Sunday, October 11, 2015

Short Trip Home and Other Stuff

This past week, Matt had to make a trip home to meet someone. While there he took a few photos from our favorite lookout on Pine Mountain. All other pictures are various pictures of Clay and his field trip, Green Belt, and while spending time as a family.

A new tradition has begun with Clay and that is every time he tests for a new belt and gets it he
wants to celebrate at Shogun's. We will be celebrating his Green Belt there around the end of the month. My child that at age three was scared to death of Shoguns, now loves eating there and wants to go there to celebrate each belt. He is growing up so fast!!!

One day, I really do hope we can add a little girl to our family!!


View of Pine Mountain Valley

View from Pine Mountain

View of Pine Mountain Valley from Pine Mountain


Matt on top of Pine Mountain


Matt and his Jeep on Pine Mountain


Clay ready for his field trip

Clay walking out the door ready to go

Clay with his green belt and corn pipe bought at gift store at Museum of Appalachia's

Clay with his Green Belt


Chilling at McDonald's Saturday morning

Testing for Green

On October 8, 2015, Clay tested for his green belt in Tae Kwon Do. He had a very adventuresome day. At 745am he went to school. He went to the Museum of the Appalachia with his class. He wanted to go alone, without us tagging along. They had bus issues on the way to the Museum and on the way back. Thus they were an hour late getting back to the school, finally, at 5pm. Testing was at 530pm. We made it!!!! I am posting the video of his testing and then of the award ceremony and pictures will follow. I will then post a brief sentence on the results.

Tae Kwon Do Testing

Tae Kwon Do Awards Ceremony
















Clay received was rewarded Level 2 Green Belt (Belt and Certificate), 2 Stars for academic excellence (which is determined by his teacher how many stars), and Award for attending 32 classes. We did not know that there was to be award for class attendance so the pictures are a little blurry. Hope y'all enjoy watching this as we did seeing our little one perform at something that he loves to do. We are VERY proud of our little boy!!!!

Monday, September 21, 2015

Chickamauga Battlefield

"The Battle in the Valley of the River of Death" The last two days we have been to Chickamauga Battlefield. This weekend Sept 18-20, 2015 marks the 152nd Anniversary of the Chickamauga Battle. Saturday we got to participate in and see a demonstration at the Kelly Cabin. A battle that took place on September 19, 1863. A battle that included one major mistake that the men fighting that day were never able to recover from. It came in the heat of battle when the Union soldiers fired upon itself. Over the course of the two days of the battle 40.000 men from both the Union and Confederacy were either killed, wounded, or missing. The Snodgrass Cabin was turned into a field hospital. The remedy for shattered limbs were amputation and would have to be done in 15 minutes. Even though chloroform and ether were available it was in short supply and not at Chickamauga. Today, markers telling the story at each location of each unit, monuments that have been in place since 1893 and more recently tell the story of this battle and give a visual of where everything would have occurred and men died. It is a place that consists of rolling hills, and peace reigns as you hear the birds, crickets, and squirrels that marks the sounds of nature. Yet, as you enter each marker and read it and look up you see what must have been that day. You walk on grass and terrain that on that day 152 years ago was covered in bodies and blood. The land there was paid for in blood that demands our respect. On Saturday, we witnessed the firing of an original battlefield cannon, not once but twice as the Park Ranger told the story of that terrible mistake that I discussed earlier. Then we got to see a demonstration of the men as they returned home from war in Sept 1865 and the difficulties they faced upon returning home to find everything gone and destroyed and unable to find their family or any remnants of it. Clay and I both were able to read a small part for this demonstration. The differences in the going to war and coming home of the men were extreme. The merging of men in uniforms and carrying weapons of that battle and seeing faces of the visitors to the park that day with our modern clothing and devices were surreal. It is hard to explain. On Sunday, we explored the park in more detail. We drove the lines and viewed the markers and monuments and at the same time left a lot to still be explored. It never leaves your mind that you are walking were someone died, was wounded, or cried out to God for mercy after realizing what the battle meant they had done and yet to tamp it down for later as they lived what they were trained and fought hard until not just the end of the Chickamauga Battle those two days, but for the duration of the War that followed.