Monday, October 9, 2017


Today, October 9, is Thanksgiving in Canada. We joined the Burnetts and helped serve free meals for three hours to all comers at a school. The event was sponsored by an Edmonton Rotary Club.

The following article about Thanksgiving in Canada comes from Time Magazine--Waxman, O. (2017, October 18), The Surprising Origin of Canada's Thanksgiving:

     "Between turkey dinners and family reunions, Canadian Thanksgiving--observed on the second Monday in October--can look pretty similar to its U.S. counterpart. But in fact, part of the reason Canadians first petitioned for the holiday was to celebrate their luck at not being American.
     "In the wake of a crisis of faith catalyzed by Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species, Canadian religious leaders began in 1859 to petition the colonial government for an official day to thank God. Initially, they thanked God for plentiful harvests. But over the next decade they became even more grateful that they were spared the bloodshed of the U.S. Civil War. 'It was a solemn, holy day in the middle of the week when people would go to church,' says historian Peter A. Stevens, 'and thank God for how fortunate they are to be Canadian.'
     "As the idea of a national Thanksgiving spread in the  U.S. too, the two holidays began to look alike, with American publications promoting the idea of a harvest feast. Even so, the neighboring nations kept the dates separate. Canadian Thanksgiving first moved to a Monday in 1908, after railways lobbied to turn it into a long weekend that could be used to visit family--by train, naturally--and that day change later became permanent. In the years since, the early-autumn timing has been a boon. With the holiday now detached from its religious beginnings, most Canadians think of it as a time to savor the last mild weather before the northern winter starts."


Yesterday we attended Church at the Millcreek YSA Ward. On the way home we took pictures of the North Saskatchiwan River which runs east from the Rockies through Edmonton.




Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Yesterday, October 2, was Sandy's birthday. Our kids got together and sent these gifts to her. Also, several missionaries called during the day to sing happy birthday to her.

Saturday, September 30, 2017

Click the following link to view the October issue of The Prairie PBost:
The Prairie Post - October 2017




This past Thursday and Friday the sister missionaries attended a sisters' conference. One of their activities involved a "clothing exchange."





The City of Edmonton has a project to plant trees. They erect signs like this one to identify areas where trees have been planted in the past.


Edmonton Alberta Temple

Near the Edmonton Alberta Temple is Whitemud Creek Ravine. Below are several photographs taken today on our walk in the ravine.











Sandy loves to scuff leaves. Watch this video and see the joy in here face as she scuffs along.

Saturday, September 23, 2017

Our apartment in Sherwood Park is in a "village" located near a small lake.





Robyn spent September 15-18 with us. It was grand to have family here.

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Today is our 48th anniversary. Sandy wrote this poem:


The trip she referenced took place this past weekend. On Saturday we went to Jasper National Park (five hours west of Edmonton). Sunday we attended church in Hinton, then drove four hours north to Grande Prairie for a zone conference. I did vehicle inspections and a safety presentation on Monday; we then drove back to Edmonton (five hours).

Below are pictures from Jasper.






Click on the link below to watch and hear this "bridal veil falls."

Click on the link below to watch and hear the Maligne River. Maligne is French for "evil" or "wicked." Father Pierre-Jean de Smet, a Belgian Jesuit missionary, used the word to describe the river after having trouble crossing it on his horse in 1846.





Sunday, September 3, 2017

Click on the link to hear a fun and original song by two former Canada Edmonton missionaries:

Sisters Bischoff & McSweeney