| This is a sweet little flower that greets us on our front porch each day and gladdens our heart! |
We began the month by traveling up to Preston area to attend the British Pageant, which is only put on over here every four years. They installed a pre-fab building that holds 2,000 people, and the lighting, sound and scenery effects were wonderful. It was an amazing and touching presentation which made us more fully realize how much the British people sacrificed in giving up their homes and their beloved homeland, which held centuries of tradition and history for their families.
We HAD to visit Peterborough because this is the first area where our daughter, Stephanie, served as a missionary. She reported that she has pictures of herself in these exact spots. Besides, Peterborough is fairly close to us.
| Peterborough Cathedral |
This was an interesting flower located at Boughton House. It looked fake, but it was real!
One of the highlights of the month for Sister Fillmore was receiving a calling as the 1st Counselor in Young Womens. Because of the size of our ward, no organization is fully staffed and the presidents get one counselor...if they are available. We have three Young Women at present and they are sweet, smart, and adorable. (Side note....Sister Fillmore had the entire YW Theme memorized in British Sign Language in one week. That is proof that you CAN teach an old dog new tricks!)
Elder Fillmore has been called as an instructor in the High Priest Group. At the same time we taught a Primary class for the month of August. The first week we had this assignment all of the other teachers (including the Primary president) were off on holiday (vacation), so we taught the whole Primary in one class. Not to worry, only 6 kids were there that week! The normal Primary attendance is around 18 kids total. So during the second hour of church we taught Primary, then Sister Fillmore went off to teach YW, and Elder Fillmore was in Priesthood. It's good to feel needed!
Sister Manning (the other missionary who lives downstairs) and Sister Fillmore are trying to reinstitute a monthly Family Home Evening for some of the older sisters in the ward, and it has been a lot of fun. This month we picked up the sisters (they don't live close or even near each other), brought them to our home, played a delightful game, then drove them home. All in a days work.
Other things we have been doing is changing a LOT of flat tires on the mowers and trailers, mowing a lot of grass, and trimming. We did some service for a school by hauling a trailer full of old rubbish to the local recycling center. The men also installed closet rods and mailboxes in three new houses, and made shelves to put in the houses as well. Sister Fillmore got to paint them, and has been doing some random acts of kindness at some of our mowing sites.
Painting the shelves as fast as Bruce could cut them out.
Our farm Manager does a lot of re-purposing of old barns on the various farms we own, and it has been amazing to see the transformations that occur. Every new home that he rebuildsThis shows a property that is getting ready for renovation into a house. Elders Fillmore and Manning were taking out some shelves in another old barn, but they didn't think the wood was worth saving....can you imagine that!
| Before construction begins |
Down the path from us is an old barn that is in the reconstruction phase right now. They build a completely new structure inside the old walls that might still be standing.
| This re-build will actually be 3 homes when completed. They seem small by U.S. standards, but they have 3 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms, and the British think they are great. |
| This house actually had full grown trees growing out of it when it was an old barn. It also didn't have any sign of a front wall or roof. |
| These are actually 3 separate houses.The one on the left is two story (but not when it was a barn). All of them are very modern inside, and they rent for a pretty penny! |
It seems we always have more fruit than we can eat before it gets too ripe, and we don't have our dehydrator or canning supplies here. So we have been cooking the fruits down in the slow-cooker during the day, and making apple sauce, or pear/blackberry sauce, or rhubarb sauce, which we freeze for use in cookies or cakes or a topping for yogurt. We don't have a blender to make smoothies, so we have to get a little creative with the juices.
Bruce cooked down some rhubarb for a sauce, but he put salt in it instead of sugar by mistake, and ended up throwing out the batch. The next batch turned out better, and it looks lovely on top of yogurt.
In honor of our son Mark, who served his mission in Iceland, we bought some Icelandic style yogurt called Skyr (pronounced "skee-er") The flavor is apple, carrot & ginger, but we read the label carefully to make sure it had no sheep face in it. Fortunately it didn't, but it still tasted a little "interesting". The rhubarb sauce added some flavor to it.
Speaking of food, we were invited to the farm managers home to be judges as his four daughters were having a bake-off, which included cakes and cookies. It was a tough job sampling all those sweets...but someone had to do it! We gave each of the girls, and their mother, handmade awards for their efforts.
| Cecily made fancy cookies with lots of sprinkles on them |
| Eliza made Whoopie Pies |
| Alice with a carrot cake |
| Esther with a fancy strawberry cake |
As we travel around the countryside we are always amazed at the beautiful landscapes, the quaint villages and the variety of pheasants, peacocks, swans and ducks that we see. Speaking of wildlife, we won't even mention (or show the pictures) of the ant bites that left Sister Fillmore with a swollen and itchy wrist for a few days.
We'll end with the Preston Temple, which we attended while we were in the area for the British Pageant. We had been in the Preston Temple 18 years ago when we came to England to pick up Marcie from her mission, so it was nostalgic for us to return. Marcie was here when the temple was being dedicated so she was able to participate in the openhouse events by greeting people inside the front door, serving in booths at the nearby Stake Center, or bidding farewell to guests as they left. In England where large, cavernous cathedrals and churches are numerous, some people commented that they were expecting a large open sanctuary inside, and wondered if they had missed it! Marcie would reply that they didn't miss anything except the boiler rooms. It is somewhat of a long trek to get to either temple in England, (2 hours to London Temple, depending on traffic, and 3 hours to Preston), but it is so worth the time and effort.
Until next month....Cheerio!