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Holidays & Bdays

Spending our Nomadic Halloween with Friends in California

Every year we’ve managed to spend Halloween with friends or family. We don’t always choose to spend holidays with other people. In fact, for many we’d rather be off in the desert (or at the beach) by ourselves. Apparently Halloween is the exception.

Travel Dates: October 24 – Nov 1

Last year we spent Halloween with my family in Utah, coinciding with both Andrew’s baptism and my cousin’s wedding. The year before that we were in Lincoln City with some Instagram traveling friends sporting some frosty costumes.

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This year Sam had a geek conference in Mountain View, California so we stayed a few extra days in town to spend Halloween with the Siminoff family. We met them last winter in the Florida Keys and they fast became some of our favorite people. They spent a year in their truck camper touring the US (with a side trip to New Zealand and Australia!) and are now back in their sticks and bricks.

Happily for us they have a very long driveway, full hookups, neighbors with chickens, and take payments for their “campsite” in chocolate chip cookies, staying up until 2am talking, and fresh pineapple.

It’s been a fabulous week.

The Costumes

In the last 6 months Rachel and Andrew both earned their Hogwart’s robes through our Family Store. I was impressed they thought that far ahead and made sure they would get their costumes with plenty of time to spare.

Sure, dressing up as Hogwarts students isn’t particularly original, but how many kids have you seen that actually wanted to be in Slytherin?

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Andrew chose Gryffindor (since they obviously couldn’t be in the same house), which means Cara was left with Ravenclaw or Hufflepuff.

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Cara didn’t earn her robe, however, so we swiped a knight costume destined for Goodwill, added  a cheap sword and cardboard shield and she galloped off into the sunset to save the day!dscf7967dscf7968

Pretty cute kids. We don’t have tons of room for costumes to hang out in the trailer with us, but the kids actually dress up in their robes quite frequently and play so we’ll find room for them somewhere.

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The Events

We kept things pretty low key. We made some really easy Pumpkin Rice Krispie Treats, attended the local LDS Trunk – or – Treat, and carved pumpkins. Rachel and Sam had been cooking up a microcontroller lit pumpkin for the last month or so and are happy that it worked out!

Halloween Night was spent out combing the streets for MORE candy (not that they needed it!) with the neighborhood gang and then staying up way past bedtime.

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We are all sugared out! I love being able to spend holidays celebrating with friends all over the country. It really does make each year unique and memorable – we get to not only remember WHAT we did, but WHERE we did it.

How about you? What was your favorite part of Halloween this year?

Categories
Daily Life Musings of Sam

Sam vs. Jury Duty – Tips for Full Time Travelers

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I spent a few days this last week as a member of a jury in a criminal trial. This is my second time serving in a jury in spite of only being summoned to service twice. I guess I have one of those faces.

Jury duty is one of the more painful civic duties for a full-time traveler. It requires being in a specific place at a specific time, just for the chance you are selected. If you are self-employed (as I am) then you also lose out on work during your service.

Being in a jury is an inconvenience, but it is educational. It also gave me more confidence in our legal system as I observed some of the inner workings of our judicial system.

In my case, the jury ruled not guilty of the serious charges against the defendant. Everyone on the jury thought something happened but there was not enough evidence to remove reasonable doubt. While the accused may have been guilty (of something) and gone free, we avoided the horror of convicting an innocent person.

I’m glad that it’s hard to convict somebody of a crime, and that we are innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

Tips for Jury Selection for Full-Time travelers or otherwise busy folk:

Being excused from jury service is rare. Most excuses result in a delay in your service, not being excused all together.

You can shift your assigned jury time. The court knows that people have obligations and are willing to work around them. If you have a family reunion or a work conference, they will be happy to schedule your service after you return. Your jury paperwork will include instructions on how to notify the court of any such issues you have. Expect to receive another notice soon after your conflicting event.

You might be able to ask for a specific dates. Full-time travelers rarely return ‘home’, but you might be planning a trip through your home state sometime soon anyway. I delayed once because of a family reunion. When I received another notice shortly after that, and I called the jury clerk at the number listed on my summons to explain our situation. The jury clerk was both cheerful and happy to work with me, and assigned me to the week we already planned to be in town visiting family.

Even if you receive jury summons, you might not be selected for the jury. The jury selection process takes about a half-day. If you are not selected, you are usually done with your jury service for a few years. Jurors are selected in a random order. The computer system assigns you a juror number and you are selected in order unless excluded. Valid reasons for exclusion include knowing anybody involved or having a family member convicted of a similar crime. High numbers are less likely to be selected.

You will be told the expected length of the trial during the jury selection process. If you have scheduled travel, know the dates in advance. The court will ask about conflicts for the trial period, and you might be excused.

Be ready if you decide to delay. When I was first summoned, my juror number (called a reporting number on the paperwork) was in the 20s. When I delayed, my juror number was quite low. After my request for the specific dates, I was juror number 1.  Juror number 2 had also asked for a delay of one week. With low numbers, we were more likely to be selected for the jury unless we were excused for some reason. Your local court system might well run things differently, but that’s how it rolls here in Utah.

Go, and enjoy your jury service. In spite of the inconvenience I really enjoyed my time. The ‘commute’ on the local mass transit system down to the court was a nice change of pace. I learned more about the criminal court system and enjoyed the time with the other jurors. Being a good citizen is important, and I was pleased to be support our legal system in such an important role.

Categories
Daily Life Mommy Diaries The Airstream

We’ve Been Traveling for 1000 Days, and Why That Doesn’t Matter

When we originally left our sticks and bricks house in July of 2013 we had no idea what was in store for us. I woke up that morning and knew we were on the brink of something amazing, but the reality has been far more grand than either of us imagined.

Today we have officially been on the road “full time” for 1000 days. That’s kind of a big deal. Sometimes its hard to remember what life was like before Airstream travel. For our youngest, Cara, its been almost half her life. We’ve camped at 308 places, earned 105 Jr. Ranger Badges, and towed the Airstream over 600 hours and 33,344 miles.

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July 2013 – Sept 2016

What I realized this weekend, however, is that the numbers don’t matter. We could be on the road for 6 months or 6 years and the most important question would be not, “How long have you been on the road?” but “How has being on the road changed you?”  Our goal has never been to see every state (we don’t even have a sticker map) but to spend time together as a family in meaningful ways.

We’ve taught our kids to backpack, mountain bike, paddle, adjust to uncertainty, overcome fear, and most importantly to let go of material things while embracing experiences and relationships.  We are more patient. We love the peace and quiet of being out in nature. Saying “no” is okay and defending family time is perfectly acceptable.  Things are just things, and simple is better. I really like to mountain bike. Sam loves to work on programming projects with the kids. We all love to hike. I love to hear my kids breathing while they sleep at night. Establishing a solid, positive relationship with our kids while they are young could be the most important thing we ever do.

There have been sacrifices and our life is not all rainbows and unicorns. We’ve cried. We’ve been angry and frustrated. We’ve had important things break. That one time, we literally set our brakes on fire. We’ve had deep doubts, unbelievable success, unexpected detours, and tears of both joy and frustration.

I wouldn’t change a thing.

This adventure of ours isn’t about the road, it is about our family and how we’ve grown.

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Categories
Airstream Accessories Daily Life

Chore Chart, Tickets, and the Family Store

Chore Chart, Tickets, and the Family StoreWhen we first started out in the Airstream it became very clear to us that our kids still needed to do chores. In our sticks and bricks they would vacuum, clean bathroom counters and mirrors, load and unload the dishwasher and help sweep. Putting the silverware away can be done by a 3 year old and we were all about having our kids do more to help around the house. We never paid them allowance as we are of the “you are part of this household and you just have to help out” mentality.

Even though our space in the Airstream is smaller, there is still plenty of work to be done! Have you seen how dusty things get? We devised a chore chart for our fridge and with the help of some vinyl strips from a craft store and a friend with a Cricut vinyl cutter we put it together. We recently upgraded our magnets as well and love that they are a little more hefty than the originals. We bought these Smiley Stars and these 0.5 inch round magnets from Amazon (affiliate links). Once assembled, we used a bit of Mod Podge over the top to seal them.

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There are quite a few sections on our chart, and while it looks fairly complicated it  break down rather nicely.

Chores

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We adjust these over time and have occasionally tweaked which chores go together as not all of them get done on the same day. As of now they are:

  1. Garbage/Walls & Table
  2. Dry Dishes & Toilet/Bathroom Floor
  3. Sweep/Mop & Bathroom Sink, Counter, & Mirror

They have to scrub/mop their assigned areas on Monday (i.e. the garbage can and walls surrounding it or bathroom counter, sink, and mirror) and generally keep them tidy the rest of the week. The garbage person is responsible for tying up the bag and putting a new one in. If the dumpster is close they take it all the way out, if not Sam or I throw it in the truck and take care of it later.  Drying dishes is both after the breakfast/lunch round and after dinner. I’m still lobbying for a daily sweep but alas, we only seem to get it done 2-3 per week with mopping on Monday.

Last spring I was frustrated with how much I felt I was doing and how little everyone else was (a slanted perspective to be sure) but when we were parked for two weeks with full hookups we tried having Rachel & Andrew trade off washing and rinsing the dishes and they did so well we haven’t looked back! They do the breakfast/lunch dishes and those two magnets just swap between the two of them and Sam and I take care of the dinner dishes. It’s much less frustrating for us as parents because Sam had to interrupt work to do the afternoon dishes or I couldn’t make dinner because the counter was a mess! Now things run more smoothly and the kids are generally better at conserving water than we are. They just hate it when “dry dishes” lands on the same day as “wash” or “rinse” but Cara is slow enough drying that we have no desire to make that her permanent chore.

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The kids are also in charge of stabilizers (that would be the S magnet at the top). They have to either put them up or down and then can move the magnet to the next person. If they forget – too bad they have to do it again. I think Cara managed a 3x streak one week and was so upset we started moving the magnet before actually doing the stabilizers so they wouldn’t forget. And yes, its manual. Many people get a drill or other attachment to do it automatically, but we didn’t have enough chores as it was so we stick with the old fashioned way.

Scriptures

We have learned that we are more consistent with family scripture reading over breakfast rather than at bedtime. We are currently reading the Book of Mormon out loud with everyone reading three verses. If there’s a principle or something to talk about, we will elaborate but generally we just read and understand the stories. I fully attribute Cara’s progress in reading to scriptures. It’s amazing the hard words she’s learned to sound out like “Zarahemla” or “destruction”. We get a magnet per day that we read as we reward the kids with a ticket per magnet on Family Store days.

Levels 1 & 2

Pre-travel we met up with a friend who had an amazing responsibility/reward system for their kids. We talked about it a lot and then Sam and I adapted it for our specific goals and situation. The basic idea is that kids have to be done with all “Level 1” activities in order to move on to “Level 2” where they can earn tickets for the family store (I’ll explain that in a second) or have screen time. We chose Chores Done (is the garbage full? Are the dishes done? How’s the floor look?), Room picked up (basically their bed made and everything neat and tidy – nothing on the floor), Teeth Brushed, School Done, and Read for at least 20 minutes (this one is never a problem).

Once they are on Level 2 they can have screen time (if they have any left) and also earn tickets for writing in their journal or doing service for someone else. We also will give out extra tickets for awesome behavior in certain situations or if the kids have particularly agreeable attitudes.  This section we’ve used less, but I just added journal writing to their school curriculum so I imagine there will be more magnets up there in the future.

DSCF6960Family Night

As members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints we are encouraged to set aside Monday nights as “Family Night” and spend it together. With suburban families, hectic schedules, school, and work this allows parents to have at least one night with their kids in a fun, spiritually uplifting environment where everyone is together. Although we spend more time together than the average family, our kids still LOVE Family Night or Family Home Evening (FHE) as its more commonly known.

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We rotate assignments, but the general outline is Song, Prayer, Lesson, Activity, and Treat with the kids’ favorite parts being the Activity & Treat (naturally). FHE can be short or long, and we’ve adapted it to many situations with excursions for ice cream, camping on an island, or just a simple game of cards and strawberry sorbet. The kids have resources to put together a lesson and some go better than others, but overall it’s generally a positive experience. Often they are spiritual, but sometimes we aim for something more practical.

Screen Time

We limit our kids’ screen time pretty severely. For a while they could just play as long as they wanted and we found our kids to be grumpy and irritable. Once we set a hard limit, suddenly there was less grumbling when it was time to be done. They get (4) half hour sessions per week, for a totally of 2 hours. The most we usually let them play in a row is 2 of those, so an hour total. They can buy an extra 3o minutes of screen time in the family store for 7 tickets, but I’ve been surprised at how little they utilize this option. Some weeks they use up all their tablet time in two days, but most of the time they are good about spreading it out.

Family movie nights or long drives don’t count against their tablet time, or if Sam and I just have a lot going on and we need the kids to be distracted we are more lenient. The kids also know that if we get together with friends and the parents just want to chat around the campfire they can usually play an hour or two of Minecraft if they just stay quiet and out of our way! These remain the exception however, but can provide some extra reward for the kids and a little bit of peace for us as parents.

For every tablet time they do not use during the week, we will pay them 7 tickets. If we are super busy with friends one week, or they set their mind to it, the kids have earned all 28 tickets before by not playing the tablet all week!

The Family Store

To motivate all of these changes we adopted the idea of the “Family Store” or a place where the kids could earn things. The store opens once a week, usually on Sunday afternoons unless we forget and then the kids remind us on Monday. We bought a semi-small plastic container with a lid to store the items in, and it fits under Andrew’s bed.

DSCF6979 The kids pay us with actual carnival tickets we bought at Walmart. Each item is based on a ticket cost, so if we paid $1.00 for it, the kids have to pay 10 tickets. So essentially a ticket is worth $.10. We will buy items in advance if is something the kids see at a store or a visitor center (stuffed animals were a big one for awhile) but if it’s a high priced item they have to earn half before we will buy it. There’s been a few times where interest has waned and I’m glad I didn’t buy the item up front.

We generally have 1-5 ticket pieces of candy in the store, such as smarties, tootsie rolls, mints, or the movie boxes of candy we can get at Walmart. They can also earn extra tablet time, and occasionally they’ve earned bigger items all together such as an ice cream date, or a trip to the movie theater. That generally doesn’t go over so well, and we haven’t done that in awhile.

They usually have something bigger they are individually saving up for. Rachel has earned a Kindle & cover (1,100 tickets!), they both have earned Harry Potter robes (200 tickets), Cara has earned Kingdom of Wrenly books (about 50 tickets each) and is currently working on earning her Paw Patrol DVD (120 tickets).

When they started saving for bigger items, Sam also introduced the idea of The Bank. For every 10 tickets they put in their bank (aka plastic sandwich bag), they can earn 1 ticket the following week. It’s a ridiculously high interest rate (which we remind them of often) but it makes the math super easy. The biggest lesson taught is about immediate gratification vs. saving for something bigger and better.

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Our largest struggle is having the kids earn “stuff”. As a general rule we’ve tried to eliminate a lot of fluff and meaningless stuff in our lives and coming up with consumable incentives or finding a place for the items they want to earn can be challenging.

Earning Tickets Through Outdoor Recreation

In addition to having good attitudes, writing in their journals, not playing the tablet and reading scriptures they can also earn tickets through hiking, backpacking, junior ranger badges, biking, paddling, and any other outdoor activity we do.

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The catch is they only get tickets for HAPPY miles. This has severely cut down on the whining, and they know we will dock tickets if there’s a bad attitude on the trip.

  • Generally 1 ticket per happy hiking or biking (off road or on) mile. If we mountain bike for 4 miles they earn 4 tickets.
  • For hiking we double that if we go over 5 miles. We’ve done plenty of 5-8 mile hikes and the kids LOVE It when we just barely hit 5 and they can double their tickets to 10. There’s been known to be conversations about doing laps in the parking lot to get Endomondo up to the magic number.
  • Biking we double if its over 10 miles.
  • Paddling (canoeing or kayaking generally) we do 2 tickets per mile.
  • Backpacking they get 2 tickets for every mile they hike with a pack. This is whether or not we are over 5 miles. Our Cumberland Island hike was a mix of hiking with and without packs so the calculation was a bit complicated.
  • For every Jr. Ranger book they complete, we pay 5 tickets, + 1 ticket for every extra page they do.

While not a perfect system, it really works for us at this stage of our kid’s lives. We do adjust and make decisions based on changing circumstances and skill levels but overall having a system has helped our family run smoother and better!

If you have any suggestions or comments we’d love to hear them! Do you have incentives for your kids? What can they earn? What types of chores do your kids do?

Categories
Daily Life Faith Utah

A Month in Manti, Utah for the Mormon Miracle Pagaent

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Travel Dates: May 28 – Jun 26, 2016

In two and a half years of travel we have never stayed in the same spot for a month. Ever. Our typical stay lasts anywhere from one night, to our previous record of two weeks. Lately we have been aiming for 7-10 days, but an entire 30 days seemed a little intimidating. Luckily, we had the Mormon Miracle Pageant to keep us plenty busy. We posted back in June about our decision to participate in the pageant, but we thought a summary of our time there was in order – both for those that are interested in participating in Pageant with their families someday, and those that want to see what staying stationary can be like for full time travelers!

The Campground

We stayed at the Temple Hill RV resort just north of the Manti Temple in a water/20amp electric site. The owners were great and the campground was very shaded (which was our saving grace!). Sanpete County is known for its ATV trails, so we had quite a lot of company on the weekends with warriors and their toys. Once pageant performances began, the campground filled up more regularly, but still never fully reached capacity. The sites were tight enough though that we had a few mornings where our neighbors were up long before us and we didn’t enjoy the noise in such close quarters. If we were to do it again, however, we’d make sure to sign up early enough to get a spot with 30amp hook ups at the local RV Park. Not having air conditioning and 100+ degree temperatures were a terrible combination. We all get a little irritable, lazy, and fairly non motivated when it gets that warm outside (and inside!). We had 20amp electrical and water, but no sewer which meant hitching up and dumping our tanks everyday 6-8 days.

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The RV park has a pool, but for the first two weeks it was not heated and was COLD. The kids jumped in once or twice but they never lasted long. Our last week, however, they installed (or fixed) the water heater and we spent some long days at the pool to get out of the heat! It was nice having laundry on site, and during the week we felt we could spread out a little since there were few campers in our area.

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Activities Other Than Pageant

For the first week and a half, we still managed to sneak in some school. The kids had subjects they were finishing up from last year (ahem, math!) but we were pretty lazy about it. With rehearsals not starting until 5:oo pm most nights we had plenty of time during the day to clean, work on school, and have Sam get his paid work in. Once things heated up with late dress rehearsals and performances, however, we gave up and just called it “summer”. Everyone was too tired by then to even think about school.

Since the campground pool was too cold, the kids and I took one day to visit the local Manti community pool which was fun but also disappointing because there was no diving board for the older two. Poor things. I also signed the kids up for 2 weeks (8 days, Mon-Thur over two weeks) of swimming lessons at Snow College up in Ephraim. In hindsight I’m glad I signed them up for the 11:20 am spot, because that last week we had dress rehearsals and performances which meant we didn’t crack our eyelids in the morning until at least 9:30am. Rachel and Andrew have done swimming lessons previously, but Cara never has. Despite their initial insistence that they could swim just fine, by the time lessons rolled around all three were excited. Rachel and Andrew worked on their diving and stroke technique, while Cara blew her teacher away with how fast she learned to dive for objects and swim the front crawl.

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Shortly after arriving, we took a drive up to nearby Maple Canyon to check out a Box Canyon hike. We also were able to watch some of the rock climbers and decided we needed to come back the following week with our gear and try it out. I climbed down there long ago in college and remembered it being fairly beginner friendly. We went up the following Monday for Family Night and even brought the daughter of a friend (okay, for all purposes she’s considered a niece) and introduced her to rock climbing. Unfortunately the next time we went up to climb the routes were busy with Boy Scouts and we had to bail.

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Our first Sunday evening (June 5th) we took a drive up Ephraim Canyon to get out of the heat. We checked out the campground, but our biggest find was an awesome boondocking spot we find off a forest service road. The following weekend (June 12-13) we towed our trailer up there Sunday after church and spent a blissfully cool couple of nights camping up in the forest. We still had to drive down for swim lessons, but the cooler temperatures were worth it! We had an epic campfire dinner one night and were also joined by Sam’s brother who was driving through the area on his way to Idaho from California.

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We celebrated my birthday (June 16th) with waffles for breakfast, a climbing trip turned canyon picnic up Maple Canyon (boy scouts, remember?), dinner with my parents and friends and donuts & ice cream for dessert!

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Father’s Day we left the trailer and drove up to Sandy, Utah to attend church and have dinner with my family. We then spent two nights at our friend’s house in Lehi where the kids played, and played, and played some more with their best friends. It was a fabulous break from the heat in Manti and we always love seeing our friends!

During performances we had both family and friends come down for pageant. It was so fun to see everyone! When my parents came down, in addition to celebrating my birthday we also visited the Ephraim cemetery where my dad’s ancestors are buried. Apparently “Madsen” is one of THE families in the Ephraim/Manti area.

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We were also surprised with a visit from Sam’s parents! They flew from Oakland, CA to Salt Lake City, UT and then drove down. It had been months since we’d seen them last and we always love spending time with them! Our last afternoon together we spent a few hours at Palisades State Park canoeing, swimming, and generally horsing around.

DSCN7405 We took one night off during pageant performances to watch the entire thing. Many of the other participants were surprised we had never seen it before and encouraged us to do so. We bought dinner from the vendors and had fun hanging out on the lawn before the show started. We loved watching it and we became even more excited for our final performances afterwards.
IMG_20160623_211929416-01 We had plans to visit the local libraries, but turns out the kids had enough books to keep them busy for the month. Once pageant performances started it really took up more time than we had originally thought and didn’t have the energy for much else!

Pageant Rehearsals

My 31st – June 4th was our first week of rehearsals and it was a lot of fun. The pageant directors put out a master schedule and ran through various scenes from 5:00-9:30pm every night. All of these rehearsals were in the local church building and not actually over on temple hill. This was great because we were indoors, out of the sun, and it was air conditioned.

Many of the principal parts had rehearsals in the side rooms while the larger groups practiced in the gymnasium. Rachel, Andrew and I attended the square dancing rehearsals where we learned a simple Virginia Reel for one of the Pioneer Scenes. Sam would bring Cara over a little later as we went into rehearsals for some of our other parts. We had originally intended to not have Sam and Cara in the Pioneer Scenes as they were much later in the pageant, but we learned at our first rehearsal that we needed a man from our handcart group to join the Mormon Battalion so they started coming to rehearsals as well. We figured we’d just see how she did once we got into those late nights!

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Our second week (June 7-11) we started rehearsing on “the hill” and were able to practice with our handcarts as Pioneers. I don’t think we realized how steep that hill actually was. It was a workout to run up and down it and even to pull those handcarts across! By this time we were able to have a sense of the show, how things worked, and where we were supposed to be. All the seasoned participants kept telling us that “it’ll all make sense once you get on the hill” and it really does! Nothing quite prepares you for the magnitude of the stage than actually being on it. We also were given costumes this week. There is a dedicated costume building on the property and we were able to try on our costumes, make sure everything fit properly and then we left them there to check out every night.

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These were hard weeks for me as I had a lot of trouble balancing early rehearsals with dinner. Some days we’d have an early dinner and take snacks, but everyone would come home starving at 8:30pm. Other nights we’d snack before we went and have a quick dinner when we got home at 8:30. I still don’t think we ever figured out a schedule that really worked, but we survived. We definitely did not eat as healthy for the month but luckily we burned a lot of calories going up and down the hill!

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Friday June 10th and Saturday June 11th were run throughs. We ran through the entire pageant from 5:30-7:30pm, and then everyone was fed dinner, we changed into costumes and we ran through the 1st half on Friday and the 2nd half on Saturday in costume with lights. The kids were extremely excited to practice in costume as it made everything more real. Some of the costumes they use are pretty elaborate and it was fun to see the different characters!

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Our Parts

As a family we mostly participated in large group scenes. These were fun as we could all be together during rehearsals and performances. There were three main ones we did: Harvest, Christ in America, and Pioneers.

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As Joseph Smith translates the Book of Mormon, scenes are shown of the people that once lived in North America.One of the story threads of the pageant is about a righteous man called Captain Moroni who led the Nephi people through wars with the wicked Lamanites. In Harvest, we celebrate his return from war, and its a colorful scene with many of the young girls (including Rachel) twirling ribbons. Unfortunately the people at that time were plagued with prosperity and many turned to wealth and riches and hardened their hearts towards the teachings of Christ (Sam and I alternated nights going “wicked” and pretending to throw rocks and shoot arrows at the prophet Samuel the Lamanite).  From there we repented, and looked to Nephi as a prophet who foretold the coming of Christ to visit the people.

Upon Jesus’ death in Jerusalem, the people in North America experienced extreme earthquakes, floods, lightning and other tumultuous storms. On stage this meant a lot of running around in the dark with fireballs being lit by the stage crew. It was one of our favorites! At first Andrew insisted we hold his hand so he wouldn’t get lost, but by the last night everyone was comfortable to just run around by themselves. I loved how much confidence my kids gained through this experience!

We also participated in the “Christ in America” scene from the Book of Mormon where Jesus Christ visits the indigenous people of North America after his resurrection. This was my favorite scene and we were encouraged to really put ourselves there as if we were seeing the Savior. One night I was able to walk up to touch his hands and his feet, and another night Andrew and Cara were able to sit on his lap as he taught and blessed the children. While there, Jesus Christ organized His church and called Twelve Apostles, just as he had in Jerusalem. Sam started out as a “fill-in” Apostle, but eventually just planned to fill the role every night since the regulars didn’t seem to show up.

DSCF5894After Christ in America, we exited the stage and changed into our Pioneer costumes. Once the narrative reaches the end of the Book of Mormon where Moroni (not the same as Captain Moroni) buries the plates for Joseph Smith to find, the pageant returns to Joseph Smith and eventually the martyrdom of Joseph & Hyrum Smith and the exodus of the Saints from Nauvoo. As Pioneers we pulled our handcarts across the hill, participated in a campfire scene (that’s where the square dancing came in), and journeyed from Salt Lake City to Manti with the protagonist, Robert Henshaw, who is killed by Native Americans. What follows is a beautiful depiction of life after death and the fact that our families truly can be together forever after we die.

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Looking back over our experience, I will admit its one of the most difficult experiences we’ve had as a family. Late nights, following a schedule, managing expectations, and just plain working hard were all involved, but it was definitely worth it! We feel closely bonded as a family having shared this experience, and our kids are already scheming for when we can participate again! Andrew wants to be a Nephite Warrior and Rachel can’t wait to be a Lamanite Dancer and an angel. We are so grateful we were put by the Lord in a time and place that this worked out so easily for us to do together. Our testimonies of Joseph Smith and the restoration of Christ’s church on the Earth were strengthened and we made many friends that will hopefully last a lifetime!

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