 Good morning. We have, we have viewers worldwide. People realize it in the background. People are dancing during this, the startup song. If you're not dancing, I'm so sorry for you. Here comes my cat. She has, she also says hello. Let's see what we have here. So we have Hillary. Hello, Hillary. We have Chris, Tommy, Thomas, and Louis. Hello. Hey, Louis. Yoke and Greg and Benjamin. Hello. I know for Benjamin it's 2 a.m. I know that's, I know that much. Oh, Chris Fariolo has me crying already this morning. What could have been Kiki? That said good morning. Who was running the video chat? See, yeah, it was probably Kiki. It was probably Kiki. She's a noisy typer. Yeah. She didn't like that. Not at all. No bets will be taken on when my backdrop will fall because It's a drinking game. It's super secure. Every time it falls, everybody drinks their mimosa. Drinks their coffee. See how caffeine we can get. No, it has a binder clip. The only way that it'll fall is if something knocks over the lamp that's holding it. Ben says it's only midnight there now. Oh, so it's midnight. Okay, so that's good to know. It's not too late for you anymore, Benjamin. Well, good night, you know. Definitely Pat's my bedtime. Okay, let's see. So we had some other people say hi. We have Sue and Canberra. Where is that? I don't even know where that is. Canberra, that's in Australia. Oh, here in Australia too. What time is it there for you, Sue? We have Jonathan and Betsy. Hello, everybody who's watching. Thank you. Makes me so happy to see you guys every Saturday morning. Well, you won't see me next Saturday. And neither Mindy, they're leaving me by myself next week. So I might have to grab another co-host and replace these two. That hurts. Just for a weekend shot right to the heart. Well, it's also midnight for Sue. Thank you for popping in. They also have a new name. So thank you for watching. Are you on WikiTree? Are you an avid WikiTrayer? Are you talking to Sue? Yes, I'm talking to Sue. Sue Carrar. And we have Christina Corbeiani. She's from Buenos Aires, so Corbeiani. Those both very well, Sarah. I know. Well, I do know the Hispanic names I know being from Miami. Sue, we love that you love WikiTree. We do. Love WikiTree. Okay. So we do have a funny question of the week. Oh, we do. Oh, I had to move on. I got up early this morning so I could go through them all. So let me share and move us out. Oh, look, it's me. We were on the side there for a second. You want me to leave us? No. I don't want to see me twice. No. Oh, it's great. Let me see if I can zoom. How do I zoom? Control scroll. Control scroll. There we go. Oh, my goodness. There we go. But then it went back. And I can't help you further than that. There we go. Boom. Boom, meow. I'm not sure what GF 4 313 means, but told a story of an earlier relative who came home without a key and was shot by his father. Now that happened to me when I was a kid. I had gone out and came home without my keys. And when the police came to the door, because somebody saw me trying to break into our house, my dad said he didn't know me when he opened the door. Oh, wow. That's comforting. Yeah. It teaches you not to lose your keys. And I've only lost my keys like twice in my life. And boy does he remember that. So I love that Virginia Fields has a file that she keeps on funny things. The Pantola County taxes. 1850 senses. The certification by Henry swearing gin. The census taker that I certified these to be 64 pages and a piece of a page. Inhabitants. I done as near and accordance with my oath as I could do it. The people was hard to get along with. There were a couple of senses anecdotes in here. And Chris Ferriero hit the, hit the button on the head with this one. He said Henry was later found in the local saloon lamenting his encounter with the Smith family and their 22 children. I'm adding the 22 because it's another one, but 20 children. Funny, Chris, funny. You had me in tears before I even saw you this morning. But it was Chris is on fire. Robert Bruce Irwin and his great granddaughter contacted me so I could put documentation about a warrant for his arrest, a father and a child out of wedlock for fornication and bastardy. He was 21 and she was 20. They didn't let him see her. He threatened to shoot them. They finally did marry. So the bastardy bond or the bastardy. Sentence has been handed down in that family. Thank you, Alexis Nelson for doing that. Let's see Newport Library. Yeah, and this is, this is an interesting one too from Chris about, it turns out that the Austin's half brother were involved in a boat accident at the mouth of the Merrimack River. No one was hurt, but the story of itself makes so much more dramatic than it really was. The coast guard saved the three on the skiff that was capsized when they hit the boat that was rescuing them. And Chris goes on to talk about how gross the water was. And that was really the, the whole part of what Chris was telling us that the water was gross in 1930 in that river. But it has been since cleaned up. Yay. The prisoner stated at the hearing of the jury that he was guilty upon which they found him guilty. He received an excellent character. That's, that's a funny thing to find him guilty, but oh, he's a nice guy, but he's, he's so guilty. Now, I don't understand why there's a picture in the middle of this, but this is the story of Moby Dick and the, the Owen Chase Mariner narrative of the most extraordinary and distressing of the Whaleship Essex of Nantucket, which was attacked and finally destroyed by a large, and I believe anyway, narrative of the Whaleship Essex anyway. So that's fun. This guy carved tombstones and he decided to, to make his own tombstone, making a note that despite his education, he was always being a poor man, along with the knowledge that death renders all souls the same. Here lie I by the churchyard door. Here lie I because I'm poor. The further in, the more you pay, yet here I lie as warm as they. Oh, let's see. Oh, this is funny. My grandfather and his brothers went together and installed electricity and lights in their mother's house. My great grandfather came home and not wanting or needing electricity started busting all the light bulbs with his cane. Bet you're wondering why this is so funny. He was blind as a bat. Why on earth did he do that? And how many did he really hit? How did he actually find them to hit them with his cane? It's like, can you imagine a pinion made of light bulbs? That's from Pam Dale. Let's see. That's from Jessica Key, who says that she is that exact description. A couple of times she wrote a letter in which he discussed his McFadder relatives as being that. There's a couple of stuff. A couple of links off to some cute stories, but wedding bells did not ring for a Zaya driver. Kansas 76 years old when he came to marry Miss Eliza Emerson. And applying for the license, he gave all the information asked by the license clerk until it came to the maiden name of the bride where he failed. He said, oh, oops. I'm stumped. I have to take the train back to town to find out what her last name is. Okay. I don't know if I would marry somebody that I didn't know their last name. Yeah. There are too many greats in here for me to try and see and I don't want to math. Okay. So, this is from Robert Schott. Was sentenced by the court of Friestland, Netherlands for shoddy work on a dyke in Laxm in 1671. Between some beams, a space of three fingers thick was found. He was sentenced to flocking and banishment in the Netherlands. If you don't know about the Netherlands, those dykes protect the communities from the encroaching sea and if you had three finger gap in between the beams, that is a place for the water to get in and wash them away. So, seems like a pretty heavy sentence for something so benile, but it wasn't. Let's see. When I started searching for my great-grandfather, he just didn't come home after Shiloh. He was born in Kentucky and had a total of six consecutive wives, none of whom knew about the others. He died a ripe old age, I bet he did. What a charming scoundrel he must have been and that's from Jen Kloss and I love that. A couple of people posted their royal lines. Wasn't quite sure what that was about, so I'm going to skip those. This story from M. Ross is part of a tragic comedy. I see it as part of a sitcom. My mother died in 1933 when my mom was four. Her grandmother Mary Ann moved into the family home to look after my mom and her brother. Now fast forward to June 1944 when my grandmother, my grandfathers, my mother's dad remarried. Mary Ann was 76 and had been running the family home for ten years. The second wife brought her mother Lucy aged 81 to live with the family. My mother was then just turned 15. It became her responsibility to look after fetch and carry for the two old ladies. So it went on and the two old ladies, one would say I'm cold, the other would say I'm hot. Ask her to raise a window. Excuse me for just a second. Well, Max is attacking. We had some... So they drove each other crazy and her crazy because they were so at odds with everything that they wanted to do. And it was pretty funny. And that was from M. Ross. And all of those weirdness of turning the light on, turning the light off, less blankets, more blankets. It was all during World War II with rationing and blackouts in effect. And the one who wanted the window raised, he couldn't raise the window because he couldn't open the blackout blinds anyway. You can imagine it must have been really funny. The Bacchum line, this is from Jim Bacchum. He's proved his line and he strives for accuracy. And he keeps from growing crazy by helping others try to correct the wrong assumptions in their genealogy. This past January I was killing time looking at the marriage and divorce record of an aunt in Birmingham, Alabama. And discovered in a newspaper article at Ancestry that my father had married in Birmingham, in 1925, before coming to Colorado for tuberculosis where he married his mother. So he's so... Heck, he really believes in accuracy and getting things right. And he didn't even know his father was married and they haven't found any divorce records. Look who's watching. Hi, Ellen. Hi, Ellen. Ellen. Ellen. Let's see. Marion Saruti always has a good one. Lucy Burl, Dawson related stories about this George Hildreth. He kept diving off the boat and head first and his mother said, Georgie, you should not dive into the water head first like that and he became Commodore George Hildreth and replied, mother, as long as you call me Georgie, I'm going to dive into the water head first. So that was a funny, funny anecdote. Let's see. Persistent story that the first settlement in my family arrived from Virginia after stealing a pastry at an Irish port in the late 1600s. After boarding a ship to eat it in solitude, of course, when I go and I steal my pastries, I always go and find a ship that's getting ready to sail and hide on it. Me too. The story was captured via Bill Dayo's history of the Sullivan family in Stafford County, Virginia. So that's not the funny part. The funny part is Gail Connolly recognized Bill Dayo who wrote the book, She Knows Bill Dayo. And so now Gail Connolly and Gary Sullivan have become Wickey Tree brother and sister over this one story about the Sullivans and this shared thing. That's so fun. That's like a cousin bait. Planned McBean, which is full of fantasy and drama. Occasionally some of it's true. So story about one John Bean, Maltenborough, New Hampshire, hunting with his daughter, having started to hear a noise outside of the house and looking out. She saw a large bear under the windows. She went and looked for the gun, forgetting that her father had it with him without hunting. Which was the real cause for Oliver suffering because she wanted to get wild meat to eat. She wanted to shoot the bear for the bear meat. She then caught up a shovel of live coals from the hearth taking an old hat out of the broken window and dumped it directly on the bear, poor bear's back. He ran away towards the woods ablaze. So this is a story that you hear often that people did this. She assumed it was a, this is Robert Seale, he assumed it was a unique family talent until he found an almost identical version told about Lydia Downer doing the same thing. Yet Lydia's father later killed a bear with all of his hair burned off his back. So that embellished the story even more. So some of those are really great. It's always fun to find fun stories in your ancestor's lives. Yes. Sometimes you find interesting stories, maybe some sad stories, but then you'll have the funny stories too. Thomas Kerneline has a whole slew of stories in here. So if you want to go through and read these, one of them is about a fellow who wanted to fly in a plane and never, ever, ever got to. So finally they got him an open cockpit plane and it scared him so bad he would never fly again. And they still have the ticket stubs from the flight. Yeah. So Thomas has some great stories in there. Let's see. I like this in back in the early 1980s, David Sloat spent a lot of time at Seattle National Archives and in the Mississippi censuses, he found a couple of things. There was a record of one fairly large family which was properly recorded, but in the left margin of the page, the name of Thomas M. Mosley, there was a note stating Old Rebel Dammit. Guess he was hard to interview, going back to the original census comment earlier. And then Mississippi was gathered by 35-year-old B.B. Pace, being true to his job of recording all residents on the given date. When he entered the names of those in the hotel where he was staying, he entered his own vitals. When he entered his job description, he listed himself as a gentleman and he is the only person listed as a gentleman on any of the records for that that he did for the 1850 census. We should give him a gentleman category. Somebody thought it was interesting that somebody had 22 children on a census record or in their information. So that is the funny, that was a very, very enjoyable question of the week and I really love the funny stuff. Keep the funny ones coming, Aowyn. Funny, funny. Oh, look, Thomas Conaline is here. Yes, yeah, he's here. Yes. I would have read through all of yours. Yours were great too, but too many for this morning. Yeah, we would be here all day. They might enjoy that. I don't know if we would. You guys want to have an all, well, that's in a couple of weekends. Well, be an all, you'll see us all weekend long. What is the preparation for this? He watched the Swedish chef videos because the profiles of the week this week are, I guess we can go ahead and start that since people seem excited to see. I mean, I'm excited for chefs because that just means that we have food involved. So, our profiles of the week, our main one being James Beard, chef and namesake of the prestigious James Beard Foundation Award. So let's start with him. He was born in Portland, Oregon and died in New York in 1985. He served in World War II, setting up ship sailors, canteens in different countries. He was an American chef, cookbook author, teacher of television personality. He pioneered television cooking shows, taught at the James Beard Cooking School in New York City and Seaside, Oregon, and lectured widely. He emphasized American cooking, prepared with fresh, wholesome American ingredients. And then, you know, the James Beard Foundation. It's a picture of him. And the awards, that award recognizes chefs, restauranteers, authors, and journalists each year. And in 2020, the winner was pit master Rodney Scott. So, that was, that's our main profile of the week. And I feel, hold on a second, let me look up Rodney Scott for a minute. I feel like he was, James Beard, award. I think he was one of the, yeah, he won last year. So that's all I wanted to mention. So that's our first one. And then we have Julia Child. Boom! Many of you. What? What was that? I can never think of Julia Child without thinking of the crazy, funny, Saturday night life-skit with Dan Akroyd, where he just is chopping away and just chops everything his old hand off. And he was being Julia Child. So, our second profile, Julia Child, she was an American chef, author, and television personality. She was also a spy in World War II. Interesting fact. So they say she worked for them, but who knows? She has a sticker. She has a sticker. That must be true. Let's say whatever's on Wiki-Treat. No, I'm just kidding. She mastered the art of French cooking and had a lot of television shows about it. And yeah, and she had, I'm sure there's a movie about her and books she's written. Julia and Julia. Julia and Julia. It's a very, very good movie, that movie. We are eight cousins, three times removed. Please tell us how close you are to each person. So next one is Anthony Bourdain. Born in New York in 1956, and as some of you might know, unfortunately he killed himself in 2018 when he was in France, but he was a really big in the, especially for television. In 1999, his tell-all expose about the restaurant industry published by the New Yorker magazine before reading this. And he was and a whole bunch of other books. His book in 2000 Kitchen Confidential Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly cemented his celebrity, cemented his famousness and lots more books and television shows, some that still air on the Food Network, so very cool, but unfortunate he's not with us anymore to expand his the culinary world. Next on our list, uh oh, okay, are we ready? Are we ready for this one? We are, are you? I don't know, okay. Marie Perrier, that man that I already, I already, Perrier, I just said the name of the drink. Did tools what trick? Thank you, Mags. She was born in France, died in France in 1972. She was a French journalist and food columnist. She was working for L the magazine and she invented the detachable recipe card for the magazine. These were elegant and original and 1961 they were collected in a book called La Cuisine de Mappie. La Cuisine de Mappie. So that is her and looks like she has a little plaque somewhere in France. So, next on our list, we have a lot of uh interesting ones that I'm probably gonna butcher their names. I can say his full name, Johannes or born in the Netherlands. Joep originally wanted to become an actor but decided to start a culinary career. After high school, he left for Paris in Barcelona to get his experience and in 1968, he returned to the Netherlands and started to work as a restaurant and he later started TV shows in the Netherlands as well. So, very cool. Who's next? Isabella Beaton born in England in 1836. She was an English journalist, editor, and frider. Her name is particularly associated with her first book in 1861 Mrs. Beaton's book of household management which sold 60,000 copies in the first year. And this book has been edited revised and enlarged several times since Isabella's death and is still in print as of 2016. Cool. Which is very cool since she died back in 1865. I wonder if the newest editions keep any of the older stuff that they had. I know like I have the Joy of Cooking and in the New or Joy of Cooking books you can't find anything on canning, but I have it in my collection and it does have stuff about canning in it. I know, we'd have to compare. Who wants to take on the task? Yeah. Any volunteers? Okay, our next chef and or foodie is Gustava Jork Bjorkland born in Finland from 1833 to 1851. Gustava ran a well-reputed restaurant in Stockholm and she died in Sweden in 1862. And yeah, we have a lot of female chefs and foodies this week so that's pretty cool. Who's next? Margaret Fulton You did really well with that name. Thank you. She was born in Scotland and died in Australia a couple years ago. She was an influential Australian food writer, journalist and presenter. She was a cookery editor of The Woman's Day and known for the best-selling book The Margaret Fulton Cookbook. I remember seeing that. The Margaret Fulton Cookbook. She was awarded many honors during her lifetime including in 1998 Declare an Australian living treasure by the National Trust of Australia. Very cool. And then we have one more. Edna Lewis born in Virginia she was the first African-American celebrity chef and notable expert of refined American Southern cuisine. Sometimes called the South's answer to Julia Tile. She was born in Virginia and she died in Georgia in 2006 an accomplished chef. The restaurant she worked at frequented by many high-profiled individuals. The Taste of Country Cooking was published to Wide Acclaim in 1976. Hale is a classic study of Southern cooking. A memoir told in recipes. In 1990 she co-founded the Society for the Revival and Preservation of Southern Food. Very cool. I can concur with that. We have a lot of great profiles this week. A lot of varied people. So if you want to learn more read their profiles. I always learn so much doing these. I want to order all the cookbooks. Although I'm not allowed to cook here because I'm Southern and I live they don't like my cooking here. Much better. But then you definitely need Edna Lewis's book. Yes. Get it and then just tell them to deal with it. I have grits. I have cornbread. My parents sent me a flat of grits. I'm going to have grits until the end of times I think. I actually had some grits yesterday. Your mama is saying she's going to cook for me. Or does she want me to come down there and cook? I could make you some good shrimp on grits. I think she's saying you can come down there and cook for her probably. So did anybody say I wasn't looking at the people. But her closeness and I was trying to post a couple. A lot of people were close to Julia Childs it seems. I'm closest to James Beard 19 degrees. You're like Thomas and I'm actually he's actually my 20th cousin six times removed. Really far out there but we are related to all the connections trickle down correctly. There might be some uncertain ones but there you go those are profiles of the week and let me tell you guys if you know me if you have watched these life casts you will know that I'm very excited for the photos of the week this week. So yes because they are animals. She sent me notes like okay yeah Sarah she sent you a bunch of animals. It's going to be great. I hope everybody's ready. We have 34 to look at. Oh man we would have a background photo. Who did that? Oh it's a dog in a cone. It's the background photo. Okay let's begin. So we have someone on a horse. I guess Robert Eugene Gill in El Paso, Texas wearing World War I. Very cool. I love horses. I wonder if anybody put things specifically for me. My mom feeding our pet crow. We're back at the food thing. Well because we were turkey I mean we were just talking about shifts. That was bound to happen. We got a good segue. I do like this one. I have a pet crow. Crows are apparently pretty smart what I've heard. They're good if you want a pet bird that would be a good pet to have. Look it's a little poodle. At least I'm assuming it looks like a poodle. It doesn't look little. Smaller than a full-size poodle. We're talking food again. Let's stop talking about food. We're talking about animals now guys. They're serious. This is a big puppy. A big little puppy. I feel like there's bigger puppies. Oh look another pet crow. Whenever I say crow kind of if anybody has watched Game of Thrones it just reminds me of that. Or it makes me think it's a creek. I have not seen that one. Oh my gosh. It is a monkey and an elephant. He's in a little zookeeper outfit. Awesome. I want a monkey. Not really because they don't potty train. You have to put them in diapers. You just didn't have a baby forever. Thank you. Okay. That's a cute one. I guess they couldn't keep the dog still so he's a little bit blurry. That's pretty cute. I'm assuming it was very hard to get pictures of some animals back in the day because they would just move in the exposure time. Just didn't. Oh they're on a donkey. In California look at that. They look so happy. Apparently June has a whole bunch of circus animal photos. June knows I like animals as well. I thought you were going to say June know. No. I will look at those animal circus animal photos. Don't worry. Oops wrong way. Riding a donkey. Oh kitty cat. Look it's a black cat. Look Kiki it's like you. Kiki it's your great great great great great great great great great great great grandmother. She was not happy that I woke her up. Uh oh. Okay. Oh. See that looks like a bigger dog than that other dog. That's a floofy. I wonder what kind of dog that is. That's a sheep dog. Some kind of sheep dog yeah. That's just my guess. I don't know. Karen Stewart what kind of dog is that? Okay next. Another bird photo. Johanna van de Brock. Johanna van de Brock. And I guess that means something about a bird. I'm assuming. Yoke she's here. Yoke what does that mean? Yoke is in the chat. She should still be in the chat. Maybe she could tell us what that means. It's a tame crow I think. If you're using your powers of deduction on language territory there she said a tame crow. Good job mags. Merci beaucoup. Well those three photos of pet crow that's pretty cool. Kathy Nava I'm assuming she's talking about a monkey that we had a black monkey when I was growing up named Baguera from the jungle book. That's fun. That's a lot of dogs. Oh are you okay Sarah? Are you okay? This is animal overload tree. My heart aches like Are you purring? How many dogs? One, two, three. Oh sorry let's count now. Okay. There's like a blurry spot here so I don't know if it's three dogs or two. Ten I think. Looks like about ten. That's cute though. They had all of these dogs taken a family photograph and they had to have all of the dogs in the photograph. She is writing a zebra. I don't think that's a thing anymore. I don't think you can really write a zebra. Aunt Dola. That zebra does not look happy that's all I'm going to say. Oh it wasn't a monkey it was a cat. Oh black cat. Okay. In Texas they're writing zebras. Oh look at the cat and the dog. The best friends. Oh look and it's in its own I wonder how many photos are in this animal free space page. Can I open that up? Only one. Oh okay. And is it the free space page for the cat or the dog? Oh look it's cranky. My gosh. Yeah little rascals. Peaty. That is cute. If you're my age do you remember watching them? Yes. Peaty we all wanted Peaty. My dog had my dog. My dad had a dog that looked like Peaty. That's cute. Let's see. Oh That's a cute photo and doggy. Oh it's another fluffy kitty. So what did you do for your Saturday morning? Oh I sat and watched a video of these three ladies talking about pictures. First about food and then about animals. Oh cow bunnies. Cow bunnies? Yeah. I have a friend who called every animal in the field a bunny like horsey bunny, cow bunny. Oh bunny. Daisy and calf. How cute. What was Kay here? Oh look Kay. There she is. Two cans of milk a day paid for the farm. That's pretty cool. Here's some more horses. About 1914. Nice. See the puppy? Find the puppy. Oh there he is. I'll zoom in so everybody can see. He's not wearing trampled. There you go. Does everybody see him? Everybody see the puppy? Oh I'm still very zoomed in. Let me un-zoom in. Kay. Oh that's cute. Writing a cow. The cow's named Catherine. And the cow's not moving so I don't know if you can technically say that they are writing the cow? Sitting on the cow. They are sitting atop. Cow sitting which is way better than cow tipping. Oh look there. Oh look there. That little, that dog is in love with that baby. Look at the face. Yeah. Best friends forever. Kay. Another horse one. Where is this? Is that Oh is that Russia? Or somewhere else? Trying to determine where this is located. Wow what a beautiful horse. Mm-hmm. Let's see I guess. I can't just, I don't know if anybody wants to tell me where that is. I can't see it so I can't tell you. Oh. Austria, yeah. Oh Austria? Yeah. Thank you. And Thomas also will give Thomas a shout out for that answer as well. All family with their doggy. Oh another one from Austria. The same, the same guy shared another photo. Wolfgang. Oh. That's so cute. Mindy we have to get you cued up so you say ah with us. Oh it's so cute. And by the way the fashionista are here. Mindy. Real picture behind you but thank you. She had that built her partner built that for her over a week. I wish he doesn't do woodwork. Look at the puppies in Australia, Australia miniature poodle puppies. Some more poodles. The cat is standing up. That cat looks like it puts up with a lot. Like my cat does. Yeah. Okay. Well more cats. Some cats have to be very patient when they're with families with small children. That's cute. Looks like a pony. That's pretty small. Oh my gosh that's a skunk. That's a skunk. That's a skunk. That's a skunk. That's pretty cute. Those are cute. I saw this video of this mama skunk with this little baby skunk and that was pretty cute. They are cute with their babies. We have lots of urban skunks and we have a skunk that uses our yard as a roadway and three o'clock in the morning I'll wake up with a horrible smell coming in the house and a skunk has been out in the yard doing something. I like how this cone feels to me. Be nice. I'll be back. I think he's trying to hypnotize us with his eyes. With his shiny eyes. Oh look another pony. Is that his name? Selam? How cute. And that little kid's pose is priceless. Yeah it is. Adorable. Okay. We have 34 photos to go guys. 14? Yeah there's 34 photos. It's a Saint Bernard. Betsy, Betsy shared this one. She's still here. And there's Saint Bernard. Those are good dogs. Aww. So cute. Oh my gosh she's in the pocket. I love pocket puppies. What a cute puppy. Aww. Betsy's still here. Thank you for sharing your photo. Oh another dog. That horse has probably very well trained. As this kid probably wouldn't be able to keep it under control. That's a draft horse. And then another dog. Bye Greg. Oh that was it. I guess that was the last. There was only four left. And then for the animal photos. I believe it. Let's see if we have any extra special ones in the G2G pose. That we didn't already see. We saw that one. They had a very weird looking dog. That's what they said about this dog. Oh you can see that one. A long hair dashhound. This was Yoke's picture. Oh the crow followed his her father every morning to school. What was the elephant? All the dogs. We have the kitty cat. The cat's name is Smut. Smut? That's a good name for that cat. Yeah it'd be a good name for a black cat. Yeah you should change Kiki's name to Kiki Smut. No. The donkey. No. That was Chris's poodles photo. I didn't realize it was his until right now. Peaty. Peaty. I love all the crow photos. Let me tell you. It's very unique. That's a new one. Doggy wo wo. That's the name of this dog. Another zebra. It looks like it's painted. This one looks like a painted one. Looks like a painted zebra. A painted... I don't know. Maybe it is a zebra. We saw that one. We didn't see that one. There's a little doggy in the front. We have one more page. I hope nobody is tired of looking at animal photos yet. Because I am not. All these kitty cats. Oh there we go. He also has a kite. A hunting horn. A hunting horn. They probably go hunting together. How cute. My GGGGGG grandfather was saved by his dog. The dog wouldn't let him go to the outside toilet. He sent a servant out there who was killed by someone hiding in the toilet. Wow. There was news reports this summer of a bear that was hibernating in somebody's outhouse. The bear was in the spring to use the outhouse and got attacked from underneath. Wow. Yeah. Apparently he was a... Rosie was a de-scented skunk. I want a de-scented skunk. Kiki would you like a de-scented skunk? As a friend? Didn't Pepe always chase a black cat around thinking the black cat was... Yeah because they painted... They would put the black stripe on the cat or something. Like... Yes, yes, yes, yes. To make it look like a skunk. This is a test post. Oh we didn't... Oh that's a cute one. The doggie is helping with the bag. The baby's bag. Making sure the babies are okay. Aw the pocket puppy. P-p-pocket. Pocket puppy. Okay that... That is it. All of the... That was all of the photos of... Animals. That was exciting. I'm so glad we got to do this one for you this week. Now... We can... Our wiki tree challenge going on right now for Tim Janssen who if you missed out... on Wednesday... He wasn't able to make it but we did kind of introduce him. He is a DNA expert. A doctor. A real live doctor. Not just a... Yeah like a medicine doctor too. So... And we were doing his tree this week. How was that going so far Mindy? Well people are working on it. Challenges and of course primarily that his father's side is all Russian and Ukraine and Germany but people are working on it steadily and hoping to find some good stuff for him. I know we've gotten a few brick walls broken down. No spoilers yet until Wednesday but... But if you are also interested in helping I don't know if we have anybody in the chat that's watching that's actually registered for April. I know Chris is. Chris you got to get to work. I don't think I saw your name on the score sheet. Get to work Chris. I'm going to do some work this weekend on Tim's stuff. And it's going great. And if you want to find out everything that we found about Tim's tree you have to wait until Wednesday. But also if you're not actively doing the research and you've already been participating stop in a discord and share the people on that are doing the research. Go go go. Hillary Get to work Hillary. Is there a list somewhere of upcoming challenge guests? So we usually kind of release them a month that advance top secret. Do we have I think we have the May the May ones. So you can see all the hold on. If you go to the actual May registration. So May this is the May ones. So we have Scott Fisher Devon Lee Nathan Goodwin and Jenna Ortega. Devon Lee Devon. Devon Noelle Lee Devon Noelle Lee You have to put the Noelle in there. Noelle Devon Noelle Lee and Jenna Philbert Ortega So it will be a lot of fun. It will. And then after Tim we have we have we have Jerry and then Connie Knox. We are hoping that Tim would join us on Wednesday. It's the plan. It's probably hard for him though because he's on the west coast and he is a practicing physician so I imagine he sees patients into the afternoon so it might be tough for him to make it. So we'll see. I guess you'll find out on Wednesday when you come join us. Benjamin is having some trouble getting discord working. Yeah we'll have to work with you on that after the live cast or I'll hook you up with your captain. I have an ongoing minigun hook you up. I've been meaning to post a quick video on how to use discord. I just haven't gotten it up yet. So maybe Benjamin that will inspire me to already go ahead and do that for you. And with that do we have any questions? Comments? My background did not fall so anybody who made a bit lost the bet. You lost Chris. I've been drinking my coffee the whole time and I was trying to get it to fall. Sorry Meg, sorry to disappoint everybody you I guess that's it then. I don't see anybody saying anything else. Do you pay your mother to say this? No. That's just it. So with that we will head off. See you on Wednesday and then next Saturday. Maybe there's a Friday date night on Friday. I'm not sure. I think they do it every other Friday and next Saturday I will be here with me. I will still be here with somebody or maybe I'll be by myself. Who knows what will happen. I will be presenting somewhere. Somewhere is it a mystery? Kingston Branch the Ottawa Ontario genealogical society or Ontario ancestors in Kingston, Ontario virtually. And then Mindy actually has some other American revolution. I have a meeting on Saturday. So while they are not going to be here they will still be talking about Wiki Tree. I'm sure. We will see you guys next time. Goodbye.