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Up until now

Yes, things have been quiet on Blogrilla lately. Haven’t posted much. I’ve been going nuts at work trying to get a phenomenal amount of work done prior to our vacation. I’ve been working my ass off during the day and then coming home and working for a few more hours.

Its true. Ask the little woman. She’s not crazy about it. And neither am I.

The good news is that today at noon I got up and walked out of the office and didn’t look back. I’m off for a week and looking forward to spending a few days at the beach and a few days not at work. We will be staying with some relatives in New Jersey and we always have a good time with them, so I’m sure we’ll enjoy this visit too.

Tonight I had to go to a cub scouts leadership meeting because I’m taking over the sales of popcorn and candy for the pack. I guess its a fundraising position. They planned out roughly what they want to do with the rest of the year and HOOBIE DOOBIE these are some enthusiastic folks! I’ll write more later, just know for now that they have a lot planned.

Its late (9:40pm) and I have to get up at 3am to start the drive down to NJ. We leave then because by the time breakfast time rolls around we’re already more than half way there - usually just at the border of NJ and NY state. After a potty break and some food its just a few hours to South Jersey where the family is.

So I don’t think I’ll be updating the blog for the next week or som, but when I come back I’ll post some photos.

Until then — auf wiedersehen!

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small comment

I’ve been playing chess over at http://www.redhotpawn.com and have discovered something about myself.

I neglect my king. I just let a checkmate sneak up on me because I had neglected my king.

Huge mistake.

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still a busy family

the weekend was really very busy again. Saturday was spent mostly out of the house. Peterman got his nails trimmed first thing in the morning. Then we drove down to The Pru in Boston. Its a skyscraper with a mall at the base. That’s where the Boston Duck Tours take off from. My company sponsored the event so I took the whole family. It was a good time. We left around 11am and for the next 90 minutes we toured downtown Boston by land and by sea. The kids got to drive the duck in the Charles River. Turns out they’re all lousy drivers!

The tour guide was fun and it was kind of cool seeing Boston from that angle. I would definitely do it agian.

Afterwards we went to California Pizza Kitchen - an upscale pizza restaurant in Boston’s back bay. I have to admit that they serve some outstanding pizza!

We had promised Benjamin that he could go to some Pokemon event at the South Shore Plaza shopping mall. So it was a 30 minute drive down there only to find that the place was packed. We found the event at the center of the mall and there was a line wrapping all the way around the center sqaure. I sent Liz and Grace on their way because I had volunteered to stay with the boys and Chloe. There were people milling around everywhere and in the middle of the square was a lounge with a bunch of kids silently playing gameboys. There were also a bunch of LCD screens set up so people could play a game, but I think you had to pay a pile of money to register for it and again, there was a long line.

Nonetheless that would have been preferable to what we did. It turned out that we stood in line for (get this) 90 minutes to buy three plush pokemon toys.

I know, I know, I’m so humiliated. My parents didn’t bring me up this way! I don’t know what’s the matter with me! It wasn’t even like the kids were DYING for a particular toy or anything. I’m still kicking myself.

But we made it back to Melrose by about 4pm - just in time for a seven year old’s birthday party!

I was a little irritated because I was getting hot and losing my patience. The good news is that there was cold beer served at the party and that seemed to make everything alright again.

We stayed until about 8pm and had a good time.

Whew! Busy day.

Sunday was also busy, but it was spent largely at home. My personal rule is that I don’t mow the grass before 9am. I figure its the least i can do for my neighbors. But at 9am on the button I was putting a new blade on the mower along with some new oil and a fresh air filter. The heat was oppressive. It was crazy-humid with very high temperatures even by 9am. So I spent about 2 hours mowing and trimming and did a lot of sweating. I showered off before going to Fudruckers for lunch. Ben had gone to a friend’s house for the morning and a buddy of Gabriel’s had taken him to a beach in Nahant. Since I was all clean and refreshed when we got back I went back to the yard and dismantled the old picnic table and taught my helper, Chloe how to use an 18-volt drill. really it was way too large for her and she couldn’t use it for long. The crescent wrench was better, but was very tedious, so I showed her how to use a socket wrench. And she was actually a great help! I also went around the yard picking up and fixing things that needed some attention.

I think I took the rest of the afternoon and evening off. I was absurdly sweaty again so before going to Papa John’s to bring back pizza I had to shower again.

I think I put in a couple of hours of work in the evening too. That’s been the case more often than not for the last month or so. While watching TV I will get some things started at work and check on the progress of other things. I haven’t yet burned through both laptop batteries in one evening, but I do often require both.

That’s how the weekend went. Busy!

Yesterday our plumber started removing our furnace. No, we asked him to. its ok. Today he’s supposed to come back and replace our oil burning furnace with a more efficient natural gas furnace. Also, his buddy is removing the oil tank (yippee!). Our oil company sent us a contract for the coming year’s oil and it was going to be $300 a month! during the winter — less in the summer, but mostly it was $300 a month! When we arrived at our house eight years ago it was $104!! So we’re switching. We already had gas in the house for the hot water heater. The gas company gave us a good price on a furnce ($500). We’re regular customers of our plumber so he cut us a good deal too. Its still an expensive proposition, though.

So that’s going on this week. Next week we’re going down to South Jersey for our bi-annual family reunion in Wildwood, NJ. It should be a good time. I could use a bit of a vacation. I’ve been working a lot and need a break.

I’ve also been playing some chess at www.redhotpawn.com. Its been going well. If you want to play, look me up!

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Weddings and What was Joey Wearing?

The Dilbert Blog

At this point, good reader, I must direct you to another person’s blog. Its Scott Adams, the guy who draw/writes Dilbert. He also keeps a blog and it turns out he’s got a wicked sense of humor!

Funny guy.

Watch for what Joey is wearing in Scott’s description of the wedding he attended.

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New name

Over the weekend I spent some time in the sun and got got a tan… well in places it was “tan” while in other places it was bright red. Because some of me was pasty white, some was tan and some was red, it occurred to me that it came as a result of the technical nature of my profession.

So I turned to Liz and said “Hey, look at my cool Nerd-Tan!!”

She laughed and disagreed that it was cool.

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Music: Love and Rockets

VH1.com : Love and Rockets : Biography

I’ve always liked Love and Rockets. I remember that I was just starting to really enjoy their music right before I moved to Austria in 1987. At a time when the rest of my music was offensively hard (Fear, Dead Kennedys, Replacements, etc) this was much more melodic. Granted, it could be a little dark, but it was fresh and new and I liked it.

I just found out that all three members were originall from (as VH1 puts it) “… the pioneering goth band Bauhaus”. Hah! I was “goth” before there WAS a “goth”! I’m that far ahead of the curve!

Well, that is…I was that far ahead of the curve. Here it is twenty years later and I’m still listening to Love and Rockets. I guess that makes me kind of stunted.

Not “retarded”!

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A good post from Garrison Keillor

Garrison Keillor writes for Salon.com and I have to confess that I enjoy his writing quite a bit. I think I’ve developed an appreciation for him and his style that I never had when I was younger. Dad would have his Prarie Home Companion on the radio every Saturday and he got very testy when interrupted the show with our questions.

Clearly he appreciated Mr. Keillor in a way I did not.

So, here’s a good article reprinted without permission. I’m hoping they won’t hunt me down over at Salon.com!

The confrontational columnist
This summer, savor the small pleasures: Grilled salmon, blowing cigar smoke at strangers and starting bar fights.
By Garrison Keillor

Jul. 12, 2006 | A summer night in paradise, supper in the backyard, and the neighbors’ elderly cat who is on his last legs wanders over, smelling the salmon on our grill, walking as if his feet hurt. He’s got the old-cat blues. He wakes up in the morning and everything tastes like turpentine; he feels like going down to the railroad line and letting the 4:19 pacify his troubled mind. My wife serves him a piece of salmon and he eats slowly, savoring the fish oil. He is 15 years old and this likely will be his last summer, and a fine one it is.

In Minnesota we look forward to these warm summer nights. That’s what keeps us marching forward from February to June, the thought of eating supper outdoors in our shorts and bare feet. If this were Maui, where paradise is written into the contract, we would dread the thought of bliss interrupted, but here on the frozen tundra we accept July and August as our allotted ration of bliss. It’s fabulous. We can’t get over how wonderful it is. And then it’s over.

It gives you a twinge to see an old cat on a paradise night who is about to croak. But I used up most of my anguish over mortality by the time I was 25. I was a poet, like everybody else, and wrote extensively about death and despair back then and pretty much wore out the subject. We poets went to parties where people chain-smoked and got bombed and listened to Janis Joplin screeching from the hi-fi speakers loud enough to cause cardiac arrest. Nobody imagined that Janis might someday come to Jesus and take up a life of regular exercise and good nutrition. She was determined to crash and burn. We, as it turned out, were not, but we were full of morbid gloom, a luxury of youth, trying to imagine death, the cessation of being, the emptiness of the world without us, the sliver of moon in the sky, the cry of the hoot owl, the railroad tracks stretching away to the west, et cetera.

Now my thoughts about death are mundane ones. I hope that when the cat croaks, he does it out in the open, or at least in the bushes, and doesn’t try to crawl up under a porch where someone will have to reach in and extract him. People die in crevices in New York, brilliant loners who go to the city to find their niche only to get hooked on happy dust and wind up in a tiny apartment crammed with junk, and one dark day the neighbors detect an evil smell and call the cops and it’s him, the tall gloomy man with the glasses, dead as a doornail. Keep in touch, tall gloomy men. Don’t go in the cave. Leave that cocaine alone. Get outdoors more. Take long walks.

I’ve arrived at that delicate point in life where it gives me a twinge when the lady inside my computer says, “You are now disconnected.” Or when the flight attendant refers to our “final destination” and says, “We will be on the ground shortly.” Is that a nice way to talk? It suggests lying prostrate as uniformed personnel tear open your shirt and put the paddles on your chest. I don’t want to be on the ground, I want to walk up the jetway and climb into a taxi and go to the hotel. Saunter into the bar, order a glass of gin neat with a twist of barbed wire, light up a stogie, look for the biggest guys in the room, walk over, blow smoke in their faces and say, “Which one of you fairies thinks he can take a 63-year-old newspaper columnist?”

“Oh,” you say, “is that what you meant when you talked about living life boldly and lighting a candle in the darkness and daring to make a difference in your commencement speech at St. Raymond’s lo these many years ago, when the president finally had to stand up and tap you on the shoulder and suggest that you wind it up?” Yes, of course, and just for that, you little twerp, I’m going to stop right now and not say what I was going to say about daring to be selfish and to enjoy your life without feeling obligated to share your hard-earned wisdom with your needy friends. Not another word from me. You figure it out for yourself.

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A weekend of rockets and swimming

The weekend went very well. On Saturday we went to the rocket launch that we had been looking forward to. The cub scouts organized the trip to the CMASS launch site. CMASS is model rocketry club that meets regularly for these launches. They’re lousy at writing directions, though. After we eventually found the site, in the middle of a 500 acre field we start launching the rockets. I’ve posted the photos here: http://modelrocketryatcmass.solomonville.net/
Ben’s rocket went really well. It carried two styrofoam shuttles up with it and lets them go when the inertia lets up. He managed to recover the rocket and both shuttles each of the three times it launched. I think one time his parachute failed to open but the rocket still survived.
Gabriel had less luck. On his first launch, his Screamin’ Mimi took off at about a 45 degree angle and flew away! He and a friend went to look for it but couldn’t find it. Liz also looked but couldn’t find it. A couple of hours later someone turned it in. The parachute was too badly damaged to be salvaged so we didn’t launch it again.
Chloe’s rocket was troublesome as well. We brought it up for the safety check and the guy wouldn’t let us fly it because a fin had fallen off while chloe was playing with it. She eventually got a chance to launch it later, but because there was no wadding in it, the heat from the rocket burned up the string holding it together. So she didn’t get to launch it again.
Grace’s … oh cripes. first she lost her registration card. Then the igniter burnt out on the launchpad. Then she lost the replacement igniter. She eventually got bored and wandered off but I felt an abiding need to launch her Gnome. It did launch but the elastic shock cord that holds the nose cone to the body of the rocket dislodged from the body and we were only able to retrieve the nose cone.
They served hot dogs and drinks and everyone was very welcoming and generous. We had a really good time. So good, in fact, that I think we’ll go back on our own. I have to admit that I saw a model V2 rocket that looked really great launching. And I might like to put together one myself. Ben did 95% of the work on his rocket. Unfortunately, Liz’s father has no practice helping kids do anything so he did a lousy job helping Gabriel but built the whole rocket himself. Same with Grace’s. I helped Ben and Chloe.

Afterwards we stopped at the famous Hodgie’s ice cream stand and enjoyed ice cream in the shade on a hot sunny day.

On Sunday we went to Portland, Maine to visit Mike Gorman and his family. Another acquaintance from high school, Tim Hopper was also visiting. We all had a really good time visiting a sandy beach at a river. We grilled some burgers and dogs and picnic’ed. We spent the afternoon swimming and playing in the river and visiting old friends. It was an excellent day.

I should get back to work — I have a lot to do this week. In two weeks I’m taking some time off to go down to Wildwood, NJ to see Liz’s family. And there’s no way I will be able to do it unless I get to a certain point in my work. But things look pretty good in that regard.

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