Sandi Powers Obituary (1947-2021) – St. George, UT

Celebrate the life of

Sandi Powers

A life full of love, laughter and adventure

September 19, 1947 – May 15, 2021

Please gather with us for an afternoon in the park while we share your favorite memories and stories and reflect on a life well lived. Sandi’s light touched so many and her laughter was contagious. We celebrate with tears, laughter and honor a friend, partner, mother and wife.

Saturday 23 October 2021

1:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.

Cottonwood Cove Park

1027 S Dixie Drive, St. George, Utah 84770

Casual and light-colored clothing (please no black)

We share a light meal with a main course of meat and vegetarian options. If you are able, we’d appreciate your contribution of a dessert to share.

Send your questions and answers to Kari Steadman (Sandi’s oldest daughter) at [email protected]

If you can’t make it, feel free to share a memory, song, or reflection for our memory book.

Sandra “Sandi” Kay Powers was 73 years old when she died peacefully with her family on May 15, 2021 after a brief illness in St. George, Utah.

Sandi was born on September 19, 1947 in Vernal, Utah. Her parents moved from farmland in Illinois to the Rocky Mountain region. Her father worked in the oil fields across Wyoming and Utah and moved the family many times due to the demand for oil refining. Sandi spent most of her childhood in Worland and Lander, Wyoming and eventually Moab, Utah, where she graduated from high school in 1966. After a brief apprenticeship to obtain a professional qualification, she landed in Denver, Colorado, where she enthusiastically entered the travel industry as a reservations agent with Frontier Airlines. She married her first husband in 1969 and began a life of travel and discovery. They welcomed two daughters and roamed the western states of Colorado, Wyoming, California, Nevada, and Washington. She devoted these years to helping her husband, educating her girls, and traveling the world at every opportunity while working in the real estate and travel industries.

After a divorce, she stayed with her daughters near Seattle until she married her beloved husband Auburn in January 1999 and began her next adventure. She and Auburn soon moved to St. George, Utah and later to Emmett, Idaho to be closer to the family. Looking for warmer places, they ended up in Queen’s Creek, Arizona until they began their full-time RV lifestyle for four years. Longing for a home base, they moved back to their favorite area and settled in St. George, where they could be surrounded by friends and pursue their passions of jeeping and nature near jagged rocks and trails.

Sandi loved people and was a master of connections who always made sure no one felt left out. She was known and valued for her planning and organization skills and is regularly referred to as “the life of the party”. She has touched so many lives through her travels and moving around – a friend to everyone and a mentor to many. She willingly shared her wisdom and experiences to help others, always defending the outsider, sharing joy, sadness and prayer for everyone who asked – even those she had never met. She was unexcused in standing up for any person, cause, or effort. Her most popular and best known feature was her huge laugh; known to have a personality that took up an entire space. With her loud and brazen laugh, which she shared openly and frequently with the world, you always knew where to find her.

In addition to her passion for people, Sandi loved traveling, playing cards, doing handicrafts, playing Pepper with her puppy and hanging out with friends. She and Auburn jeeped with friends and clubs across the west, taking on adventures that not even the young and brave tried. Sandi’s grandchildren were her heart and soul and she looked for every opportunity to visit them. She enjoyed learning every detail of her life and sharing her stories, joys, challenges and adventures. Sandi has lived life to the fullest and has never turned her back on a precarious matter. No doubt her vibrant soul will continue to seek adventure and watch over her fellow adventurers as she basks in the glory of her master. Watch out for the sky – here comes Sandi!

Sandi leaves behind her loving and devoted husband Auburn Powers, her brothers Ron and Gary Potts, their children and their spouses Kari and Brian Steadman, Robin and Robbie Marshall, Russ and Cathy Powers, Kathy and Brian Koslan, Sandy Van der Wahl, grandson, Paisley , Bailey and Davis Steadman, Heather Powers, Jeff and Kelly Koslan, Tyler Koslan, Tara and Nathan Fralick and nieces and their families Tami, Ken and Drake Hendrix and Janel, Will, Peyton, Maizie and Hannah Clark, great-grandchildren Liam, Ruby, Abigail , Michael and Dallas, along with numerous friends she called family. Her parents Dean and Hope Potts precede her in death.

Your family would like to acknowledge and thank the incredible care team at Intermountain St. George Regional Hospital, especially their Nurses BJ, Austin and Andy, Social Worker Michelle, and Palliative Carer Mary Helen. Her concentrated patience and compassion supported Sandi and her family on a difficult journey and enabled her to live in peace and dignity.

Funeral services will later be announced on social media, with plans to celebrate Sandi’s full and vibrant life in St. George in the fall of 2021.

Instead of flowers, please consider donating to one of Sandi’s favorite charities.

Keep our trails open

Enter “In Memory of Sandi Powers” in the comment field

www.fmca4wheelers.com/donate

The National Police and Trooper Foundation

www.nptadonations.org

Arrangements are made on the direction of Spilsbury Mortuary, 110 S Bluff Street, St. George, Utah 84770, 435-673-2454. Friends and family are invited to leave a special memory or comment on Sandi’s guest book at www.spilsburymortuary.com

Published by Spilsbury Mortuary – St. George from October 20 to October 21, 2021.

Comments are closed.