Sunday, September 21, 2008

Nothing from Jon

     Well, as of today I have not received anything from Jon, except some really bad pictures of buildings (somewhere in Japan, and at night where there was nothing you could see) and a picture of a girl without a name.

     So far, I have sent him two packages and about 12 letters and a 900 minute phone card to call me with. I imagine he will never call here so I am just leaving this one where it is.

     At least he listened to me when I told him to go to Corpmen school. As of now, he has finished his schooling and is stationed in Yokosuka Japan. I would love to be there myself. I have one more package to send him so I will see how things go. Maybe he will actually call me but I am not holding my breath.

     Hey! At least he sent me half an email saying he received the phone card. That is at least something. I know he has some sort of Internet access. The messages say they are coming from his yahoo account. With that, (Jon, listen up here) you can always send an instant message from anywhere. Get onto Yahoo's instant Web Messenger by clicking me! By the way, In case you didn't know, you can use the web messenger from any browser by clicking on the link here. I am nearly always online and have the instant messenger running (another thing to read and listen to Jon) so even if I am not there, I will get what ever message sent the next time I sit down at the computer. Pretty neat if you ask me.

     I just hope he is doing OK since he won't write and the emails are rather haphazard.


This page is labeled with ICRA

Back to school

     Bridget is starting back to college. She is taking a math class so she can help Richard and William with their math. It is a remedial algebra class and it is three days a week for the semister.

     I am happy she is going back. It gets her out of the house and back out into the world. It is at the University of Cincinnati, at the Batavia campus so it is not far away.

     With the new car (which is another story), it should be a snap to get there with little gas and little time. I will keep you posted on her grades and such.

     The class costs $390 for the semister and her books were $90 too. I think the cost is worth it since it will count towards her degree.

     At the time of this posting, Bridget wants to complete her teaching certification and teach. Hey, it is what she wants.


This page is labeled with ICRA

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Jon stopping by.

     two weeks ago, Jon stopped by on his way to his tour in Japan. The kid is so skinny, it makes me hungry just to look at him. He is so hyper. All the workouts and such. He is a one of a kind kid.

     Well, we sat around and bull crapped about this and that. Things like cars, and boats and the Navy. Also responsibilities and family, bills, and things that effect us both. Jon sitting on the couch while at a stopover on his way to Japan.  Click on this picture to see a bigger version. All the things that we had in common.

     We did get him to stay a few hours and get some sleep. He really does not have a room here and William was adamant that he sleep in his bedroom. We both went to bed at about 1 AM and he wanted to get up early so I set my alarm.

     At 5 AM, I went up and was going to wake him up, but I just had to watch him sleep for 10 minutes. Yeah, he is 22 and all, but I think the last time I did that was in 1993. He still sleeps with his eyes open. It is comforting (to me) to watch him sleep. I will not get into the specifics of why he didn't live with me in his teens. I will just say that I missed him all this time.

      Sometimes you just have to love your kids, no matter what happens in our lives.


This page is labeled with ICRA

If a tree falls by the river, does it make a splash?

     We had a little storm blow through the other day. It (to my delight) took out a tree in front of the house. Sure, It was blocking a little bit of the view. One thing. When it came crashing down, it almost killed a man that was walking up the street.If you click on the picture, it should blow up in a seperate window. If not, hold down the shift key and click on the picture.You can see Richard, Maryann, and William in the middle of the tree. Click me to open me in a new window. Anyway, in this picture, you can see Richard, Maryann, and William in the middle of the tree, being impressed that it actually fell. In their eyes, trees are supposed to be these massive things that are impervious to such things.

     As you can see, the tree was a little on the large size. I would have to estimate the girth to be about 60 inches or so. The strange part was that the storm literally ripped the root system out of the ground.

     Maryann was the most impressed that the tree fell. Just the day before, she was sitting in the tree's shade. I was one of the trees that everyone sat underneath because it created a great amount of shade for the picnic table and the bench that was underneath it's canopy.

     One of the things that this storm did, was to reorient the house. Tree down across the road from the house. Click me to open me in a new window. Yes, the wind was so strong that it moved the house a little bit south. Some of the flooring (floor boards) that are on the first floor had been moved to the point of them bouncing up as you walk on them. More on that in another post.

     When all this was happening, Bridget and the kids were on the porch. All of them were yelling at Tom who was the guy walking up the street when this all was happening. Just before the tree fell, I could see his umbrella fold upwards in the wind and that is when everyone else was running into the house. Of course, I am the big dummy and passed them in the doorway as I was running out into the storm.

Maryann trying to grasp the size of the tree when looking up into the inside of the trunk. Click me to open me in a new window.I had seen Tom walking up the street, then as his umbrella folded up because of the wind, he literally disappeared from view. The rain and wind were blowing so hard, I could not see more than 50 feet from the house. Just as he disappeared, I saw this massive shadow come crashing down, covering the street and what looked like, crushing Tom. So as I was running out of the house in the middle of this seriously dangerious storm, he was huddled down in back of the scoop in front of the house. He was missed being crushed by mear inches. I ran over to where the tree fell and was relieved to see he was still alive. I was damn impressed that he was unhurt. So, after a few seconds of telling him that he needed to come over to the house, he came over and stood in the front door and shook for a minute until the storm finally blew over.

     So, once we saw that Tom was OK, we all went outside and admired the damage. It was not very interesting. Only the fact that this all transpired just after a concert was blown away up the street at the park and just minutes ago.

     It was stimulating when we went out and saw that everyone was out looking at the trees and seeing that everyone was unhurt.


This page is labeled with ICRA

Saturday, July 26, 2008

The Gadsden Flag:

The American Revolutionary period was a time of intense but controlled individualism - when self-directing responsible individuals again and again decided for themselves what they should do, and did it - without needing anyone else to give them an assignment or supervise them in carrying it out.

Such a person was the patriot Colonel Christopher Gadsden of South Carolina. He had seen and liked a bright yellow banner with a hissing, coiled rattlesnake rising up in the center, and beneath the serpent the same words that appeared on the Striped Rattlesnake Flag - Don't Tread On Me.

Colonel Gadsden made a copy of this flag and submitted the design to the Provincial Congress in South Carolina. Commodore Esek Hopkins, commander of the new Continental fleet, carried a similar flag in February, 1776, when his ships put to sea for the first time.

Hopkins captured large stores of British cannon and military supplies in the Bahamas. His cruise marked the salt-water baptism of the American Navy, and it saw the first landing of the Corps of Marines, on whose drums the Gadsden symbol was painted.


This page is labeled with ICRA

Monday, July 14, 2008

Boyscout Canoe Trip (By Richard)

Last Friday we (my Boy Scout Troop and I) went to Morgans Canoe and Livery. My Troop had rented a total of five canoes and eleven kayaks. For a fifteen mile trip down the Little Miami River, it took us about nine hours to reach our campground.

During that time this what happened, Chrisna (my good friend) in his kayak was acting as if it was impossible, while having trouble with every little thing you could think of from paddling to turning to capsizing which he did in two foot water. When he did when when no one was looking, we were shoving off the bank. Then for a quarter mile he slowly chased it over rapids and four feet deep places in the river.

After he got the hang of kayaking people started to tip or should I say capsize. Soon after wards Patrick was the second one to tip over very dramatically I might say with a scream from him (horribly loud I might add). It took him forever to dump out the water and get back in.

After a few hours, we hit some rapids which wanted to turn you around really fast. The rapids tipped a canoe, then a few hours later the havoc began. Three more canoes tipped because they tried to finish a merit badge requirement. Afterwards we had a couple of kayaks tip over and we finished the trip. We slept that night through a storm and a lot of fireworks from across the river. The next morning we woke up, packed up, had breakfast and left for home.


This page is labeled with ICRA

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Murder at the Boy Scout campout!

     Apparently, one of the newer scouts (neither of our boys were the one) threw a life frog into the campfire during the boys weekend camp out. It was apparently done in an attempt to hide the fact that the frog had a broken leg or something like that. The boys were not very descriptive on this one because they didn't want me to be upset.

     I have to commend the Scoutmasters. The one part everyone knew and expressed was they handled the situation immediately. That is one reason I trust the Scoutmasters in the troop. They are understanding, responsible and vigilant.


This page is labeled with ICRA

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Dispair in the grocery line (and other places)

     I saw a lot of worried faces today in the line at the grocery store. People talking about how they can't afford to buy all the things they 'wanted' or things of that nature.

     We went out to dinner last night. It was the first time in three months where we actually sat down and had dinner in a restraunt that didn't have a drive through. The wait staff were all discussing gas prices and how they were truely concerned for their jobs. I over heard this because they were congregating around the front of the restaurant and our booth was the first one up close. They didn't know I was listening in, but the concern was too deep to keep the discussion down. When the nice kid served our meal, she said in a rather broken voice that "If you need anything, you can see were not crowded so just say if you need anything."

     At work,people who never had a cause for concern have started to discuss how much it costs every day to get to work and back. Some of the guys have a $20 round trip every day. This literally comes to working the first hour plus just to get to work.

     I am not sure where this is going, but when I was at the grocery, I literally had tears welling up because I am so distressed that things are going to get so much worse, it might be the downfall of so many people.

     I guess time will tell on how bad things will get.


This page is labeled with ICRA

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Life is not fair

     "I used to think it was awful that life was so unfair. Then I thought wouldn't it be much worse, if life were fair and all the terrible things that happen to us come because we actually deserve them. So now I take great comfort in the general hostility and unfairness of the universe." - Marcus


This page is labeled with ICRA

Sunday, March 09, 2008

The snow factor

Bridget and Maryann working on their snowman.  They had fun outside getting wet and building this snowbaby with snow that just didn't want to pack. CLICK ME to see a bigger version.Maryann and Bridget's Snowbaby.  All wrapped up in pink  and using my scarf. CLICK ME to see a bigger version.     As you can see in these photos, we had a little snow. About 8+ inches to be close. It was nice to be able to hear the snow once again. Snow makes a very loud sound when it is coming down wet and heavy. It is a peaceful sound that will blanket the others sounds you normally hear in a community.

      We are lucky so far in that the river has not risen too terribly much. It is supposed to crest at MELDAHL DAM at about 48+ feet by the NOAA RiverWatch forecast. The normal flood stage of that damn is 51 feet so as the neighbors have been saying, "don't worry, the river won't even make the street in front of the house."


This page is labeled with ICRA

Saturday, March 08, 2008

OK, finally free telephone calling

     I am one of the biggest purveyors of free services on the net. I have always been frustrated that there was now easy to call people anywhere for free. (I am starting to sound like a 'Pocket Fishermen' commercial) Well, I stumbled across GrandCentral on the blogger website front end.

     All you have to do it mouse over and tap on the "Click me" button to call anyone Absolutly free! Even on a stinky dialup connection you can do this. All you need is a microphone and speakers.

     No, there is no 'catch' or fees later on. Google is the owner of this process / website and you know they want you to use their sites for free. Why? Because it makes them money, that is why!

     Whether you believe me or not is my problem. I like free stuff as much as the next guy and am always looking for things like this. There are some sites out there where they want you to download their application and install it on your machine. I don't like that because it gives someone I do not know access to my computer.

     The major advantage of this setup it that it is totally web based. Nothing to install or give access to your PC. When I tried it, I first took the time to call a dozen people I know in various states around the country. Hey, I even called my own house several times to test it out first. You could not tell I was on my PC when I called. OK, the only exception was that the call sounded better than a squeaky cell phone that sounds like you calling from the bottom of a well.

     Hey, you don't have to believe me. go to the GrandCentral website and look for yourself. Then, once you see what I am talking about, give me a call. You don't have to setup an account with them to call out, just receive calls (which is easy enough the kids fixed a setting I missed. Well, I have my cell around 99% of the time. That, and you know I barely sleep anyway. Give me a call on the link either on this post or in the left frame of our blog. It gives me a reason to think.


This page is labeled with ICRA

Saturday, March 01, 2008

Webconnect icon now available (again)!!!

This is a picture save of the CSX WebConnect ID which I created a couple of years ago.  I just thought I better get it out to where it could be used.I have realized that I didn't post the nice little icon I created for The CSX Webconnect for terminal (web) access to the CSX Mainframe. I really like this little icon. It is pretty close and at least it shows what your supposed to see in an icon. Well, actually it shows a graphical representation of the application your going to use.

If you like the icon, you can either e-mail me with a request for it or download the little jpg and convert it to an icon (if you know how to really do it. I can not upload items besides graphics to Blogger anymore. Thus, the problem.

Click me to start a Google Talk session.  If I am online, I will answer you!Just send me an e-mail or instant message and I will get a copy of the icon to you (as well as a set of the instructions on how to use it). Shoot, I can probably do it myself from home if needed. It is not difficult.


This page is labeled with ICRA

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Parking Wars

     The parking around the Bethesda Oak building is terrible and since I can't see paying $5.00 for a one hour stay, we found a space on the street down from the Doctor's Office. The morons that actually live around that area are rather (let me say it nicely) ineffective in the way they park their cars on the street and in the driveways. I should have snapped a photo or two to show you how bad they are, but I didn't take any (for some strange reason) at that time. If I can describe it in quick terms, they covered every part of the sidewalk with either their cars, trucks, or garbage cans.

     You know, if there had been a person in a wheelchair or on crutches, they would never have made it to the medical center. The local "You gotta protect the '__________' [fill in the blank with what ever downtown minority group you wish] radicals", would have been all over this.

(I personally would have to say the group in this case would be considered the 'transportationally challenged' or 'people without a vehicle', but that is just me.)

Calling the police, a press conference, and informing everyone that someone was ".... repressing them for not allowing them to have access to the city sidewalk with their 'Tyrannical parking and blocking actions!"

     I can see how the press conference would be televised on the 10 o'clock news where the City of Cincinnati would kowtow to the oppressed sidewalk consortium and start a new police patrol whereby a set number of the cities finest would be strategically positions to make twice daily patrols of the cities sidewalks to combat the degenerate miscreant horde, that has blocked our access to the sidewalks created for the citizens and especially the oppressed and perambulationly challenged among the downtown area residents. This is one time I really would have enjoyed calling the police to have them come over and write a ticket for this.

     Yeah, I am being a jerk on this one. On the other hand, these residents should be able to follow the law just like everyone else. I just hate going downtown anymore. Everyone feels they are 'entitled' to do whatever they feel is easier for them. No pride in anything. Just make everything look like a big pile of crap and an annoyance for everyone that passes by. Stuff them and their pissy way of doing things. I can't stand the downtowners any more and I doubt anyone could blame me.

Now to the point of this thread! The Television Show on A&E.

     I don't know if you have seen the television show 'Parking Wars', you will understand that I would love if Cincinnati (or even New Richmond) would adopt the strict parking enforcement that they use (on the television show) shot in Philly. They do not take any grief from the people who are incapable of abiding by the law. Your in a restricted parking space that prohibits parking at 1600 and your there at 1601, you get a ticket. If you haven't paid your tickets previously written, they boot your car or even tow it away and impound it. I could do that in any of these little towns or even Cincinnati and it would generate tons of money and keep the streets safer for everyone.

That is not a bad idea. I think I will bring the idea up at the next village council meeting!

     If you go to the A&E television web site(s) for "Parking Wars", you might not be able to get there if your antivirus blocks phishing websites. Apparently, the website owners (or the webmasters) are attempting to draw down information from your browser (which is know as phishing). I know that Trend Micro blocks it as a malicious website for phishing. That is all I need to know to stay away. Hopefully it is just a misunderstanding by the software, but I don't mess with sites my antivirus blocks. It is not a site I would have just popped over to for kicks (without needing information). It is just not a smart thing to do.


This page is labeled with ICRA

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Snow day again!

Trying to get Richard ready to go out and shovel the sidewalks and paths to the house and bed & Breakfasts next door.  It was so bundled up that he could not bend over to tie his boots.  It was fun to watch.All the kids were bundled up and ready to go play out in the snow. It was nice to see that they wanted to go out. The temp is about 12 degrees and they were trying to build a fort or igloo or something. I had to laugh at the inability of the three of them to pick a common theme for their blocks of snow. It appeared to be more like a short wall of snow than a fort, but I was apparently not using my imagination enough to see it.The snow is coming down pretty good now.  It actually feels like sleet to be honest.

I know this will be short lived because the temperature is supposed to climb up into the 40s in a few days and all this fun will be a memory.

At least everyone is coming to realize that they have to play when the time is right. Everyone jumped at the opportunity to get out there as soon as they had their homework finished. It is always nice to see smiles on the kids faces.

I really do hope that they kids don't have school tomorrow but I can't think that they will not plow the streets. But, after all, we now live in a small town and the roads have over an inch on them already. Confidentially, it took them a whole day to get it done the last day. Maybe dreams can come true.


This page is labeled with ICRA

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

The Day The Earth Stood Still

A Great Movie PosterEvery time they show the movie "The Day The Earth Stood Still" on AMC TV or any other television station, I get around a hundred extra hits for the following three days. What ever it takes to get people here, I say Great!

The reason I chose the title as it is written, it because I was (am) just fed up with the whole world. I retired from the Navy and found that living out in the civilian community was so bad and money hungry, that I figured that was Patricia Neal should have said was, "Eh' Never mind. Go ahead and destroy it all".

I am not being cynical. It was just an observation I made after being laid off from a job because of corporate greed and sloth. Why else would someone be laid off when they were doing their job and a whole lot of other people's jobs above them? I had just had it. Thus, the title.

Gort

On a different note, I am amazed that I have passed the 12,000 hit mark. Not bad for someone who only wanted to post pictures for their family, then was hooked on writing HTML.

If your reading this, Thank you for stopping by. Send me an instant message by clicking on the Yahoo Messenger link on the upper left frame. I would really like to chat.


This page is labeled with ICRA

Thursday, February 07, 2008

How to Instantly Get a Human When Calling Big Companies

A weekly occurrence for many of us is that frustrating, "Wanna' throw the phone out the window" feeling when you call a company and have to speak to a damn computer for 5 minutes 'before' you get to speak to a real person (if the system doesn't hang up on you first).

The other, just as frustrating alternative is when you have to press a sequence of buttons when prompted: 'press 3 for X, 4 for Y, 5 for Z', etc. Someone has taken the initiative to create a website called 'gethuman.com' where you can find the 'secret' codes to be put through to a real human in the shortest time possible, sometimes instantly.

Many companies have this provision so that employees or field workers can get through to the front of the line. All the big companies are listed, from AAA to XM Radio, from Amazon.com to Walt Disney World. In some cases a direct line is provided that gets you right to a human, instantly!

You might want to print out the list, or at least keep it bookmarked on your computer on in your 'Yahoo!' or 'Google' toolbars like I have done. I plan on making this a permenent link on this blog.

You'll save your time and your sanity!

www.gethuman.com


This page is labeled with ICRA

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Snow Day!

Uh, Hooray? (I think).

I got up early to get Richard off to school and checked the closing reports online. I was happy to see that the local schools are closed. When I first checked at 0600, there was a two hour delay, now they are closed!

New Richmond Exempted Village School District

Closed Wed 2nd Jan 2008 07:10AM

A view up the street (north west) showing the snow on the ground and on the pick-up.The temp is about 12° right now with 16 MPH winds, plus there is an inch or two of snow on the ground. So, instead of having school, the kids get another day off. It does not bother me. I didn't really want to drive them there today anyway. I try and always drive them when the weather is this terrible. If that makes me a push-over, so be it. I don't want them sicker than they already are.

The weather is supposed to stay the same all day with a high of 20° and more snow. Too bad we don't get a blizzard. At least that way, it would be a feeling of justification for the kids staying home. Right now, it just seems like we are keeping them home for no real reason. 20 years ago, it would be snowing and they would still have open school. I guess things change with time.

All of us have bad colds. I have completely lost my voice and have (if you can believe a little more of the compounding bad situations I am in)Kids sitting on the couch.  Even though it is a snow day, they are not feeling well. two bloody ear drums and a bloody nose.Bridget thinks that are both ears are infected but who knows. I can hear fine. They're just not working at 100%.

William is coughing and Richard is even moving slow (but that might just be a case of apathy). Maryann is my daughter. She practally never gets sick. But, since she can annoy her brothers, she has to force the issue and push them to the side and sit between them.

I should be able to get some more work done around here now that I have some 'volunteers' sitting on the couch with the remotes glued to their hand(s).


This page is labeled with ICRA

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

The first "Parcel Post Baby"

A newspaper scan of my Great Uncle.I have a newspaper article showing my Great Uncle who was listed as; "Here Is The first 'Parcel Post' Baby" who was sent through the mail. This is a very good scan of the article. You can make a guess at the date, but since the article is not dated and all my relatives have no information to follow up on this. I had to look back at the history of the postal service.

The article lists both the name of the baby and the 'Rural Mail Carrier and Rig' "who delivered him from his parents to his Grandmother about a mile away." (insured for $50)

The best guess I can do is either 1913 or 1914 due to parcel post service starting in 1913.

I don't know to laugh or smirk. It sounds like a stunt to see if they could get away with it. Knowing my family, that was just the case. No one I asked even knew it happened. Even my parents didn't remember even seeing the newspaper article they gave me in a stack of papers they had saved.

I sent off an email to the Postal Service historical society and am waiting on a response from them and if they knew of this happening. I hope to get a response sometime soon.


This page is labeled with ICRA