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Friday, January 15, 2010
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
An Adventure
Wayne and I have been to a few of the large aquariums in the U.S and I just love them. Oh, how I would love to pet the dolphins, and frolic with the seals. We went to the largest one in the U.S. at the Mall of America and I was just fascinated when a whale or a sting ray would float over my head so closely that I felt like I could just reach up and touch it.
Now this would be an adventure as long as I had a comfy mattress and someone to lift me up in the morning.
Sleepovers
A unique overnight adventure at the Vancouver Aquarium!
Sleeping with the belugas - an experience you'll never forget!
After everyone has gone home, and the Aquarium has closed its doors for the night, we invite you to join us for an exciting night of exploration! Stash your gear, meet your adventure leaders and get ready to explore the Aquarium through a variety of special activities, tours, presentations and guest speakers.
After a delicious evening snack, we head into our behind-the-scenes marine lab to continue on the second half of your adventure, where you can touch local invertebrates including live sea stars, sea urchins, anemones and more!
Bed down in front of one of the Aquarium's spectacular marine galleries. In the morning, after a calm continental breakfast, tour the Marine Mammal Deck and Amazon Free Flight Gallery as the Aquarium wakens for a new day.
The Aquarium offers two exciting and unique programs:
The Family Themed Programs are offered to the general public: families, adults, individuals and Aquarium members through a variety of special activities, presentations, tours and guest speakers based on that evening's theme (selected dates)
The Ecosystem Expedition Program is designed to meet a school-based curriculum and environmental badge requirements for Scouts and Guides. Fun-filled and interactive activities focusing on the various ways animals, plants and humans interact within each ecosystem (seven days a week)
Hugs and Fishes, A Valentine’s Sea-fari - Spend Valentine’s at the Vancouver Aquarium on Saturday February 13, 2010. No kids, no crowds! Just you, a few other couples, and 70,000 amazing animals.
To get started on your journey, please call (604) 659-3504 or e-mail us at: sleepovers@vanaqua.org.
A unique overnight adventure at the Vancouver Aquarium!
Sleeping with the belugas - an experience you'll never forget!
After everyone has gone home, and the Aquarium has closed its doors for the night, we invite you to join us for an exciting night of exploration! Stash your gear, meet your adventure leaders and get ready to explore the Aquarium through a variety of special activities, tours, presentations and guest speakers.
After a delicious evening snack, we head into our behind-the-scenes marine lab to continue on the second half of your adventure, where you can touch local invertebrates including live sea stars, sea urchins, anemones and more!
Bed down in front of one of the Aquarium's spectacular marine galleries. In the morning, after a calm continental breakfast, tour the Marine Mammal Deck and Amazon Free Flight Gallery as the Aquarium wakens for a new day.
The Aquarium offers two exciting and unique programs:
The Family Themed Programs are offered to the general public: families, adults, individuals and Aquarium members through a variety of special activities, presentations, tours and guest speakers based on that evening's theme (selected dates)
The Ecosystem Expedition Program is designed to meet a school-based curriculum and environmental badge requirements for Scouts and Guides. Fun-filled and interactive activities focusing on the various ways animals, plants and humans interact within each ecosystem (seven days a week)
Hugs and Fishes, A Valentine’s Sea-fari - Spend Valentine’s at the Vancouver Aquarium on Saturday February 13, 2010. No kids, no crowds! Just you, a few other couples, and 70,000 amazing animals.
To get started on your journey, please call (604) 659-3504 or e-mail us at: sleepovers@vanaqua.org.
Friday, January 08, 2010

From the Deseret News and KSL:
How do you describe ‘The Wondrous Gift of Christmas’ concert presented by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and Orchestra at Temple Square which delighted the more than 84,000 people in the LDS Conference Center in Salt Lake City? Perhaps noted historian Pulitzer Prize winning guest artist David McCullough said it best. At the conclusion of the Sunday mini-concert, he noted that John Adams toward the end of his life was having a conversation with young Ralph Waldo Emerson who had been studying at Harvard. President John Adams looked at the young scholar and said that he would to God that there was more ambition in the land. By that, said Adams, I mean ambition of the laudable kind -- the ambition to excel, not to have more money or power or fame. “Excel” the more than 750 performers and technicians did. Natalie Cole said it was “Unforgettable.” And she would know. Clearly this year’s audiences were not only on the edges of their seats, they were on their feet applauding and cheering from the processional of 85 dancers early in the program to Richard Elliott’s organ solo of built on the theme of “Good King Wenceslas” to the finale with the Choir and Orchestra, bell ringers, a combined children’s choir of 140 singers in what has become the signature closing of Choir Christmas concerts: “Angels, from the Realms of Glory.” Soloist Natalie Cole thrilled the audience with her warmth, her admiration for the voices of her 360 “backup singers” and her presentation of the Biblical account of the birth of Jesus Christ. The setting was a bit different for David McCullough who is more used to book signings of his fine historical accounts than on an elaborate stage with enormous baubles suspended from the ceiling and trees lit behind him. The Choir is “a noble attainment,” he said comparing it to the likes of the Brooklyn Bridge – his written account of its construction is compelling – and the Marshall Plan. “I include the Choir as one of the proudest achievements of our country,” he said. “It is an expression of the human spirit for all.” .
I was able to get tickets for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir's Christmas concert again this year. I felt so blessed. You are only allotted 4 tickets so Wayne, Colett, Amy and I decided to make a afternoon and night of it. The sons-in-law had to stay home and babysit this time. We drove to Sandy, ate an Italian dinner and then took the train into the big city. We had to wait about 15 minutes for the train because we had missed the first one by about a minute. The girls froze. Amy had on little cute shoes and Colett had on thin boots and even wore a dress. They looked mighty fine, but they also sacrificed their comfort and almost died from hypothermia to look that cute. We finally got on the train which dropped us off just a block from the temple and since it was a very cold night, that was a big plus. Our tickets were only "OK" but at 7:30, the people who had better tickets than ours, but hadn't shown up, lost their seats so we moved into their's. It ended up being a packed house so someone who was very late got our first seats. Let that be a lesson to you to always be on time. Last year we had very good seats but because of sitting in traffic for over an hour, we lost ours.
That's why we took the train this year.
so we have a few of what the conference center looks like before.
Saturday, January 02, 2010
Christmas 2009
Everyone has to have a Christmas posting don't they? I will have a few different Christmas posts, but I will start here.
This is actually the "end of Christmas" pictures and I will work my way back to the beginning of the Christmas season on my next posts. Christmas morning and gifts are actually the anticlimax to my Christmas joy, although they are very nice.
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
The Homestead
This blog post is for my Mom and Dad. I sent them email files to copy but I can't seem to get it in the right format for them to copy. At least you can look at it here. I may have to get Amy to make another photo copy and send it snail mail.
This is in a jpg. format and may be too big to copy, but if you enlarge you will get a good view.I got some really wonderful Christmas gifts this year and I want to thank everyone for them all....from cookies, candy and bread to gift certificates, scrapbook supplies, clothes, tools etc. Amy gave me a Christmas gift of a framed photograph of my Mom and Dad's home. It's the one I grew up in and miss so much at Christmas. It made me cry and although I blogged about it a few months ago with pictures of the inside, here is the house from the front.
Except for the occasionl frost on the inside walls in my bedroom and the pipes that regularly froze up, it was a great place in which to grow up.
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