Trains

November 15, 2025

I was thinking about a friend who is a train aficionado. That got me to thinking about my experiences in trains. Back in the dark ages (1960s) I’d take the Zephyr from Chicago to Galesburg on those weekends I traveled home from college. Two hours from Chicago to Galesburg was much faster than driving. During the winter months the Zephyr was packed with people taking a few days off their normal routines for the ski slopes. The party atmosphere on those evenings filled the train.

A few years later married with three small children we took the Santa Fe from Cleburne (south of Fort Worth) through Kansas City to Galesburg. Those trips were not as enjoyable:

  • The trip was much longer (15 hours as opposed to 2)
  • We rode coach – Gwen’s dad was a Santa Fe brakeman – relatives of employees were free in those days
  • We had three small children
  • The ride was rougher
  • On one Summer trip the A/C broke. That was a killer

I’ve avoided U.S. trains ever since.

CleanShot 2025-11-15 at 12.23.

However time rolled on and our excursion from Alice Springs to Adelaide on the Ghan was “Most Excellent” as Bill and Ted would say. We had our own compartment. The service was top flight. The food was world class for Australia. Of course we were leaving “The Alice” after 17 months where fine dining was meat pie floaters – a meat pie filled with meat of unknown origin floating in a bowl of pea soup. Plus, our itinerary included a few days in Adelaide. I love that city. If I could have worked there instead of Alice Springs we would have stayed permanently and I would be typing this memory from my back porch looking out on a grove of eucalyptus trees.

In the later years we rode the rails so to speak in Europe several times. Our experience there was much more enjoyable than our Santa Fe trips. If only train service in the U.S. was half as good as The Ghan or European travel.

Intercity express 1284735_1920.


My Earliest Christmas Memory

December 4, 2024

Christmas 4704707_1920.

I was young, maybe 7 or 8. It was Christmas morning. Both Jerry and Sally were old enough to creep down the stairs with me which we did. Now, we had a steep stairway with a door at the bottom which should clue you into how old the house was. Also, we did not have an inside bathroom yet.It wasn’t until I was in 6th grade which was 1958 when the blessed inside bathroom with a commode and a bathtub arrived.

We also did not have TV and the phone was one of those old 15 person party line models. It was one of those old huge crank phones that hung on the wall and had a big transformer. After the new type of phones were installed we rigged up the old phones with some leads hanging out from the transformer. We then used it on the Mississippi to stun catfish by dropping the leads in the wire and cranking the phone which caused the transformer to zap the fish with electricity. The catfish would float to the surface and you had, I don’t’ know, maybe 2 minutes to grab them until they came to and swam away. My how times have changed.

Wow,I really digressed. How did wander from Christmas morning as a youn child to stunning catfish on the Mississippi? Back to the story.


Jerry, Sally, and I crept down the stairs as quiet as a mouse and slowly opened the door. We were greeted by our older brother Jim with a hug smile on his face. He said and I quote: “Boy, we really go some nice presents from Santa.” Turns out he had woken early, and opened all the presents. To this day I’m not sure how he could have done that without waking Mom and Dad. Our old house configuration was a square with the kitchen at the Northwest corner, dining room at the Northeast corner, living room with the Christmas tree and presents in the Southeast corner, and Parents bedroom in the Southwest corner. There were no doors between the living room and the parent’s bedroom, just a rod with drapes hanging down.

I don’t remember if Jim got in trouble for opening the presents or not. All I remember about the rest of the day is I received a warehouse made of mental with some boxes, and maybe trucks. I laid on the carpet all day playing with the warehouse, the boxes, and the trucks.

In any case that’s my first Christmas memory — at least 70 years back.


Five Favorite Albums

July 30, 2024

concert

I’ve seen several Greatest Albums of All Time and 100 Best Albums lists the last several days. They started me thinking “What are my favorite Albums?” After some thought here are my Five Favorites:

Marvin Gaye – What’s Going On

The Ghetto

Growing up if you lived in Illinois and could pick up Chicago Pop Music radio you were exposed to a great deal of Rhythm and Blues – Sam and Dave, Otis Redding, Wilson Picket, and of course Marvin Gaye who was always my favorite; partially because he had a cool name.

What’s Going On was released in 1971 after I left Chicago. By then we who survived the 60s were worn out and tired of protest, confrontation, riots, and prejudice. I was no exception. What’s Going On struck a chord with me. I still listen to the album quite a bit. It’s definitely on my 5 favorite list.

The album is a musical journey that combines soulful melodies with poignant lyrics reflecting the revolutionary 60s. With hits like What’s Going On, Inner City Blues, and Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology), this album remains a timeless work of art that continues to resonate with listeners today.

On a sad note, the 44 year old Marvin’s life ended tragically when his father shot him during an argument.

Bob Dylan – Highway 61 Revisited

I purchased this album in 1965 before I went off to College in Chicago. I played the album over and over and over. It got to when Mom came in the house while the album was playing she would immediately shout: “turn that communist noise off this minute!”.

It was Bob’s break from folk music which at the time was one of the most popular genre’s and he was the king of folk music.

I had not listened to the album in probably 10 years but the other day I was reading the book Where Good Ideas Come From. The book mentioned Highway 61 and the Beach Boys Pet Sounds as two of the most influential albums of all times generating whole genres of new music.

The album begins with Like a Rolling Stone which was the most popular tune on the top 40, probably the only one from the album.

My favorites are probably Desolation Row and It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry.

It Takes a Lot… reminds me so much of the old Hank Williams song I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry it’s just plain eerie. Speaking of Hank Williams, he’s not spoken much of anymore even in the C&W arena but that man was positively a genius. Just google the list of his most popular songs someday.

Right now I can’t read too good
Don’t send me no more letters, no
Not unless you mail them
From Desolation Row

ends Desolation Row. In other words, leave me alone and go back to your friends where you belong…

Desolation Row was much more understandable when I was 17. Now I list listen to the lyrics with awe and love the 12 string guitar.

Beatles – Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band

What can I say about Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Heart’s Club Band that has not been said already. It is the first popular concept album (1967). It, like Highway 61 spawned a new genre of music, Progressive Rock

I was living in Chicago attending DeVry Technical Institute studying electronics living with 5 other students. Between the 6 of us we played that album so many times in the condo I finally had to toss it and purchased another.

A Day In The Life is one of my if not most favorite songs of all time.

There are many, many, many stories about this album and the Beatles with LSD. If you’re curious Google can fill you in.

CCR -Cosmos Factory

Swamp 6999795_1280.

I really like Creedence Clearwater Revival’s (CCR) music, sometime know as swamp rock. This is my favorite album of theirs. Their extended version of I Heard It Through The Grapevine is a fitting end to the album and is my favorite from the album.

One item common to Cosmos Factory and the first three albums on this list is the music. I really like the music, not just the lyrics.

As a final thought what does this album have to do with the Cosmos Factory Website?

Linda Ronstadt – Heart Like a Wheel

I’m firmly convinced every male of my generation was secretly in love with Linda including me. After all these years I still listen to her often. She started with the Stone Ponies. The first time I heard her was with that group. The Condello’s and I were sitting in the General Dynamics F111 Factory parking lot waiting until we had to go to work listening to the top 40 when Different Drum came on. It’s funny how when hearing a song your mind calls up a perfect picture of where and when you first heard the sone. Different Drum is one of those songs for me. We must have spent many hours in that parking lot because Judy Collin’s Amazing Grace also reminds me of that parking lot. Someday I’m going to drive over there and see if the parking lot is still there.

On to the album, Heart Like a Wheel is her best album IMHO. Released in 1974 it was also her most popular. My favorite song from the album is Willin which is why the photo is a road.

I recently found out she has PSP which also afflicts my wife, Gwen, who is now home bound in a wheelchair. Of course this has brought me closer to Linda and her music. So much that before Gwen could no longer travel we had planned a holiday to her hometown Tucson to visit her roots.

The End

Anyway that’s my top 5 today. One thing they all have in common is my age. The earliest album on the list is 1965 while the most recent is 1974. It’s not that I don’t like older and newer music because I do. However there must be something special about the music from that stage of your life. For me at least, that is true.


Old Threshing machines, WWII, and my Dad

June 13, 2024

Old Threshing Machines

Calling All Engineers!!! I’m thinking most engineers like mechanical gizmos with gears, belts, pulleys, chains, etc. If you do then you should watch a YouTube video on a Thresher’s Festival. My Favorite has always been the Mt. Pleasant Midwest Thresher’s Reunion. Here’s a link to a YouTube video of the 2022 Reunion: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HaOAglUn95E.

Mt. Pleasant is close to the farm where I spent my childhood. The Reunion was always held around Labor Day just before the school years started. It was always a highlight and even though I have not attended in years I’d love to visit Mt. Pleasant one more time before I’m called upstairs (I hope and pray).

Events like these are held all over the Midwest in the Summer. You should catch one if you ever get the chance.

We had to rely on the generosity of Uncle Leonard to take us to Events like the Thresher’s Reunion. That included trips to the Iowa State Fair and Minnesota fishing trip. As a side note a trip with Uncle Leonard was very interesting. For example, when it was time to eat we pulled into the parking lot of a grocery store in some small community on the way. Aunt Dorothy would run in the store and come back with a loaf of white bread and bologna. Then we would take off while Aunt Dorothy passed around sandwiches of white bread and bologna.

Uncle Leonard was Dad’s partner on the farm and Dad never left the Farm. Dad drove a tank in WWII until the tank was blown up by the Nazis in France. He spent 6 months in a French Hospital before he recovered enough to come home. Everyone said he was not the same person after he came home. He never talked much, never went anywhere, never allowed guns in the house and never talked about the War.

I believe he had what they would call now as severe PTSD.

Growing Up with Dad

That got me thinking about growing up with a Dad who was never not quite there but off somewhere we could not go. Now that I’m much older I think I understand him, maybe just a mite. Don’t get me wrong as you read this article. I loved Dad and he loved us. I can’t begin to understand what went on in his mind but now that I’m much older I have developed a ton of empathy for him. Being a caretake for a wife with PSP helps as well. Here’s a few snippets of life with Dad:

My earliest memory: When we were young one of us did something bad. None of us would confess or rat on the guilty party. So he whipped us all with a belt. I don’t remember what we did and never knew who did it but it was not me. I’ve always expected Jerry.

Time marches on — I was probably 8-10 years old when after unloading a hay wagon in the barn Dad started the Farmall F20 by cranking the engine. Horribly, the tractor was in gear and started forward, knocking him over and running over his head. He had severe head injuries for the 2nd time. During the operation to repaired his injuries the surgeon discovered gauze in his head. That gauze had to have been left in from his WWII surgeries.

Jim (my older brother), Dick (Uncle Leonard’s son a year older than Jim), and I were hiding in the corncrib in back of the barn with an unobstructed view of the entire accident. It was horrible and we were frozen in place until sometime later when Dick’s older brother came looking for us and talked us into coming down. it was a day I will never forget.

Of course we did not see what happened after the accident after we saw Dad get up and take off walking after all the men took off running to the house to tell mom. Mom ran out and saw dad walking alone up to the house. She loaded him into the car and drove him to the hospital.

He was in the hospital for quite a few days. I was a kid so it seemed like forever. Mom spent most of the time with him in the hospital so relatives took care of us. Once Dad was home he spent the remainder of the year recovering.

Time marches on — I remember Dad, Uncle Leonard, Dick, Jim, and I went fishing on the Mississippi next to the New Boston lock and dam. The Game Warden stopped by and when he left Dad and Uncle Leonard were holding tickets for not having a fishing license. That was the only fine they ever had their entire lives. Uncle Leonard reckoned they came out way ahead (one fine in 60 years of fishing), but Dad was hopping mad.

High School

Time marches on — Dad had a really bad temper. It took a lot to make him angry but when he did stay out of his way. I remember once we were going to butcher a steer. We had penned the steer up and Dick was tasked with shooting the steer with his 22 rifle loaded with 22 long bullets (As I said earlier Dad did not allow guns on the farm but that only applied to us not Uncle Leonard and Dick). We should have known you can’t kill a steer by shooting it in the head with a 22 but we soon found out. All we accomplished was making the steer and dad really mad.

I’ll never forget the look on Dad’s face when he turned to me and calmly said: “Get me the Sledge Hammer”. When I brought it back he calmly took the hammer from me, climbed up the fence and commenced to slam the sledge hammer down on the steer’s head over and over and over. Soon, the steer died and slumped into a heap. Dad climbed off the fence and continued to slam the hammer down on what was left of the head for what seemed like an eternity until finally his anger was slated. The rest of us just stared in disbelief.

Time marches on — It was the Spring of my high school senior year when I had to help dad prepare and plant crops. As I related earlier he farmed with his brother, my Uncle Leonard. Uncle Leonard was injured that year and could not work. I would rush home from school every day and head out to the field to take over plowing (or some other Spring field work). He would go home, eat, do chores, sleep for a while, and then relieve me between 2 to 3 AM. I’d sleep until 6:30 and get up for school. Over and over and over again. I was 17 and that schedule wore me out. I can’t imagine how he did it at his age

Time marches on — Every Summer we baled hay to feed the milk cows and other cattle we raised. Baling in the field was not bad. Dad drove the tractor and I loaded the hay rack. That was not bad but I always dreaded unloading the hay into the barn. Dad unloaded the hay from the hay rack onto the elevator as fast as he could. In the barn I had to stack the hay bales as they came off the elevator. The barn was always hotter than hell and the bales came off faster than I could stack them

And Beyond

Time marches on — Every Summer we bailed hay to feed the milk cows and other cattle we raised. Baling in the field was not bad. Dad drove the tractor and I loaded the hay rack. That was not bad but I always dreaded unloading the hay into the barn. Dad unloaded the hay from the hay rack on to the elevator as fast as he could. In the barn I have to stack the hay bales as they came off the elevator. The barn was always hotter than hell and the bales came off faster than I could stack them.

Time marches on — I graduated high school and left home, moved to Chicago, graduated from DeVry, moved to Fort Wort, worked for General Dynamics, married, graduated from UTA with BSes in Math and Physics (not English as you should have guessed by now), started working at E-Systems, had children, moved to Alice Springs to work at Pine Gap, came home, and Dad was diagnosed with Parkinson’s.

Being stricken with Parkinson’s should not have been a surprise because he had severe head injuries both in WWII and on the farm. For a few years then all my vacations and long weekends were spent traveling back home to care for Dad while Mom had a little time off. The last time he dined out was at a Long John’s Silver’s in Burlington, Iowa which I took him to. I’ll always be thankful I was able to help him during his later stages before he passed on.


The Pretender

March 5, 2024

The Pretender

The Pretender by Jackson Browne has always been sort of my theme song. In the 60s we started out to change the World.

“Come gather ’round people
Wherever you roam
And admit that the waters
Around you have grown
And accept it that soon
You’ll be drenched to the bone
If your time to you is worth savin’
And you better start swimmin’
Or you’ll sink like a stone
For the times they are a-changin'” – Bob Dylan

When I was much younger than I am now in 1968 I thought our generation was going to change the World. We were the ones! The 60s were turbulent times, aren’t all time turbulent.

Here’s what went down in the 60s while I evolved from child to adult:

  • The Cold War (the entire decade)
  • First Televised Presidential Debate Airs (September 26, 1960)
  • Kennedy Elected President (November 8, 1960)
  • “The Pill” is Born (December 1960)
  • Bay of Pigs: Failed Invasion of Cuba (April 16-25, 1961)
  • Silent Spring published (1962)
  • Berlin Wall Construction (August 13, 1961)
  • Cuban Missile Crisis (October 22-28, 1962)
  • I Have a Dream… (August 28, 1963)
  • Kennedy Assassinated (November 22, 1963)
  • The Beatles (February 9, 1964)
  • Smoking “Hazardous To Your Health” (January 11, 1964)
  • Civil Rights Act (July 2, 1964)
  • Gulf of Tonkin (August 2, 1964)
  • “Bloody Sunday” – Selma Alabama (March 7, 1965)
  • Johnson Signs Medicare Bill (July 30, 1965)
  • Watts Race Riots (August 11-16, 1965)
  • Summer of Love (Summer, 1967)
  • My Lai Massacre (March 16, 1968)
  • MLK Assassinated (April 4, 1968)
  • Robert Kennedy Assassinated (June 6, 1968)
  • Democratic Convention Opens in Chicago (August 26, 1968)
  • We learned smoking was hazardous to our health (January 11, 1969)
  • One Small Step for Mankind (July 20, 1969)
  • Woodstock: Three Days of Peace, Music & Love (August 15-17, 1969)
  • Two Million Take Part in Peace Moratorium (October 15, 1969)
  • First Internet Packet Transfer (November 21, 1969)

Now 60 years later “we have met the enemy and he is us”. – Admiral Perry

I didn’t change the World. I sold out to the Establishment which I swore I would never do.

What happened?

For me personally – I fell in love, married, got a job, bought a house, consumed, and had children.

Now looking back I wonder how life would have turned out if I had taken a different path?

“Are you there? Say a prayer for the pretender
Who started out so young and strong only to surrender” – Jackson Browne


The Kingston Trio

January 16, 2023

“Where have all the flowers gone” by The Kingston Trio was for me a revolution. Yes I know Pete Seeger wrote it but back then I never hear of him. To me The Kingston Trio was a revolution. Growing up in the Northern Midwest I was weaned on Lawerence Welk and the big band music from the top floor of the Hotel Blackhawk. Then The Kingston Trio came along with a couple guitars and lyrics with issues other than “teen anguish” – like “Tom Dooley” and “The MTA”

They were an early folk group I suppose although the they pre-Dated the folk music surge. From Hawaii and California they were also the first wave of alternative music from the west coast.

This is one of my songs on my “Peace” playlist which I listen to when the world gets me down (more on that in the next post)

To be fair another wind of change was blowing though our community at that time. My older brother, Jim, was into a different genre with artists like Bo Diddley and James Brown.

On the Pop stations yet another style was gaining popularity – pop music with songs like “A thousand stars in the sky” by Linda Scott and “Sherry Baby” by The Four Seasons. We called it “Pretty Rock” with a look of disgust.

This was al Pre-Bob-Dylan who totally, totally overturned the apple cart. He appeared at the perfect time in the sixties along with rioting in the streets, Vietnam protests, equal opportunity, cancer warnings on cigarettes, the pill, the Kennedy’s and Martin Luther King assassinations, and the list goes on and on


Our 2022

January 5, 2023

Seems like 2022 just started and now we are in 2023. All in all 2022 was a good year for us.  Gwen’s PSP is progressing slowly. There were things she could do last January she can’t do now but the specialist tells us her progression is much slower than normal for people with PSP.

On a happier note we were able to travel some this year after several years hunkered down at home because of the COVID pandemic. However, we had to postpone our major trip of the year which was a Baltic Cruise on Viking because we contracted COVID just before the trip was scheduled. We have rescheduled it for this year and looking forward to the cruise.

We had no major medical problems other than Gwen’s PSP of which there is no cure. I did contract an infection in my leg which caused the leg to swell up below the knee quite noticeably. I’ve no idea how the leg became infected. It’s the leg I burned severely when I was four and has been a problem off and on my whole life. 

That’s about it for the highlights. A summary of our year ordered by date is below:

  • 02/02: Purchased a Mac Air M1 to replace my 10 year old laptop – My this baby can fly
  • 02/09: Started the implant process on 2 teeth. Pulled the teeth and did a bone graft
  • 02/17-20: San Diego with the Neustadt’s. We stayed at a house right on Mission Beach. The highlights were the beach, Sea World, and an evening picnic on the beach watching the sunset
  • 03/29: Lowered our bed because Gwen cannot climb in and get our of the bed without my help
  • 04/19-22: Las Vegas holiday just Gwen and myself. We saw Mystere, a show good for children, which we liked very much. Our most memorable meal was at Carmine’s in Caesar’s forum shops
  • 05/16: Replaced two motors in the attic that opened and closed vents
  • 06/10: Canceled our Viking Baltic cruise because we both had COVID
  • 07/07-10: Erin Olson’s wedding in Troy Ohio. Sara and Paxson traveled with us. A good time was had by all. The highlight besides visiting with family and the wedding was the day we spent at the Air Force Museum 
  • 07/13: Posts for the implants installed in my mouth – not fun
  • 08/12: Married to Gwen 50 years – seems like yesterday
  • 08/17-22: Steamboat Springs holiday
  • 08/25: I have hearing aids now
  • 09/08: Queen Elizabeth passed away – the longest reigning English monarch
  • 09/21-26: Sedona and Scottsdale holiday
  • 09/28: The doctor says I have two broken toes, an infection in my leg, and massive swelling in my foot and leg – way too much to be caused by the broken toes. Turns out the infection caused the swelling. After the antibiotics cured the infection the leg and foot returned to normal. The process took three weeks.
  • 10/14: Replaced the HP Ink Jet printer with an Epson Tank printer. The HP still worked but I was tired of spending $100 for new ink cartridges
  • 11/08: Replaced Gwen’s iPad – the old one would not hold a charge anymore and the home button worked intermittently 
  • 12/10: Bought a new backpack after all these years with the old one. This backpack is a Tom Bihn that cost way too much $$$ but it is so cool.

Now, time to forget the past and forge into 2023 with both eyes wide open. Themes for this year are fighting Gwen’s PSP and travel.

Motto for the year: “Live everyday like this is your last day and learn like you will live forever”


My 2014

December 30, 2014

The older I get the faster time goes by. 2014 blurred by at the speed of light! Is the the clock going faster or am I less able to cope with change? Or is my life busier? Regardless, 2014 did have it’s higlights. Here they are in no particular order.

  • Danube river cruise – We take a BIG vacation every other year. This year was a Danube River Cruise with extended stays in Frankfurt and Budapest. We enjoyed every second and definitely plan on taking another river cruise. Its a simply marvelous way to tour an area. For more detail: European Vacation
  • 50th high school reunion – Seems like 1964 was just yesterday. 39 of us graduated in May 1964. 27 are still with us and all but 4 were able to make it to the reunion. The venue was old Alexis High Gymn which brought back many memories. I had a wonderful time catching up on the last 50 years with a bucnh of really good people.
  • Austin born December 29 – Our 5th grandchild born December 29. A healthy boy weighing in at 8 pounds, 4 ounces. Mother and baby are doing well,  Dad is recovering. I’m sure he will grow up to be healthy, wealthy, and wise.
  • Big brothers visit – My older brother and his wife visited us this year. My youngest brother and his wife live in the area. I really enjoyed spending time with them. Made me realize how precious famiies are.
  • Remodeled house – It all started out when I mentioned I’d like to tear out the shower and replace it with a walk in shower. Before I realized what was happening we remodeled the bathroom, kitchen, pantry, patio, and replaced all the carpet with wood floors. I glad we did it but would not want to live through is again.
  • Old Crow concert – We saw the Old Crow Medicine Show at the Dallas House of Blues. I don’t go to many live music concerts but can’t imagine any being more amazing than this group.
  • Nashville trip with son’s family – We and our son’s family packed our bags and headed out on a road trip to Heber Springs Arkansas, Memphis, and Nashville this past Summer. Ate great barbecue, ate great breakfasts, attended The Grand Ole Opry, and generally had a wonderful week. For more detail: Nashville Vacation
  • Cub game on the 100th anniversary of Wrigley Field – On our way to my 50th high school reunion we watched a Cub game in their 100th year at Wrigley Field.
  • WineThirty – My oldest daughter and her husband opened WineThirty, a wine bar in Murphy Texas, this year. We really enjoyed our weekly trips there to enjoy a glass of fine red wine and even finer conversation.
  • The road to Master Gardener – I became a certified Master Gardener this year. The journey encompassed most of the year. It involved taking classes, manning the help desk, pulling weeds, spreading mulch, planting, taking measurements at the research garden, and enjoying the company of a group of really fine people.

My rules writing this post were:

  1. Write down the 1st 10 things that pop into my mind.
  2. Don’t change any of the items after the thought popped into my head.
  3. Write only one of two sentences for each item.

My 2013

January 2, 2014

Executive Summary for people that only read the 1st line of emails: I retired. We took numerous trips trying to make up for lost time. We spent a lot of time with our grandchildren.

Lessons learned:

  • There is no privacy on the Internet
  • Backup everything on your computers several times

What Happened

For everyone else, another year has come and gone. Every year seems to flash by faster than the year before.  This year  was no exception.  Here’s what went down:

  • January: The year started out with Gwen staying with Sara and Mike to help take care of our newest grandson Paxson who was born on December 19, 2102.

    Paxson's 1st birthday

    Paxson’s 1st birthday

  • January 22-25: mini-Vacation to San Francisco.
  • February 16: Gwen’s laptop died. This was a very traumatic experience for two reasons. First, I had not backed up her Outlook “pst” file and quickly discovered it contained all her important data. It’s now December and has taken most of the year to recover. Secondly, we bought a Samsung ultrabook laptop.  Its a really good computer but the OS is Windows 8.  Microsoft really made a big mistake here by putting the Windows phone interface on computers!
  • March 15-22: Rangers Spring training trip in Sunrise.  Stayed in Sedona.  One day trip to the Grand Canyon which never ceases to leave me breathless at the first site. Also, hiked around Sedona quite a bit and dined at some great and not so great restaurants. Our two favorite’s were Beckett’s Table in Phoenix and Elote in Sedona.
  • March 28: Retired after 39 years at E-Systems
  • April 29: Took a nice long bicycle ride but half way through the ride a rammed a parked pickup doing 15 mph.  My ribs took the full impact of the collision. I did not break any ribs. However, I bruised the bones in my sternum and sprained the ligaments. The end result is breathing hurt for three weeks. I could not sleep laying down for a month, read sleeping in a chair. And my ribs were sore for 4 months.  Don’t ask me how it all happened because I don’t know. I saw the pickup and thought I was clear of it but apparently not.
  • June 1-14: Baseball and visit family vacation to St. Louis, Monmouth, Chicago, and Cincinnati. The new Busch Stadium is a great place to watch baseball. It’s downtown and within walking distance of many hotels and restaurants.  The downside to Busch Stadium is the food concessions there are dark and boring. Wrigley Field is an icon and a must see for any baseball fan. The Red’s park was easily the best of the lot. The stadium is downtown with a great view of the Ohio river. The concessions are outstanding also.

    Reds ballpark

    Reds ballpark

  • July 3-5: mini-Vacation to Ft. Worth with Andy, Kara, and Averi Grace to see the Stockyards, Museum of Modern Art, and the Symphony perform at the Botanical Gardens.
  • July 11-19: Vacation in Colorado. Started out in Pagosa Springs.  Spent a few hours at the hot springs and developed a great sunburn.  Dined at a couple of good restaurants.  Then drove up the spine of Colorado to Steamboat Springs stopping at Leadville for lunch on the way. This is a very spectacular drive. I’d recommend it to anyone.  Outside of Chicago, The High Mountain Pies in Leadville has the best pizza I’ve ever eaten. This was our first time at Steamboat Springs.  We loved it and plan to go back.  More to do here than Pagosa Springs including restaurants.

    Clear blue Colorado Mountain Lake

    Clear blue Colorado Mountain Lake

  • September-November: I signed up and attended the Colin County Master Gardener classes this fall. I am now officially a Master Gardener Intern.
  • September 27 – October 3: Vacation to Great Smoky Mountains and Arkansas Ozarks with our firends Vicky and Paul to see the Fall color. Unfortunately the Fall color came after we left but we did purchase a really neat kitchen table.
  • October-December: Gwen went back to work for two months. She really enjoyed the work but neither of us liked getting up a 5:30AM.
  • December 05: the Mother of all Ice Storms slams through Dallas
  • December 28: Claudia and Chris opened WineThirty in Murphy at the end of the year.
  • On the downside some good friends passed away including Rick Trimble. He was always a joy to be around and never met a person he did not like. On the famous side we lost Nelson Mandela, Margaret Thatcher, and Peter O’Toole, and Lou Reed.  Not so famous was  Doug Engelbar who invented the computer mouse.

Bests of the year:

  • Best musical performance: Dallas Symphony Orchestra’s “Pines of Rome.”
  • Best book “The Ocean at the End of the Lane” by Neil Gaiman
  • Best song: “Beggar in the Morning” by the Barr Brothers
  • Best day: March 28 – the day I retired
  • Best movie: I only saw two at the theater but the best was “The Hobbit: Desolation of Smaug.”
  • Best Experience: Playing with the grandchildren

Goals:

  • Retire: retired March 28
  • Lose 20 pounds – lost 4.5. Not good but better than gaining weight
  • Vacations: visit at least one new destination and visit family in Midwest – Vacation to Great Smoky Mountains and visited family in June
  • Ride HHH – did not ride this year
  • Become a Master Gardener – took the class and am now a Colin County Master Gardener Intern
  • Digitize photos and slides – very little progress
  • Setup my own web site and landing page – done www.molsonno6.com

First music I remember

November 7, 2010

What are the first 3 songs that come to mind when you think of your childhood – younger than Junior High?

For me it is:
  • Peter and the Wolf – parents had it on 45s and played it for at least me a lot.  I happened to hear a snippet of it a while back and all the memories came flooding back.: East house, funny carpet on the living room floor, taking a bath on Saturday night in the portable tub in the Dining room because we did not get an inside bathroom until I was in 6th grade, the party phone on the wall with a different ring for each of the 13 subscribers, Uncle Julius, the old black 47 Plymouth.   I just listened to Peter and the Wolf this afternoon and it is as good as ever.
  • Ghost Riders in the Sky – Laying on the floor of the East house listening to it – Vaughn Monroe I think.  Don’t know why I remember this one but it popped into my head.
  • You are my Sunshine – my mother sang it all the time.  I don’t know who she was singing about? I remember her singing it while making soap our of pig lard at the East house.

What are yours?