Monday, February 21, 2011

Day 2

So, as I was cruising into Casper, WY from the airport today ( in my mini-van ) I was reminded how much casper is like Nome, at least the weather anyway. Yesterday they had a day long blizzard and today it is clear with lots of snow on the ground that is now being blown around polishing everything.



I was thinking the other day about when we had a little accident with one of our single otters. I was on my way from Kotzebue to Nome in a navajo when I got a message that one of our otters was overdue from picking up a group of hunters on the American river. I was asked to go check on it. I knew the approximate area where they would be so I descended down to get under some weather and then headed for where I thought they could be. I tuned a radio to 121.5 so as to pick up and Emergency Locatro transmitter, if there had been an accident and it was going off. Sure enought within about 10 miles I started hearing one ( not good) When I was about 2 miles away from te site I could see a flash from a beacon on the airplane, neaning there was still power to it. I soon had the aircraft in sight. It looked like it had hit a bank of the river on take-off and ripped the engine off to ne side and the landing gear was crumpled. It looked pretty bad. I went right over it down low then circled overhead trying to see any people. Later I learned that the pilot had heard me coming from a good distance and could tell it was a navajo and that it was headed straight for him. I stayed in a circle above the wreck while climbing higher to talk to the office. When I could I reported that it didnt look good and I couldnt see anyone. they were already getting Eric Pentilla and his Evergreen helicopter ready with Mike Owens to come help. I continued to circle overhead. I wanted the people in the airplane to know we were still there and I wanted to be able to relay info to the office once the helicopter arrived.

It took quite a while for the helicopter to get there, maybe 1 hr 15 min or so, They got there near dark and reported everyone was alive allthough the pilot had some injuries. It turned out that the hunters were giving the international signal to me of injured people at the site by laying down on the ground with arms and legs out. The only problem was they had their camo gear on and I couldne see them.! Well I relayed the message and headed to Nome because I was getting very low on fuel. The helicopter brought them all in and the pilot and 1 passenger were hospitalized, well for a while anyway, the pilot wouldn't stay and even with possible internal damage and a big cut on his head from the curled prop hitting him, he went home.

The aircraft was retrieved after freeze up.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Day 19











A few photos from a scout trip to the little Sahara. It was beautiful weather ! Not a bad self portrait there!!
And there is nothing like a scout breakfast!
I am excited about some camping with grandsons this summer!!















Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Day 18, sort of

So, It is late, and I am finally down my to - do list to where the Blog Post is! I haven't thought of anything profound today, I was studying PC-12 stuff, and while it is pretty cool, you might not find it interesting. But I did start thinking of an old story that all my children are already familiar with but I don't know if it is written down anywhere.

Don is a friend of our from Nome. He is now in his later 60's. He has had some serious health problems in his life. Don owns a little cabin, that I am sure someone is squatting on now, on the Grand Central river. We have all been there, what a beautiful location!

Well, one time Don was driving himself to his cabin and stopped at the Grand Central bridge to see how many fish were swimming around in view. Now, for those of you who haven't been there the Grand Central is a VERY cold, clear river, and at the bridge it is plenty deep enough to jump off of the bridge into its chilling waters. Remember, the challenge is to see if you can actually speak something intelligent whilst swimming to the shore! You are usually so overcome by the cold that it is hard to get real words out!

Ok, sorry, I degress, back to Don. This day he proceeded to the center of the bridge to gaze over the railing and imagine how he is going to catch those beautiful fish down there. He gets there and starts looking, now Don gets really excited about fishing, and I can just see him looking intently at the water and not really being aware of much else. And the next thing he knew, his false teeth were out of his mouth and falllllllllling........splash! You can imagine how you would feel! Well Don doesn't really fly off the handle quicklly and I believed him when he told me that when those teeth went in , he just stood there staring and all he said was " Schucks". He stood there gazing into the water for sometime, and was able to locate the teeth through the clear water, but didn't know what to do about it.

It wasn't too long until a state truck came by and the young driver got out to check out the fish situation also. He started a conversation with Don and Don explained about the sunken teeth. This good man decided to help. He stripped out of his clothes and dove into the river!! I think it would be a pretty good trick to do that and actually get the teeth, but he did! I am not sure how many tries it took him, but maybe he did it in the first one! Hows that for serving someone? I used to know which DOT worker it was , but I have forgotten.

Don asked around town to find out this guys favorite beer and then bought him a case!!

So, always wear clean underwear because you never know when you might have to take off your clothes and get someones teeth!

Monday, February 14, 2011

Day 17

Ahhh, Another satisfied customer!! After a Larapin dinner of Peanut-Chicken vegetables and rice with Bok Choy, Dad somehow found room for a piece of No sugar added Apple Pie!! Imagine that! He has been doing really good recovering from his surgery, the physical therapist claims he is her star patient! He has been walking a lot and doing really good on his eating.



I was glad to hear that my Son - In Laws did such a good job of treating their Valentines today - Way to go guys, well, except Luke, he was a bit of an over - achiever, he gave sushi, flowers, and a couple gift cards. Like dad told him: he may have to stand before the husband committee for such behavior. Husbands have a range of generosity that must be observed or it reflects poorly on the rest of the group! I haven't heard a report from my favorite daughter in law yet on how Jake did but I am confident that it will be positive.



A couple thoughts on prayers: Sometimes we think that praying should be like going through a drive Inn. We give our order to the microphone hidden somewhere on that plastic sign, then we pull up and are handed exactly what we wanted and we go on our merry way.



The way I see it is there are some things requireed for prayers to be efective

We must approach God in the name of Jesus Christ. This way we come as disciples of Jesus, only asking for things that Jesus would approve of. We don't ask selfishly, or for trivial things. If you haven't been receiving answers like you thought you should start by thinking about what you are asking for. A few things that I think would be on the approved list - Humility, a greater capacity to love, the ability to forgive, courage, opportunities to serve, the strength to serve, blessings on those ( and it could be you also) who are having a rough time, and the list could go on, but you catch my drift.


When we approach God in prayer, we need to also be forgiving of others. Mark 11:25 mentions that when we pray we should forgive, to insure that we can be forgiven, but I cant help but think that communication in prayer will happen much easier if we don't have ill feelings toward others obscuring our hearts.

A couple verses earlier in Mark bring up another requirement for getting answers to our prayers. We have to believe that we will get an answer!! It is possible to overlook an otherwise obvious answer to a prayer simply because we don't really believe that we will get one!


If you believe there is a rabbit in a picture then you will look until you see it.


I would refer you to the list I started about what would be good things to pray for. If you have doubts that God answers your prayers, then pray for something from the list, surely you could believe that you will get an answer to one of those things, so really believe it and look for your answer, through the scriptures, through your spouse, through a speaker at church, or a friend. Personally , my answers come in quiet meditative times (often while on a mountain:) )when I am pondering things, especially words from the Book of Mormon.


Congratulations to Jake on his promotion to Driver!!!

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Day 16

This is a few hours late, so I will do this twice today. I went to an adult session of our stake conference last night, really good. One of the speakers was from England and gave excellent talk on the need for us to forgive ourselves after we have repented and then to move on. One of the illustrations he used was that we were designed with both our feet and our heads pointed in the same direction! We weren't made to be constantly looking back at what we've done wrong, but rather to look forward to what we are going to do.

I heard that Bob Dylan and Barbara Striesand are both preforming tonight at the Grammies. I would like to hear those two, but not sure I want to bad enough to watch all the show, maybe I can find out what time they perform....

Friday, February 11, 2011

Day 15

The answer is...................Alyssa. The birthday girl!!! I am really glad the Jensens were able to go to the McCarneys house to celebrate birthdays!

February 11th 1986 in Nome Alaska was a foggy drizzly day, with the temperature hanging around the mid 30's. But there was something in the works that would brighten everything up! Yep a beautiful 8lb 13oz girl that we knew had a middle name of Sue, but the Alyssa part didn't come along until about 10 days later! ( the hospital really wanted to get that birth certificate done). We were living in a duplex on 3rd ave. in Nome with a good view of the ocean from the living room. Her older siblings were happy to have her home, especially Becca, who wanted to take care of her. Even as a young child Alyssa was soft spoken and gave serious thought to things before voicing her opinion.

Alyssas first trip to the dentist was interesting, she was about three and Deena had primed her for the experience well in advance. She went when some of her siblings were getting their check-ups, and when it came her turn, all the pre-visit coaching went out the window. She would not open her mouth. Finally the dentist coaxed her into opening up, he got his fingers in there and..... she bit him! So much for that try.

A couple weeks later, the day for another try is approaching, we have been coaching, but it is obvious that more needs to be done. so Deena sweetens the pot: " if you are good for the dentist and do what he says you can choose a Barbie from the surprise box that we have for birthdays. " Alyssa careful considers this prize and responds: " 2 Barbies". ( Lynn, I am sure you have experienced her negotiating skills by now) OK, Deena agrees and off to the dentist it is, and......same results, only I think it was a different finger that got bit this time.

Yes Alyssa had a Tom Boy-ish period in her life that I am sure we make sound like it was longer than it actually was. I always remember the comment by Jake " Alyssa, you're about as close to a brother as I am ever going to get".

Once while on vacation in Arizona, Alyssa witnessed Deena withdrawing about $150.00 from an ATM, she quirried her mom about how much that cost to use that machine, and when Deena responded " about a dollar" Alyssa's eyes got big and she said : " I have a dollar!" I guess I would of been excited too if I could get $150.00 for $ 1.oo.

Of course I should mention the time when she took the snowmachine out for a ride after dark, and she didn't return when expected. I was just going out the door to look for her when she came home, big tears and all telling us she had tipped it over. It was really no big deal , I got it righted and it started right up. She has always been good with equipment, a good driver and also a good shooter!

It was fun to be able to see many of her Cross Country meets and watch her mature in High School. A couple important memories that I have had with her in her adult years have been: After dropping her off for the first time at ISU, I was driving away from the parking lot and I could see that little face way up there in that big Dormitory! Made me get all chocked up. Our Teton hike together, something we all need to do more of, was great, we had to move off the trail to let a cow moose through, and one evening we sat on a big flat rock and quietly watched a gorgeous sunset. Also that was a memorable trip because I met this tall guy that lived upstairs from Alyssa that let me have his bedroom for a night, I think he was trying to make a good impression,............ he did.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Day 14

Today will be a test day. I will tell a story about one of my daughters and you will need to identify which one it is!

I was wathching my daughter play basketball, she was young and energetic! I was on the bleachers wathching as the opposing team had the ball and started driving towards their side of the court. The boy with the ball was going pretty fast and dribbling well. My daughter was guarding him closely when she committed a foul and the boy went tumbling out of bounds and ended up in a heap over by the drinking fountain.

I think that in the NBA nowadays it would of been called a flagrant foul.

She casually walked back on the court with her hands on her sides as if nothing had happened. All the spectators had seen it and there were a few comments going around, so I stood up like the proud father that I am and proclaimed " That's my Girl!" I was followed immediately by a large man in front of me stating " that was MY boy!". A good time was had by all!

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Today

Once upon a time in a land, not too far away, there was a beautiful princess and a handsome prince. They didnt know each other until one day when they were at a party and the young prince was bold enough to show the princess one of his war wounds. It was his ankle and it had been hurt in a fight against a most formidable enemy. The princess was quite taken with him, perhaps it was his good looks, perhaps his bravery, or, as I think, it could of been his thick hair and because he was born in the great state of Idaho to goodly parents. They soon fell in love and married in a beautiful temple located in the village of Boise.

The prince was happy! The princess was happy! But, something would soon happen that made them both even happier! Yes, they had a baby. A man child to be sure. He was lively with quick eyes and alert to every sound ( I know, I was there). The prince was so excited. He wanted to give his new baby a gift, he wanted to give him a fine , shiny new sword. A good sword to fight dragons with. But, his mother, the beautiful princess, ( who undoubtedlly was born of a beautiful mother), was also wise and asked her husband to wait and let him grow until he was at least as tall as the sword was long, before he gave it to him. The prince saw the wisdom in his wife's counsel so instead of giving him the sword at that time they instead gave him a name! I don't think I can say it out loud for I don't want any dragons to hear it, but, it starts with Bradd and ends with ock. So, now the young man has turned 4 years old, and is also a big brother to a smiling and snapping curly headed brother named Emmett. But to the surprise of all, The big brother is not a dragon fighter! Instead he is a friend to dragons! He even rides on their backs as they fly across the mountains! But, now listen very closely because I will tell you a secret: sometimes he turns into a dragon himself! Yes, it is true, I have seen it happen! And so what will happen now? He goes to preschool and and he rides a scooter as fast as a strong wind. And he plays with some cousins ( though he longs to see the cousins that live over the Rocky Mountains)

What will happen next in the life of the Handsome prince and Beautiful princess?

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

today

well, I never mentioned much about Jessica and Braddock on their birthday, so I thought I would share a few thoughts about Jessica.
Her birth was quite an occasion, when Deena went into labor I was quite concerned, it hadn't been that long since my sister had lost a prematurely born baby. I remember at the hospital I ran into Toni Talbott, the wife of a fellow pilot from the aerodrome. She worked at the lab. It was nice to hear her reassurance that premature births weren't that uncommon. However the doc did order up a helicopter to standby to transport her to a larger hospital in Spokane because they thought she would be around 4 lbs. So, when she came out at a whopping 6lbs 3 oz. I was quite relieved. I was amazed at how much pain and work was required of Deena!! I realized that giving birth was a big deal!! well, after about 5 days in hospital to treat her jaundice, we took her home and celebrated her first poopy diaper!! We were living in a trailer not far from Deena folks and we had a water bed that was pretty comfy, but if we wanted we could create a wave that could just about throw Jess off the bed! what else can I say about Jessica? You all know her pretty well! She was a great first child. With all the responsibilities that come with that job! Lots of talent, lots of capability to love. A few random thoughts: " its a tiny bit soaking wet!" "hold you me" and of course " Everyone always says I exaggerate all the time , but I never do". Jessica heard newborn Hannah crying one night. Deena was in bathroom. Deena saw a couple flashes of someone running up and down the hallway(in the dark). It was Jess grabbing Hannah and running with her back to her room! She had thought Hannah had been left.

I guess we may have forgotten to teach her how to swing on a swing set................ Luv Ya Jess!!

the next day

ok, I fell asleep before I shared this last night, so this is technically yesterdays post. I wanted to share another poem, that corresponded with the "man" thoughts. This one by Rudyard Kipling:



IF
If you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you;
If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
But make allowance for their doubting too;
If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,
Or, being lied about, don't deal in lies,
Or, being hated, don't give way to hating,
And yet don't look too good, nor talk too wise;
If you can dream - and not make dreams your master;
If you can think - and not make thoughts your aim;
If you can meet with triumph and disaster
And treat those two imposters just the same;
If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
Or watch the things you gave your life to broken,
And stoop and build 'em up with wornout tools;
If you can make one heap of all your winnings
And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss,
And lose, and start again at your beginnings
And never breath a word about your loss;
If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew
To serve your turn long after they are gone,
And so hold on when there is nothing in you
Except the Will which says to them: "Hold on";
If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with kings - nor lose the common touch;
If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you;
If all men count with you, but none too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds' worth of distance run -
Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it,
And - which is more - you'll be a Man my son!
Rudyard Kipling

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Day 10


I would like to share some of our Lesson today that we gave in our combined Aaronic Priesthood class. We gave a lesson based on a talk by Elder Christofferson. Here is some of his opening story:

Years ago, when my brothers and I were boys, our mother had radical cancer surgery. She came very close to death. Much of the tissue in her neck and shoulder had to be removed, and for a long time it was very painful for her to use her right arm.

One morning about a year after the surgery, my father took Mother to an appliance store and asked the manager to show her how to use a machine he had for ironing clothes. The machine was called an Ironrite. It was operated from a chair by pressing pedals with one’s knees to lower a padded roller against a heated metal surface and turn the roller, feeding in shirts, pants, dresses, and other articles. You can see that this would make ironing (of which there was a great deal in our family of five boys) much easier, especially for a woman with limited use of her arm. Mother was shocked when Dad told the manager they would buy the machine and then paid cash for it. Despite my father’s good income as a veterinarian, Mother’s surgery and medications had left them in a difficult financial situation.

On the way home, my mother was upset: “How can we afford it? Where did the money come from? How will we get along now?” Finally Dad told her that he had gone without lunches for nearly a year to save enough money. “Now when you iron,” he said, “you won’t have to stop and go into the bedroom and cry until the pain in your arm stops.” She didn’t know he knew about that. I was not aware of my father’s sacrifice and act of love for my mother at the time, but now that I know, I say to myself, “There is a man.”


I thought that is a great example also of what a man should be like. A lot of what we see in the world today teaches that real happiness comes from self indulgence and only doing things that are in your best interest. I have long thought that being a parent or a spouse is all about everyone except yourself. I believe that we are successful in those roles as we forget ourselves. When we consider decisions we should think " What is best for my wife and family?


Elder Christofferson again: " Though he will make some sacrifices and deny himself some pleasures in the course of honoring his commitments, the true man leads a rewarding life. He gives much, but he receives more, and he lives content in the approval of his Heavenly Father. The life of true manhood is the good life."


I can testify to the truthfulness of that. I know that times when I have succeeded at being unselfish in serving my family I have felt the contentment that comes from feeling my Heavenly father has approved of my choices.

Now, I need to share another important line from his talk, and it addresses those times when as men we are trying to do it right, but don't quite make the high mark that we are shooting for: "Sometimes men try but fail. Not all worthy objectives are realized despite one’s honest and best efforts. True manhood is not always measured by the fruits of one’s labors but by the labors themselves—by one’s striving."

Isn't that a great truth? Sometimes we try and try and try to do something, only to not reach it. It is easy to feel we have failed, but if it was a worthy objective, even though we didn't obtain the fruits that we were working for, it was not in vain. We will be better as a result of our striving.

The greatest quest we can have is to strive to be like Jesus. And the really cool thing is that He is the one that enables us, through the atonement, to keep striving, to repent and to try again and again and again to be more like him.

That gives me hope.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

day 9


OK, Today i read an interesting article in the local paper. It seema the Utah legislature has decided to get rid of a law that made it illegal to openly carry a gun within 1000' of a school. It is still legal to carry a concealed weapon, if you have a permit, within that 1000'. Now I know that if someone was going to cause harm they probably would keep their weapon concealed right up to or maybe into the school. But, if you saw a person with an unconcealed weapom within that 1000' you could do something about it. Now with no restrictions you can watch and see what they plan on doing. We all would do something anyway if we saw someone toting a gun headed towards a school, but it just doesnt seem right to me, even though I am a firm believer in the right to bear arms, to repeal the 1000' rule. The only justification the legislature had was that it might be inconvienient for someone carrying a gun to have to circumnavigate the 1000' perimeter. Give me a break.

Thats another picture in the Casper area. It was about a 20 mile drive outside of town, the last few miles on a dirt road. As I was driving out on it in my rental car my thoughts went back to one time when I was going to a school in Arizona with my boss and one evening we went for a drive in his rental car into the desert. Really into the desert, we traveled thru it at a high rate of speed bouncing all over! I remember thinking " I must remember to never buy a car that used to be a rental because people treat them like this!" Of course, I learned a good lesson from the adventure; I follow his example and have fun! A guy just has things that he wants to do in a car but doen't want to abuse his own !

Friday, February 4, 2011

Day 8




Dad is doing really good now, saw a nurse and pyhsical thereapist today. Tonight he mentioned that he would like to find a job! Thats great! I think he could use it. Help us find places for him to apply. Of course we thought of Wal Mart as a greater. What other jobs are out there for an 85 y. o. man? Dads whole life has been about work, and it would be good to see him doing some again.

I have uploaded 3 pics taken outside of Casper, WY this summer. There is a rabbitt in all three, can you see him?


Here is another favorite poem, this one By Robert Frost:

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth.

Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same.

And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I--
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Day 7

We got Dad home today! he didn't need any pain meds in the hospital, and he has quite an appetite.

Well, I believe Alyssa would be a great pilot also! Jessica brought up a good point about the comparison of how I would of scored when I was a new pilot compared to now. The scores would definitely of been different. Now I scored fairly high on the Invulnerability and anti-authority, well, I think they were in the high 20's, with Macho coming next and impulsive and resignation being very low. The purpose of getting the pilots to see how they score isn't to have them correct their attitudes so they will score all zeros the next week, but rather for them to recognize when the high scoring attitudes rear their heads and then correct them.

I believe that early on in my flying days, and I mean really early on, like before I was 20 y.o, I probably scored really high in the invulnerability column. But after my first 9 months flying in Bethel and having 3 of my fellow pilots die in some pretty ugly crashes, I started taming that attitude. I thought of a story that actually involved a friend of mine that gives a good example of the invulnerability that both he and I experienced in our youthful enthusiasm for flying:

My friend that worked at Henley Aerodrome with me was named Rob Cheeley, Rob was a year or two older than me and we got along very well, he had gone to Alaska one summer and worked in a logging camp and he helped fuel my enthusiasm to go to Alaska. One day Rob was on the ramp visiting with an older guy that was kind of an odd duck who had a little homebuilt airplane called a Smith Termite. It was made almost all of wood, it was a high wing single seat tailwheel airplane with a small 65 hp engine. I had been warned, as Rob had, that the aircraft probably wasn't built real well, and we should not get involved in it. Well, Rob was talking to the owner and pretty soon, Rob was obviously getting ready to fly it.

After Rob was in the open cockpit and about ready to have someone start it for him, he motioned for to me to come over, he wanted to talk to me. When I got over he made sure the owner couldn't hear him and then he asked me: " How do you do a loop?" he then explained that the owner wanted to know if his little airplane could do any aerobatics and Rob had convinced him that he was experienced at such things and could go try it out for him! I gave him a 30 second description of how to do a proper loop in an underpowered airplane, reminded him about doubts as to how well the aircraft was built, then gave him a prop ( that means I went out and manually spun his prop so it would start, the common way to start an airplane with no electrical starter). Rob went on his flight, came back in one piece, and told me he had accomplished the loop, although it didn't sound very pretty!

If something had wings and fuel, there wasn't much reason not to fly it! Rob became a Christian, got married to a Hawaiian girl, became a doctor, and started a medical ministry in remote China! I believe if you google his name you can find out about it. Sounds like he is accomplishing a lot of good!

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Day 6

The 5 Hazardous attitudes in Aviation;
1. Resignation - “ whats the use, forget it, I give up”
2. Anti-Authority – “ Why should I listen to you?”
3. Impulsivity – “Do it quickly”
4. Invulnerability – Nah, I don’t think it will happen to me”
5. Macho – “ Come on, I can do this!”
These are pretty well known among pilots, and there are online tests that you take to see where you rate in each area. A numerical value is given for each area, the higher the number the more you have that attitude. I think the numbers go from 0-50 for each one. Where do you think I rate? Where do you think you would rate?

2 dangerous words in aviation – “ Watch This”
Speaking of words, who knows the phonetic alphabet? You know, Alpha, Bravo…………

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Day 5

Today was spent at the hospital with Dad. He had his hernia operation. Everything went pretty well, they did have to go with a modified anesthetic plan after having some concerns with his heart, but when I left him at 8 pm tonight he was doing well and eating very well. Dad is really good about eating green smoothies even if they dont taste good. OK, another Dad story. Last night Dad shared with us the story of his one other experience with surgery.

It was 1962 and dad was a forman at the PFI papermill in Lewiston. He had an employee that really wanted the first day of hunting season offf, but there were other more senior people that did also so dad informed him that he would have to work. Well this guy didnt want to take no for an answer, and insisted that he was taking it off. Dad said they argued, finally the guy said he was going to the bar that was close to the mill. Dad went home but knew he still had to deal with this, so he went to the bar so they could talk, well, he was still outside when the guy came out and before dad knew it he took a swing at dad at hit him on the right cheek, now it broke the cheek badly because he had a roll of quarters in his fist! Dad went home but Mom took him to the hospital. It was decided, because it was affecting the biones that held his eye in place that surgery was needed. Dad remembers that as they were putting things back together they adjusted the bones until Dad said that his vision went from double to single, meaning they had the eye socket at the right height, and then they put things into place! He recuperated in the hospital for a week and then another week at home befoer he went back to work. The guy still had his job and he met Dad outside the mill and talked about all the repecussions he had had since he hit him ( allthough I find it amazing he still had a job) and asked dad what he could do to make things right. Dad told him to forget it. Dad also reported that he turned out to be a pretty dependable guy that he could call on to work overtime when needed. Later on this guy worked for PFI at a mill at Kamiah and had his shirt or jacket get caught in the machinery and it ended up pulling his arm off. They must of been quick with first aid, because he lived, but while rushing him to a hospital about 20 miles away the car broke down! Luckilly an ambulance came from the hospital and got him.

Hey, Ethan and Matthew have joined the 31 club! Ethan is going to practice dribbling a basketball 31 times each day and Matthew will do 31 jumping jacks each day. Right on guys, we are proud of you!