Sunday, November 23, 2014

November 2014

The first week in November Gayle and I flew to Georgia for a wonderful, restful visit with family and friends.
 We got to go to the Longhorn steakhouse in Covington one evening with Richard, Rosemarie, and all their descendents (as of now).  Here are Gayle and Rosemarie waiting for a table.
 Emily and her mom, Rosemarie.
 Richard and his bride.
 A table with Sells, Cleggs, and Parkinsons.
 David, Katie, and Blythe.
 Abby and Aaron.
 Andrew, Amanda, and Ashley.
 
 The Utahans.

 We also made it down to Eatonton, home of Brer Rabbit and Uncle Remus.  But it's also home for cousin Leon, who owns a beautiful flower shop.
 Cousin Roger has re-created a wonderful village from the turn of the 19th century (roughly) near Eatonton.  Here he and Gayle pose in front of one of the log sheds he built.
 Gayle was baptized in this pretty Southern Baptist country church in Deep Step, Georgia when she was about 9 years old.  Her mom and other relatives are buried across the street in the church's cemetery.
 Next to the church is an outdoor worship area, just above a water filled kaolin (chalk) open mine down below.
 Deep Step is a kaolin mining area, as evidenced by this pit below the church.
 Here are Gayle's mom and dad, side by side across from the church.
 Gayle's mom.
 Her dad.
 Gayle's sister Beth is buried near a Baptist church in Milledgeville, Georgia.
Louis also gave me a shot at driving their very long RV, in case we ever want to get one too.
I did not take out a single mail box!

 Gayle demonstrated how to get into a cock pit of a small plane without damaging the wing flaps.
 Ronda and Louis next to another T-Bone under restoration.
 Here's that RV, next to a workshop trailer on wheels.




We took the RV out for Chinese food.



Rosemarie took us to Athens, GA to see the university's botanical gardens, a real treat.
 Some of the orchids we saw.
 Even though it was cooling down for autumn, there were still some nice plants outside surviving the colder weather so far.


Sisters and BFF.


We were able to hook up with a couple at church from the Covington ward (the Hiatts) and make it to the Atlanta temple one morning.



 Here's Richard and Rosemarie's house in town (Social Circle, GA) which served as our home base the whole week.  We love staying there, and I like jogging around town and out in the country.
 This is Richard and Rosemarie's house out in the country, complete with two dogs in the yard and a golf cart in which to get around.




One of Richard's sculptures.

Emily, Rosemarie's daughter, and her husband Chester, have a family blue-grass band.  One night they performed at a "plantation" out in the country where there was a church fund-raiser event.  The venue was outdoors in a pavilion where folks were eating and talking, so the sound was not the greatest.  But the Cleggs gave a wonderful performance.

This clip shows Ashley on the fiddle, then Abby on the mandolin, and then Aaron on the banjo.  Mom and dad play respectively the stand-up bass and the guitar.


Chester sings "Moving On" as Aaron accompanies.  They started getting some speaker feedback mid-way through, but finished up without showing any qualms.  Very professional!

 Andrew, Emily, Abby, Chester, Mandy, Aaron, and Ashley.
 We got to watch our two smallest granddaughters last weekend, as well as the Kent girls (Nicole, Ella, and Audrey).  Note our early snow.
 The girls had fun drawing clown faces as Gayle had showed them.  Audrey, in the background, is doing it on the white board instead.
 The results.
Nothing like a good competitive game of Old Maid!

Here are two clips of the girls, and then Gayle, playing Dead Man Come Alive.









 Here's Avril, with her "snow cake on a stick with a cherry on top."
 The Kent girls had breakfast with us while their mom went to conduct choir practice (she's the director).
Here I enjoy being the only male in the entire household - 7 to 1 counting Gayle and mom.

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