- This blog: As soon as I decided to quit scrapbooking forever and depend upon our family blog to record memories, I stopped blogging. Maybe I need to scrapbook again and then I will blog just to avoid scrapbooking? Whatever it takes.
- Book blog: Moderation, moderation, moderation . . . A concept I don't understand when it comes to reading. I'm trying, and taking a long break from my blog is one of my strategies. "Hello, my name is Shelley, and I'm a bookaholic." The book-blogging world has been calling to me lately, though, and I may attempt to start again but in more of a low-key manner than before.
- Music blog: Actually this is one I most actively update. Why? Because it takes about 2 minutes to post a video. In other words, I like music, and I'm LAZY.
- Weight loss blog: Three words: I GIVE UP.
- Gardening blog: Apparently when you actually have a garden, you don't have time to blog about it. I've decided to just get rid of the gardening blog and share any cool veggie tales here.

Dan and Jeremy built the frame for the raised bed which helped Jeremy fill a Scouting requirement.

We filled the bed with some lovely dirt we get from a local garden center. It's awesome stuff!

We also learned from last season that the peas really needed taller support, so here's our new pea trellis. I forgot what this stuff is called, but you use it when you pour concrete to reinforce it:

This was our first little baby, a beet seedling:

Our garden in December:

The peas this month that have grown taller than me, just like my kids:

And these are my favorite, the beautiful and yummy cabbage:

I've been keeping a notebook with gardening notes divided by month, and then I just put the year in the corner, so I can see each month what I did the year before and what to do the same/different. This is another reason I stopped updating the gardening blog because this serves the same purpose only it's better. Of course I haven't always been good about recording everything.

I'm so excited that things grew!!! This is the first time I've done broccoli, spinach, cabbage and beets. Everything has done pretty well except for the broccoli which got a really slow start. I think the temperatures were just too warm the first few months after the seeds were planted, and since the weather has been cooler it has finally started to do something:

What a broccoli feast we'll have!
Saturday, July 18, 2009
(Posted December 29, 2009)
This day and the last were mostly driving, so we only have a few pictures. We went out of our way and through a lot of traffic just to drive over the Golden Gate Bridge:
Lara and I visited the National Steinbeck Center while Daniel the Brave took all of the kids to the hotel for swimming and fun.
There were a lot of cool exhibits representing the novels he has written and lots of quotes like this one,
which I actually disagree with--there are too many books. I will never have time to read all the ones I want to!
This day and the next were mostly filled with violent bonding moments in the car. We stopped at In 'n' Out sometime on the way home, which usually makes everyone happy.
All in all it was an awesome trip. Beautiful sights, visiting with family, and eating way too much junk food. What more does a family need on a road trip? (Besides sleep...)
Friday, July 17, 2009
(Posted December 29, 2009)
At this point we were putting in a lot of miles each day to get home, so the only point of interest we saw was Redwood National and State Parks. In Klamath, we couldn't miss the opportunity to drive through a tree:
Somewhere near the visitor center we spotted this large group of what I believe are elk. We get pretty excited when we see a lot at one time.
We went on one or two short trails, but since it's been so long, I can't remember what they were called. I just know that the kids had been sick of hiking for many days at this point, but I think they had fun here? I'm not even going to ask them to verify that. Here are a few pictures from the trail that look like good evidence to me:


In case you're wondering how I was doing by day 13, just take a look at this beauty:
Thursday, July 16, 2009
(Posted December 29, 2009)
On the twelfth day of our trip we traveled through the fog as we made our way down the Oregon coast,
and stopped for a visit to Heceta Head Lighthouse.
We took a short trail up to the lighthouse,
stopped for a few pictures,
and took a tour when we came to the end of our mini-hike. During the tour, I took a picture of these: 
and Dan took a picture of this (the brains of the lighthouse): 
We spent some time playing on the beach in some very cold water.
That afternoon we took a break from the sightseeing and went bowling in North Bend, OR.
That night we had more down time at the hotel. I think by that time the kids were either sick of swimming or it was too cold. We ordered pizza, watched TV, read, and surfed, and tried to rest up for day 13!
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
(Posted August 30, 2009)
Day 11 took us to several points along the northern coast of Oregon. Our first stop was Astoria.
Besides being a beautiful, old-fashioned seaside town, it is also where Goonies was filmed. We wanted to see the Goonies House, so we followed the welcome sign . . .
. . .and snapped a photo in front of the house. Unfortunately, there's that huge bush now that blocks a lot of the view. Just try to imagine Data zipping from his house next door to this one.
Then we marched up 164 steps to get the the top of the Astoria Column. (Kaylynn opted out of this one because she has a mild fear of heights.)
The column has a spiral of scenes on the outside depicting the area's history of exploration and migration, but we were more awed by the views of the Columbia River, and this four mile bridge that we later drove across. (We kind of had a thing about crossing any and all bridges that we could.)
We were amused by this sign on the Washington side of the bridge. It really gets the point across:
After driving back over the bridge and back into Oregon, we just had to check out the shipwreck of the Peter Iredale at Fort Stevens State Park. I mean really, what's cooler than an actual shipwreck? (It ran ashore during bad weather in 1906, and nobody died or anything, but the kids had fun climbing all over it.)

Next stop: Fort Clatsop--where they have built a replica of the fort that the Lewis and Clark Expedition stayed in before returning east. The kids had fun testing out the beds, including the one Sacajawea slept in, and hanging out at the tables wondering what kind of food the members of the expedition ate.

And then, as if we hadn't seen enough that day, we took a tour of the Tillamook Cheese Factory.
We've never seen so much cheese at once in our lives, and never such huge blocks of it. I think it's just the camera and the lighting, but it sure seems like everything was orange like the cheese.
One of the best parts of the factory is the ice-cream counter! Tons of flavors to try. I had a sampler of three different scoops, and Dan had two ice-cream cones just to try another different flavor. It's no wonder I gained ten pounds on this trip! Here's Jeremy enjoying his selection.
All in all, quite a busy day. At this point the sugary, caffeinated beverages I was guzzling had ceased to have any energizing effect on me, and I was ready to crash by the time we got to the hotel.
