Great Lights in Heaven

Friday afternoon my brother Karl texted our family group text. "Look for the Aurora tonight. Biggest CME in years." I was very skeptical that we'd be able to see anything. Karl lives in Minnesota and served his mission in Quebec, but even he had never seen the Aurora before! Still, when Sam mentioned the solar storm too and said we ought to just go outside and look…just in case…I agreed that we should.

But then we forgot all about it and watched a movie with the girls and got ready for bed, and were just falling into bed around midnight with great sighs of satisfaction (I LOVE bedtime, it's the best part of the day) when suddenly I remembered the Aurora Borealis. "Should we bother looking??" we both said. We couldn't decide. But finally Sam said we'd be sorry if it was good and we didn't look, which was true. So we decided we'd just drive a little way out of the brightest city light and see if we could see anything. "If it's really good we could come back and wake the kids up," said Sam. "But it probably won't be," I said.

We got dressed again, and then the car was almost out of gas, of course, so we drove to get gas, and then I kept feeling nagging guilt about leaving the girls and Teddy. "What if they feel bad?" I said. "I know they'll want to see it if we see it." Sam finally got tired of my fretting and said "All right! Let's just go back for them!" So we did.

When we got home Sebastian was just getting home, and he decided he might as well go with us too, which meant we would have to switch into the van to fit everyone. (Malachi was coming home from work too and was too tired to join us, so he could stay home with the littlest ones asleep.) It all seemed like SUCH a bother for something that probably wasn't even going to be visible! But as we were getting shoes and blankets, and switching cars, and trying to wake up Teddy without waking up Ziggy, and bumping around looking for the camera in the dark—Seb and Sam looked up at the hill and said, "Wait a minute. That glow of city lights is in the wrong direction!" And they could see, too, faintly, that there were bright sort of waving lines in the sky. So they ran up the hill and took this picture:
Well! As soon as we saw that we were all very excited, because the sky is not dark at all from our hill, and if we could see it there, we thought we'd certainly see it somewhere darker! So we set off with renewed motivation.
Ky took and sent me a couple more pictures from our hill when he got home. The camera picks up the colors better than your eyes do, but there was something visible even without the camera. It was just sort of a nagging, hovering glow, with movement you could only see from your peripheral vision…disappearing if you looked straight at it. Ky said he could see that long streak of light in the above picture, but the rest of the colors were so dim he wouldn't have even noticed them if he hadn't been looking.
We drove out past Erda and Stansbury Park until there weren't any more lights. There were people and cars pulled off all along the highway looking at the sky! We could see glimpses of light and color as we drove. Then we pulled off onto a side road by the lake so we could get a better look. It was amazing! We were all so excited! We hadn't dreamed it would be anywhere near this visible. One thing that surprised me was the variety in color—I'd thought the Aurora would be mostly one color at each altitude. But there were all kinds of greens and purples and pinks and yellows.
Another thing that amazed me was the curtain-like effect of the light at times. I've seen that in pictures of the Aurora in Alaska, but I didn't think we'd see it even here! It really did look like broad sheets of colored light (cellophane, maybe) hanging down from some invisible attachment point, and then draping and waving and folding back and forth on each other as you watched them.
Out here where the sky was so dark, you really could see the color with your naked eye! And you could detect if the light was streaky or stripy or more of a diffused glow. The camera brightened the colors, but we were saying, "Oooh, look at those dark reds!" and "Oh, it's turning greener down on the bottom!" without even looking through the camera screen. You could see when the columns got taller or wider or brighter, and you could see them shimmer as they moved. I have never seen anything remotely like it. I was thinking about the prophecy of Samuel the Lamanite before Christ came to the Americas: "There shall be great lights in heaven." These were great lights!
Sebastian had brought the good camera, and I was so glad, because his pictures turned out amazing! That camera was better at capturing the contrasts than the phone camera was. I was under the impression it was really hard to get good pictures of the Aurora, and wasn't going to even bother with the real camera, but Seb said it wasn't actually that difficult. I had also thought you'd need long exposures to capture enough light, but the really long exposures actually didn't work as well. The aurora moved and shimmered too quickly. It was better to have only a 1- or 2- or 3-second exposure. I love the picture above, with those contrasting pinks and purples on the left side, and then a haze of yellow fading up into bright green. So vibrant!
You could clearly see the reflection of the lights in the water, too. This picture is from my phone so it's a lot fuzzier, but it does a good job of showing how bright and dimensional the lights looked. It wasn't just like a flat screen with light on it. You could tell they had depth.
The Aurora were definitely stripe-y at this first place we stopped. Bright and dark bands above the water.
And they got even stripe-ier after a few minutes! These really looked like beams from heaven! You can get an idea of how bright they are when you see that the lights of Salt Lake are glowing to the left of that mountain point. The lights in front of the mountain are Erda, and then to the left of it, that bright glow low down in the sky is Salt Lake City, and the Aurora are still much brighter above it. You can even see some of the wavy folds in this phone picture. I love the small clouds visible in front of the Aurora, too.
These aren't good videos, but they do a pretty good job of showing the constant movement of the lights. It's hard to describe how strange it is to see the sky just…moving.
In this second video, if you turn up the sound, you can hear an interesting buzzing and crackling in the power lines. It only happened from time to time, as the Aurora got brighter and seemed to move more, so we think it was caused by the Aurora itself, inducing a current in the power line, perhaps. So interesting!
After a while we decided we'd see if we could find somewhere more removed from the headlights on the freeway, so we drove out a little further toward Stansbury Bay and Rowley. The stars were so bright out there! On a normal night we would have been marveling just at them. But the Aurora was too impressive!
By this time the sky had changed again. The Aurora became a lot wider and softer, less curtain-y. More like colored mist. And they were in more places in the sky. This bright swatch of light was to the west.
And in the real camera, it was a beautiful deep red color!
The greens didn't extend as far up into the sky
We could even see Aurora colors (faintly) on top of the Milky Way, to the east! That white glow down by the horizon is still Salt Lake City lights.
There was still some movement and shimmering
And some horizontal bands too!
We never got a view right up into the curtains like some people did. The light didn't ever get that far above us. This is my brother's picture from Minnesota:
where you could look straight overhead.
But we could see huge tall columns that grew and shrank visibly out of the bands of color below.
Daisy's middle name is Aurora—named for the dawn, not the Aurora Borealis, but now that we've seen these, it's for the Aurora Borealis too! :) She felt a special connection to this beautiful phenomenon, as if it was sent just specially for her. Maybe it was!
I really loved the soft, diffuse glow of the lights at this time. It wasn't as attention-getting as the stripes and columns, but it felt more otherworldly, like instead of seeing an event happening, you'd just been transported to some other planet with some other kind of sun and sky.
At 2:30 a.m. we reluctantly concluded that we probably should go home. We thought the Aurora Borealis would probably just get dimmer from this point on anyway. So we drove away, only to see such beautiful displays through our windows that we couldn't resist stopping again! The stripes were back, and this time there were also little cubes and stacks of light as if they shone from a big city full of buildings, each beaming a spotlight up into the sky. An elf city.
The colors also got surprisingly blue for a while. I didn't see that the rest of the time.
This was also my favorite view of the night, because the lights got really bright and spot-light-y again, and there were two distinct borders defining either side of the long sheet of color. The border lines were so bright!
We were ooh-ing and aah-ing in amazement (except for Junie and Goldie, who had fallen asleep in the car). It was like a fireworks show!
The colors changed from pink to purple to maroon
You can see them much more cleanly in the pictures from the real camera! The phone muddies them a bit.
This is what a slightly longer exposure looks like. You can't see as much definition in the Aurora. You can see the train going by in the foreground, though!
Elf city again
It got SO bright and SO pretty! It was amazing! Again, the camera does pick up the colors a little better…
but I tried to adjust this picture to about what we were seeing with our eyes. Still lots of color, lots of color variation, lots of line definition. Definitely still impressive.
We finally tore ourselves away again at 3 a.m., and didn't get home till 4! We were so tired! But it was so worth it! I woke up the next morning still excited and amazed at what we had seen, and wanting to tell everyone about it! Then Karl texted, "Now pull out your eclipse glasses and look for the giant sunspot that caused it.  Right edge." We looked at the sun and sure enough, there was the spot! Really several spots, I think. Who would think those solar storms could cause such beautiful things here on earth!

What an amazing, incredible world we live in! I love it so much! The Aurora Borealis is a sight I never thought I'd see in my life…especially not here in Utah!

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Shopping with gnomes, fun stuff with brothers, and zombie islands


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Gus, as you may know, plans to be a "Caw Man" when he grows up (that's a man that owns Caws, and carries them around on his shoulder, and perhaps lets people take pictures of them). So, here he is being a Caw Man, with his little Caw!

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Some Clementine happenings. Here she is coming inside and saying forlornly, "Sebby all gone?" She is very sad that Seb went somewhere and forgot to wave goodbye to her!
Here she is looking sad and pensive about something else. Isn't she turning into a big girl? I love her hair.
Snuggled and sleepy
Hat
In the basket where the cloth eggs go ("I AM a egg!" she said, when I protested)
Playing the piano with Sebby
Tippy-tip toes to reach the fridge. "She's en pointe!" said Daisy. Yep, just like Posy in Ballet Shoes! She's destined to be a prodigy, I'm sure.
Helping Daisy make brownies
Clementine loves Big Gnomie so much. I don't know quite how she managed to stuff him into this high chair.
Gnomie having a nice ride in the shopping cart (with Chicken down in the driver's seat)
Little dandelion-head
Yellow bunny helps push the cart

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The girls' friend Elle made up and choreographed her own ballet for their friend group. They've been practicing since January and finally did their performance. It was super cute. Elle did a ton of work getting it ready, even made a program and took cast pictures and so forth! Daisy and Junie played twin sisters who get lost on an island after a plane crash. Exciting! Clementine had a short appearance as "Young Daisy."
The girl who played "Young Junie" got a little stage fright and had to be led onstage by Elle. "Young Daisy" was game for it.
There were zombies on the island who got Daisy! Doesn't Goldie have an intense scary stare?
The twins reunited!
Curtain call
Clementine was quite pleased to be part of it all!

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Goldie and her twin. She just turned 11, which means Nutmeg is 10 ½!

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We went to one of those city "Safety Fairs" hoping to get the free bike helmets. Ziggy has ruined 100% of the ones we own by leaving them out in the sun and rain. But no luck; they were gone by the time we got there. Blast!
At least we saw the helicopter, I guess

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Taylorsville Temple Open House. Beautiful temple! Great flower beds! Loud open house, though. Didn't feel very holy, I'm sorry to say. We'll have to go back when the temple is open! 
…and, bonus tulips from the Jordan River Temple
After the open house we stopped at Macey's for ice cream. And to terrorize the store with tiny shopping carts, apparently.
Nice face, Gus
Ice cream cone! His second ever! (He had to share this one with Clementine, though)
So much giggling

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Goldie and I got to do Mother-Daughter cake decorating for Activity Days. It was so fun! Do you like our flower garden cake?

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Malachi looking fast at some track meets. I didn't shiver through a single snowy meet this year! Amazing. Was that because this year had nicer weather or because I skipped all the snowy ones? Not sure.

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We've had some cool weather lately. Pretty clouds, rain, snow.
The children love snuggling outside when it's raining!
Cute little swing-nest. Who is hiding underneath the swing?
It's Gussie!
Rainy walk to church
Tiny people waving goodbye
Goldie squinting in confusion at rain coming down from a blue sky

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Ziggy's tornado picture, "I luv trdabo." (He doesn't. He's terrified of them. Every time there's a raincloud in the sky, he comes running in a panic: "I think I see a tornado cloud!")
Gus and Zig playing paramedic (poor Gus is on the stretcher)

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Some fun stuff with big brothers going on lately. Abe took the girls to Nielsen's, much to their delight.
Seb and Teddy went to an Aviation Open House up at the Delta Hangar at the airport. It was really fun for Teddy to see a real plane and talk to some pilots. He spends a lot of time with Seb talking planes and has gotten really knowledgeable about them! You should hear the two of them exchanging "A380"s and "E175"s and "737-200"s, and analyzing strobe flash patterns from every plane that goes overhead at night. I think it was fun for Seb too, to show a little of what he does at his airport job.
Engine (Seb and Teddy could tell you what kind it is, no doubt)
Airplane tires
Huge airport snowplow
Teddy touching one of the plane's lights, which will someday be way up in the sky!
A different day—Seb took the three little boys to the airport to watch planes
And still another day, Abe took the little boys to a carwash and Clementine went running downstairs saying excitedly "I'll get my shoes!" When she came upstairs and Abe and the boys were gone (there was no room for her in Abe's car!), she was SO SAD. Seb saw her crying, scooped her up, put her in his car, and took her get an ice cream cone and to ride on Trax with him. That fixed everything. Best big brother!
Just for good measure, here is Seb and Gus and Clementine wearing matching hats
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Abe moved out! He started back at BYU for Spring term. His time at home with us went too fast! We were all sad to have him go. He went to live at my mom's house for a couple months before he gets into an apartment with an old mission companion, and I'm sorry to say that my mom gloated about it! She said "I always did say I'd collect your firstborn son eventually, and now I've got him." Hmmph.

Before he left, he distributed a bunch of random stuff to his siblings. It was like Christmas! Clementine now loves Harold and the Purple Crayon so much.
Bye to Abe
Off he goes!
My mom took a super-sneaky picture of Abe heading off for his first day of classes. "Off on my day," as he used to say when he was just a little tiny guy heading out with his backpack. He had a whole year+ of BYU before his mission, but because of COVID it was all online, so it's great he now gets to actually go to class on campus! We miss him, though.
The only good thing about Abe leaving is that now he can come home and visit! He came home on the weekend for a Psych-watching marathon. Daisy and I made beautiful and delicious charcuterie platters for us to eat during it. We were very pleased with ourselves (and there's nothing like watching Psych with Abe and Ky. So fun. We missed Seb!).


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Love the flowering trees around town
Feathery clouds
And snow! Eek! I don't mind May snow, though—it's usually gone so fast. It's kind of a fun surprise. And at least it didn't ruin all the blossoms!
 
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Gus rode home with me from church in the front seat, and he was so happy that he could open the window all by himself and then reach out of it! He was just delighted about it!

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Daisy and I made a piñata at a Relief Society activity. (It was for a service project, not just for us, which is good, because I wouldn't have wanted to break it after all that.)

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For Junie's birthday (the day before it, actually), we went to a playground and had a picnic.
She turned 13, if you can believe it. Little Junie-Lark!
We all wore orange, or as close to it as we could, since that's her favorite color
She chose fancy homemade ramen for her birthday dinner
Ziggy gave her this sheaf of excellent pig drawings

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Braid bun
Huddling up for a Family Home Evening frisbee game

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We made our last visit to the puppies! They've all been sold and are gone now. But we were happy to see them one last time, and to talk Malachi into coming with us for some of the time. He professes not to like dogs (nor indeed do I) but, as I told him, puppies are different!
He tried to maintain his aloof air, but you can see the smile underneath. How long can you remain mad while holding a puppy, after all?
Lap full of puppies
And that is all!

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