January 31, 2012

Our Life in Texas

Caleb growing like a weed! He's now standing on his own!  
The new nephew, baby Knox! What an angel! 

The sweet face of Whit, his daddy! 

Texas Tech University. Derek and I drove 2 hours just to get Jimmy Johns in a college town. 

Caleb spent Thanksgiving in the arms of his great, great grandpa. Derek and I spent the day with a head cold, the Dallas Cowboys and the Marlor Family. 

I made ornaments for each Sunday of Advent for our church. 

Our sweet boys together! Know and Caleb! 

Youth Group




Snow is Midland! Seriously! 







a note left hidden from mom in our wedding journal. 

A 5th generation wolf that visited me at work. Erm, huge! Makes a great dane look wimpy. 

These are the kind of things you find out about after you marry your husband! And then frame just to smile at every day! 

Derek's best friend, a cheerleader in college! Go Ryan! 

Our donated tree in our new home in America! 

Christmas Eve! A White Christmas! 

Going to Christmas Eve service. 

Trying to get to Sunday morning Christmas Day service! 

Our Christmas Eve snack-a-thon! 

Caleb's first Christmas. We watched him open gifts via skype at 7:30AM! 

Christmas dinner made by us! Turkey, dressing, green beans and mac-n-cheese! YUMMMM! 



Midland

Okay, where did the first month of 2012 go?

This sign is just silly. What it should read is, "Drive at your own risk - entitled drivers of Texas 
A gift for Derek - a map of America that we picked up at Pike's Place in Seattle. I sewed the route we traveled this summer. In just a couple of weeks, we will fill in the rest of the drive from Midland to Atlanta. 

Dust Strom....sinus infection...same thing. 
We've now had several of these dust/sinus storms. And at first we were brave and would venture out, now we know to stay home and snuggle instead. Who really needs groceries when you know it's going to cost you a week of being stuffed up?
Derek went on a hunting retreat with the elders the same week we moved to Midland. Now, this is what you would call a "blind." Derek got to sit in this blind during the wee hours of the morning to hunt/kill/gaze at the various 4-legged things that walk around the 3,000 acre ranch of one of our elders. Derek's one sentence summary of the venture: "Pretty freakin' fascinating." 

The end of Derek's pork eating days...just kidding, but definitely the end of Anlee even considering trying pork again!
Okay, so the above picture was never a conceivable picture in my mind! I married Derek Fekkes, not pig-killin, red jumpsuit wearing, woodsman! I can't take this picture seriously, but I do enjoy it! Grandpa would be proud!
The ranch in Texas 3 hours east of where we live. They actually have trees! 

Waiting in line for opening weekend (hunting) BBQ. What's the most common color in this picture? 

How many dead animals are on this plate? Hum...sausage! 

The view of Midland (aka "flatland") from the 12th floor of an oil company. This is our new home! 

Okay, what you have all been waiting for! The OIL TOUR!
Derek and I have been on three oil field tours with the amazing Mr. John. First, when we visited, second with my parents and third with Derek's parents. We have learned something new each time out. Mr. John is literally the best in the business and an amazing tour guide! These tanks are used to separate the oil, natural gas and water. The tanks are used so that the water sits on the bottom, then the oil sits on top of the water and the natural gas is vented into another pipeline. How do they separate? Temperature. These tanks are kept at a steady temperature in order to separate. They have to get the oil down to 99.9% oil without impurity. That is alot! But, pretty easy to do. The smaller white jug is filled with chemicals that help kill bacteria in the oil. The rising mound of dirt around the tanks help prevent spills.
This oil jack literally pulls oil out of the ground 10,000 feet deep. The small rod in the far right has oil inside. This is a hydraulic pump that is connected to power lines that enable the motor and weights to pull the oil out. This machine will pump anywhere from 40 to 70 barrels of oil a day, depending on how rich the well is.

The oil jacks pull the oil out of the ground and pump it into these large holding tanks that store the oil until a truck, as you see in the picture, arrive to take it to a refinery. These trucks run 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. If the tanks overflow, everyone loses money and all of the pumps shut down. One of these tanks recently caught fire due to lightning, but was extinguished quickly. These tanks would full our car for years! I'll blog about Fracking some other time!


Most of you know this picture from our Christmas card! 
We couldn't resist poking a little fun at ourselves and our new home! Who ever would have thought that Derek and I would end up in Midland, Texas after our life in Korea! We traded an 11 million person city with public transportation and bike paths for middle of the desert mesquite land with one city bus and zero bike paths! But, it's home and we are loving our new city. Just so you know, the clothes were borrowed!
Our new life in Midland...home sweet home! 


January Newsletter

Hey Friends and Family,

I've been silent...but, you know that doesn't last long with me. I guess after we left Korea I didn't think you guys would be all that interested in everything we are doing. Either way, I'm going to share some highlights from my handy-dandy iPhone. I finally transferred some pictures onto the computer AND I have a day off of work...look forward to more regular posts!

AND... We would like to thank Laura Grant for the amazing and bold new header for our blog. We love it!

Okay, onto a photo shoot:
Who is more awesome than Preston?


Derek and his lovely family share really cool Preston "Presty" "P-man" "Mini-Tobin" "Pekkes" with me. He's seriously the coolest 10 year old I have ever met! 
Mt. Baker, the guardian of the Pacific Northwest seen from Derek's little Camano Island. 

The awesome Preston as goalie. I got a taste of what it would be like to cheer for our own kids...I'm going to be embarrassing.
Birds on Camano :)

We walked out on this bridge...probably aren't willing to do it again, but beautiful. 


PEKKES!!! Trying to escape a hug.

Derek is not trying to escape, however. This is Snoqualmie Falls, a beautiful waterfall just outside of Seattle. 


Okay, here is a confession of extra sneakiness on our part. Every year (kindy through senior year) my mom bought me a homecoming mum and she always ensured that it would be embarrassingly HUGE! So, since graduation I have been getting her back each year by supplying her with the biggest and brightest mum. So, a mum for the mumsie! 

At the flagship Starbucks in Seattle. We only waited 45 minutes with half of Korea, Japan and China in line. 

The beautiful and always full of life, Cam Spam at the Olympic hotel in Seattle. 


A picnic at the Gasworks in Seattle. 

Brothers together before the wedding! This view is from Colin's office in downtown Seattle. 



The beach on Camano. 


Most awesome kid! 

Watch out world! 

Bird watching...this is sweetness. 



The handsome Fekkes boys at Colin's wedding! 
I hate that it is blurry, but the Fekkes ladies. 


Meeting Cathleen and Jeremy in Portland. 

I know why it's named "in and out"...uh hum... just saying...

The newly married Lanes' with our uhaul before we left Chico.

This truck made it many miles with the car on the trailer. Here we rested in Thousand Oaks, CA before the long drive East to Texas. Loved the greater LA area. Hated the endless drive through the windy desert. 

Close to Malibu! 

 

Oh man, the beach and Tommy's... which one do you think we enjoyed more?

The best part of all of this is that each moment and each day was shared with my best friend, D. Now, we are gearing up for yet another long haul on the road. We are flying out to GA in Feb and driving back! We are going to finally complete our full lap of America!
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