Magpad

Magpad

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

2022 Christmas Greetings

 Merry Christmas from the Magpad 2022 
You can see our other Magpad Christmas cards through the years by clicking here.  

Saturday, November 26, 2022

Welcome Baby Dax!

 We are happy to welcome Dax into our family.   

He is grandbaby #13 joining the family of Sam and Makelle.  
You can be sure he's getting plenty of love from his two older sisters.

Saturday, November 19, 2022

Thanksgiving Craft

In preparation for our Thanksgiving gathering I was looking for crafts for the younger grandchildren to do.  I was happy to find this cute Thanksgiving hat activity.   

 Click here or on the link below to get the official pattern and instructions:


Friday, October 28, 2022

Never Give Up.....

 Isn't this the way life is?  
Just keep on keeping on.......
(click onto the full screen box in the bottom right hand corner as you watch the video)  

I got this from Kai Lo's Facebook page 

Monday, September 19, 2022

Grace and Goodness: A Tribute to Queen Elizabeth II

As I listened to Music and the Spoken Word this past Sunday, I loved the tribute Lloyd Newell gave to Queen Elizabeth II.  She is a great example of a follower of Christ.  
Recently, the longest-reigning monarch in Britain’s history, Queen Elizabeth II peacefully passed into eternity. For more than 70 years, she was the only sovereign many Britons had ever known. And while the world changed dramatically over the decades, the Queen remained steadfast and strong, an emblem of “grace and goodness” to her people—and to the world.

Like a river that moves with purpose and direction, the queen was driven more by principle than popularity. Devotion to duty, service to God and country, gave her life meaning and purpose.

Before her coronation, the Queen expressed the humility and dedication that made her such a great leader for so many years. “I want to ask you all,” she said, “whatever your religion may be, to pray for me … that God may give me wisdom and strength to carry out the solemn promises I shall be making, and that I may faithfully serve Him and you, all the days of my life.” Clearly, God answered those prayers.

“Faithful” is a good word to describe Queen Elizabeth’s service. Her faith in a Heavenly King guided her life and her work. She often spoke of that faith—of the Christian ideals that inspired her. And yet Queen Elizabeth’s faith was evident not only in her words but also her actions. She endeavored to serve, not just to be served. She visited the downtrodden. She lifted those who suffered and gave hope to those in despair. She explained: “For me the teachings of Christ and my own personal accountability before God provide a framework in which I try to lead my life. I, like so many of you, have drawn great comfort in difficult times from Christ’s words and example.”

I loved that after Lloyd's tribute to the Queen, the song that followed was,  "It is Well, With My Soul".  (Click onto the highlighted link to see it also preformed in sign language.) You can see the whole 30 minute program by clicking here.  

Wednesday, September 7, 2022

What a Difference 58 Years Makes

Harris siblings - 1964
Harris siblings 2022
We are very blessed to be family!  

Tuesday, August 30, 2022

🎶 For the Beauty of the Earth 🎶

The plants on my front porch reminded me of the hymn, "For the Beauty of the Earth"  




For the Beauty of of the Earth
Text: Folliott S. Pierpoint, 1835–1917
Music: Conrad Kocher, 1786–1872

1. For the beauty of the earth,
For the beauty of the skies,
For the love which from our birth
Over and around us lies,

[Chorus]

Lord of all, to thee we raise
This our hymn of grateful praise.

2. For the beauty of each hour
Of the day and of the night,
Hill and vale, and tree and flow’r,
Sun and moon, and stars of light,

3. For the joy of human love,
Brother, sister, parent, child,
Friends on earth, and friends above,
For all gentle thoughts and mild,

Sunday, July 3, 2022

Happy 4th of July 2022

This program that was shown today on Music and the Spoken Word got me in the mood for the 4th of July.  Enjoy!
You can also see the video by clicking here

My favorite song in this program is: "America, The Dream Goes On" starting at 10:00 minutes.  I felt that the pictures shown during this song are a good representation of America. 
I grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area, so of course this picture caught my attention.
I also enjoyed seeing the statue of the Marines raising the flag on Iwo Jima.

Starting at 13:35, Lloyd Newell gave this timely message titled:  "Self-control, Liberty, and Law" taken from the patriotic hymn, "America the Beautiful":

Self-control, Liberty and Law
There is a line from a well-known patriotic hymn: “Confirm thy soul in self-control, Thy liberty in law."  These principles are basic to life, basic to the eternal plans and purposes of the Lord. But sometimes we seem more to have remembered freedom than self-control, liberty more than the law.

As we come together, live together … in a world where physically we come ever closer together, always we have to have self-control, always we have to live our lives with law as well as with liberty. Always we have to consider the rights, the privileges, the comfort, the convenience of others, with an awareness that we have no right to do anything we want, to take anything we want, or irresponsibly to say anything we want, or to befoul the moral atmosphere, or the water others use, the air where others are, the peace that others have, or their rightful privacy, or to live uninhibited lives. We have to be considerate of others always. Self-control, with law, is the only safeguard of liberty; and not the existence of law only, but respect for law, obeying the law—the laws of God, the laws of the land.

Acclaimed filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille said this of laws and liberty: "We are too inclined," he said "to think of law as something merely restrictive—something hemming us in. We sometimes think of law as the opposite of liberty. But that is a false conception. … God does not contradict Himself. He did not create [us] and then, as an afterthought, impose upon [us] a set of arbitrary, irritating, restrictive rules. He made [us] free—and then gave [us] the commandments to keep [us] free. …"

To this great utterance we would add: The greatest threat to liberty is lawlessness. And the greatest assurance of liberty is respect for law. "Confirm thy soul in self-control, Thy liberty in law."

The above narrative is from this webpage:   https://musicandthespokenword.com/spokenwordmessages/self-control-liberty-and-law-sunday-july-03-2022/

Monday, May 2, 2022

Utah National Parks Adventure

Kathleen and I were excited to embark on a three-day, 986 mile road trip through south central Utah. We wanted to get better acquainted with our newly adopted state. 
We were joined by our good friends, Jonn and Judy Claybaugh. Jonn and I have known each other since high school in California. Our first stop was to see Cove Fort, two hours south of home. The fort was built in 1867 at the request of Brigham Young as a secure way-station for travelers through central Utah. Today, it is owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.    
Senior missionaries conduct tours of this lava rock-constructed fort, the last totally original fort still in existence in the American west. Why lava rock?--timber was and still is in short supply in this region; and, it is situated not far from an ancient volcano. 

Cedar Breaks National Monument, east of Cedar City, has an elevation of over 10,000 feet where we are standing, with a depth of over 2,000 feet. It was cold!  
Heading south, we stopped in Orderville. The town was established in 1875 for Latter-day Saints to live and share freely with each other under the United Order. The Order lasted about ten years. Judy chats with the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers Museum docent, who she discovered is a distant relative of hers! 
Cemeteries in Utah always include a mix of recent residents with original settlers. This headstone in Orderville is of Mary Benton (1810-1884). These resting places are testaments to the faith and tenacity of a people who fled religious persecution to forge new communities where none existed.    
Moqui Cave is a unique museum of ancient history located north of Kanab. Built inside a huge cave along Highway 89, it houses a gift shop, rock collections, and ancient archeology finds. It's a must stop! 
Judy points to a photo of her and Jonn's son who married into the family that owns and operates the cave.

Across the highway from Moqui Cave, in the canyon, are additional caves. These are being developed by the same family into resort venues. A tree was carved by someone years ago with a chain-saw and was just recently discovered when the heavy brush was removed.
Kanab was settled near the Arizona state line. It was a popular destination for Western movie makers decades ago, as well as now, due to its stunning landscape and vistas. 
We passed through Hatch, population 133, about fifty miles north of Kanab.  
The houses of worship in rural Utah may differ in building materials. But, whether they are from the 19th century in Kanab (top), or of modern style in Hatch (bottom), the congregants’ strong faith in Jesus Christ remains the same no matter the time period.  
Bryce Canyon National Park is one of the most popular of the national parks due to its unparalleled beauty and grandeur. Here is the largest concentration of irregular columns of rock found anywhere on Earth—its geological wonders defy description. Located at around 8,000 feet, it was cold when we arrived. 
Starting at Sunrise Point, we descended the Queens Garden Trail that connected with the Navajo Loop Trail.
Jonn pauses at the bottom prior to our ascent to Sunset Point. 
Bryce Canyon is a favorite of international visitors. Judy made friends with a tourist from Germany, while Kathleen met a Scottish traveler with whom she shares ancestry.  
Kathleen was disappointed in my choice of a Bed and Breakfast in Escalante.  (just kidding) 
Overlooking Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in the distance.
Four miles west of Torrey, we begin hiking up to Hickman Bridge, along the Fremont River. We are now in Capitol Reef National Park. 
The climb is steep up to the 133-foot natural stone bridge.
In the distance is one of the the white domes of Navajo sandstone that resembles the dome of the Capitol building in Washington, DC—the origin of the name of this national park.
Near the trailhead to Hickman Bridge, we view the petroglyphs carved in the rock by the pre-historic inhabitants of this area.
Goblin Valley State Park is a strange and mysterious valley, unlike any other in Utah, featuring thousands of hoodoos, referred to locally as goblins. The formations of mushroom-shaped rock pinnacles are the result of gradual erosion of sandstone, deposited 170 million years ago when the area was next to an ancient sea.  Wandering through the goblins, I imagined myself on the set of the 1965 television show “Lost in Space”. 
One goblin resembles a duck; the other a French artist wearing a beret.

Our last hike was up Little Wild Horse Canyon, five miles from Goblin Valley. 
This is a slot canyon that is so narrow in some sections that only one hiker can pass between the sheer walls of stone.
Returning home via the I-70, we stopped to enjoy the panorama of the San Rafael Swell at the foot of Ghost Rock. 
The fastness of the valleys and canyons below once were hiding places for outlaws, including Butch Cassidy.
The temple in Manti was completed by local members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1888. It dominates the Sanpete Valley, and can be seen from many miles. Near this spot in 1977, as college students, we attended an outdoor temple pageant. Of course, being with Kathleen I didn’t watch much of the pageant— we were engaged two months later.

Northeast of Manti is Spring City. Although it is still largely a farming town, Spring City is becoming increasingly known for its many examples of 19th century pioneer architecture. The 1899 old schoolhouse is an example. In 2010, Forbes magazine identified Spring City as one of the prettiest towns in America.
It was a fascinating three days of travel and learning with dear friends. 

Wednesday, April 13, 2022

My Mother, Carlene Buchanan Harris

My mother was born 89 years ago this month.  
She was raised in Bountiful, Utah...
...and was the valedictorian for her high school. 
She met my dad at the University of Utah.
They raised their family in Concord, California.
Every summer we traveled to Utah to be with our extended family.
She dearly loved her children and grandchildren!
Every two years we had a Harris family reunion.
Six years ago in April my mother passed away.  
Being the only daughter, I inherited her jewelry.   
What to do with all of her costume jewelry from the 1950's?
You google "jewelry Christmas tree on velvet" and get to work.  



This "jewelry Christmas tree on velvet" hangs in my dining room 
and every day when i see it, I think of my mother... 
....and I am reminded daily how blessed I was to be raised by her.