Dear Family,
Cheryl found a Salt Lake Tribune picture from the Ballet West performance of Cinderella that we went to. It is a pain that we cannot take photos ourselves as I have some pretty good camera equipment.
But here is Olivia's brief moment on the stage. She is the one sitting up there on the magically pumpkin turned carriage holding the whip urging the mouse pullers to scoot across the stage. You had to pay attention to see her.
Even though in this one, their performances were short, the girls had to go to all the practices with the professional ballet company and of course appear in all the performances. It was stunning and I was proud of Cheryl's girls who have absolutely no stage fright and relish in the attention and lime light. Way to go Mary Clare, Lauren and Olivia.
Love, Opa
Saturday, February 16, 2013
DOUGLAS GETS HIS MISSION CALL
Another of the grandchildren, Douglas Wirthlin, got his mission call yesterday. He was anxious and received the packet at BYU yesterday. Since he was in Provo, a Skype connection was set up for the opening of the envelope event with Doug and family.
He had a funny mission call dream in which he was called to the two year "Provo Theatrical Mission". Bit of a nightmare as there is no such mission but it woke him up good.
The mission is to the Piura, Peru Mission. He enters the Peru MTC on June 5th. Congratulations Douglas! He has taken Spanish in High School. He had a hunch that he would go to Peru in spite of the little nightmare.
It is interesting to see where the family has gone on missions. In my generation and previous generations, all went to Switzerland, Germany and Austria. My brother Alvin went there, also my sister Barbara as did I (twice). My cousins and uncles past went there as well. My great Grandfather, Leopold Wirthlin, went back to Switzerland 13 years after he travelled to Salt Lake City crossing the plains as a pioneer. He left wife and children to complete his mission. Great missionary faith in those days. I have often wondered how many of his descendants have served missions. Of my eight sons. three went to Spanish Speaking missions, two to France, one to South Africa, one to Russia and one to Taiwan. The grandchildren will be further spread around the world as missionary work picks up. I have been trying to have sessions with those leaving on Preach My Gospel. So exciting.
What a great time to see this work unfold. Nice job Douglas, I know ou will be a great missionary!
Love, Opa
He had a funny mission call dream in which he was called to the two year "Provo Theatrical Mission". Bit of a nightmare as there is no such mission but it woke him up good.
The mission is to the Piura, Peru Mission. He enters the Peru MTC on June 5th. Congratulations Douglas! He has taken Spanish in High School. He had a hunch that he would go to Peru in spite of the little nightmare.
It is interesting to see where the family has gone on missions. In my generation and previous generations, all went to Switzerland, Germany and Austria. My brother Alvin went there, also my sister Barbara as did I (twice). My cousins and uncles past went there as well. My great Grandfather, Leopold Wirthlin, went back to Switzerland 13 years after he travelled to Salt Lake City crossing the plains as a pioneer. He left wife and children to complete his mission. Great missionary faith in those days. I have often wondered how many of his descendants have served missions. Of my eight sons. three went to Spanish Speaking missions, two to France, one to South Africa, one to Russia and one to Taiwan. The grandchildren will be further spread around the world as missionary work picks up. I have been trying to have sessions with those leaving on Preach My Gospel. So exciting.
What a great time to see this work unfold. Nice job Douglas, I know ou will be a great missionary!
Love, Opa
VALENTINE WEEK
Dear Family,
There has been lots of action on Sherwood Drive this week. I believe we have the busiest house on the block .
We had Oma's great valentine party on Sunday. I don't usually like doing these on Sunday but we thought it might be a family dinner and Family Home Evening but there were so many little kids around, we had to settle for a Family Valentine Dinner.
Crowd control is getting to be significant activity when about 50 show up. We had John and Kaley and boys, Suz and Scott and their children, Cathy and Pete and kids, Emily and John and family, Hannah came up from the Y, Mike and Rayanne and gang, and Cheryl and Paul and their children all came for Mom's yearly Valentine Get Together.
Since it was Sunday, all preparations were done on Saturday. We decided to serve the food of Love which consisted of Quiche and Crepes. Suz did a entire day of cooking making 125 Quiches shaped as hearts as you can see in the photo. Some are with broccoli and ham (recipe in previous post) and some with Swiss Cheese, bacon and onion and they were fabulous! She also made seven larger Quiches.
I cooked crepes and made 60 10" crepes one at a time. Suz took over and got two crepe pans going and made another 60. I believe we went through four dozen eggs, two gallons of milk. On Sunday, we only had to warm things up.
Here are some lined up for the above with salads and other treat. It was interesting that this time, all stayed longer than fifteen minutes and there was continual snacking and conversation for three hours. The kids ate all the quiches and most of the crepes. Mom set up a crepe bar with Nutella, jams, strawberries, bananas and whipped cream and it was a hit.
We could not get them all settled for a
family night; it was difficult when we had 17 children but now it is a real challenge.
Mom had a craft setup in the kitchen and some painted valentine boxes and others made valentines cards for their family.
Then there was a second Valentines party on Valentines day. John and Kaley had a sewage problem in the newly rented house and they came over. We had a spontaneous party with Suz and her family and John and his. I won't get into the menu but it was great! Suz then made a chocolate fondue and here are the kids lined up. There is Grant, Timmy, Zandy, Juju and Tilly (Opa too).
For a further Valentine treat, Cheryl invited us to the Ballet West performance of Cinderella.
Cheryl's daughters Mary Clare, Lauren and Olivia were in this one. They did not dance but were there as children, Mary Clare and Lauren holding flowers with Olivia driving the enchanted carriage. This is what the reviewers said about the children; "The children in the production blended so well with the company that they only stood out due to their adorable faces."
Could not say it better myself. Well more action; Mom speaks in Sacrament meeting on Indexing and Catherine comes by for her Patriarchal Blessing.
Love to All, Dad
Cheryl's daughters Mary Clare, Lauren and Olivia were in this one. They did not dance but were there as children, Mary Clare and Lauren holding flowers with Olivia driving the enchanted carriage. This is what the reviewers said about the children; "The children in the production blended so well with the company that they only stood out due to their adorable faces."
Could not say it better myself. Well more action; Mom speaks in Sacrament meeting on Indexing and Catherine comes by for her Patriarchal Blessing.
Love to All, Dad
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
RICK'S 50TH; ALL THE BROTHERS MEET (AND THE DAD)
Dear Family,
The occasion was the celebration of Rick's 50th birthday and all the guys were invited to Rick's mountain ranch in the Sierra foothills, and all came!
This was an unusual event as I believe this was the only time all sons were together with their dad for more than five minutes over the years. The wives were supportive and it was a classic family event.
Here are the players from right to left in order of birth: on the right is Roy,successful computer entrepreneur, then Rick, partner in a fancy Beverly Hills law firm, Doug, vascular surgeon deluxe ( a bit of a chip), Bryan, President of Sandpoint Ltd, The Dad. To my right is Mike, Professor of electrical engineering at BYU, then Jeff, pediatric psychiatrist in Spokane, Rob, retinal surgeon in Spokane (he does my eyes) and John, now a lawyer in Salt Lake City. All gave up time to come down and celebrate with Rick.
We stayed in Rick's log cabin with extras including an outside shower where you can get clean and watch the stars at the same time. There is a stream running through the property, several outbuildings, four wells, and a 800 gallon water tank on top of a hill. Here is the living room complete with wood burning stove. Rob and Mike elected to stay outside in the old large family tent.
Here is the tent that I bought, first thing, when I got on the staff of the Massachusetts General Hospital in 1970 and was the basis of many camping trips in Maine with all the kids for several years. A great barn in the background. We stayed up late each night but all slept so well where the air is clean and crisp,
The deal was that we would do several improvement projects on Ricks place for the two days we were there. One crew was the road builders completing a road uphill and circling back. Brush and small trees were cut down, boulders removed and a road cut into the side of the hill. I told Rick he could have a guy come with a D6 and cut the road in little time. "Nah, I have my Chinese road crew here and we will do it by hand!"
The occasion was the celebration of Rick's 50th birthday and all the guys were invited to Rick's mountain ranch in the Sierra foothills, and all came!
This was an unusual event as I believe this was the only time all sons were together with their dad for more than five minutes over the years. The wives were supportive and it was a classic family event.
Here are the players from right to left in order of birth: on the right is Roy,successful computer entrepreneur, then Rick, partner in a fancy Beverly Hills law firm, Doug, vascular surgeon deluxe ( a bit of a chip), Bryan, President of Sandpoint Ltd, The Dad. To my right is Mike, Professor of electrical engineering at BYU, then Jeff, pediatric psychiatrist in Spokane, Rob, retinal surgeon in Spokane (he does my eyes) and John, now a lawyer in Salt Lake City. All gave up time to come down and celebrate with Rick.
We stayed in Rick's log cabin with extras including an outside shower where you can get clean and watch the stars at the same time. There is a stream running through the property, several outbuildings, four wells, and a 800 gallon water tank on top of a hill. Here is the living room complete with wood burning stove. Rob and Mike elected to stay outside in the old large family tent.
Here is the tent that I bought, first thing, when I got on the staff of the Massachusetts General Hospital in 1970 and was the basis of many camping trips in Maine with all the kids for several years. A great barn in the background. We stayed up late each night but all slept so well where the air is clean and crisp,
The deal was that we would do several improvement projects on Ricks place for the two days we were there. One crew was the road builders completing a road uphill and circling back. Brush and small trees were cut down, boulders removed and a road cut into the side of the hill. I told Rick he could have a guy come with a D6 and cut the road in little time. "Nah, I have my Chinese road crew here and we will do it by hand!"
They had to remove some big roots and here is Rob tearing out a huge root. He was always pretty strong.
Here is the road crew cutting the road. All did hard physical work that they were not used to in their various professions and daily work. They also got pretty dirty.
I was on the log splitting crew for a couple of days. Rick and I are in the background as I ran the log splitter and Bry fed the logs. Rob is stacking the split wood in a version of a German Holzhaus but not quite as even as they are over there. Jeff helped with the stacking as well.
There was a shooting break in the afternoon. This was the fifty yard plinking range and here we see Bryan shooting the new Winchester 1886 in 45-70, (my get over the presidential election blues). Rick had a nice shooting range with hanging steel targets and we all had a blast!
Roy, Doug and Rick went up to the 400 yard shooting range and did long distance sniping. Here is Roy, a true Sharfschuetzer with his 400 yard result.
I should mention something about the food. Gemina bought all the food and this was not done on a tight budget. She went to the Italian stores in LA for the pasta, sauce, meatballs and sausage. This was the first dinner and the guys did all the cooking and clean up. As I sat there surrounded by my sons around this table I just had to chuckle. Here were all these professional people, Carhart suspenders, soiled shirts, messed up hair and they reminded me of the old pictures of loggers in northern
Michigan sitting at the table in the bunkhouse but at that moment I also felt pride for these sons and it was a great moment.
Everyone had a cooking assignment and all helped with the cleanup. Their wives would have been proud! Rob had breakfast which was toasted bagels, gourmet lox, scrambled eggs and sliced onion as in the picture. It was so good! On Saturday night, Gemina had bought rib eye steaks (thick) and Roy did the honors.
Here is Roy doing an Assada or the grilling technique he learned on his mission to Argentina. Coals are kept at the edges with an open center and the meat slowly cook in the middle. This was done perfectly! This was a real lumbar jack feed and the best rib eye I have ever had. We spent the evenings "hanging out", watching old movies, Rob and Jeff played advanced squad leader every moment they could and some just wandered off to collapse in bed. John usually parked on the couch and did not need any sleeping medication. Roy sharpened all the knives on Rick's present from Doug, a gourmet sharpening wheel with a leather stropping wheel.
Then it was time to go; the much anticipated event, the highly planned and coordinated
activity was well lived and like all good things came to an end. It was a historic moment for me as I was able to enjoy the company of my eight sons and as we stepped back in time and once again worked together. I am very blessed and so are they and it was great!
Love, Dad
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
LOTS OF SNOW!!!
Dear Family,
As many know, we have had a ton of snow here in Salt LAke City and especially here on the foothills. We were gone when there was about 3 feet of snow and Suz and Scott had to deal with the driveway. Our neighbor, the Prices, always do the sidewalks with the snowblower.
The backyard is also full of snow. Scott and the grandkids built this gigantic snowman in the backyard. It is Kosmo, the BYU football mascot. Scott managed to get a BYU shirt and shorts on him and he is holding a football. Neighbors said it was a good thing it was in the backyard as all are UofU fans here. Here is Mom next to this 6'5" snowman. Now that it is melting a bit, the shorts are almost half mast!
Snow is piled high along the street. When Kaley came to look at their rental, she had to use my Toyota FJ cruiser to get through all the unplowed streets. She is coming here with John and two boys this week, leaving sunny Tampa Florida for good.
Suz and I drove past their rental today and it is a cute house north of 39th South not far from REI and Smiths. Can't wait to see those little guys again but am not sure our house is insured with Timmy, Johnny, Grantli and Garret on the loose here. It will be fun as these cousins get together
Lots of snow in the backyard. Scott built a snow run o the lower level and the kids had fun going down on sleds.
The skiers in the family are having a ball as well. Suz is going to ut two of her daughters into a ski school sponsored by their school.
Well off to California to see Rick on his 50th birthday. All the sons will be there along with the Dad..
Love, Dad
As many know, we have had a ton of snow here in Salt LAke City and especially here on the foothills. We were gone when there was about 3 feet of snow and Suz and Scott had to deal with the driveway. Our neighbor, the Prices, always do the sidewalks with the snowblower.
The backyard is also full of snow. Scott and the grandkids built this gigantic snowman in the backyard. It is Kosmo, the BYU football mascot. Scott managed to get a BYU shirt and shorts on him and he is holding a football. Neighbors said it was a good thing it was in the backyard as all are UofU fans here. Here is Mom next to this 6'5" snowman. Now that it is melting a bit, the shorts are almost half mast!
Snow is piled high along the street. When Kaley came to look at their rental, she had to use my Toyota FJ cruiser to get through all the unplowed streets. She is coming here with John and two boys this week, leaving sunny Tampa Florida for good.
Suz and I drove past their rental today and it is a cute house north of 39th South not far from REI and Smiths. Can't wait to see those little guys again but am not sure our house is insured with Timmy, Johnny, Grantli and Garret on the loose here. It will be fun as these cousins get together
Lots of snow in the backyard. Scott built a snow run o the lower level and the kids had fun going down on sleds.
The skiers in the family are having a ball as well. Suz is going to ut two of her daughters into a ski school sponsored by their school.
Well off to California to see Rick on his 50th birthday. All the sons will be there along with the Dad..
Love, Dad
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