Monday, August 31, 2009

Birthday madness on Aug. 25th

Happy 8th birthday to Adrienne! Where do you suppose she wanted to spend her special day? In that most unholy place of parental torment, Chuck E. Cheese, of course. It had been several years since we braved an outing there, and I hope not to darken their doorway in several more. Now, I suppose some adults thrive in a crazed atmosphere where children run wild like ruthless barbarians, and more power to 'em, but...egads. Laughing, screaming, and crying rugrats everywhere. Hopelessly trying to maneuver my way between kids who darted every which way while blinded by the blinking lights and deafened by the blaring arcade games...it's not for me. But, Adrienne kept saying it was her best birthday ever, so it was worth a few hours of insanity.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Orange belts!


Nate and the kids (minus Zach) are in the middle of a 6 month family membership at a local martial arts training facility, ATA Karate. The membership was one of the silent auction prizes we won at our church gala last April for a pretty ridiculously low price. The 4 of them recently tested for their orange belts, which comes after the initial white belt. After 15 more classes they can test for yellow belts.

Monday, August 10, 2009

A campy story

On Thursday of last week, we braved the wild outdoors and camped for the first time. Neither Nate or I had done more than back yard camping growing up so we decided to do a test run of sorts at a state park that is fairly close by, Nerstrand-Big Woods. Our campsite was right across from the bathroom/shower facility, so we eased into the wilderness on tiptoe.We arrived in the afternoon and set up the '4 room' tent we bought at a garage sale last year.After the tent was up, we did a little bit of hiking. We took the trail to the Hidden Falls.The Hidden Falls turned out to be a few drops of water trickling over this swath of limestone. Oh, well. It was kind of neat anyway.

We hiked back and made an emergency run to the blink-and-you'll-miss-it town of Nerstrand, where we picked up contact solution & a lens case, which yours truly forgot to pack. Ah, the glories of civilization, even the one-horse town type. On returning we lit the campfire and had (what else?) hot dogs for supper.

And s'mores! Nicky the walking dictionary said they looked delectable, and of course they were.Unsure of what the sam hill to do next, we sat around the fire a little more and then hit the sack. All night we listened to the sounds of nature. The gentle rain that fell intermittently at night, Adrienne snoring, and Michael grinding his teeth. In the morning we had cold cereal for breakfast. Just as we got the dishes put away, the heavy rain started. We decided to spend some time milling around Faribault while waiting for the deluge to subside. It never really did, so we (and when I say we, I mean Nate) took down the tent in the rain and went home, closing the chapter on our exciting inaugural camping adventure.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Runaway Horse

We celebrated Nate's birthday this past weekend with our first ever trip to Canterbury Park. It was a fun night, despite losing $22 and the cancellation of the last 2 races due to rain.
We seemed to be pretty good at picking 3rd or 4th place 'winners,' which doesn't get you much. The highlight of the night was an equine escape act that occurred prior to one of the races. The starting gates were on the opposite side of us, and an uncooperative horse ran backwards from the gate all the way around and past the cheering crowd before being caught and subdued by the man on horseback who chased him.

Nate was obviously thrilled to receive some gummi bears. He also got some fancy golf shoes to wear when he golfs twice a year. Oh yeah, and gum - 2 kinds!
A motley assortment of ruffians scarf down some birthday cake on our deck. These people often come by expecting to be fed.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Obama - the good, bad, & ugly

Good: We were able to refinance our mortgage last week, due to the president's home loan refinancing program. It allowed us to secure a lower interest rate without having to pay mortgage insurance, despite the fact that we now own less than 20% of the equity in our home due to the drop in home values.

Bad & Ugly: Perusing other blogs yesterday, I read that Obama's proposed health care policy involves requiring the elderly to receive counseling concerning the cost-to-benefit ratio of their very existence. What happened to 'health care for everyone'? The stipulations are starting to surface. Health care for everyone! - so long as you reside outside of the uterus or your 'quality of life' is deemed acceptable by some subjective standard. Disturbing.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

back yard project

As phase one of a larger scheme, last week we built a retaining wall in our back yard. We had a shed under the deck that we wanted to relocate, and so the excavating and building fun ensued. Eventually, we plan to remove the landscaping rock from under the deck, and put in a patio & patio door. Though it's a walk-out level basement, the original owners refrained from putting in a door to keep their kids from sneaking out at night (as if the windows wouldn't work just as well for that).

We rented a bobcat to remove this weird rock retaining wall of sorts, then built the new wall with help from my dad and our neighbors next-door, who happen to have some handy landscaping experience.
We dismantled the shed and rebuilt it next to the new wall. Of course, the kids seem to think that we did all this work so we could restore the middle swing to its previous location. Much to their dismay, it had been taken down to make room for the shed over a year ago. Exciting, eh? Now to start buying lotto tickets so we can afford the patio endeavor...

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Yep Yep Yep Yep

I think I find this more amusing now than I did in the 80's.

Friday, July 10, 2009

Happy b-day little brother!

You know how old you are, but I didn't know if you wanted the whole world...er, both my readers to find out.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Bishop Piché!

We have a new bishop in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and it's our former pastor, (then) Father Piché.Here we are with him after Michael's first communion in May of 2007. Father Piché left our parish a year ago to become Archbishop Nienstedt's right hand man, and Pope Benedict XVI named him a bishop this spring. We all miss his great sense of humor and engaging homilies. I hope he can stay in our area for a while, but it won't surprise me if he's whisked off to be the archbishop in a new diocese within a few years.