Saturday, September 29, 2012

3 Memorable Hikes - Geocaching

For the first time, I made it all the way to Elephant Rock!  It's a three mile hike up Mueller Park Canyon.  Bill and I left about 5am, one summer morning, because neither of us could sleep.  Bikers were already on the trail, and some were coming down from Rudy's Flat, a spot above Elephant Rock.  We rested on the much appreciated bench at the top and took a few pictures of the view into Bountiful.
Another day we hiked up North Canyon.  It was much steeper so we only went about a mile and then turned around.  Bill remembered times when he took the Blazer Scouts overnight camping there.


At Powder Ridge Ski Resort, we hiked with family into Hidden Lake.  Along the way we saw five deer and several grouse (?).  Once at the lake, some had fun throwing rocks into the water, used by moose and deer as a drinking hole.  I hiked around the lip of the lake and located a Geocach box on the southwest side.  In it was a newspaper, a notebook, pencil and TP.  I wrote a note and felt a little thrill at having found a small treasure.  Here is some information about Geocaching:



Geocaching is an outdoor recreational activity in which the participants use a Global Positioning System (GPS)receiver or mobile device[2] and other navigational techniques to hide and seek containers, called "geocaches" or "caches", anywhere in the world.
A typical cache is a small waterproof container containing a logbook where the geocacher enters the date they found it and signs it with their established code name. Larger containers such as plastic storage containers (Tupperwareor similar) or ammunition boxes can also contain items for trading, usually toys or trinkets of little value. Geocaching shares many aspects with benchmarkingtrigpointing,orienteeringtreasure-huntingletterboxing, andwaymarking.
Geocaches are currently placed in over 200 countries[citation needed] around the world and on all seven continents, including Antarctica,[3] and the International Space Station.[4] After more than 12 years of activity there are over 1.8 million active geocaches published on variouswebsites[5]. There are over 5 million geocachers worldwide.[6]

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

9/11 - Poem


9/11

Billowing dust and crushed matter
Sudden decent of countless number
Floating innocent flesh and cinder
Fleeing multitude clouded over

Few messages and tokens
Transport love in final moments
Unseen welcome into heaven
Clasp of distant hearts unbroken

Bodies tumbling into dust
Spirits rise to be embraced
Beholding love's familiar face 
Escaping grip of evil's hate


Janice Harten
Sept 4, 2002 – May 24, 2010
Copyright © 2012 Janice Harten.  All rights reserved.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Brigham City Utah Temple - Open House - Shoshone Indians

Before any temple is dedicated, an open house is held for the public to enter and walk through the beautiful rooms.  Every temple has unique furnishings and decorations, even if it might have a similar architectural design to some other temple.  What is most memorable, however, is feeling the spirit of the Lord.

Recently, Bill and I went with our son and his family, to the open house of the Brigham City Utah Temple.  This temple includes imagery of an important locally grown fruit, peach blossoms.  People come from all around to purchase boxes of peaches from the miles of orchards along the foot of the mountains.   Also within the temple, are four new original paintings in the baptistry, "one of the middle eastern Jordan River, one of John the Baptist baptizing Jesus, another of a pioneer baptism in the Box Elder County and a fourth of two brethren confirming an American Indian after his baptism." Later, while sharing our visit to the temple with our daughter, she mentioned there is an interesting story about the painting depicting the Shoshone Indians.  Here is a little information I found:

In the 1860's and 70's, following the Bear River massacre of the Shoshone Tribe, by government troops, some Indian's told about being visited by spiritual messengers, who told them to get baptized.  Elder George Washington Hill and his companion taught and baptized many.  The following is a quote from Elder Hill's account.

"At least five different Indians claimed supernatural visitations telling them to join the Mormons.  The experience of one Indian in Skull Valley in the summer of 1872 was typical.  He claimed that while he was sitting in his lodge, three strangers who looked like Indians visited him and said the Mormons' God was the true God and the father of the Indians.  Find the Mormons and have them baptize you, these strangers said, for "the time was at hand for the Indians to gather, and stop their Indian life, and learn to cultivate the earth and build houses, and live in them."  Then the stranger showed him a vision of all the "northern country and Bear River and Malad" where many Indians were growing many fine crops with a few whites showing the Indians how (Hill 1877, 11).

Several hundred Indians accepted these messages as divine and subsequently joined the Mormon faith.  Apostle Orson Pratt believed the holy messengers were the Three Nephites mentioned in the Book of Mormon.  "We have heard of some fourteen hundred Indians who have been baptized ask them why they have come so many hundred miles to find Elders of the Church and they will reply - 'Such a person came to us, he spoke in our language, instructed us and told us what to do, and we have come in order to comply with his requirements'"

In early August, this year, some of the Shoshone descendants attended a special open house of the temple.

Amos Wright wrote an interesting missionary account about his service among the Shoshone Indians in the Wind River Mountains during the 1880's.  You can read it by entering the following link:

http://www.lds.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?hideNav=1&locale=166&sourceId=9f06aeca0ea6b010VgnVCM1000004d82620a____&vgnextoid=2354fccf2b7db010VgnVCM1000004d82620aRCRD