Home sweet Lego home

Lego creation
Guess who’s house?
Lego creation
Guess who’s dog?

No one makes better cartoons nor tells better stories than Disney.

dad

Someone will always be considered the best, no matter the category.

Ps. If you are challenged to see yourself as best in your category, consider becoming a category of one.

No peer.

No equal.

No fear.

Unlimited creativity, tenacity, and purpose.

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This website is about our HOME. This is the fifth of five daily, differently-themed blog posts about: (1) mind, (2) body, (3) spirit, (4) work, (5) home. To return to Mid Life Celebration, the site about MIND, click here.

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Didn’t know it then

Construction on the back of the house
Two steps down from the sliding glass door is a 10’ x 10’ cement pad “patio”. Guessing the overhang is one foot (a joke by today’s standards).

i never set out to make our home my favorite place on the planet, bar none.

dad

Like many Americans, we started with a few basic essentials. The photo in this post reminds me how basic our back porch began.

For two decades, i’ve been fully aware our back porch is my favorite place on Earth. It’s helpful to remember that Disney had me traveling the world, full-time at Disney Institute.

In typing the previous paragraph it just hit me how i came to learn our back porch is my favorite place.

It’s a classic unpacking of…”There’s no place like home.”

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This website is about our HOME. This is the fifth of five daily, differently-themed blog posts about: (1) mind, (2) body, (3) spirit, (4) work, (5) home. To return to Mid Life Celebration, the site about MIND, click here.

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Simplify everything

Small boy, pumping gas
Not sure he had started kindergarten when this photo was snapped.

The older you get, the more life’s in-box and your stuff will consume your time and energy. Simplify everything, including how much stuff you own.

dad

Don’t believe it now?

Eventually you will.

Pinky-swear.

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This website is about our HOME. This is the fifth of five daily, differently-themed blog posts about: (1) mind, (2) body, (3) spirit, (4) work, (5) home. To return to Mid Life Celebration, the site about MIND, click here.

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Backwards always suits me

Disney speaker jeff noel near wildflowers
Beargrass is other-worldly. Never gets old. Same with Pixar.

At Disney, i wear Glacier tee-shirts. In Glacier i wear Disney tee-shirts.

dad

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This website is about our HOME. This is the fifth of five daily, differently-themed blog posts about: (1) mind, (2) body, (3) spirit, (4) work, (5) home. To return to Mid Life Celebration, the site about MIND, click here.

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Big House

24-second video: The dark horizontal line through the Continental Divide is sediment from millions of years of a shallow Sea.
19-second video: Vegetation and a cliff to the left (my right) has me as far away as i can get to pass them.

From an internet search on Grinnell Lake…some copy and paste content:

1.6 Billion-800 Million B.C.
Primordial shallow seas deposited sediment on the prehistorical supercontinent of Rodinia, forming layers of sedimentary rock now known as the Belt Supergroup. These ancient rocks are among the oldest on earth—invaluable for geologists hoping to study the origins of life on earth.

170 Million B.C.
Shifting tectonic plates formed the Rocky Mountains. In the process, they pushed a large region of ancient rock eastward into present day Glacier National Park. This patch (known as the Lewis Overthrust) is one of the largest and best preserved regions of Proterozic (1.4 billion-year-old!) rocks in the world. Its most dramatic incarnations include Chief Mountain, which stands alone on the eastern edge of the park, and Triple Divide Peak, which is the meeting point of both the Continental Divide and the Hudson Bay watershed—considered the apex of the North American continent.

100 Million B.C.
The Western Interior Seaway—another ancient inland sea—deposited tons of mud in the region, which eventually hardened into mudstone shale. Hidden in this layer, paleontologists have found many marine fossils.

18,000 B.C.
During the last ice age, colossal ice sheets gouged the mountains and valleys of the region, creating massive U-shaped valleys, cirques, and large outflow lakes (which seem to radiate like fingers from the base of mountains). Since 12,000 B.C., these glaciers have been in retreat, though some—like Grinnell, Blackfoot, and Jackson—remain.

10,000 B.C.
The earliest evidence of human inhabitants in the region indicates that tribes arrived shortly after the last ice age. The lineages of these tribes can be traced to current day Shoshone, Cheyenne, and Kootenai.

1806.
The Lewis and Clark Expedition came within 50 miles of both Glacier and Yellowstone, while missing both.

1885.
After a series of explorations by so-called “mountain men” of the old west, George Bird Grinnell first visited the region on a hunting expedition. After several trips, he became a major advocate for the region, spending two decades promoting its establishment as a national park.

1891.
The Great Northern Railway crossed the Continental Divide along the southern boundary of the present-day park. Hoping to stimulate travel to the region, they worked hard to promote the beauty of Glacier, working with Grinnell and Henry L. Stimson to lobby Congress to make it a park.

1910.
U.S. Congress designated Glacier a national park. The bill was signed into law by President Taft.

1915.
The Great Northern Railway built a number of hotels and chalets throughout the park, modeled on Swiss architecture. Promoters attempted to portray Glacier as “America’s Switzerland.” Railway president Louis W. Hill sponsored numerous artists to come to the park.

1932.
As the automobile became more popular, engineers completed the 53-mile Going-to-the-Sun Road, one of the only driving routes through the park. It crosses the Continental Divide at Logan Pass and was designated a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark in 1985.

1933-1942.
During the Great Depression, Roosevelt’s New Deal created the Civilian Conservation Corps, a relief agency created to put unemployed men to work. Over the next decade, the CCC embarked on massive reforestation, trail construction, campground creation, and fire-hazard reduction efforts.

1973, July 30. My first visit as a young teenager. Arrived in the dark and spent night at Swiftcurrent Motor Inn Pinetop. July 31 awoke near sunrise and was stunned when i walked out the room door. Grinnell Point and the Many Glacier Valley was on fire. After breakfast, the bus drove around Glacier’s south side to Lake McDonald Lodge where we embarked on a half-day Red Bus Tour.

2023, July 15. 50th anniversary visit. Stayed at same Swiftcurrent Motor Inn Pinetop.

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This website is about our HOME. This is the fifth of five daily, differently-themed blog posts about: (1) mind, (2) body, (3) spirit, (4) work, (5) home. To return to Mid Life Celebration, the site about MIND, click here.