The Rally

100,000+!!! people. Holy crap! That’s 30,000 more than saw the speech at Invesco Field! Then on top of the Denver rally, 50,000 people showed up in Ft. Collins in the afternoon! This is a movement…

Ahna, Ezra and I headed downtown this morning to the Barack Obama rally in Denver. We met up with Teva and Micah at the Tattered Cover for a quick coffee before moving over to Civic Center Park for the event. We had assumed/hoped that there would be a rather large crowd, as reports of people lining up as early as 5am were filtering through the downtown area, but even with the preconcieved ideas of the number of people, the actual number exceeded our thoughts. 

We got down there around 10:45 for the program that was supposed to start at 11:30 (which actually started around 11), and the entire center part of the park was filled up from the City Building to the State Capitol steps already (for those that don’t know Denver, it’s a park that is two full city blocks long). Knowing that our chance of actually seeing anything was slim and slimmer, we tried for the closest spot that we could near the stage and speakers. The energy, excitement, and enthusiasm of the crowd was absolutely unparalleled. We also noted that we were thrilled to see the amount of diversity (gender, race, and economic) in the crowd. All ages, all walks of life. It was also the first time that Ahna, Ezra, Teva, and Micah had been able to be in person for a rally and their level of excitement was nearly through the roof. 

We were able to hear Gov Bill Ritter, Sen Ken Salazar, and Cong Mark Udall (running for US Senate) speak before Obama came on. Even though Obama was speaking to a crowd of “well over 100,000 people” (according to the Denver Police Department), he came across as very personable, very relaxed, and very much in his element. The speech hovered between the canned campaign speech and new attacks on McCain, but again came across very good; and was very well received by the crowd. 

It was a lot of fun, especially with the historic mark that our voice is bringing. It’s always great and very fulfilling to be part of something that inspires you, and to voice that opinion loud and proud.

Nov 4 is just around the corner……

(ps: the first four pictures are mine, and the last five are from the Denver Post and Helen Richardson…added to show the scale of the event since my pictures can’t)

Opening Day Of Ski Season (For Me)

As it would turn out, the ski season was one week late to arrive this year (compared to the previous 2 years), and opened on the day that we departed for Florida…meaning that for the first time in seven years, I would be absent on the first runs of the year. Such is life. 

But Friday was my own personal opening day! I woke up early – partially because I couldn’t sleep – and headed out the door to make it up there in time to get my season pass before the lifts opened. I had ordered the pass right after my birthday, but just received it this morning. It was cold and snowy up there (11 degrees at the base plus the wind), but it felt so good to be on the skis again. 

Since last year was my first year skiing with the telemark gear, I was a little nervous about the first few turns of this season…no problems with the first run. It was the first turns on the second run that got me. I didn’t fall, but I am sure that I provided the people in the lift above me with some laughter for a few moments. I can tell you one thing about telemark skiing: it doesn’t seem to matter about how much you prepare during the off season, nothing that I have tried can get my legs ready for those turns.

The freedom to play on the mountain is such a refreshing feeling: I’m sure that I will need to be refreshed every couple of days this winter. Anyone that want to join me?

The pictures are from the top of Loveland Pass, from the parking lot at A-Basin, and down the run that is currently open.

Where Duct Tape Gets It Stickiness: Rice Cereal

Well, Wednesday turned out to be a down day….most all of the day was spent indoors not doing very much. My Mom stopped by for dinner, but otherwise we were pretty recluse. 

Thursday brought some sun and a little more action from our house. I was on the mend, and Ezra seemed to be a little better, Ahna still feeling pretty good, but expressing concern over a possible sore throat. Unpacking (yea, we didn’t get to it until today), grocery store visit, and a trip to the mall. We decided that we needed a video camera, so after some quick research through the library and Consumer Reports, we headed up to Best Buy, gift cards in hand, to get a camera. We settled on a traditional tape camera – mostly due to it’s cost – but also due to the fact that it records in essentially RAW format, thus allowing the most editing capability once it’s on the computer….at least that is what the salesman said. I’m not sure that I believed him that the digital cameras compressed the video quality, but we couldn’t afford them anyway. I am hoping to give it a shot soon and possibly post something to the blog over the weekend. 

Now to the big event of the day: Ezra tried rice cereal for the first time! The Dr. had suggested it during the last visit, and we had been waiting for the right opportunity to give it to him. Last night was it. We sat him down in the Bumbo, put the tray on, applied a bib, and went to town feeding him. He did great. It was hilarious. At first, he didn’t know what to do with his tongue…..he kept taking the food in, then moving his tongue in a sucking motion, thus pushing the food back out. He would try and try to accept the spoon into his mouth with pursed lips, each time resulting in half of the spoonful not making it in. He played with the food, he smiled, he ate, and he wanted more. Overall, we were very pleased (along with very amused) with his performance, and are looking forward to doing some more with him soon. We conveniently scheduled a bath for after the feeding, but didn’t plan on the amount of other things that would need some cleaning….oh well, it was taken care of. Back to the title: this stuff is crazy sticky. I think that double sided tape, gorilla glue, JB Weld, contact cement, and duct tape could all take a lesson from he current King of the Mountain: rice cereal.

Those Pictures As Promised…

Here are a couple of PopPop playing with Ezra, Ezra on the plane, and the snow that greeted us on Wednesday morning.

Shadow’s Message

So we got home and found that the cat had puked up a little on the hardwood floor….no big deal, happens every once in a while, and seemingly every time that we leave for a while…..but this time there was an apparent and clear message….you decide.

Sick And Tired And Jetplanes

Monday night brought a new experience for us: Ezra coming down with a sickness. Since none of us had ever dealt with it before, we were completely unsure of how he/us were going to react to the symptoms….well, for the most part he did really well….but for the rest of the part, he slept terribly – and consequently, so did we. 

Tuesday morning was a chill time spent mostly hanging around with my Grandparents and packing for our afternoon departure. There was much trepidation about the up and down, the pressurization and depressurization of the airline cabin to come. 

After returning the car to the rental agency (we put over 800 miles on it, and really enjoyed the space and function), we headed into the airport to check in. I had budgeted an upgrade to business class (only $99 each on Air Tran) for us from Atlanta to Denver, so with some computer problems, we made those changes. We were also able to secure a row with an empty seat for the Jacksonville to Atlanta leg. We got on the plane and took off for Atlanta, and Ezra slept the entire way (after a feeding during takeoff). In Atlanta, he was a happy go-lucky baby with little or no care in the world (he did have a runny nose, a cough, and an apparent sore throat). But being in the world’s busiest airport has it’s disadvantages (other than always waiting in a long line of planes to take off), including too much to look at for a 4.5 month old that should be going to sleep.

He was awake and fussy since he was so tired. The boarding process on the plane seemed to take several weeks, and it was another month or so before they dimmed the cabin lights before takeoff. Almost by magic, the lights turned off and not long after so did Ezra. But the sleep was not deep and it seemed as though every noise, every conversation, every reading light, every drink service was at 150 decibels and Ezra stirred because of them all. For the most part, once he fell asleep he was fine for the trip…but we tried to move him between us a couple of times, each time with him waking up….so Ahna was stuck holding him for most of the trip.I had followed suit with Ezra and got the same symptoms has he did – only I was able to drown them in NyQuil and cough suppressant. 

My Mom graciously met us at the airport at 10:30pm and we all trekked home tired, sick, and ready for a nice night sleep.

Oh, we got into Castle Rock on the drive home and were welcomed back to Colorado with snow! It is always such a beautiful sight: the first snow fall of the year. Unfortunately, I haven’t downloaded the pictures from my camera yet, so those will have to wait until later today or tomorrow.

It’s A Zoo Out There

Special Florida Edition

On Monday morning the three of us headed out with my Grandparents to the Jacksonville Zoo. It has been a really long time since any of us has been to a zoo, and it has been at least 10 years since my Grandparents have been to the zoo in Jacksonville. As you would expect, lots of things have changed since they last were there: paved walkways, better exhibits, more animals, etc. I have my own reservations about zoos, but I put them aside and we all enjoyed a nice morning of walking, learning, watching, and enjoying each others company. Besides, I used it as a chance to do some photography…

In the evening, we headed down to my Aunt and Uncles house about 1.5 hours away from Jacksonville for dinner. When we arrived, my Aunt surprised us with a proposition…the two of them would hang out with Ezra, and they would send us along to have some dinner by ourselves. It took us a minute or two to get used to the idea (seems like thinks such as ‘spontaneity’ are harder to deal with when you have a kid), but we took them up on their offer and headed out for a bit to eat. When we returned we enjoyed some conversation for a while before needing to head out for the long drive back to Jacksonville. We had a great time, and miss the opportunity to spend more of it with them.

Tybee Or Not Tybee

Special Florida Edition

On Saturday we drove to Savannah and Tybee Island to meet up with Kari and Nora, to explore the city some, and to hang out for the weekend. Kari and Nora made the trek down from Atlanta early in the am, and we left Jacksonville just after breakfast. 

The 2.5 hour drive from Jacksonville was uneventful, if you ignore the constant rain (that nobody seemed to be able to predict…I think that there are only two weather computers in the country, and all weather people feed off of just those two) and the construction-caused traffic. We encountered what has now become probably my least favorite roadside sign: “Construction for next 32 miles.”

Despite coming on a 2.5 hour drive from the south, and a 5 hour drive from the northwest, we all arrived within 10 minutes of each other and met up at The Sentient Bean, a coffee shop in downtown Savannah. It was a cool place that was a center point for a lot of the political action that surrounded the G8 summit there a few years ago. Since it was raining when we finished our drinks and lunch, we decided to head out to where we were staying on Tybee Island – a beach community about 12 miles from Savannah. 

We had been looking into places to stay in Savannah for a little while, and discovered that attempting to stay in the historic/downtown area of the city was going to cost about as much as a new car. We were left with a decision on where to go, and instead of an interstate hotel, we hit up an inn on Tybee Island called The Hunter House. It was a good price for a two-room suite with a bedroom and a pullout queen couch, so we made reservations. We had read about the place in a few travel books, and figured that we had a good find. 

Then we got there. The island isn’t the quaint little place that we had envisioned, as we discovered by the billboards on I-95 advertising Tybee as “Savannah’s Beach.” But we held out hope until we saw all of the typical touristy places: t-shirts galore, lame restaurants, and cheesy painted homes. We pulled into the inn and were taken down to the suite on the first floor. It was run-down, had old crappy furniture, a questionable bathroom, a 15 inch TV (which may have been nice in 1986, but isn’t now). The bedroom was sparsely furnished, and the pullout bed was terrible at best. The place was livable for a night, so we decided to make the best of it and tough it out….but if you are ever looking for places to go on Tybee Island, run fast from The Hunter House.

We went back into Savannah for dinner, then returned to the place for the night. Ahna, Ezra, and I spent the night in the living room; and pulled the mattress off of the couch and slept on the floor. It wasn’t a terrible night of sleep, but it was far from good. Anyway, it certainly makes for good stories.

The next morning I woke early (not because it was time to rise, but because my back was on fire from the night’s sleep) and headed to the lighthouse to take some pictures while everyone else was waking up. It was cold that morning – 52 with a strong wind – so the pictures were taken fast since I only brought along shorts, short-sleeved shirts, and flip-flops. 

Following a good and greasy breakfast a some local establishment, we ran down one block to the beach so Nora could play in the sand. We stumbled upon a local surfing competition and watched that for a few minutes. Afterwards, we headed back into Savannah to wonder around. The weather broke overnight and presented us with a very pleasant day. We walked around the historic district, through some cemeteries, through lots of squares, around lots of horses and buggies, down River Street, and next to all sorts of cool and old buildings. We ended the time together with some coffee and snacks in a park and headed off in our different directions.

Quick Teaser Post…

So it’s been difficult to do any posting consistently since my Grandparent’s don’t have internet access at their home. I am currently sitting at a coffee shop checking in on e-mail and checking in for the plane trip home tonight. I should probably get back to the house, so no big post today….just a picture or two to tide you over until tomorrow.

Ezra And The Gators

Special Florida Edition

Yesterday we headed down to visit with my cousin Amanda at the University of Florida. When we were looking at the map with my grandparents on how to get down there, they warned us of a little town called Waldo (yup, now I know where Waldo is…roughly 1 hour southwest of Jacksonville, Florida…no need for anymore books asking the question) and the speed traps that they set up along the road there. There was even a story that someone had put up a billboard as you approach town that warned of the speed trap to be (confirmed…the billboard exists, just as advertised). Funny thing is that we never saw a police officer of any kind in Waldo, but we saw lots of others on the drive to and from Gainesville. I came to the conclusion that everyone in the state of Florida is a perfect, law abiding citizen in every regard of their lives except for obeying the speed limit…because there is no way that there were any cops left to do regular police work after the number that we saw on the roads today. 

We met up with Amanda at a fun restaurant/bar aptly named The Swamp. It sits on University Blvd right across the street from campus, so we were able to enjoy the people watching, the rather lovely afternoon in the shade, and some really tasty food. It was really nice to hang out with her in her element. Every time that we have seen her in the past 5 years it has been with family around, so it was good to have an adult-to-adult conversation with my cousin for the first time. PS – Go Gators.

Last night we took my grandparents out to dinner at a great little seafood shack near the Navy base. It’s a dumpy little joint that happens to serve delicious food for a great price – highly recommended (I can pass on the directions to the place if you ever want, but I have already forgotten the name). 

By the way, will someone please make Joe the Plumber and all references to him go away?