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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

MEXICO!


We went to Mexico for a week in the end of May and beginning of June.  We flew into Cancun and then drove an hour to our resort in Playa del Carmen.

We stayed at the Iberostar Tucan.  The property is actually shared with the Iberostar Quetzal, so that means the pool is huge, there are twice as many restaurants, and the property is GINORMOUS!!  The restaurants have great food.  The restaurant options are: two all-you-can-eat buffets, four dress-up restaurants, and two beach/poolside restaurants.  For breakfast we ate at the buffets, for lunch we ate down at the pool, and for dinner we mostly did the buffet.  We went to two of the dress-up restaurants though.  The restaurants we went to were Japanese and seafood.  At night there were shows to see.  During the day, we spent a lot of time by/in the pool/ocean.  We bought a ball that can bounce on water from Brookstone before we went.  By the time we left, two other groups had bought the balls from the gift shop at the front of the hotel.  When we weren't doing that we did some other pretty fun stuff.

One day, we went on a tour to TulumChichen Itza, and a Cenote called Ik Kil. Both of the ruins, are ruins of the Mayan People.  We went with a tour group called Alma's LDS Tours. We loved hearing about the similarities of their beliefs to the LDS church.  Similarities like: their God was a white, bearded man, that he was born of an Earthly mother and a Heavenly Father, that he came to Earth and will come again one day. There are too many similarities on here to list but look them up or ask me!

We were picked up at our hotel in a van by our tour guide.
This is our tour guide, Miguel 

First we drove to Tulum where we looked at ruins for about an hour and a half.  Here are some pictures from that.
Tulum literally means "walled" and the city of Tulum was surrounded by walls on three sides and backed onto a steep cliff that overlooked the ocean.  Inside of the walls was where rulers and priests lived, while the commoners lived outside of the walls.   



The temples were places of worship and only the highest priest was allowed inside.  In order to pay reverence to their God, the steps leading to the Temple were so narrow that the priest would have to walk up them sideways and therefore would never have their back to God.  The doors were also very low, meaning the priest would have to bow to enter.



The Mayans were known for their amazing architecture.  In the picture above, on the Spring Equinox (also considered the birth of their God), the Sun would perfectly shine between the 2 buldings on the left.  The light would then shine directly into the Temple of Fertility (picture below). 



From there, we drove to Chichen Itza.  This was a much bigger ruin.  Here are some pictures from there.




This is the main attraction at Chichen Itza,  El Castillo or the Temple of Kukulkan (The Feathered Serpent).  Chichen Itza was one of the largest Mayan cities, built around the 9th century AD.  It is also one of the New Seven Wonders of the World.

Each of the pyramid's four sides (representing the four seasons) has 91 steps which, when added together and including the temple platform on top as the final 'step', produces a total of 365 steps.  The current temple is actually built on top of a smaller identical temple.


This is the side of the main temple.  During the spring and autumn Equinoxes, the Descent of the Feathered Serpent occurs.  The Mayans believed that their God would return in the form of a Feathered Serpent.  The snake on the side is built in such a way that during those days the northwest corner of the pyramid casts a series of triangular shadows against the western stairs that creates an illusion of the serpent is slowly descending day by day until the whole serpent appears.
 
This is what the final serpent looks like. (Clicky thing)





 This is the ball court at Chichen Itza.  Here is a description of the game played here.


That little hoop is where the teams had to get the ball through.

This was where the priests and rulers would sit to watch the game.

These are depictions of the skulls of the Team Captains of the winning team.  The losing team cut off the heads of the winning teams and then the heads were drawn in memory.

After Chichen Itza, we drove to Ik Kil.  Ik Kil is a cenote.  It is a natural swimming hole.  Here are some pictures:

This is what it looked like from above.  We had to walk down steps (see below picture) to get to it.

Here we are jumping in! The water was FREEZING. But definetly worth it after a SCORCHING hot day with very high humidity.
  
The water was so clear! You could see tons of fish swimming around.


This is me jumping from the 20ft high platform!

Overall, we all really enjoyed our day!  At the end of the day, our guide gave us a gift.  It was a recreation of this stone carving.  The carving is believed to be of the Tree of Life as seen in Lehi's vision.   

 


We had a great day and would recommend this tour company or a tour like it to anyone visiting this area of Mexico.

Another excursion we did was to Xel-Ha.  Xel-Ha is a natural waterpark.  There is a lazy river, snorkeling, zip lines, cliff jumping, bike riding  swimming with the dolphins, and so much more.  The way it works is that you buy a wristband that lets you do almost everything (scuba, dolphins, and a few other things are an additional fee. We drove about an hour to get there.  When we got there, we got our lockers and got ready to go out. I hadn't been feeling good, so we got me some Pepto Bismal and I was good to go.  Then we headed to get breakfast.  After breakfast, we went on the lazy river.  This lazy river was a natural river that took about 45 minutes to float down.  You got to go down in either single or double tubes.




Along the way there were zip lines and spots to jump off cliffs.






 We did that a few times and then went to the main lagoon.  Here you can float and snorkel around (the snorkel stuff was free).



 We saw a ton of rays along the bottom of the lagoon.  We touched them.  They're slimy.

Other than those trips, we just lazed around the resort.  We did walk into town one night but quickly returned because of the high humidity.  Great TRIP!

Thursday, October 25, 2012

May Through Present


In the beginning of May, we went back to Estes Park for the 24th Annual Duck Race.  Basically, people can buy a rubber duck and chose from a list of organizations where they want that money to be donated to.
The Ducks are then dumped into the river.  

The Lady with the stick is in charge of getting ducks unstuck!

They then float down the river. If your duck is one of the Lucky Duckies, you win a prize!
This day was a lot of fun; enjoying the duck race, walking around Estes, and eating Ice Cream.

We also went to the Sealing of Josh's cousin Marissa and her now husband in Utah.

I also had my End of the Year Field Trip with my class.  Every year, the 5th graders at University Schools spend a week traveling around Colorado and Utah.  This year's trip included: The Sand Dunes, Fort Garland, Pagosa Springs, Mesa Verde, Arches, and Glenwood Springs.  We (50 students, 3 teachers, and 10 parents) traveled in a charter bus and parent cars.  We had gorgeous weather the entire trip.  It was a great trip and I think I slept for the next 3 days straight after we got back. Here are some pictures:
This is what our sleeping arrangements looked like.


 Double O Arch
 Delicate Arch


The next week was the last 2 days of school and I officially finished my first year of teaching! HURRAY!! 

The next  week we left for Playa Del Carmen, Mexico (Pam, Richard: In laws, Josh, Cam, Scott, Bobby, and Lindsay. Missed Mark and Camille.  =( Brothers and Sisters in Law).  The next post is completely devoted to that trip.

June was a pretty mellow month.  We spent time with Dehncke family, spent time with Heidbrink Family, and went to the Greeley Stampede.

In July, Mark, Camille, and Scott came out  to Colorado for 5 days.  We went to the Stampede again and went swimming at least 2 times a day =).   

Other events for the month included: an airshow in Wyoming, Olympics, and a James Taylor concert.

Pics from the airshow:



Because of my AWESOME Uncle Stephen, we got to go see James Taylor at Red Rocks!! This was Josh's first concert.  Before the concert, we got to walk around backstage and even go ON THE STAGE!! Then we watched some of the show from the crowd and some of the show from backstage.  We were especially glad we could go back stage when it started to DUMP rain.  The power went out from lightning in the area, but after about 2 hours, the rain stopped and the show went on.  We had so much fun and loved the concert.


 The Stage


Our view from backstage as it DUMPED!

We had so much fun and loved the concert!

August was Cam's Birthday!!! And we got a fire pit.



In September, we went to Aspen a few times.  SEE ASPEN POST!  We also went out to Virginia to visit Josh's Grandpa, Richard's Dad.  It was so great getting to meet him and see his AMAZING poker skills.

So far in October, quite a bit has happened.  General Conference (more on that in future blogs) was the first weekend.  The next week I helped out with an intervention for a child with behavior problems at University Schools.  That weekend we went to Utah for Camille's baby shower and Josh's cousin's farewell before she left on her mission to Brazil.  We also bought a new jeep that weekend! And have already been 4-wheeling in it! The jeep is manual transmission so I have been learning how to drive stick shift.  EEK!


This past week we went 4-wheeling, I went down to the Temple and hung out with my "soulfriend" and now we are getting ready to head out to Utah on Friday for Josh's Grandpa's funeral.

Well there you have it!! A full year of the doings of Cam and Josh!

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Oh Blogging!

So some day I'll get in the habit of Blogging on a more normal basis (more than just once a year). : / Until then I have alot of catching up to do! Yikes!

I LOVE reading other people's blogs, I have had people comment that they like reading my blog, and Josh constantly, NICELY, reminding me to do it.  I also had a friend remind me how great it is for keeping track of your family doings.  SO here goes... The Adventures of Cam and Josh since Oct 14th 2011!

2011 ended with not much happening.  Nothing else much in October.  In November, Bobby (Brother in Law), Lindsay (Sister in Law), and Scott (Brother in Law) came out for a week for Thanksgiving.  In December, Christmas was spent in Denver with the Dehncke family and in January, New Year's was in Utah with the Heidbrink Family.

2012 began with me loving my job of teaching 5th grade, part-time and Josh working full-time and going to school part-time.  In February, for Valentine's Day, we went to the Downtown Aquarium.  We spent about 2 hours walking through the Aquarium and then had a dinner next to a giant tank full of fish and even SHARKS.  The  price of the night included: walking around the Aquarium, a rose for me, dinner, and a picture.  Overall it was a fun and romantic Valentine's Day.
Isn't that a cute frame?

In March, we went back to Utah to celebrate Mark and Bobby's (Brothers in Law) birthdays.  We also built  raised garden beds in our backyard.  Which came out VERY nicely.
The Skidster (yellow digger thing) was used to take out a shed which then was disposed of like this:


In April, Josh, his dad and our neighbor Bryce put up a fence between our houses.  Bye bye big back yard.  No picture of that, but very similar to the fence in the picture above.

A HUGE event was going to the Kansas City LDS Temple.  For those of you who are not members, an LDS Temple is a building built as a House of God.  We go to the Temple for many reasons, including marriage and to make sacred promises to God. More questions about the Temple, JUST ASK!  So we went to Kansas City with my mom and Josh's parents.  We flew in Friday morning, checked into our hotel and then headed to the Temple.  Once a Temple is dedicated, only worthy, LDS members can go inside.  But before the dedication, there is an Open House where all are welcome.  We first watched a video about the Church and why Temples are special and important. Then we went on a tour of the inside.  My mom was very impressed by it's beauty and it was a special experience for me getting to explain some of what our Sealing was like inside of the Denver Temple.  Here are some pictures from the day:
Aren't we both SO photogenic. I think we both missed the memo about actually looking at the camera.  At least the background is pretty. :)

We also visited some important sites from the History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Independence, Far WestLiberty Jail , and the Monument of the 8 witnesses).

We also went for a hike up in Estes Park.  We started from Wild Basin Trailhead.  Here are some pics from the day:
River we hiked along.

Such a pretty day!

Pretty little church we saw on the drive.

I sure love those mountains!

Well, there is October through April.  Onto May through Present!!