Sunday, July 20, 2008

KAILEY's FIRST BIG GIRL SLEEPOVER

On Friday the 18th, Kailey had her first sleepover with her friends Ami and Taya, they had so much fun and totally wore me and Joey out!!! Here are some of the pics from the night and then we took them swimming to Gem Lake the next day!

Taya, KAiley, me and Ami
Photobucket

Joey the horse
Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

FINALLY SETTLED DOWN
Photobucket

GEM LAKE
Photobucket

AMI AND JOEY
Photobucket

TAYA WANTED NOTHING TO DO WITH THE WATER
Photobucket

KAiley swimming with a dog
Photobucket

Photobucket

Ami swimming
Photobucket

They all had an amazing time and this is not the last of the sleepovers to come, I guess me and Joey better start building up our energy now!!!

Monday, July 7, 2008

4th of July Island Park Camping Trip

On the 4th of July we got up early, loaded up the Jeep with everything we were going to need for our camping trip. We grabbed the dog and headed over to our friends, Lisa and Keith Skaar. We were leaving at 12pm, or so we thought. After leaving Wal-mart to grab a few last minute things, lol of course I had to buy some clothing item, we all know how I am lol, we finally were headed to their house. We got there when they said at 11:30am and they weren't there. I called Lisa and she said they were still in Ft. Hall getting fireworks and would be there asap. So the waiting begins. Finally they arrive and they have to finish loading up the camper with the last few essentials things that needed to go, the dogs and the dirtbike and hooked up the camper to the Suburban. Well, Lisa's airbags to her suburban decided to stop working, so we spent an hour trying to figure out what to do and then she just said, Screw it, we are going with out them. So we stop at Maverik to fuel up and then Lisa's kids say, "We're hungry!!!", so off to McDonalds we were. While at McDonalds, Lisa's mechanic friend was heading over to look at her airbags, so after he got there and the guys ran to the autopart store we were finally leaving. We drove all the way thru, with a quick stop at Ashton, we were almost to Island Park, when all of a sudden Lisa came to a quick stop, now let me add at this point our dog Baby was sooooooo hot, she was panting and having a hard time, so we kept giving her water and had the AC cranked, but she was not happy, anyways, so we all pull over to the side of the road on top of the hill to IP. Her fuel pump seemed to have gone out! We had no idea what we were going to do and then next thing we knew Lisa had her Suburban started again and we were ready to go. Babydog had finally had enough and just passed out, shes so cute.
Photobucket

After driving and stopping and waiting we finally made it up to Henry's Lake right around 6pm, 4 hours later than me and Joey thought lol, oh well last time they went they didnt get there until 11pm so hey we were doing good. We unloaded and got everything set up, had a quick dinner and then the Skaar family was off to watch the fireworks, but we stayed behind and ended up watching all the big shots blow an easy $5,000 on fireworks all around the lake so we were just fine! Once they got back they told us they missed the fireworks, so Keith took Kaden, Ky and I call her Kiwi out to the street to light some fireworks off. We got the kids to bed and the adults, I don't know how, stayed up talking til about 130am. We finally crawled into bed, WE HAD NO KIDS IN THE CAMPER YEA!!!!!!!!!!!!! NO sooner had I closed my eyes it felt like, Joey was waking me up saying the guys were going fishing, it was 630 UGH!!! So I thought I will fall right back asleep, nope. I was up for the day. So we pile out and the kids wake up and we start the coffee first then breakfast. The guys all lay down thinking they were entitled to sleep while us girls had to watch the kids and cook. Oh boy did they have a rude awakening lol. After eating and getting sunscreen and in the adults cases tanning lotion( BAD BAD BAD IDEA) on , we were set for the day. Joey decided he was going to learn how to ride a dirt bike, thank god we have insurance on him lol. Now he wants one and a motorcycle!! THANKS KEITH!!!!!
Photobucket

Photobucket

When Joey got back from riding we tried to take naps, but the kids just wouldnt let us. ARRGH!! So we decided to go for a ride around the lake on the 4-wheeler and just check things out and get away. I took an amazing picture of our beautiful surroundings.

Photobucket

Later that night after all of us realized how sunburned we were, we started dinner and started to wind down. Heres a picture of Lisa and Keith, you can see how burned they are lol.
Photobucket

Them going for a ride
Photobucket

Campsite
Photobucket

Hell yea I ride too!!
Photobucket

Well after we got to sleep and woke up and ate and got things packed up, of course you can read about what we did that afternoon at Earthquake Lake, we finally had everything loaded up and me and Joey were out of there and headed home, so I thought. Joey decided he needed to stop and try fishing lol. So we pulled off the ride at a little river and he gave it a shot no luck. :(
Photobucket

So we drove up and decided to fish the river by Mack's Inn. He got lucky there, fish wise lol ;)
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Nothing to brag about as you could see, that last picture the fish was actually only 3 inches long maybe.
FINALLY YEA!!!!!!! WE were going home, but one last picture, we were dirty, sunburned, tired and sooooooo ready to just get home
Photobucket

Babydog was just excited as us to get home
Photobucket

Anyways, so that was our 4th of July weekend all summed up. We had alot of fun and wore ourselves out, but we can't wait for our next adventure!!!!!!!!!!! STAY TUNED..............................

4th of July at the Manwarings

Finally my family was all able to get together and have a good 4th of July BBQ. It was great and very relaxing. We sat around, talked and watched all the kids play. Its amazing to see how big they are all getting and of course how adorable our nieces are. We were lucky enough to get a new niece from Joey's side on July 2nd. Lily Erin Schmidt entered our world and I know she is going to change our lifes for good! She is a little angel and a true miracle for Jon and Nicole. Anyways, here are some photos that we took that night, unfortunately we didnt get everyone, but right now everyone is so focused on those cute little girls!! Oh yea, and by the way my niece Brooklynn won Cutest Baby in Idaho Falls on July 4th, so its official I have the cutest nieces.
Tyree and Brooklynn
Photobucket

Jared and Kellen Melon
Photobucket

Brooklynn being a goof
Photobucket

Tyree and Tiffany
Photobucket

Brooklynn and me
Photobucket

I love this little girl!!!!!!
Photobucket

Tyree, little miss blue eyes
Photobucket

Kellen Melon and the Mohawk
Photobucket

Uncle Joey and Tyree
Photobucket

Brooklynn playing in the water
Photobucket

Having so much fun
Photobucket

Here comes big brother Kayde spraying her in the face!!
Photobucket

NOW GABRIEL, SHE WAS NOT HAPPY!!!
Photobucket

Now shes sporting the mohawk too!!
Photobucket

READY TO DRIVE!!
Photobucket

How do I make it go???
Photobucket

I love my family!! They are always so much fun to be around!!!!! We had a great night!!!!!! I can't wait til our next get together.... now for us on to our next adventure...............

A very scary and uneasy trip down to one of history's greatest events; Earthquake Lake, MT

On SUnday July 6th, we drove up to Earthquake lake in Montana with some friends who had lost family in this devestating tragedy and it was an experience I know I will never forget. Reading the stories of survival and struggle shook me to the core. If you are ever in the Island Park area it is soooooo worth it and very important to go and see it for yourself, pictures don't even begin to bring the feeling you get when you look out and drive and view the devastation that is still there today! Here are some pictures we took while up there.
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket


"On the evening of August 17th, 1959, the area just west of Yellowstone National Park experienced an earthquake measuring 7.5 on the Richter scale. At the time it was the strongest earthquake recorded in the United States. It killed twenty-eight people; many were buried beneath the 80 million tons of dolomite that crashed down upon a sleeping Forest Service campground, others drowned when the Madison River, displaced by the slide, engulfed their tents. These deaths, the exodus of nearly eighteen thousand tourists from Yellowstone, an evacuation of downstream residents, and the astounding (and photogenic) property damage are probably known to most readers. Reports of tremors came from as far away as Seattle, Washington, Dickinson, North Dakota, Banff, Alberta, and Provo, Utah. Indeed, the National Forest Service's Earthquake Lake Visitor Center perched on the scraped mountainside across from the slide area is a shrine to these events. From the windows of the 1960s-modern building, visitors looking eastward can gaze upon the dead trees poking from beneath the surface of Earthquake Lake, the lake that formed behind the rockslide. Slightly to the west, the gray rock guts of the slide area, "the mountain that fell," wink in the sunshine. From the rockslide, the visitor's gaze naturally drops to the concrete spillway and then follows the rock detritus four hundred feet up the near canyon wall to the two-story-tall Memorial Boulder. In 1960, exactly one year to the day after the quake, the United States Department of Agriculture christened the surrounding 38,000 acres the Madison River Canyon Earthquake Area. In 1967 construction crews completed the Earthquake Lake Visitor Center.Inside and outside, the visitor center encourages its twenty-eight thousand annual visitors to think about the campers' bad luck, the heroism of rescuers, and the ingenuity of engineers who labored to cut a new spillway and repair the cracked dam holding back the waters of Hebgen Lake. But there is also another theme running through both the visitor center exhibits and the many publications describing the event: geologic discovery. For scientists, the Madison earthquake was an unsurpassed opportunity to study earthquakes. According to plate tectonic theory, the earth's crust is broken into several large pieces, plates that "float" on the earth's molten core. Over geologic time these plates move, creating zones where plates collide. One such place is the Pacific Coast of North America, where the North American plate is being subsumed under the Pacific plate. Earthquakes occur when the force of tectonic movement becomes greater than the strength of surrounding rocks and the rock suddenly gives way. Quakes radiate along fault lines, which often are existing fractures in the rock but can also be created by a new line of breakage. The Madison earthquake area is located in the Intermountain Seismic Belt, a region of young fault lines that runs southwestward from northwest Montana to the Wasatch Mountains of Utah. Although the entire area is on the North American plate, it is on a soft edge that experiences "warping" as a result of the plate's movement. As the plate moves, it stretches the earth's crust, which then breaks along the fault lines. This type of faulting is called basin and range because the fracture of the rock results in large "blocks" moving upward and the land between sinking. Such faulting has produced the short north-south mountain ranges separated by wide valleys that are characteristic of the western United States north of the Great Basin.
The Madison Range is a typical example of a mountain range created by this process, and it is laced with active faults-including the Hebgen Lake, Red Canyon, and Madison Range faults along which the August 1959 earthquake occurred. The Madison earthquake was actually a complicated event in which two faults slipped within two seconds of each other. As a result, three great blocks of earth and rock dropped; two of these tipped, causing Hebgen Lake to roll nineteen feet to the north. Part of the Madison earthquake's value for research is the fact that it produced effects not common to all quakes. First, the earthquake occurred near the earth's surface, at a depth of approximately eleven kilometers. Its epicenter, the location on the earth's surface directly above the quake, was at Duck Creek. The quake's shallowness resulted in many visible signs on the landscape, particularly in the scarps that mark the fault lines. Along these scarps, the earth stood between nine and twenty-one feet higher on one side than on the other. In Red Canyon a scarp following the contours of the mountainside is visible for some fourteen miles. Sand spouts, slumping, and minor landslides also appeared. By measuring, charting, and comparing the data with prequake measurements, United States Geologic Survey (usgs) geologists developed theories about why this earthquake, and others, occurred. It was their first opportunity to study range-front faulting in the Northern Rockies.The second uncommon event produced by the earthquake was the giant wave, known to geologists as a seiche, that formed when Hebgen Lake tipped and water began to slosh from one lake shore to the other and back again. Eventually, waves twenty feet high overtopped earth-filled Hebgen Dam, built by the Montana Power Company in 1915, and rushed downstream. This water and the lake's normal outflow formed Earthquake Lake (commonly known as Quake Lake). Although the dam held, it sustained damage to its concrete core and spillway. When the wave action subsided nearly twelve hours later, cabins on the lake's north shore stood underwater while on the south, muddy expanses lay exposed, boats and docks stranded far from the water's edge.The quake's proximity to Yellowstone Park, long a crucible for scientific research, also enhanced its educational value. One boon was a new awareness of the extent to which seismic activity affects Yellowstone's geothermal fea-tures. In Yellowstone some two hundred geysers erupted and new ones sprang to life. Many of the park's hot springs changed temperature. The springs' colors changed, too, as minute particles of broken rock muddied the waters. In the northwestern corner of the park large cracks emitted hot steam. usgs-maintained gauges monitoring flow into Hebgen Lake revealed that the amount of water in the Madison River increased from 350 cubic feet per second a day approximately two weeks before the quake to 1,100 during the last ten days of August. The Madison Earthquake Area is both a monument and a classroom for geological research, and many parts of it are easily accessible to visitors. The Earthquake Lake Visitor Center, located on Highway 287 approximately twenty-seven miles northwest of West Yellowstone, Montana, is open 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. seven days a week from mid-May through mid-September. The admission charge is three dollars per car and one dollar per bicycle or hiker. Other sights-the Red Canyon and Canyon Creek scarps, Hebgen Dam, submerged cabins and highway, and the Memorial Boulder-are accessible all year. These locations are marked along Highway 287 between its junction with Highway 191 and the Madison Slide area. Call the Hebgen Lake Ranger District at (406) 823-6961 for more information."