Sunday, February 14, 2010

Well another busy week has gone by. I can't believe how fast time is going by. Last night we had a valentine's supper for the branch. I wish I had more pictures to show you. Sister Marion Allen did a great job of getting the project going and finishing it. It started out a very rainy Saturday, but with the members and the other people that came it turned out to be a great success. The first picture is Bruna Riley, and Holly Tyndale-Biscoe. Holly is the one that I have been tutoring in Math. She hopes to go to BYU in the year 2011 in the fall. She is a great asset to the branch and a wonderful member. Sister Riley is a lovely lady in the branch, she and her husband in the next picture with the white hair join the church 17 years ago in England. She and her husband in the next picture with the white hair met in Yugoslavia. She was born in Italy and was raised in Beligum. They have been living here in Spain for 7 years now. They are a wonderful active couple and we sure enjoy them. He is the Branch mission leader and works really hard to help the missionaries that are standing by him in the picture. With Sister Riley is Holly Tyndale-Biscoe, a wonderful young girl that I have been tutoring in Math for a over a month now. She hopes to go to BYU in the fall of 2011. She is going to take the SAT test in October and wants to do well. She with her family are very active. You can see the back of her young brother, Seth, standing in front of the missionaries. The next picture are the Parker's, Linda and Ted, that I put in last week's blog, who were visiting and brought a non-member. In the picture they are talking to Bruno and Victoria Cologne, who we met just last night, they are less-active and we hope they will start coming out to church. We really enjoyed meeting them. They had joined the church about 6 years ago, but knew most of the members.

The next picture is of Jack Tyndale-Biscoe who played nice music for our supper. He is the young man who is getting his papers ready to go on a mission. He will be the first missionary from the Mijas International Branch. We are all excited for him, but we also hate to see him go, because of his talent in playing the piano. He played during the supper last night and it was very lovely. He will be a great missionary. He can play almost anything you ask him to, and he taught himself to play the piano. He goes over the the church and practices for hours, with the piano and also his violin.
You can see the beautiful table that was prepared for our party. We even had real china to eat on, thanks to Sister Marion Allen. It was a delight for all those who came. I think we had 19 there for the dinner, which was very delicious. I did get to help prepare, but then Sister Allen wouldn't let me do anything else once the members started coming. Sister Leonila Garcia helped her getting the rest of it ready. The missionaries helped to pass out the plates and we had chicken and ham casserole, with carrots, peas, corn, mashed potatoes and puffs, a pastry that is very flaky. Our appetizer was melon slices, orange with a raspberry sauce. We had raspberry dessert in a chocolate tart. Very tasty.
The next picture is Sister Mellor with two of her friends from the states. They all had girls the same age and they also became friends and they all know Sheri Hill. Sister Sherry MacMillian grew up in Harper Ward and knew several members and she was once a roomate with Christine Burt Bingham. Sister Mellor is in the middle and then Marsha Porter that is in the same ward as Sheri. They came to our branch plus we had another family, Lee Davenport and family, from the state of Washington, that picked up their daughter from the Madrid Mission a week ago and was touring. We love to have visitors from all over the world. It was great visiting with them all and hearing their wonderful testimonies. The spirit was very strong today. We had fast Sunday, because last week we had a Regional Broadcast from Salt Lake.
Some of you have seen the Smart Cars that are now in the states and I couldn't resist taking these pictures. They are almost small enough that you could almost park 2 of these Smart cars in a parking space like we park in everyday that we go to the office. The parking is at a premium around the office so we park at these parking spots and walk about 1/2 mile to the office. I think it has helped Roy, except on those days that it is raining or is going to rain, because he feels it in his hip and knees. The parking places are usually between two trees along the side where the train goes.
News that we have is that our mission boundaries are going to change. We got work that they are going to take the 4 missions in Spain and combine them and have 3 missions now. The Bilbao Mission will be dissolved and President Clegg will become the new mission President when the Mellors go home the first of July. We will lose the Canary Island to the Madrid Mission, and they will take the west part of the Bilbao Mission and the rest of that mission will go to the Barcelona Mission. Just 3 years ago the Canary Islands were no longer a mission by themselve, but put in our mission. So that means instead of 5 Spanish Missions there will be only 3. The missionaries are being cut down in all the missions, so that there will probably be only 2 missionaries for each unit, ward or branch. We will gain the Elche Stake from the Barcelona Mission and also the La Manche District from the Madrid Mission. It looks like on a map that our area will double in size if you don't count the Canary Islands. It will be interesting and those missionaries who are on the Canary Islands at the time will then be serving in the Madrid Mission.
We sure have enjoyed serving here and it is amazing that the church is great all over the world. The visitors even mention how they feel the spirit of the truthfulness of the gospel wherever they attend church. It's amazing how you can feel love for even the visitors that come. We know that the church is true and needs to brought to all of God's children.
A couple of puzzles that we were able to figure out this week was about some letters that we received at the mission office. I hate to see letters not given to who they are addressed to. We got a letter for 2 missionaries that had served in this mission years ago from Sri Lanka. I tried to sent it back to the owner, but it got delivered to us again. A day later we got a telegram for those same elders from a lady that was baptized in 1994. I had scanned all the past newsletters so we could put them on a disc to be saved instead of paper copies. So I went through the past newsletters for that time frame and found the full names of the missionaries and got on white pages. com to find them and we found a number and Elder Hunt called the one that was now living in Kansas city and talked with him and it was him and his companion that had baptized this lady. So we got to forward the letter on. Another letter came to the mission home in the first of January and it was dated Nov. 2007 and of course the missionary was already home, but I found his address in Blanding, Utah and sent the letter on to him. That was kind of fun to make out those mysteries.
We hope you all have a very wonderful week. Love Roy and JoAnne Hunt

Monday, February 8, 2010


You are probably wondering why we haven't updated this blog this weekend. Yes it has been a very busy weekend. We caught a bus at our church at around 3:30 p.m. to go to stake Conference in Granada and didn't return home until 11:30 p.m. On Sunday we had to get up early and go to the church so we could drive to Malaga for Stake Conference. It was a Regional broadcast from Salt Lake City and we didn't have to go all the way to Granada again. We even got to hear it in English, they had a rooms set aside for English, German and the main congregation was able to hear it in Spanish. It was a great broadcast. We heard from Elder Kenneth Johnson from the Seventy, Sister Leiffert from the General Primary, Elder Alan Packer from the Seventy, who was also once the Mission President here in the Spain Malaga Mission. Then we also heard from Elder Russell M. Nelson from the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. It was a great meeting and was enjoyed by all.
We had a couple, from Maryland, that rode with us , Ted and Linda Parker. There were here last week for church and joined us for conference, even the bus ride to Granada. Ted and Linda Parker are in the first picture. They were a very delightful couple and it seems like we are getting friends all over the world. They are trying to visit every temple in the world, besides visiting all their children around the world. They have been married for 10 'syears and she is a convert to the church. They were both married before and Ted's wife had died. I think they met on a cruise ship where Ted was a dance partner for those on the trip. He is from Montana and she is from Maryland.
The next two pictures are from our Zone Conference that was held Wednesday and we traveled into Malaga by train and then walk to the church, which is about 4-6 blocks away. It's hard to tell about blocks, because things in Spain are not laid out like Brigham Young laid cities out, with square blocks, so I'm trying to judge the number of blocks by the distance that we walk. It is very hard to find parking places around the church there in Malaga, because it is downtown and parking is at a premium. The mission president usually does two zones together for their zone conferences. That makes it so he only has to do 3 or 4 zone conferences every 6 weeks. I say 3 or 4, because the Canary Islands usually have separate Zone Conferences because of the travel, but this time they had a joint Zone Conference. We are included with the Malaga Zone because we work in the office. It was a great conference and all the missionaries were given another cheap Book of Mormon and were asked to reread the Book of Mormon and mark the scriptures with different colors. One color of each time the Savior was mentioned, another for his attributes, another for the words he spoke and another for doctrine or principles of the gospel. Then at district meetings there were to talk about new things they found in rereading the Book of Mormon. We even got some cheap Book of Mormons for the native Spanish speakers. We were to have a book in our native language. This was talked about in Preach My Gospel. We really enjoyed the conference and we also enjoyed getting to know more of the missionaries in the mission. We also have to listen hard, because most of it is spoken in Spanish. Sometimes I don't know if we will every get very fluent in Spanish. I guess we will sometime be able to understand, but working in the English branch doesn't make us speak Spanish. We are still reading the Book of Mormon in Spanish everyday out loud, so we are still working on it.
On Thursday we went home teaching, because it take 2 hours one way to go visit the Chapman's in a small village called Los Prados. We have visited them before and it was delightful to visit them again. They are a very nice couple and we enjoy visiting with them. They are less active, but have been very respective to us. They welcomed the Liahonas that we left with them and they asked about most of the members. We just wish that we could get them back to coming to church again. We did invite them to the supper that the branch is going to have on the 13th of Feb., but they called and said that they wouldn't be able to make it. We will keep trying though, because they are a wonderful couple.
The other two pictures are pictures of church that I took when I was walking around Fuengirola in the southern part of the town. Usually it take me about a 15 minute walk to go pick up the name tags for the missionaries that have to have their name engraven. The missionaries found a sports shop years ago that would put their names on the name tags. Well this time I decided that I wanted to walk a different way back to the office and so I did. I found out where the Zoo was and where the bull ring was here in this town. The churches were close to the Zoo so I snapped a couple of pictures. I usually see another Church on the way to the post office, but I hadn't seen these. I like wandering around the town to see what is here. I'm not a shopper, so I don't always pay attention to the stores, but there are lots of small shops all over the town. I think I should take more pictures of them so that all can see it. Well until next week, we wish you all a great and wonderful week. We are so grateful to be able to serve a mission here in Spain and we pray that all will go well for the missionaries, because the church is true and there are lots of people who still need to find the truth.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Well we sure had a very busy week. Monday was staff meeting and what a great meeting to have with the Mellor's (President and Sister) and the office elders and the AP's. We have a spiritual thought, go over the baptisms that happened during the week, etc, go over the calendar for the next couple of weeks and another other things that they need to bring up, for example Roy wanted to talk with the Zone leaders at their conference to remind them how important it was to fill out the baptismal record and how to get it sent in as soon as they are confirmed. Usually in this mission they are confirmed a week after their baptism, because so many of them happen on Sunday afternoon and they confirm them the next Sunday. We usually go out to eat with Sister Mellor and she brings back a lunch for President Mellor, because he usually has another meeting with the AP's as we go out.

On Tuesday it was Sister Mellor's birthday and we went to a
Spanish restaurant and had something like fajitas, but it was not on tortillas but on french fries. It was really good and filling, because Roy and I shared a plate and it was plenty for us.

Wednesday we went to Algeciras to check out one of the Elder's
apartments to give word back to the President that they really needed to change apartments because of the mold. On all the walls, which isn't healthly for the missionaries. Of course with all the humidity and bad circulation in some of the apartments there will always be some mold. They don't heat the apartments over here so there is good conditions for mold to grow in even the best apartments, but this one was very very bad and we agreed that they needed to move. On the way there we did see the rock of Gilbrator, but not very good because of the rain, the 4th picture after we checked the apartment out it really started to rain, but we did drive into the rock of Gilbratar, which belongs to Great Britain to look around and on the 5th picture you can see that we were closer but saw even less. Needless to say, we didn't stay at all, but went home teaching on the way home.

We went to visit Sister Marion Allen, the 1st picture, who lives a lot closer to the Rock of Gilbratar than she does to the branch. She sure brings enthusiasm to the branch. She got back a week ago from her Christmas trip to England, and already has a party planned for the branch, she is the activity chairperson. It takes us usually about an hour to drive out to her place. She did go with the stake to the temple trip that we went to on Friday and Saturday. We left our branch/ward building at 9:30 p.m. It was the whole stake that went. We had a couple of buses for the whole stake. We drove into Malaga and picked up more people and met the 2nd bus there and left there about 10:30 p.m. Then we drove to Granada and picked up more people, the busses weren't completely full, but we had a good group and we left there between 1:00 a.m. and 2 a.m. We had another rest stop around 4 a.m. and reach the temple at about 6:00 in the morning so we took a picture to show you the moon and the temple. We had to wait for a session to start about 8:00, we did get into the temple about 7:00 and then we did a couple of sessions, the youth did baptisms for the dead and some did a third session. We left Madrid about 4:30 p.m. and drove back and we didn't arrive home until about 12:00 in the morning. That made it a very very long day and we were very tired. This picture of the elder is Elder Ruz who lives in Spain and finished his mission on the 9th of January. I met him in the celestial room of the temple. What a shock to see him there, his sister was going through for the 1st time.
I also found Sister Raimez who is coming into our mission on the 9th of Feb and is right now in the MTC in Madrid, which is on the temple grounds. I really needed to meet her because we are the ones that have to pick her up. The President and his wife will be on the Canary Islands and won't get back in time to pick her up. Another one of our duties. This picture is what the Rock of Gilbratar looks like on a clear day, the mountains behind the main rock is Africa. So far we have had many clear days when we were in that area and Sister Mellor took this picture.

The 3rd picture is our branch members that went to the temple, Bro and Sis Meyer from Germany, Roy and I and Sister Allen from England.

The most exciting news is our branch new grandson that was born on the 30 of January to Evan and Hilary Fisher. This is Gavin Fisher weighing in at 6 lbs, 14 oz and was 19 3/4 inches long. He was born in Yuma, Arizona and joins his 2 1/2 year old brother, Conlan. Isn't he just cute? We are biased or anything like that, but this makes # 21 grandchildren for us, and later on when Evan gets his laptop back or a new webcam we can see him other than just pictures. We did get to talk with Evan today and they are already home. Everything went fine and Hilary's mother got there on Tuesday before the baby came, so that was great.

We wish you all a very great week. We plan to have a very busy week, Zone Conference Wednesday, Home Teaching on Thursday( 3 hour drive one way) and Stake Conference on Saturday and Sunday. Love you all.

Sunday, January 24, 2010


Sorry about last week, we didn't add to our blog, I had a cold and didn't feel very well, but I'm on the mend now. So just a recap of our last two weeks. The Wednesday before last we went out and checked apartments of the missionaries. It was really an all day affair because to get to the first one it took us over two hours to drive there and the others were close to each other, within a half hour or less between each one. The first one we went to was Jerez, with Elder Gleason, Elder Ross, Elder Lauener, and Elder Solari. We had met Elder Ross and Elder Solari in the MTC in Madrid. Elder Lauener is Switzerland and I was able to speak German with him, but his English is also very good.
The second one we went to was in San Fernando, where the zone leaders lived with two other missionaries. This second picture is Elder Hafen, Elder Beswick, then Elder Woodland, and Elder Larsen. They were great missionaries and fun it talk with. Elder Hafen has an egg in his hand that he was going to use for an object lesson on faith.
The next ones were in El Puerto de Santa Maria and we have Elder Phillips and Elder Basurto, who is our newest and now our shortest Elder. Elder Ruz was the shortest and he went home this thursday. Elder Basurto is from Spain, but was born in Ecuador and Elder Phillips is from England as well as the Elders Wallace, and Elder Woodland and they all knew each other in England before they came on their missions. These last elders didn't get changed during the transfers this last week.
We then went to Cadiz, which is a port city in Spain that is really just an island and was an old city, at the time of Christ. The sisters lived there and we have Sister King and Sister Campbell. They were delightful also to talk with. Sister King just got transfered to the Canary Islands and Sister Campbell had already been on the Islands.

We then went over to El Puerto de Santa Maria where Elder Ellis and Elder Wallace were serving. They had a very nice apartment and quite large compared to some of the other apartments. Elder Wallace Also got transfered to the Canary Islands on Thursday. We first met him in the MTC in Madrid while we were up there. It is really great to talk to these missionaries and see their excitment in serving a mission.

We plan to go this week to Algeciras, which is across the bay from the Rock of Gilbrator, so that should be an interesting trip also. We plan to do our Home Teaching on the back back, because Sister Allen lives closer to the that area and has to come all the way to Fuengirola to go to church. She really lives closer to Algeciras, but she wants to go to an English speaking ward. She just got back this week from England, and when I called her, she said she only got back 2 hours ago. She brings lots of enthusiasm into our branch. She is a widow and has moved to Spain to live. She is our activities chairman and already has planned an activity for us for the 13th of February.

This last picture is the newest member of our branch, Lydia Madera Duran. She is from the Philippines and is working here to earn enough to put her children through school. Right now she is with her boss in Madrid, I think they have a home there also and she has to go up there with them to work. She is a delightful new member and she is standing with the office missionaries Elder Barton and Elder Goings. They are a great companionship and we get to work with them in the office. Elder Barton is quite new to the office, he got transfered here in December and was trained by Elder Millerberg who left right after Christmas and went to Granada. Elder Barton is from Gilbert, Arizona. Elder Goings is from Richmond, Utah, up by Logan.

We have a busy week planned, meeting with the office elders, and the Assistants to the President and President and Sister Mellor on Monday. This usually happens every Monday if the Mellor's haven't gone to the Islands for Zone Conference. On Wednesday we first have a meeting with the branch missionary leader and the elders and afterwards we travel to Algeciras. We will be late in getting back that day and won't go into the office at all. Back to the office on Thursday and again on Friday. Friday night we are going with some of our branch members and members from the Spanish ward to the Madrid Temple. We take a bus late at night and travel to Madrid during the night, catching whatever sleep we can and then do a couple of sessions in the Madrid temple and travel back the Fuengirola and then try to be awake for church the next day. We will let you know how this goes.

We really love it over here and the missionary work is going great. They have great plans for the coming year even with fewer missionaries and hope to have more baptisms than last year. With the members help I know we can do it.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Well we had a very rainy first of the week this year. We had put off a couple of times of going to Malaga to see the Christmas lights and we finally did it for Family Home Evening with the branch members who could go. We went inbetween the rain storms. We were afraid that there would be lightening storms that were predicted. The Meyers, the German couple really wanted to go and we were willing to also go, the Tyndale-Biscoes said that they would go, but there were hestiate about going in the storm. But we went in one vehicle and we were very lucky because it would rain for about 5 minutes and then let up.

We picked up Aaron Jacobsen on the way so that he could see the lights with us. He is the single guy from Alaska over here working on his doctors' degree in history. He has been in Berlin and wanted to come to Spain and enjoy the sunshine, but ha, ha, it has been raining for most of the time that he has been here. But he has been a welcome member of our branch and all the members have enjoyed his company, he hasn't lacked for dinner invites. He will be leaving our branch at the end of January to go Vienna to finish writhing his disertation, etc.

They keep the streets lit up until after 3 Kings Day, January 6th. So we had to go to see them before that and we decided it was worth it. We saw the nativity scene in one of the public buildings. There were also other Nativity scence put up around the city. They had several trees all decorated with lights, and many of the main streets had different light above the streets. Some of us got out and walked around the streets and we were went to return to the vehicle it started raining on us. You can see part of the group around the tree in one of big market plazas. On the right are the Meyers, from Germany, and on the left are the Tyndale-Biscoes from England with one of their sons, Seth.

There was another tree lit up also. They also had the tree wisemen made up of flowers in one of the round-abouts, but my picture didn't turn out. They celebrate Three Kings Day, like we do for Christmas, they have a parade, exchange gifts, etc.

We didn't stay at the office and watch the parade, but the elders told us that they throw out candy from the floats like they do during Peach Days. And they say that the last King, Baltazar, the black king, has the best treats.

I have been tutoring Holly Tyndale-Biscoe with her math, she missed about 3 weeks of school right before Christmas because of the flu and needed to get caught back up. I glad I have been able to help and that I haven't forgotten all my math. She is taking a pre-calculus class and later wants to take the SAT so that she can go to BYU when she finishes over here. She is going to an English school here, but has to travel by train and bus to get there every morning and night with her younger brother. She has one more year left after this one and then the family wants to move back to England.
We had a very enjoyable district meeting today. We are very impressed with the missionaries and the lesson that they give. Those that we have worked with are excellent leaders and will be a benefit to the church wherever they will serve in the future. They even have a Spanish lesson each week.
We hope you will all have an enjoyable week and may the missionary effort fill the earth. We do have a testimony of the importance of the message of Jesus Christ for the whole world.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Well, we want to wish all of you a Happy New Year, it came in with a bang here in Spain. They set off firecrackers and fireworks to bring in the New Year. Some of the people started a lot earlier, because we have been hearing firecrackers go off for a week now, but on the 31st of December there were definitely more of them and several more when the clock turned to 12:00. We didn't go out and chose to stay home, but the noise kept us awake.
The bad thing was the poor dogs in the neighborhood. Every time one of the big firecrackers would go off the dogs would stat to bark.
It must have really hurt their ears.
We did get some pictures from Sister Mellor that were taken at the Mission Home on Christmas that I thought that I would share with you. We had a traditional Christmas dinner with turkey, dressing, yams, mashed potatoes and gravy and tossed salad. We happened to be at the head of the table this time. These missionaries were a great group to eat with and they left shortly after singing a few Christmas carols so they could be back to call their families. While we were waiting for the dinner to begin we finished a puzzle and of course I had to help, I miss putting puzzles together. I didn't put it altogether myself, the elders also helped, but Sister Mellor took my picture.
This week started out really warm. When I walked down to the post office, I got really hot and wished that I hadn't worn my sweater. On Tuesday it started out about the same, but later on during the day it started raining again and rained for the rest of the week. Saturday was a very sunny day and we walked over to the church for our district meeting. But it suppose to rain again maybe tomorrow but definitely on Monday and that is the day we wanted to go see the lights in Malaga.
We did go into the office on New Year's Day but didn't stay the whole day because the internet wasn't up and they were having trouble with the computers.
We hope that all of you will have a prosperous and happy New Year.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

I can't believe another week has gone by. Christmas has come and gone and the New Year is approaching. We didn't really take many pictures this week because it rained the whole week, even had lightning and thunder to go along with it. It wasn't really too cold, only if you got wet through and the wind continued to blow. One day, I think it was Monday, my shoes got soaked all the way through just walking to the office. (Jo walked too close to the down spout of on of the builings and it filled her shoe full of wather.) We tried to get everything ready for the zone conference that we had last Tuesday in Malaga. We had a wonderful Zone Conference, and had a program about Christmas, with Scriptures and songs. We had a wonderful meal with the missionaries and enjoyed visiting with the missionaries from the 2 zones. They have 2 zones meet together for Zone Conference and then they try to have a zone Conference about every 6 weeks or so, usually between the transfers.

We were going to go with the Branch back into Malaga to see the lights on Wednesday night but it continued to rain so it was cancelled and we will try to go next week. They tell us that they keep the lights up until 3 Kings Day, which is January 6th. On Tuesday night Roy and I went home teaching to a couple of members, Fred and Bruna Riley, they have been members for about 17 years and have lived here in Spain for 7 years in Mijas Costa. He is from England and she was born in Italy and grew up in Beligum. They met in Yugoslavia at a (Communist Party)conference. She speaks several languages, and he only speaks English. They are a delightful couple and very strong members in our branch. He was in the Branch Presidency when we got here and is now the branch mission leader. She is the Young Women's Advisor, we only have 1 young woman, Holly, and she is a joy to have in any class. Holly has been our Pianist in Sacrament meeting until her brother, Jack, got back from Australia. Jack Tyndale-Biscoe is getting ready to serve a mission and he plays the piano beautifully. He is self taught and studied a very intensive music course while he was in Australia. He will be a great missionary.

On Thursday we got ready for Christmas, that is when we took our preparation day, which entailed cleaning our apartment, doing the wash, etc. I also did some baking. I made a lemon merigue pie to take to the mission home for Christmas dessert. On Friday we went up to the mission home to help with the cooking, but didn't need to do much. We did eat with President and Sister Mellor and nine other missionaries. They were a great group and enjoyed the Turkey, mashed potatoes, gravy, dressing, and yams and salad. It was great food. Then the missionaries hurried back to their apartments so they could talk to their families and then we were able to visit all of our kids on SKPE. It was so great to see all of the grandkids and what they got for Christmas. We really enjoyed talking with all of them.

On Saturday the English celebrate Boxing Day and once again we were out at the Riley's to a dinner about 3:00 o'clock and we had 15 people there. 4 of the missionaries and the rest were members of the branch. We took Aaron Jacobson, who is the member that is from Alaska who is over here working on his Doctor's degree. He is doing it out of England, but is doing research in Germany. He wanted to spend some time in the sun in Spain and then it has rained the last week here. He was here a month ago and decided to spend his time in our branch. He will be here until the end of January. He went to Columbia on his mission and has learned German, so the Meyers, the Germany couple really like to speak with him.

After we were at the Riley's on Saturday we went to the Meyer's for supper and we took Aaron with us. We always enjoy ourselves when we are there, even though Roy doesn't quite understand everything when they speak German.

On Sunday we had 17 people for Sacrament meeting, and we hope in a couple of weeks several of the others will come back from whereever they spent their holiday. It was a great meeting, even though it was small.

We wish you all a Happy New Year.