100 Days ’til Halloween
Pioneer Day Prairie Party

Serve this on a quilt; use bandanas for napkins and
Bread bowls for the chili would be another treat!
Honey lemonade
(let the children shake a jar of cream to make butter – they love it)
A crock of crudites and dip
BEAN For Adults (could you have bean a pioneer?) Its like a bingo game – use dry beans for markers and move the activities around to different places on each card, cut one up to call with. To win, get four in a row
Need a bit more Pioneer Day eye candy? Check out the cuties at: http://pinterest.com/pammcmurtry/pioneers/
Butterscotch Haystacks
12 oz. butterscotch chips
1 C. peanut butter
10 – 12 oz. chow mein noodles
Melt butterscotch chips over low heat, stir in peanut butter. Add noodles. Drop by large spoonfulls onto wax paper. Form into haystacks.
Now on Barnes and Nobles.com
How I Spent the 4th; Walt, Max and a Summer Vacation in the Midwest
Driving from Utah to Illinois and back again in one week takes a special skill set (and few brains), no matter, I had a desire to visit the heartland of America; I love the Midwest!
We first stopped at my friend Jodi’s house and enjoyed the beauty of Fort Collins, Co. Jodi and I have been friends for 25 years and it is a treat to spend time with her. She’s funny. I forgot to unpack my camera, so you’ll just have to imagine how cute she is.
The next day we drove to St. Joseph, Missouri and camped near a lake where I saw my first wild fire flies! Would you believe they wouldn’t hold still for me to get a picture of them?
As we were driving up the freeway, my husband spotted what he thought was a cathedral – wait, there was a gold statue of an angel on the spire. It was the Kansas City LDS Temple. We stopped to pay pay our respects and tell the Lord how grateful we are for the wonderful things in our lives.
We also went to the cemetery where my great…great grandmother, Elizabeth Duncan Porter, a Revolutionary War heroine was buried. After being captured by the British, she was marched from Virginia, while pregnant, up to Canada where she was held prisoner for the duration of the war. Her husband, a member of the Virginia Militia, was sentenced to be executed but the commander liked him and eventually released him. Several chapters of the Daughters of the American Revolution are named for her.
The weather turned rainy so we checked into a hotel in Independence, Mo. The next day, July 4th, off we went to visit Walt Disney’s childhood home in Marceline, Mo. My youngest son Tim was born on Walt Disney’s birthday and we LOVE Disneyland so this was a necessary stop. Here are Newell and I under Walt’s “Dreaming Tree.”
And his barn where he and his brother and sister used to play. He had one built just like this in his yard in California. Disneyland’s Main Street was based on his memories of downtown Marceline.
Samuel Clemmens/Mark Twain’s home. His dad’s law office was across the street. I love the brick sidewalks and streets.
Ok, here is where it gets interesting to a California girl. In the center of the Mississippi River, across from Hannibal, is an island that looks suspiciously like the “Tom Sawyer Island” in the “Rivers of the World” at Disneyland. Hmmm. We didn’t have time to explore the caves, will need to make another trip to Missouri
We arrived in Peoria, Illinois just in time to meet baby Max, catch the end of the sons’ softball game, grab a bite at Steaks and Shakes and be dazzled by the fireworks on the river – the folks in Peoria sure know how to celebrate Independence Day with style!
Happy Fourth!
I’m on the road today enjoying the charm of the American Midwest visiting Hannibal, Mo., home of Mark Twain and Marceline, Mo, hometown of Walt Disney. Here’s my gift to you – a curated slice of Americana – enjoy! http://pinterest.com/pammcmurtry/holidays/