Tuesday, November 30, 2021

King Richard, the Boilers Park, Washington Utah

 There was another activity put on by Ashton and Associates in St. George that Mike and I went to on Tuesday, November 30. Luckily, I was feeling better. Finally!  I was actually feeling normal again. A bit weak, but basically normal. No more aches, etc.

The activity was a movie premier of "King Richard," about Richard Williams, Venus and Serena Williams' father and how he coached them to greatness. It stars Will Smith and was really good.  What was also good was the comfy seats in the "private" theater for just our group, popcorn, candy that I won in the drawing before the movie . . . and just a relaxing time together. 

We didn't shop (we prefer to "shop local" when we can) because I still don't organize myself enough to know what to do for gifts and procrastinate, etc.  But we did make a stop on the way home.  We saw the "The Boilers" park in Washington, Utah.  

Here's what I found on the internet:

TThe Boilers Park Washington UThere’s a new park in Washington Utah….but not really.  It’s actually been a “swimming hole” for locals for years known as the “Boilers”.  It’s located just north of I15 at approximately 200 W Buena Vista Blvd Washington Utah.  Washington City took an interest in the area and has been working on turning it into a city park since 2015.  The actual address now is 295 W Buena Vista Blvd Washington UT but it may not come up on Google Maps yet. It’s now officially named The Boilers-A Natural Spring and Conservation Park. 

The Boilers is a natural warm spring fed pond that was an important water source for Native Americans and the pioneers in Southern Utah.  Apparently there is “warm” water that boils up through the sand at the bottom of the pond.  I’ve never personally been in the pond but have heard stories from old timers who have fond memories of swimming in the pond during the winter.  The three artisan style warm springs stay at about 70 degrees, year round.  The area has been inaccessible and behind a chain link fence since the 1990s.  Over the years the pond was used less because several city pools were installed as town grew.  Eventually it became a spot for partiers to meet for late night drinking and drug use.Don't Dump Fish Boilers Park Washington UT

An interesting side note about the Boilers, it has been known as a dumping area for people’s aquarium fish. Because the Boilers has a warm-water spring that flows into it, the exotic fish thrive in the pond. Several years ago someone actually caught a 9 pound Pacu, a South American freshwater fish that’s related to the piranha, at the Boilers!  When he saw that it had sharp teeth, he snapped a few pictures then released it back into the pond.  He contacted the DWR and they told him what species of fish it was. Pacu, unlike piranha, have straight-edged, humanlike teeth and can grow very large in size.

I didn’t see any fish when I was at the pond last week, so I’m not sure there are any in it now.  There were people swimming in the water and sitting on the sandy beach too.  Other people were having a birthday party and there were also people enjoying the playground. There’s a variety of indigenous flowers and plants that you can read and learn about along the path to the park.

Amenities for park goers to enjoy at the Boilers include  a large pavilion, plenty of picnic tables & picnic areas, a playground, benches to sit on and there are also pickleball courts.   This park is a little off the beaten path which makes it feel kind of like a secret meeting place!  It’s perfect for picnics, birthday parties, friend and family gatherings and of course enjoying the boiler springs.

However, Mike and I DID see fish in the pond and they looked like overgrown goldfish. He saw one trout, too, he said. Following are some of the photos I took while there.  I very much enjoyed the signage on the flora, too. 

Mike's inspecting the play area. Above.  I took a walk around the bike path around the perimeter. There's even a bike bath that goes under the freeway!  It's lit and everything. Cool.




The sign on this plant says Chocolate flower! There were cute little butterflies all over it.


Here's the bike path under the freeway. Who knew?!
This would be so cooling to wade safely in. The curbing is concrete, and sand is in it. It's kind of like a boat ramp and slopes down into the water.

Here is the exit point for the spring-fed pond.








2918 Miles




 A few years ago, Amanda and Kolton Rackham walked across America. Truly, they did.  They came to Southern Utah to visit the grandparents and stayed with us on Sunday night this week (November 28, 2021). Cute kids. Eric and Matt came by with San to visit with them a bit, and visit with us, too. Fun times. That was, unfortunately, one of the evenings when I was not feeling my best. Quite awful, actually. But we did manage to play one game of Uno. I mean, when you have that many family and kids around, how can you NOT play a game together?


Thanksgiving

 On the Tuesday before Thanksgiving, "Our House Assisted Living" (but we still insist on calling it by its former name of "Brookdale" because it is so much simpler and makes a lot more sense) hosted a lovely Thanksgiving feast for residents and guests, so Mike and Caroline and I joined my folks for a nice dinner.

On the Thursday of Thanksgiving, Eric and a friend joined us at our house (see? confusing if you are speaking those words!) for yet another lovely feast. Turkey and all the trimmings.

May be an image of 6 people, people sitting and indoor

Monday, November 29, 2021

Vaccine Booster

 I finally was able to get an appointment for us to get our COVID 19 booster vaccination shot. 

Ugh. MY body sure didn't like it. I've had aches and fatigue, some fever and general ickiness since Saturday Evening. I watched Church on the phone/computer broadcast from the comfort of my bed, and just was a slug for those two days. I hope it's over today.

Saturday the 27th. Moderna. Just for the record. Our previous dose of vaccine was 3/17/21 of J&J single dose.

I'm glad they are available. I do wish more folks would cooperate and get them.  Mike had NO reaction, lucky duck.



Monday, November 22, 2021

The Vine Project

 Once upon a time, Mike and I picked a whole bunch of apples from some trees in a neighbor's yard. Only the trees were being taken over by a really nasty vine. You couldn't see much of the tree at all. So Mike asked if we could take out the vine for the home owner.  Kind of like trade for all the apples we picked this season and hope to pick in future seasons.

Mike has been over there for many days on his own, pulling, cutting, digging. He has hauled THREE truckloads to our county dump! Three. And we are not done yet.

We are old. If he worked more than three hours, his shoulders would be trashed. I only worked about 4 hours today, and, Yowza. I'm bushed. Pun intended. I knew it was hard work and a big job, but we have found it to be EXTREMELY difficult. Our hands ache, the gloves wear out, it's dirty, the roots are stubborn. 

I guess I'll go back tomorrow for some more. I'll try to take a photo of the full truck. We were wishing we had a good "before" photo of the mess the trees and fence were in. Trees, fence, trellis, gateway, rose bushes, other shrubs...everything was being taken over by this invasive vine, plus some Virginia Creeper Vines, too!  Crazy. 

Jocelyn is the homeowner's daughter who lives in the house with roommates. She gave us a pumpkin pie today. And she IS extremely grateful for our help. 

Who knew it would be so such a huge project? Certainly not us. I figured a truck load to the dump and we'd be done. Ha! 

Lesson learned. Never plant a vine or two and let them get out of control. Controlled, they are lovely. Out of control? Not so much. The photo is from the internet, but is an accurate depiction of some of the stuff I was working on today.



Monday, November 15, 2021

BOA, Saturday night , Sunday and Monday Nov 15.

 After Ella and I wandered around and played in leaves on Saturday afternoon and had a late lunch,  we went back to the hotel, met up with Lexi, rested a while, then headed back over to the stadium for the FINALS.  CTJ High School made it to the finals on Saturday night, which were from 7 to 11 pm with the awards ceremony following.


Ella and I moved from our high, 50 yard line seats to lower ones, closer to the drum lines and awards. 
Their band placed 7th out of 12 finalists.


Drum majors represented the bands on the fields. Also, the Rutgers University marching band performed during the award ceremony.  They were my favorite of all. It wasn't a Broadway production with props and singing and dancing and costumes, etc. It was a MARCHING Band. And they did it concisely and crisp and nice and to the point. If they played "Rocket Man", they formed an outline of an astronaut outline on the field. 

That all took a very long time ( the awards ceremony) and we (Ella and I) didn't get in bed much before 1 am on Sunday. We left when the final #1 band was named, but that wasn't the end! Nope, the winners got to do their performance again as an encore. Braeden and some friends were at the awards ceremony ( but not their whole band, sadly), so they didn't get back to their hotels until closer to 2 am! 



Outside the Lucas Oil Field stadium. It was cold outside. Thankfully, this stadium is covered and warm inside! 


Our hotel lobby was cozy, too. Firelight and ceiling lights. Lexi and Tandy and Braeden all had to get up and catch earlier flights than me and Ella, so Ella, the teenager, slept and slept and slept.....

 Eventually we got out, walked to a chocolate place for our hot cocoa, walked back to get our luggage, called an Uber, rode to the airport and started home. Indianapolis to San Antonio Via Denver, again. Only this one was planned.

Ella got some pretty shots out the airplane window.


And this big 4 point buck was on the side of the road in their neighborhood as we drove in that evening. 


Bye! Thanks for a fun trip! Damian had to take me to the airport pretty early. I was home in Cedar by 3 pm or so on Monday . Tired. Lots of airports, waiting, planes, bands in 5 days! I told Tandy on Sunday morning that I see marching bands every time I close my eyes to try and go to sleep. 

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Saturday Band stuff, Nov 13, 2021

 Oops. Almost All photo groups are in reverse order.

We waited in line FOREVER for some hot chocolate and breakfast sandwich food at Starbucks. Then went to Convention center to find Tandy And Braeden. 





Uniforms? Nah, them's costumes! 


Tandy's uniform committee repairing broken feathers on the shakos ( band hats).


In the convention center.

Waiting in line at hotel for our breakfast.



Hotel window views. A power plant downtown.


Kermit is a mascot for bass clarinets and Lexi got to hold him.








Then we walked over to the Lucas Oil Field, found our seats, and watched many bands perform. CTJ High School was at 11:45 a.m. Good Job. Lots of them were really really good.

Then, after bundling up more, Ella and I went sight-seeing. We saw pretty leaves, canal, river walk, waterfall , bridges, and sculptures and art galore.  The leaves were our FAVORITE!!!






























I wish you could see these ginkgo trees in sunlight! Stunning.




After we played in the leaves, working up our appetite, we went for a walk past monuments and cool old downtown buildings and ate lunch at Five Guys .



It felt good to meet up with Lexi back in our warm hotel room and relax, do home work (Lexi), nap, visit with friends in the lobby, etc.

 There are hours more performances to watch tonight, as CTJ made the finals! Again. :-). If ever there comes a time when they DONT make the finals, these  kids won't know what to do with themselves. I hope I can stay awake till the end.