 3 inches long by 1 3/4 inches wide. I don't know where it came from, but I can surmise it was a purchase from a trip to Utah/Arizona. He had a number of framed photos he'd taken (I would assume) of Lake Powel and other red-rock areas of Southern Utah. I did not take any of those. One looked just like one I have on my bedroom wall of Rainbow Arch. It was just as faded as mine. ha.
These are small embroidered linen items. From small "coaster" size, to napkin, to place mat? I'm not really sure, but I thought they were cute. I'm pretty confident that Bob did not do them, but I am fairly sure that possibly his mother did, or maybe an auntie on the Sorensen side. You never know. But nobody else seemed interested in taking them, so I did. I have some other linens that my mother gave to me that they will go nicely with. (Not matching, but that they are old family things that are "keepers.")
This is a large framed photo of the Mendon, Utah house with lots of people out front that need identifying. I have many photos that need identifying.
I have a small stack of letters from 1900 to and from Peter A Sorensen to his family in Mendon whe he was on a mission in Norway. Kim and Cindy Sorensen have the other half of this old stack of letters. I think it is important that they ALL be scanned and preserved digitally and shared among the family. I will work on contacting them and making sure they do, too.
Here is the front cover of his funeral program
Inside the front cover
Inside
Back cover
And this is a really fun photo I found of both of my grandparents, Aunt Maureen, my Mom, Aunt Tuny and Cousin Fred. I'd assumed it was Bob, but Mom had an excellent family history story to share with me immediately when I scanned and shared it with her:
Oh my goodness! I’ll never forget that day we spent on that pier at Saltaire. What a fun day. Fred and I took the last ride on the big roller coaster before it was shut down because of the high wind. I’d never ridden a roller coaster before and have never ridden one since. it was so scary and Fred’s sailor hat blew off and he never found it. We had so much fun with our cousins every summer.
I also brought home this teeny little foot stool. It has lovely dainty crewell embroidery on the top. I thought it might be a nice addition to the Sorensen Family Guest room at my home. Unless someone else in the family really wants it. I'd be more than pleased to let it go to a good home.
Rest in peace, Bob. I'm sure you are having a lovely reunion with family and friends. Give Aunt Maureen, Uncle Owen, and my grandparents a hug from me, OK?
Here are a few more photos.
A photo of my Grandpa Virgil Philip Sorensen I found. That was a happy little surprise! "Salt Lake City, July 15, 1947" is typed on he back. (Yes, typed!)
This is Aunt Maureen an her Henry J. October 1950. Sorry it's so dark. I have the original and will scan it properly. Soon. I hope. Aunt Maureen sent it to Bob. I recognize her handwriting on the back. :-)
And this was another fun little find. Maureen and Goldy horsing around. Salt Lake, 1946.
You can tell they didn't grow up around guns. That is the first rule of gun safety we westerners teach our wee ones--never point a gun at a person, even a toy one. But I don't think it works with kids who grew up using their imaginations and playing cowboys and indians, cops and robbers.
Cousin Bob and Aunt Maureen
Please let me know if you would like any of these photos.
Love,
Linda
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