The last two weeks at the Cook house have been filled with lots of fun. Travis has been nagging me to get the Halloween decorations out so they can decorate. Little does he know that we don't really have any. While Ben was sleeping last Saturday morning I packed the kids up and we went to the family dollar and bought $15 worth of Halloween decorations. When we got home the kids went haywire decorating. The kids put all the window stickers on the windows of their choosing. Some windows are quite bare while others are packed nearly sticker on sticker. They chose where they wanted the wall decorations and spider webs and I put them up. They had so much fun. After all was decorated they went and woke up Daddy to show them the surprise of the "spooky" decorations. Boy was he surprised to go to bed with a normal house and wake up to such spookiness.
Natalie had her first field trip. They were supposed to go to the pumpkin patch yesterday morning, but due to poor weather it had to be rescheduled to this morning. I had planned on going until it got rescheduled. I had to work the night shift last night and am in no condition to be driving the girls around today. I am a little sad that I missed her first field trip, especially since I am pretty much the only parent who didn't go. She did have so much fun though. I am glad that she went today too because the weather has been a tid bid nicer and less cold. She seemed to have fun with Miss Kara (her teacher) too. She came home and has been jabbering all about it. She brought home a small pumpkin and told me she needed to wash it to "get all the buggies off". She has been carrying her pumpkin around for the last twenty minutes since she got home. She has been a little cutie.
On another note, about a month ago Ben and I got invited to a "free" dinner to Johnny Corino's in Idaho Falls with some friends. There is nothing free in life, just keep that in mind. It actually turned out to be a free spaghetti dinner over about an hour to an hour and a half presentation on fire safety. While that sounds boring and was kind of boring, Ben and I actually learned a lot about fire safety. For instance you are supposed to check your fire alarm weekly, you should replace the batteries in your fire alarm every six months, you should replace the whole fire alarm unit every ten years, you need to tip your fire extinguisher upside down and give it a good shake every six months or less, we also learned the difference between an ionizing detecting fire alarm and a photoelectric fire alarm, and a carbon monoxide alarm should be present on every floor of the house. We learned a lot more and did some personal research after the meeting was over for ourselves. After all the meeting was not just about fire safety, the presenter was their to sell fire alarms and heat detectors. While we ended up not being interested in his product we did learn a lot. Not more than a couple weeks later when I was volunteering at Trav's school, the fire department came into the classroom and talked fire safety with the kids. And about a week ago there have been fire safety things on the news. I've felt like this is a premonition or something and if I don't listen to all these warnings we will be the ones caught in a fire. It's quite expensive to be fire ready. We have had a couple fire extinguishers that have been tipped upside down and shook recently as you could guess. The batteries in the alarms were checked and actually two alarms were not working. Last year when we replaced the water filter in our refrigerator we found that the old water filter had not been changed in over ten years so if that hasn't been replaced I think it's safe to assume that the fire alarms in our house are the same fire alarms that were placed when the house was built. Slowly, but surely we are going to get every single one of those alarms replaced and get a fire ladder. We also need to have a fire safety plan for our children with a meeting place. That family home evening lesson is to come. We have a whole lot of work ahead of us, but I feel like we need to do it with all these fire safety warnings we've been having.