Click the link below for the 2014 Trek video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xH1X9VqxHLU
"My Journey Starts Here"
(Moroni 10:32)
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
Friday, June 20, 2014
Tuesday night drop-off
Hello Ma's and Pa's!
For the Tuesday night gear drop-off, please plan on the following:
-Meet at 6:00 PM at the stake center (the youth still at 7:00 PM.)
-Bring your food that night in the cooler, NOT at 3 am the next day.
-Have fabric strips ready to go for your family's gear and be ready to check off who came from your family!
-Bring any other permission slips and/or parent letters.
-The only thing you should bring Wed morning is your small backpack with your breakfast and lunch and the clothes you're wearing.
Thanks!
-The Stake YW and YM Presidencies
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Final Trek Preparations
Final Trek Preparations
"My Journey Starts Here!"
1. Please check out the Trek blog! Eveything you need to know to be ready for Trek can be found on the blog, including packing lists, permission forms, and any other handout about trek:
www.ssunspioneertrek.blogspot.com
2. AS SOON AS POSSIBLE: Permission forms to your Ma and Pa if you haven't already. Also, please let your Ma and Pa know if you have completed the Trail of Faith requirements.
3. Don't forget to research your pioneer ancestor!
4. Remaining schedule:
* Final Trek activity- Pioneer games and trail first aid.
- Wednesday June 18 (the 4th and 5th wards will meet Tuesday June 17)
- 7pm
- Your ward house.
*Equipment/gear drop off
-Tuesday June 24
-7pm
-Stake Center
-See the packing list. Each participant is allowed one 18 gallon tote, one 5 gallon bucket, and one carry-on backpack. All personal gear must fit in these three containers.
*Leave for Trek
-Wednesday June 25
-3:30am (please be on time- we are on a tight schedule)
-Stake Center
-Bring your own breakfast for this day or eat before you come.
-Bring your own lunch for this day (all other food will be provided.)
2. AS SOON AS POSSIBLE: Permission forms to your Ma and Pa if you haven't already. Also, please let your Ma and Pa know if you have completed the Trail of Faith requirements.
3. Don't forget to research your pioneer ancestor!
4. Remaining schedule:
* Final Trek activity- Pioneer games and trail first aid.
- Wednesday June 18 (the 4th and 5th wards will meet Tuesday June 17)
- 7pm
- Your ward house.
*Equipment/gear drop off
-Tuesday June 24
-7pm
-Stake Center
-See the packing list. Each participant is allowed one 18 gallon tote, one 5 gallon bucket, and one carry-on backpack. All personal gear must fit in these three containers.
*Leave for Trek
-Wednesday June 25
-3:30am (please be on time- we are on a tight schedule)
-Stake Center
-Bring your own breakfast for this day or eat before you come.
-Bring your own lunch for this day (all other food will be provided.)
Labels:
final preparations
Friday, June 13, 2014
June 18th Journal Glue-in: You Have Nothing to Fear- Find Joy in the Journey
June 18th Journal Glue-in: You Have Nothing to Fear- Find Joy in the Journey
“To the praise of God be it spoken, all I have endured has never hurt or discouraged me, but done me good. … We have sometimes been almost suffocated with heat …, sometimes almost froze with cold…We have had our clothes wet through with no privilege of drying them or changing them,… had to sleep … out of doors, in very severe weather, and many such things which you [have] no idea of. … [Yet] we have been … healthy & cheerful. … If you will be faithful, you have nothing to fear from the journey. The Lord will take care of his saints.” -William Clayton
At the Sweetwater where the Willie Company was stranded, cold and starving, they experienced great joy upon being rescued by their brethren. As John Chislett wrote:
". . . It was…resolved in council that Captain Willie with one man should go in search of the supply train and apprise the leader of our condition. . . . They were absent three days—three days which I shall never forget.
". . . The recollection of it unmans me even now—those three days! During that time I visited the sick, the widows whose husbands died in serving them, and the aged who could not help themselves, to know for myself where to dispense the few articles that had been placed in my charge for distribution. Such craving hunger I never saw before, and may God in his mercy spare me the sight again. . . .
". . . On the evening of the third day after Captain Willie's departure, just as the sun was sinking beautifully behind the distant hills, on an eminence immediately west of our camp several covered wagons, each drawn by four horses were seen coming towards us. The news ran through the camp like wildfire. . . . Shouts of joy rent the air; strong men wept till tears ran freely down their furrowed and sun-burnt cheeks, and little children partook of the joy which some of them hardly understood, and fairly danced around with gladness. Restraint was set aside in the general rejoicing, and as the brethren entered our camp the sisters fell upon them and deluged them with kisses.
". . . That evening, for the first time in quite a period, the songs of Zion were to be heard in the camp, and peals of laughter issued from the little knots of people as they chatted around the fires. The change seemed almost miraculous, so sudden was it from grave to gay, from sorrow to gladness, from mourning to rejoicing. With the cravings of hunger satisfied, and with hearts filled with gratitude to God and our good brethren, we all united in prayer, and then retire to rest."(John Chislett, as quoted by LeRoy R. and Ann W. Hafen, Handcarts to Zion)
“At that moment, standing on the same hill from which the Willie Company first saw their rescuers, I contemplated the joy that will fill our hearts when we fully come to know the eternal significance of the greatest rescue—the rescue of the family of God by the Lord Jesus Christ. For it is through Him that we have promise of eternal life. Our faith in the Lord Jesus Christ is the source of spiritual power that will give you and me the assurance that we have nothing to fear from the journey. I know the Lord Jesus Christ lives, and our unwavering faith in Him will see us safely along our journey through life.”
-M. Russell Ballard
This is our one and only chance at mortal life—here and now…Opportunities come, and then they are gone. I believe that among the greatest lessons we are to learn in this short sojourn upon the earth are lessons that help us distinguish between what is important and what is not. I plead with you not to let those most important things pass you by as you plan for that illusive and nonexistent future when you will have time to do all that you want to do. Instead, find joy in the journey—now.
-President Thomas S. Monson
“To the praise of God be it spoken, all I have endured has never hurt or discouraged me, but done me good. … We have sometimes been almost suffocated with heat …, sometimes almost froze with cold…We have had our clothes wet through with no privilege of drying them or changing them,… had to sleep … out of doors, in very severe weather, and many such things which you [have] no idea of. … [Yet] we have been … healthy & cheerful. … If you will be faithful, you have nothing to fear from the journey. The Lord will take care of his saints.” -William Clayton
At the Sweetwater where the Willie Company was stranded, cold and starving, they experienced great joy upon being rescued by their brethren. As John Chislett wrote:
". . . It was…resolved in council that Captain Willie with one man should go in search of the supply train and apprise the leader of our condition. . . . They were absent three days—three days which I shall never forget.
". . . The recollection of it unmans me even now—those three days! During that time I visited the sick, the widows whose husbands died in serving them, and the aged who could not help themselves, to know for myself where to dispense the few articles that had been placed in my charge for distribution. Such craving hunger I never saw before, and may God in his mercy spare me the sight again. . . .
". . . On the evening of the third day after Captain Willie's departure, just as the sun was sinking beautifully behind the distant hills, on an eminence immediately west of our camp several covered wagons, each drawn by four horses were seen coming towards us. The news ran through the camp like wildfire. . . . Shouts of joy rent the air; strong men wept till tears ran freely down their furrowed and sun-burnt cheeks, and little children partook of the joy which some of them hardly understood, and fairly danced around with gladness. Restraint was set aside in the general rejoicing, and as the brethren entered our camp the sisters fell upon them and deluged them with kisses.
". . . That evening, for the first time in quite a period, the songs of Zion were to be heard in the camp, and peals of laughter issued from the little knots of people as they chatted around the fires. The change seemed almost miraculous, so sudden was it from grave to gay, from sorrow to gladness, from mourning to rejoicing. With the cravings of hunger satisfied, and with hearts filled with gratitude to God and our good brethren, we all united in prayer, and then retire to rest."(John Chislett, as quoted by LeRoy R. and Ann W. Hafen, Handcarts to Zion)
“At that moment, standing on the same hill from which the Willie Company first saw their rescuers, I contemplated the joy that will fill our hearts when we fully come to know the eternal significance of the greatest rescue—the rescue of the family of God by the Lord Jesus Christ. For it is through Him that we have promise of eternal life. Our faith in the Lord Jesus Christ is the source of spiritual power that will give you and me the assurance that we have nothing to fear from the journey. I know the Lord Jesus Christ lives, and our unwavering faith in Him will see us safely along our journey through life.”
-M. Russell Ballard
This is our one and only chance at mortal life—here and now…Opportunities come, and then they are gone. I believe that among the greatest lessons we are to learn in this short sojourn upon the earth are lessons that help us distinguish between what is important and what is not. I plead with you not to let those most important things pass you by as you plan for that illusive and nonexistent future when you will have time to do all that you want to do. Instead, find joy in the journey—now.
-President Thomas S. Monson
Labels:
journal,
Prep activities
trail first aid and pioneer games
Trail First Aid and Pioneer Games June 17/18th
The Medics will discuss basic trail first aid and prevention with the youth for the first part of the activity. This will take approximately 15 minutes. It is very important for the youth to be there to learn about these common health issues they may face when they go on trek. The boys and girls will meet separately to discuss things more applicable to each group. After the First Aid, Mas and Pas may then disperse with their families to play pioneer games and do other trek activities. Please refer to the following chart:
First Aid Schedule:
4th and 5th wards on Tues. June 17th @ 5th ward building at 7:00 PM.
Medics- Trevinos and Ericksons
3rd, 6th, and 9th wards on Wed. June 18th @ 6th ward building at 7:00 PM
Medics- Buttars
2nd, 7th and 11th wards on Wed. June 18th @stake center at 7:00 PM
Medics- Swensons
PIONEER GAMES INSTRUCTIONS: Choose one or more games below to play with your Trek family. For the racing games, you may choose to play as a ward with each Trek family acting as a team, and competing against other Trek families in your ward in a relay-style race. Find joy in the journey!
STICK PULL
This was a favorite activity of the Prophet Joseph and no one ever threw him. Equipment needed: A stick 3’ (1M) long, about 1 1/2” diameter. Two people sit on the ground facing each other, feet to feet. Both grab hold of the stick and at a signal, both pull on the stick and see if they can pull the other person from his/her sitting position. The one who remains seated the longest is the winner.
CHAIN TAG
In this game, two people are “it”, each clasping hands. The pair begins chasing the others. When the pair tags someone, the tagged person links hands with the pair who are “it”, making the chain three people long. The chain grows longer as more people are tagged.
SACK RACE
Equipment needed: A cloth or burlap bag for each team. Run it as a relay. A team consists of 10- 12 people with half the team on one side and half on the other side spaced about 60-70’ (20-25M) apart. At a signal one person puts both feet into the bag and while holding up the bag with both hands, hops across to the team member on the other side. That team member puts his/her feet in the bag and hops back, and so on, until all the team members have had a chance to hop across the area. The first team with all their members having hopped across is the winner.
3-LEGGED RACE
Equipment needed: A belt or bandana for each team to tie legs together. Teams should be even numbers. Run as a relay. Distance is approx 100’ (30 M). Two members of each team have one leg “belted” to one leg of the other person (left leg to right leg), thus “three legs”. OK to hold onto waist of the partner. At a signal, they run to a mark and turn and run back. The belt is taken off and two other team members are strapped together, etc. Alternate: Have part of the team 100’ away and the racers go across the distance where the belt is traded to another pair. First team with all team members having participated is the winner. Greatest number of items conveyed in a given time period wins.
RAILROAD SPELLING BEE
The first person spells any word of their choosing. The next person uses the last letter in the previously spelled word as the first letter in a word of their choosing. The next person follows in like manner. Persons misspelling their word sit down.
BUTTON, BUTTON, WHO’S GOT THE BUTTON?
Get a button. Leader walks around the circle with a button in folded hands pretending to drop the button in each player’s folded hands. Another player has been asked to watch this procedure. When the leader has gone to each person, the leader asks, “Button, button, who’s got the button?” The player guessing chooses someone. If after 3 guesses the player has not located the button, the guesser
becomes the new leader. If he chooses correctly, then the leader remains the same and repeats the process with a new player guessing.
I SPY
One player is it and covers her eyes while the other players hide. When everyone is hidden they call out “Whoop!” The player who is “it” then looks for the hidden players. If she sees one she must call them out by name, “I spy John!” If your name is called you must run to the place from which the person who is it started searching, while the person who is it tries to tag you. If you are tagged, you become it.
STATES
Players sit in a circle and everyone chooses a state (or fruit or famous person, etc.). Go around the circle twice, having each person name their state so that the players can memorize them. IT stands in the middle with a hat or bandana and approaches a player who must name another state (belonging to another player) before IT hits them on the head with the hat. IT must hurry to the person whose state was named and try to hit her before she can name another state. Whoever is hit on the head before naming another’s state is IT. If a player says his own state or a state not included in the game, he becomes IT.
Wednesday, June 4, 2014
3 week count down!
Clothing check, buckets, tents and scones.
Only three weeks until we leave for Trek. We are so excited to get out there- what about you?
Thanks to 4th ward for these photos.
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Cute Pay siblings! |
Labels:
photos,
Prep activities
Tuesday, June 3, 2014
family kitchen
Family Kitchen
You will be responsible for being certain your food is properly packed, kept cold and then defrosted by the appropriate time for consumption.
You will be responsible for being certain your food is properly packed, kept cold and then defrosted by the appropriate time for consumption.
You Will Need:
2 Burner Coleman type stove and fuel
2 Totes (1 for Kitchen and 1 for Non-perishable foods) Picnic Sized Ice Chest (cart)
Regular sized ice chest
2- 5 gal Water Cooler
Kitchen Tote
2 Burner Coleman type stove and fuel
2 Totes (1 for Kitchen and 1 for Non-perishable foods) Picnic Sized Ice Chest (cart)
Regular sized ice chest
2- 5 gal Water Cooler
Kitchen Tote
-
Salt and Pepper
-
Md Size Soup Pot
-
12” Skillet, Cast Iron preferred
-
Cooking Spoon and Laddle
-
Metal Tongs or 2 Metal Forks
-
4 c. Disposable Container (for carrying oil)
-
Bowl for scone dough
-
2 Wash Basins
-
1 or 2 Wash Cloths and Hand Towels
-
Cutting Board
-
Sharp Knife
-
Dish Soap
-
Measure Cup
Optional Items
-
5-10 Paper Towel Sections
-
3-4 ft Aluminum Foil, folded
-
Clorox Clean-up Wipes
-
Pocket Knife/Belt Knife for every Ma and Pa
MUST BE RETURNED TO THE TRAILER BEFORE LEAVING CAMP IN THE MORNING!!!
Water Coolers
You should carry 10 gallons of water ON YOUR CART,
for drinking.
2 -5 gallon coolers
You must use water coolers and not storage jugs. Thin, plastic storage jugs allow the water to heat considerably and nobody will drink the hot water in them.
Food Tote
All non-perishable food items will be kept here. This
tote will travel with the Kitchen Tote and the Food Ice Chest.
MUST BE RETURNED TO THE TRAILER BEFORE LEAVING CAMP IN THE MORNING!!!
-
5-10 Paper Towel Sections
Food Ice Chest
This should be a Regular sized Ice Chest.
Approx dimensions L24” x W13” x D15”
You will be provided with food through your ward food liaison to pack and store in your ice chest.
Examples of the food would include: Frozen Juice, Fro- zen Milk, Gallon Bag of frozen dinner item, Frozen Sandwich Meat etc....
Once you are provided with the menu and the food items, your job will be to appropriately freeze the items and then pack your ice chest so that your food will stay cold AND be easily retrievable at the appropriate time.
Please mark your ice chest well with your colors.
Your ice chest will be transported to each camp site by the stake. It will be available to you every morning and every night at camp.
You may choose to retrieve the whole ice chest at meal time or just the individual items for that meal.
MUST BE RETURNED TO THE TRAILER BEFORE LEAVING CAMP IN THE MORNING!!!
Picnic Ice Chest
This chest will go ON YOUR CART. It will be used to
keep your lunch foods out of the sun and heat.
It will also be used to aid in the defrost of any frozen food items for meals.
All frozen dinner items should be placed in this ice chest at breakfast and monitored for adequate defrost through the day.
All frozen breakfast items should be placed in this ice chest at dinner time and monitored for adequate defrost through the evening and morning.
To print, click on turquoise title "family kitchen" above. Then press print.
You will be provided with food through your ward food liaison to pack and store in your ice chest.
Examples of the food would include: Frozen Juice, Fro- zen Milk, Gallon Bag of frozen dinner item, Frozen Sandwich Meat etc....
Once you are provided with the menu and the food items, your job will be to appropriately freeze the items and then pack your ice chest so that your food will stay cold AND be easily retrievable at the appropriate time.
Please mark your ice chest well with your colors.
Your ice chest will be transported to each camp site by the stake. It will be available to you every morning and every night at camp.
You may choose to retrieve the whole ice chest at meal time or just the individual items for that meal.
MUST BE RETURNED TO THE TRAILER BEFORE LEAVING CAMP IN THE MORNING!!!
Picnic Ice Chest
This chest will go ON YOUR CART. It will be used to
keep your lunch foods out of the sun and heat.
It will also be used to aid in the defrost of any frozen food items for meals.
All frozen dinner items should be placed in this ice chest at breakfast and monitored for adequate defrost through the day.
All frozen breakfast items should be placed in this ice chest at dinner time and monitored for adequate defrost through the evening and morning.
To print, click on turquoise title "family kitchen" above. Then press print.
Labels:
family kitchen,
food,
ma&pa
Saturday, May 17, 2014
photos 4th Ward
We love seeing all your pictures!
Feel free to send any you have from past Trek activities.
Miller trek family temple trip. (4th Ward)
Miller family Ensign Peak hike.
They almost beat the rain!
4th Ward temple trip. Photo courtesy Adam Swalberg.
Labels:
photos
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
Photos!
Here are some pics from our trek service project. We were able to weed and plant some flowers in a a flower bed for a lady in our ward who is in a wheelchair. -Barbara Dolman (2nd Ward)
Ensign Peak Hike
Photos courtesy Barbara Dolman- 2nd Ward
Jordan River Temple trip.
Photos courtesy Jessilyn Peaslee. (5th Ward)
Daughters of Utah Pioneers Museum (DUP Museum)
Peaslee Trek family- 5th ward
Labels:
ensign peak,
photos,
service project
Monday, April 28, 2014
dates
Important dates to remember!
May 18- Ma and Pa Training- 7:00 PM. Please bring all permission slips and parent letters to
this meeting.
June 1st- Jenny Phillips Trek Fireside, "Remember the Journey," at 7:00 PM. This will be amazing!
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Ensign Peak handout
ENSIGN PEAK JOURNAL GLUE-IN
“And it shall come to pass
in the last days, that the mountain of the Lord’s house shall be established in
the top of the mountains, and shall be exalted above the hills; and all nations
shall flow unto it” (Isa. 2:2).
Before leaving Nauvoo in the winter of 1846, President Brigham
Young had a dream in which he saw an angel standing on a cone-shaped hill
somewhere in the West pointing to a valley below. When he entered the Salt Lake
Valley some 18 months later, he saw just above the location where we are now
gathered the same hillside prominence he had seen in vision.
As has often been told from this pulpit, Brother Brigham led a
handful of leaders to the summit of that hill and proclaimed it Ensign Peak, a
name filled with religious meaning for these modern Israelites. Twenty-five
hundred years earlier the prophet Isaiah had declared that in the last days
“the mountain of the Lord’s house shall be established in the top of the
mountains,” and there “he shall set up an ensign for the nations.”
Seeing their moment in history as partial fulfillment of that
prophecy, the Brethren wished to fly a banner of some kind to make the idea of
“an ensign for the nations” literal. Elder Heber C. Kimball produced a yellow
bandana. Brother Brigham tied it to a walking stick carried by Elder Willard
Richards and then planted the makeshift flag, declaring the valley of the Great
Salt Lake and the mountains surrounding it as that prophesied place from which
the word of the Lord would go forth in the latter days. (Jeffrey R. Holland)
I believe and testify that
it is the mission of this Church to stand as an ensign to the nations and a
light to the world. We have had placed upon us a great, all-encompassing
mandate from which we cannot shrink nor turn aside. We accept that mandate and
are determined to fulfill it, and with the help of God we shall do it.
There are forces all around
us that would deter us from that effort. The world is constantly crowding in on
us. From all sides we feel the pressure to soften our stance, to give in here a
little and there a little.
We must never lose sight of
our objective. We must ever keep before us the goal which the Lord has set for
us. (Gordon B. Hinckley)
High on the mountain top
A banner is unfurled.
Ye nations, now look up;
It waves to all the world.
In Deseret's sweet, peaceful land,
On Zion's mount behold it stand!
(Joel H. Johnson)
Labels:
ensign peak,
handout,
journal
Ensign Peak and First Encampment Park Activity
Trek Activity- April 30th (2nd, 3rd, 9th
and 11th Wards)
or May 5th
(5th, 6th and 7th Wards)
Please
make sure your trek family knows where and when to meet.
Ensign Peak (This hike counts toward the May Trail of
Faith goals- to go on a hike in the shoes you’ll be wearing on Trek. Please
remind your youth ahead of time!)
Length: About 1 mile round trip Difficulty:
Easy
Description: Ensign Peak is a
prominent small mountain peak at the north end of the Salt Lake Valley, above
the State Capitol building. From the top, you have marvelous views out over the
Salt Lake Valley and Great Salt Lake.
Two days after arriving in the Salt Lake Valley,
Brigham Young and seven other pioneer leaders climbed the mountain to survey
the valley. From its summit they laid out in their minds the city they intended
to build. A small monument now sits on the summit.
Ensign Peak Trailhead
The trailhead is at the top of a residential area
above the Utah capitol building. From downtown Salt Lake City, drive State
Street north to the capitol, fork right and follow the road around to the northeast.
It becomes East Capitol Boulevard. Follow it up the hill to the north and then
turn left onto North Sandrun Road. Follow that road west to the LDS Church
house. The trailhead is in the back of the church parking lot, where it abuts
Ensign Vista Drive.
Ensign Peak
From the trailhead, follow the obvious,
well-maintained trail to the top of the peak. The trail swings around the
mountain and approaches the summit from the north. Return the way you came in.
Please stay on the established trail. Work is underway here to re-vegetate the
area, which has been harmed by erosion.
First Encampment Park (This would be a great place for the kids to write in
their journals.)
1704 S 500
E Salt Lake City
"First Encampment Park was created in 1997 to honor
the pioneers who arrived in the Salt Lake Valley in 1847. The first group of
pioneers to enter the valley included 109 men, 3 women, and 8 children. They
had to push their way through high grass before they found an area suitable to
set up camp for the night. The park marks the spot where they spent their first
night, and the names of some of the pioneers are inscribed on the granite
rocks.
On that night, Thomas Bullock, the company clerk, recorded in
his journal: “…We descended a gentle sloping table land to a lower level
where the soil and grass improved in appearance…The wheat grass grows six or
seven feet high, many different kinds of grass appear, some being 10 or 12 feet
high – after wading through thick grass for some distance, we found a place
bare enough for a camping ground, the grass being only knee deep, but very thick;
we camped on the banks of a beautiful little stream (Parley’s Creek) which was
surrounded by very tall grass...”
Parley’s Creek still flows underground through the neighborhood
that stands there now.
The next morning the company moved to the place where it was
decided they would plant crops, two miles to the north at City Creek.
Even the layout of the park is symbolic of the pioneers and
their journey. The granite boulders on the east side of the park represent the
Wasatch mountains. The path through the mountain rocks represent Emigration
Canyon, which is the canyon the pioneers passed through to get to the valley.
The dry streambeds represent Emigration and Parley’s creeks.
The park was dedicated on July 22, 1997 by Elder M. Russell
Ballard exactly 150 years after the group of pioneers camped here. It was
presented as a city park to the people of Salt Lake City and to all who honor
the pioneer heritage.
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