Category Archives: Uncategorized

Hen Party Finished!

I am a happy camper to have finished Hen Party before the end of the year!

I posted links to previous posts about this project (and close up pics of the hens) at the bottom of this post. You can revisit (or visit for the first time) the progress if you want to by clicking on those links.

It is a dark photo, but you can see what the back looks like. Good thing you can’t examine close up, however! I can never seem to get a pieced backing on straight!

Hen Party

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Hen Party

I like a lot of texture!

Hen Party

And the completed quilt, including binding and a label:

Hen Party

It has been a struggle. I had to get a new computer. Transferring and getting everything ‘just so’ to the new pc has been confusing and stressful, but I am learning my way around. My old pc and I were such good friends, and I am sad to say goodbye! Hello to Windows 11 and OneDrive!

I have questions! But I am blessed! Tomorrow, (which will be today by the time this posts) the Hubster and I are driving to spend the Thanksgiving Holiday with our son and his wonderful family.

You know how I am going to get my questions answered! Oh yes! Son is going to help me and my new pc get much better acquainted!

I wish you all a very blessed and Happy Thanksgiving! I know I have much to be grateful for!

Hen Party

Hen Party Update

Hen Party Update 2

Hen Party Update 3

Hen Party Update 4

Have fun and carry on!

Last Day of an Epic Road Trip

Our last day on the road took us through small parts of the Bighorn National Forest, the Gooseberry Badlands and a picnic lunch in Yellowstone National Park. It was a beautiful drive home!

Loaf Mountain Overlook on the Cloud Peak Skyway shows off the Cloud Peak Wilderness.

Bighorn National Forest

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Bighorn National Forest

Tensleep Canyon offers unspoiled beauty while rock climbing, caving, hiking, or mountain biking, and our pursuit…the scenic drive.

Bighorn National Forest

Bighorn National Forest

Bighorn National Forest

Leigh Creek Vee has a broad ledge about 200 feet below the rim of the canyon and about 1,000 feet above the canyon floor with a stone monument topped with a cross. The monument was constructed in 1889 in the memory of a British Member of Parliament (member for South Warwickshire), the Honorable Gilbert H. C. Leigh, after whom the creek is named. In 1884, Leigh, a house guest of Moreton Frewen, lost his life hunting big horn sheep.

Bighorn National Forest

Sam Stringer, the courageous former Confederate teamster, had the mail contract for delivery of the mail from Buffalo to Powder River, Sussex, and Ten Sleep. In about 1892, he nearly lost his life delivering mail, but his powerful determination got the job done!

If you are at all interested in the taming of the west, then I encourage you to click on Sam Stringer’s name and read his story. He was a soldier, a teamster (including using his wagon to carry the dead from Fetterman’s Massacre), worked on railroad building, as well as a mail carrier.

Bighorn National Forest

Bighorn National Forest

Our scenic drive home brought us to the Gooseberry Badlands right after driving through the Bighorn National Park. So fun to see the landscape change so quickly!

Gooseberry Badlands Wyoming

Gooseberry Badlands Wyoming

There is a trail to hike here, but we opted out. Perhaps someday, we will pass by again and take the time to hike the trail.

Gooseberry Badlands Wyoming

Gooseberry Badlands Wyoming

Gooseberry Badlands Wyoming

I have shared about road trips to Yellowstone National Park here, and here. It is one of our favorite parks to visit!

Yellowstone National Park

Yellowstone National Park

Today, however, since we were headed home, we only stopped for lunch at the Chittenden Memorial Bridge. It was first constructed in 1903 as a Melan arch bridge by park engineer Captain Hiram M. Chittenden of the US Army Corps of Engineers and spans the Yellowstone River.

In 1961, after a lot of public protest, the National Park Service tore down the original bridge and replaced it with a more modern, wider structure suitable for the type of vehicle traffic the park was experiencing. In an opening ceremony in 1963, the new bridge was christened the Chittenden Memorial Bridge.

Among his other achievements, Chittenden was a successful and prolific historical author. The Hiram M. Chittenden Locks in Seattle are named in his honor.

Yellowstone National Park

Yellowstone National Park

This large raven kept us company the entire time that we ate our picnic lunch.

Yellowstone National Park

Yellowstone National Park Sandhill Crane

Our road trip took us 6,738 miles from Washington State to North Carolina. We explored much, learned much, and had so much fun! Wherever you are, if you cannot afford international travel, or maybe that isn’t even a dream of yours, I know that you can find much to see and do in the area where you live!

Since this is my journal, I keep my posts under the tabs in the heading above so that I can find them again. If you ever want to revisit them, you can find them there, too.

See the world around you!

Devils Tower National Monument

Devils Tower National Monument (also known as Bear Lodge Butte) was the first United States national monument, established on September 24, 1906, by President Theodore Roosevelt. The monument’s boundary encloses an area of 1,347 acres and is located in the Black Hills of northeastern Wyoming.

Devils Tower Wyoming

Devils Tower rises 1,267 feet above the Belle Fourche River, and stands 867 feet from summit to base. The summit is 5112 above sea level. Devils Tower features the world’s largest example of columnar jointing. Hundreds of parallel cracks make it one of the finest crack climbing areas in North America.

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Devils Tower Wyoming

Devils Tower Wyoming

My camera lens was not powerful enough to take sharp photos of those black dots way up there, but it is enough to see that there were a lot of turkey vultures hanging out!

Devils Tower Wyoming

Devils Tower Wyoming

Devils Tower is a sacred place to over 20 Native American tribes. There are numerous legends and oral histories passed down and preserved through their cultures and traditions. You can learn of these stories when you click here. Devils Tower received its original name from these stories. The current name originated in 1875 during an expedition led by Colonel Richard Irving Dodge, when his interpreter reportedly misinterpreted a native name to mean “Bad God’s Tower”.

Devils Tower Wyoming

Devils Tower Wyoming

Hubby and I hiked the Tower Trail…an easy trail that surrounds the base of Devils Tower. This tree is found about halfway on the trail.

Devils Tower Wyoming

The Window is one of Devils Tower’s most distinctive features, a 300 foot alcove above the boulder field. The Window cracked open as tall stone pillars toppled from the Tower.

Devils Tower Wyoming

Devils Tower Wyoming

Devils Tower Wyoming

I love this photo because you can clearly see that the columns are not straight!

Devils Tower Wyoming

The first climbers on record to summit Devils Tower, Willard Ripley and William Rogers, built a ladder to the summit in 1893. They advertised the climb as a Fourth of July spectacle, charging admission to dance and picnic. Dressed as Uncle Sam, and carrying the American flag, Rogers climbed the ladder for the crowd.

On July 4, 1895, Linnie Rogers became the first woman on record to climb Devils Tower. She used the ladder built by her husband.

Devils Tower Wyoming

Devils Tower Wyoming

Devils Tower Wyoming

The prairie dog town at Devils Tower National Monument is approximately 40 acres in size. As in the Badlands, I really enjoyed watching them!

Devils Tower Wyoming

Devils Tower Wyoming

See the world around you!