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Archive for the Family & Friends category

Holiday Break

The holiday break has been a little different this year.

Jimmy's wedding on the 27th meant that Rick and Ann couldn't make it to Big Bear on Christmas Day. After a lot of back-and-forth, the McConnell Christmas was moved to Sunday the 20th. William missed having the traditional Christmas Day festivities, but everyone else seemed to enjoy not having to slog up the hill on an already busy day.

The (now) traditional Christmas Eve dinner at my house went really well, except we didn't get dinner ready on time. By the time we opened presents, everyone was tired, and my Dad was dozing a little. Next year, we'll make sure it runs more smoothly.

Christmas day was nice. Kristie joined us for gifts and breakfast, and everyone had a great time, as usual. I got a Spot Messenger for the FJR, and Carole got a Vita-Mix.

I started noticing a developing chest cold on Christmas afternoon. When I woke up on Friday, it was full-on — sore throat, deep cough, runny nose, aches — the whole deal. Since I couldn't call to cancel, I got up early and went to donate platelets, but the nurses decided I shouldn't once I got there — after the finger poke, of course...

Saturday was Jimmy's wedding. Outdoors, at 4:45pm (but scheduled for 4:00pm), in about 40° with a apparent wind-chill of 30°. I was suffering, and worked hard to avoid coughing during the ceremony. The poor bridesmaids in their sleeveless gowns were noticeably shivering. The reception was quite nice (other than my illness).

Sunday was spent dealing with my symptoms, and resting.

Today I'm starting to feel better, and have grand hopes of seeing the end of this bout. We'll see.

posted 29 Dec 2008 in Family & Friends

London IS a big city

Michael and Carole were talking last night, first about Dublin, then about their favorite cities. I added a comment that London was a big city, like New York. I then got nothing but grief, as they both went on and on about how many skyscrapers there were in New York, and that London didn't have nearly as many tall buildings, and how you could walk for miles in New York and become claustrophobic in the urban canyons, and I didn't know because I hadn't been to either city for decades.

As they went on about it, I chose not to press my argument - they were having fun and I was grumpy after a long day at work. If I had kept at it, I would have told them that London may not have as many skyscrapers as New York, but its population, population density, cultural impact, status as a financial center of the world, and drawing power for visitors makes it comparable to New York as world-class, big cities.

posted 9 Oct 2008 in Family & Friends

A Family Weekend

There were two family parties scheduled for Labor Day weekend. A McConnell birthday party at Rick and Ann's on Saturday afternoon, and a couples bridal shower on Sunday afternoon. Both were more fun that I had hoped.

posted 1 Sep 2008 in Family & Friends

Justin and the Jetta

Justin was cut off on the I-210 freeway by a woman in a Jetta. He got a broken right collar bone and an uncountable number of stitches on the inside of his right knee, along with various other nicks and scratches.

posted 28 Jul 2008 in Family & Friends

The Emerald Isle

Carole and I went to Ireland for our 28th anniversary in June, 2008.

posted 30 Jun 2008 in Family & Friends

Getting ready for Ireland

Carole and I leave for Ireland on Monday. Actually, we leave for Newark on Monday with a stop in Seattle, then leave JFK on Tuesday night for an overnight to Dublin, where we arrive at 9am Wednesday morning.

I've got my checklist pretty much in place. We're going all carry-on, which makes packing more challenging. The only choices left to make are the mix of clothes, how many books to bring (it looks like three right now), and what jacket to bring.

Carole and I have been reviewing electrical needs, to see if we really need to invest in a transformer. It's a toss-up right now.

posted 21 Jun 2008 in Family & Friends

31-2

Crystal, Michael, and Alexis left for Washington, D.C. and New York yesterday, and left Logan to hang out with us. Logan's all-star basketball team has a tournament this weekend — in Twentynine Palms of all places.

Carole and I worked out a plan to get him there with a minimum of fuss and expense. I left work early on Friday, picked Logan up at the house, and drove him out to Twentynine Palms for his 6:00pm game. Afterwards, we stopped at a Carls Jr. in Banning, and he had a Double Western Cheeseburger and a vanilla shake. Overall, we spent just short of six hours of driving for his 32 minute game. The final score was 31-2. His team made a couple of free throws.

Today, Carole left with Logan for the second game, at 11:00am. They're going to spend the night at the Motel 6 in town. Sunday's game is either at 10am or 11am, depending on today's results.

He's a really cool kid.

posted 29 Mar 2008 in Family & Friends

A walk on the beach

waxcres.jpgCarole had a focus group on military recruiting (for the record, she's against it...) out in Santa Monica last night. Knowing I wasn't feeling all that well, she asked everyone else if they wanted to go out to the beach, but no one was free. After taking some medication (including my second straight Imitrex), I was feeling pretty good, so I told her I'd meet her on my bike.

When I got to Santa Monica she was just finishing up, and we agreed to meet at Gladstone's. They weren't especially busy, but had short staff, so we had to wait a little while. Carole persisted on the worst table in the house (which they occasionally make mysteriously unavailable), and they finally relented.

Carole had her filet, and I had a swordfish steak that was good but not great. Afterwards, we walked on the beach, staring at the stars and listening to the waves crash. The moon was a cool waxing crescent with the crescent on the bottom, out over the ridge to the west.

A very nice evening with my lady.

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posted 11 Mar 2008 in Family & Friends

The boys go riding

Justin and I rode up to Santa Ynez, then met Carole and Mandy for dinner at Joe's in Santa Barbara. A fun day — but a little cold.

More to come...

posted 1 Mar 2008 in Family & Friends

Happy Birthday, Sarah

bdaycake2.jpgI hope your day was special.

posted 21 Feb 2008 in Family & Friends

There's nothing like...

...a lazy cat, basking in the morning sunshine. Their fur is so soft and warm.

Gavin loves it when we leave the blinds open in the family room in the morning. Early in the season, he has to sit on the top of the chair to find a patch of sunlight, but in a few weeks he'll have sun patches on the carpeting. He'll sit in a sunny spot, and wait until it has all moved away, then get up and find the new spot.

posted 12 Feb 2008 in Family & Friends

Clearing the cache in EAland

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posted 10 Feb 2008 in Family & Friends

Super Sunday

Today I made enchiladas, spanish rice, beans, and yesterday I made a run to Galco's and Sams' Club for real sodas. The game was only so-so, but the food was good (even if the rice was a little crunchy).

posted 3 Feb 2008 in Family & Friends

Math test

I hope Sarah did well on her math test yesterday.

posted 20 Nov 2007 in Family & Friends

The edge

"If you're not living on the edge you're taking up too much space".

Andrew Knight

posted 20 Nov 2007 in Family & Friends

Enchiladas

Mandy came over last night. I made enchiladas (which my spell-checker just told me has only one L), spanish rice, refried beans, the whole deal - along with some veggie dip for starters, and a choice of a fresh fruit salad or brownies and ice cream for dessert (which I know has two S's).

We played Phase 10, which was pretty cool. I took over Justin's game when he left to pick up Crissany at work, and together we took the title.

posted 8 Oct 2007 in Family & Friends

Father-son ride

Justin is getting better and better riding his new Kawasaki ZZR-600. Last weekend he wanted to go for a ride with me, but I had messed up my foot moving his bike out of the garage. (I was barefoot, and didn't put his kickstand up; when I put the bike down after moving it, the side-stand landed on the top of my right foot. D'oh.) We rescheduled for today, with some minor twisties and some introductory freeway driving on the agenda.

We suited up around 11am, and hit the road. I almost immediately went onto reserve. D'oh. We took the surface street route to my old work - Muscatel, Longden, San Marino, Huntington (briefly), Monterey, El Molino, Mission, Grand, Columbia, Arroyo, San Rafael, Laguna, Hermosa, San Miguel to Colorado. Under the bridge to Linda Vista, over the I-210 to Oak Grove, then Berkshire and the freeway, north-bound.

I forgot to ask Justin about his break-in speed limit, but we kept it under 75 anyway - mostly. We got off at La Tuna Canyon, took it down to Honolulu, then got back on the freeway going south. Justin looked comfortable with the freeway riding, so we took the 210 all the way back, getting off at Madre.

The FJR had 34.5 miles on reserve when we pulled into the driveway. D'oh.

Google Maps of the route.

posted 7 Oct 2007 in Family & Friends

Gavin update

Gavin's still working on his digestive issues, so I missed work this morning to take him to the vet's for a check-up. They were happy with his weekend output, but want to see him again on Tuesday unless more is done today.

Jan at work asked me about Gavin this morning, and we talked about how much we love our cats. During our chat, I told her about one of the cute things that Gavin does.

From time to time, the food dish will run out while we're out of the house. When we get back, Gavin will meet us at the door, and follow us around yowling to let us know that he's hungry. Smidge will almost always be waiting by the food dish, somewhat agitated (which is pretty normal for Smidge). When we fill up the food dish, Gavin will always hang back and wait for Smidge to eat, no matter how hungry he might be. He's a good big brother.

posted 17 Sep 2007 in Family & Friends

Gavin

When Carole and I were away in Banff, no one figured out that Gavin needed to be combed, so he had huge patches of mats on his hips and stomach when we got back. We combed and combed for a few weeks, and made some good progress, but he was picking at his skin so much that sores were cropping up. This meant a trip to the vet was in order on Thursday morning.

The vet quickly dealt with the mat problem by shaving them off. He looked a little weird afterwards, but had to be more comfortable. While we were there, the doctor did a routine exam, and noticed that Gavin was constipated - as in, all blocked up.

They sent us home with a couple of prescriptions to help things along, and told us to come back in the morning if nothing moved. Smidge took one for the team by spending the day and overnight in the back bathroom, so we could verify Gavin's exclusive use of the litter box.

Friday morning brought no evidence of action, so I took him back to the vet first thing. They felt the problem was serious, and potentially very serious, and recommended an enema and other treatments to make things happen. I left him for the day to get treated.

I'm sure it will be a day Gavin will not forget. By the time I picked him up at 6:00pm, he had had a total of five enemas - three medicinal, and two with warm water. He'd been pocked, prodded, had subcutaneous fluids, a couple of baths, and looked like he'd been through a war zone. But still, only a tiny bit of output. If something doesn't happen soon, the vet says they'll need to sedate him and use more direct ways of clearing things out.

They sent us home with still more medicine, and the cat version of Ensure. Gavin is getting pretty annoyed with me squirting medicine down his throat, and the treatments left him a little unstable, so he gets to spend the rest of the weekend locked up in the kitchen so he doesn't soil the carpeting.

Around 9:00pm Friday night, I found a big blob on Buddy's blanket in the back bathroom - a very good sign. I've never been so happy to see cat poop outside a litter box. I bagged it up and labeled it for the vet.

This morning I sat and petted him for a good twenty minutes, and combed out some of his post-bath tangles. He got his three medicines (which he really, truly hates), but was purring heartily while we sat together. On my way out, I checked, and there was another big prize in the litter box. I bagged and tagged it, and told Gavin how happy I was.

We'll do this same drill throughout the weekend, and I'll take him back to the vet at 10:15am on Monday. I'm thinking his progress should remove the need to surgery, so I hope it continues.

posted 15 Sep 2007 in Family & Friends

Justin's ZZR-600

Justin and I drove down to Santa Ana this afternoon to pick up his brand new Kawasaki ZZR-600. It's a cool shiny black, and a great first bike - plus, he got a killer deal. He let me drive it home from the dealer, but took it out around the neighborhood once we got back.

posted 4 Sep 2007 in Family & Friends

The Getty Villa

Carole, Jason, and I went to the Getty Villa today. The tickets were for Sunday, but thankfully they let us in. I can be a dweeb from time to time.

I'm glad we got to see the pieces that are scheduled to go back to Italy next month, like the Landsdowne Herakles. We enjoyed the gardens, and had a nice lunch at Gladstones - even though they wouldn't seat us at the worst table, which was empty all through our meal.

posted 25 Aug 2007 in Family & Friends

Jeremy and Sarah

Jeremy proposed to Sarah while kayaking at Catalina, and she accepted. Yay!

posted 20 Aug 2007 in Family & Friends

Insanity

Going in, we knew it was risky. We didn't know that it was insane. The day after we got back from Alaska, we started a week with Kobe and Logan.

posted 9 Jul 2007 in Family & Friends

I don't know, Alaska

Every year, Carole and I go away for our anniversary. Usually we pick somewhere close, but when work, time, and finances allow we head off to somewhere new. My brother-in-law Michael is working for Alaska Airlines, so this year we used his guest passes to fly up to Kodiak, Alaska.

One of the problems with guest passes is that you are stand-by. If there's no available seats, you don't get on. This forces you to make some hard choices - if the flight you'd like is too booked, you have to either gamble that you'll get on anyway, or choose another flight with more open seats. We wanted to leave on Tuesday morning, but that required two stops — one in Seattle, another in Anchorage. We decided to take a direct flight to Anchorage from LAX late on Monday night instead. This necessitated a five hour layover before the connecting flight left for Kodiak at 6:00am on Tuesday. It also meant that we got to Kodiak at 7:00am, and couldn't hope to check-in to our B&B until 3:00pm.

The flight to Anchorage was mostly full, and our row was full-up with us and a family of four. Dad sat next to me in the aisle seat, with Mom and the two daughters across the aisle. This made for a tight fit on our side, but we managed well enough. Early into the flight, however, this family started in. Mom left to find an empty seat a couple of rows up, and Dad and the younger daughter wound up in the right side seats with the older daughter next to me. They were all sniping with each other, and were generally pretty unpleasant. They all kept getting up, then sitting, then up again - over and over.

At one point, the older daughter (about 15 is my guess) was sitting next to me, and stood up to stretch her legs. She asked the Dad something, and he snapped at her to "sit down - now". Just after, I noticed her doodling on her bookmark: first she drew a figure of a girl with pig-tails, followed by a cloud up above, then finished off with rain-drops falling from the cloud unto the girl. Freudian, to say the least.

This family's antics made it pretty impossible to get any sleep. About an hour before landing, they were all back in our row, and really got into it. I didn't catch the details, but the younger daughter (about 12) was bawling loudly, Mom was sniping with older daughter, and then Dad reached across the aisle and slapped the older daughter — who proceeded to slap him back. I'm sure they all enjoyed their trip.

The airport in Anchorage was ideal for a long, overnight layover. We grabbed some water and snacks at the Starbucks, and found a nice open section of chairs. Carole was able to sleep for a couple of hours, but I could only doze a little.

The flight to Kodiak was much less full, so we got a window and an aisle seat to ourselves. The flight was short, thankfully. We wound up with a nice, nearly-new Rav 4 from Avis, and set out to kill 8 hours until B&B check-in time.

  • Exploring Kodiak
  • B&B check-in
  • Nightmares
  • The Talk
  • Where to stay in Anchorage
  • The Paris Club
  • Michael visits
  • Portage and Whittier
  • Back home
posted 2 Jul 2007 in Family & Friends

Revlon Run/Walk

Carole, Mandy and I did the Revlon Run/Walk for women's cancer research this morning. Over 50,000 people started on Figueroa just outside the Coliseum, with the runners off at 8:45am and the walkers at 9:05am.

The route went north on Fig, west on Adams, a jog down to Jefferson, then south on Menlo (just east of Vermont). We entered the Coliseum through the tunnel, and got a medal and some snacks.

We had lunch afterwards at Twohey's. A fun morning.

posted 12 May 2007 in Family & Friends

A record-setting thief

Casey Ties PCC Stolen Base Mark, Baseball Goes 1-1 v. Compton

In splitting a home-and-home series against El Camino Compton Center (formerly known as Compton College), the Pasadena City College baseball team had something to cheer about. Sophomore rightfielder and leadoff hitter Sheehan Casey tied the current PCC record for stolen bases in a season with 25, swiping three bases in the team's 4-3 loss Tuesday at Compton.


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posted 3 May 2007 in Family & Friends

An old friend

Today's front-page article in the Wall Street Journal on the legal troubles of Gemstar founder Henry Yuen caused me to google a few of my friends from back then.

My old friend Shannon was featured prominently in an article in the March 25, 2007 edition of the New York Times. Shannon and I did some work together at both Gemstar and Idealab.

Northeast Los Angeles: Set for a Close-Up - New York Times

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posted 25 Apr 2007 in Family & Friends

Lost peacocks

On our way home from Easter dinner at Claim Jumper, Carole drove us down Muscatel from Huntington. Just south of Emperor School, a couple of peacocks were wandering around in the front yard of house on the west side of Muscatel.

Peacocks are regulars up in Arcadia, and no one pays them much attention except to drive more carefully when they're in the street. As we drove south we noticed a couple of groups of walkers coming up the street towards the birds, and we both wondered why the birds had come so far south from their normal hunting grounds.

Motorcycle fun, and sunset at the beach

sbsunset.jpgI needed to burn off a vacation day, so I took the FJR and all its new goodies out for a day-long ride, meeting up with Carole in Santa Barbara for sunset on the beach. I tried to do this ride a couple of weeks ago, but got sick instead, and last week Carole was under the weather, but our persistence paid off.

The complete report is on the TCFJR site.

All in all, it was a great day of riding, and sunset on the beach with my girl.

posted 9 Mar 2007 in Family & Friends

Super Sunday

My Super Sunday featured fifteen pounds of carne asada, peanut butter rice krispies treats, classic sodas from Galco's, visits from Justin's friends Peter and Spencer, Mandy, and Jason. Plus, a decent football game.

The Bubble-Up brought back childhood memories of good times at my grandmother's. And anyone who says there's no difference between Coke made with sugar and Coke made with HFCS is either brainwashed or has no taste buds.

posted 4 Feb 2007 in Family & Friends

Justin's dome

Justin tore up his scalp on Christmas afternoon.

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posted 25 Dec 2006 in Family & Friends

Top of the heap

Carole was tops in the SimStratics December standings for service lots on TSO, just beating Dan Oo. Very cool.

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posted 14 Dec 2006 in Family & Friends

Where Carole's Been

Here's a map showing the states that Carole has visited. It does not include South Dakota, Wyoming, and/or Nebraska, which she likely visited as a very young child with her parents.

She has also visited three Canadian provinces: British Columbia, Ontario, and Quebec.

clcmap.png

posted 7 Sep 2006 in Family & Friends

Angel Game

angels.jpgMy sister Carol called me up on Friday and invited me to join her for an Angel game down in Anaheim on Saturday. Her officemate Fiona is married to a great guy named Luther whose company has season seats at Anaheim Stadium, and didn't need them. I cleared my calendar and gratefully accepted.

We had a nice chat about kids and work on the way down, and found a nice parking spot. The package is four tickets, and neither of us could find anyone to use the extra two, so we hung around the main ticket window looking for a compatible pair to comp, but after a while, under the ever watchful eye of a couple of Anaheim's finest, she decided to enjoy the extra space instead.

The tickets were almost perfect. The Terrace, just above the field boxes, but blissfully in the shade the whole game. In the top of the second I ran down to get us dogs and drinks, and walked right up to the window - amazing!

The game was most enjoyable. The crowd was fun and knowledgeable, hooting wildly when the Rangers gave Vlad Guerrero his third intentional walk of the game. The Angels dominated throughout, with a final of 10-3.

Thanks, Carol!

posted 5 Aug 2006 in Family & Friends

Magic Mountain

In spite of the heat wave, a bunch of us went to Magic Mountain on Thursday, and wound up having a really good time.

The group was: me, Carole, Michael, Crystal, Alexis, Logan, Jeremy, and Sarah. Michael had business up in Big Bear, and drove down that morning; we all piled into Crystal's Yukon XL around 10:15am and hit the road, with Carole driving. We had a fun road rage episode with a Dodge Ram pick-up on I-5 before getting a quick lunch at Wendy's.

It was hot, but a combination of water ride soakings, drinking lots of water, and rest stops kept us going. We had a little-too-long debate on whether to ride Tatsu (which we did, in the end), but otherwise everyone seemed to have a great time. I did first-rides on Goliath and Tatsu, which are always fun. (I sat next to Logan on Goliath and pretty much forgot about him. The photo showed him cowering in fear while I'm smiling and oblivious. Crystal gave me a hard time about it - understandably.)

Carole's feet petered out around 8:30pm - at the farthest point in the park. We shuffled to the front entrance while the others took in a last ride on Goliath.

All in all, a great day with friends and family.

posted 21 Jul 2006 in Family & Friends

Happy Anniversary

Thanks!

posted 28 Jun 2006 in Family & Friends

Father's Day

Rick's.

posted 18 Jun 2006 in Family & Friends

Mandy's PCC graduation get-together

Yay!

posted 17 Jun 2006 in Family & Friends

Justin's graduation

Yay!

posted 16 Jun 2006 in Family & Friends

Soccer in Mission Viejo

I was rusty, but I think it worked out well.

Samantha's team needed referee help for a tournament in Mission Viejo. When Karen called to see if I could help, I was a little reluctant, but Sam was playing the game immediately afterwards, so the timing was good. My game was scheduled for 6:00pm.

It seemed logical to take the FJR. I used my new camping bag strap layout to tie down my referee bag, and hit the road at 4:15pm. The ride was uneventful - 605 to 91 to 5, off at La Paz.

I parked close to the referee tent, checked in, and waited there for about 20 minutes. I hitched a ride in one of the utility carts with another ref while they hunted for a third. The field was about 1/2 mile south of the tent.

We had some brief confusion about one of the teams - the card said Santa Ana but they said they were from Fountain Valley. The confusion made us start a few minutes late, so we had to cut the halves down by a few minutes each. On the suggestion of the other referee, we started running a two-man, but he didn't really seem to get the concept. Luckily, a third ref showed up three minutes into the game, and I took over as center.

The game was a typical GU-14 match. The Fountain Valley team was slightly better than the San Juan Capistrano team, and won 2-0. I called impeding in the box, which is always fun, and didn't get much grief after the game from either side.

Sam's GU-16 game was next. They fell behind 2-0, with the second goal coming after the ref fell for a dive in the box which was artfully executed. Late in the second half, Sam's team made a stirring comeback, tying it a 2-2 near the end. The girls were jazzed at the end.

We stopped for El Pollo Loco. Jake's a goof, and it was good to talk to John and Cary.

posted 11 Jun 2006 in Family & Friends