Oceanside/San Diego Trip

March 31, 2012

Balcony Sunset

Friday March 2: We flew to LAX with Mike and Sara today. Then we drove to Oceanside. We are staying at the Wyndham on the beach and pier for that manner.  The traffic at 3PM was very heavy most of the way but I have seen worse here. The view from our 6th floor condo is terrific. We look straight out onto the beach.  After settling in and watching the sunset over the water’s horizon we walked up to the local brew pub and had a before dinner drink. Next we strolled down to the Flying Pig Restaurant which is kind of out of the way and appears to be frequented by only locals who know each other.  We had a terribly long wait before eating but the wait was worth it.  Everyone’s meal was delicious. I had pork chops, Mike had flank steak, and Gwen and Sara had chicken and dumplings.

Saturday March 3:  For breakfast we dined at  Beach Break  in Oceanside.  It was well worth the Saturday morning wait and they have coffee for caffine lovers while you wait.  Then we drove to San Diego and toured the USS Midway, a large retired aircraft carrier docked in the bay. Along with touring the ship itself the Midway has a large number or WWII and later aircraft.  I could have spent the day there but hunger overcame all of us and we drove to Coronado  Island where we ate at the Brigatine .  Next we toured the Del El Coronado hotel.  Then we drove back to the Wyndham Oceanside and chilled.  For Saturday night dinner we had Thai food at a hole in the wall in downtown Oceanside.  It was really good.  Wish I could remember the name of the place!

Sunday March 4: we hung out at the hotel in the morning so I walked to a local coffee shop and had a large cup of Joe.  Later, we drove to Ocean Beach and ate lunch at Hodads which has the best burgers in the World.  Then we drove to La Jolla to view the seals.  Walking back to the car we toured an open house that the owner was eying to unload for $1.6 Million.  The house is a al steal based on the location and the quality of the house.  Then back to the hotel to chill for a couple of hours. Our evening out  was at the San Diego gas latern district.  We had cocktails at the Hotel Indigo rooftop bar and then had dinner at La Pueta.  Then back to the hotel to watch Sport Center.

Hodad's - the best burger in the Cosmos

Monday March 5: We saw Mike and Sara off this morning and head back to the Beach Break Diner for breakfast. We ate healthy this morning and the food was just as good as the other day. Next we drove to the Cabrillo National Monument at Point Loma.  Cabrillo was the first Anglo dude to step foot on California. He was Portugese and he did the deed in the 1500s.  The Point Loma light house is also there.  After the monument we discovered the Harbor Point Diner not far from the monument.  The burgers there were close to as good as Hodad’s.  Of course when you are in San Diego you must go to the Zoo.  If you go be prepared to walk a lot.  Much of the zoo is laid out in trails.  We did get to see the pandas but all they did was sleep which is what you would expect from Pandas.

We ate dinner at Piatti’s in La Jolla.  Italian and very good.

Goodbye bird friend on the pier

Tuesday March 6:  Drove back to LAX and flew home.  Took all day because flight was delayed.  Arrived home at 8:30PM.

Another cool plane on the hanger deck

Got'a be Movie Stars, but who?

The Coronado Hotel

Our Condo from Oceanside Pier

My friend the pelican sittin on the dock of the bay (er' beach)

The movie stars again on the Hotel Indigo rooftop bar


Road Trip Vacation: Dallas to Phoenix and Back Again

February 4, 2012

Saguaro cactus

Monday January 2: We started our vacation by driving to Las Cruces NM. The trip took 12 hours and was 711 miles. The Sun was shining all day. The temperature rose to 60 degrees by the late afternoon. So it was a good trip. We ate dinner a local New Mexican style 70 year old restaurant in a 200 year old building called “La Posta.”  Tonight we are chilling out in the hotel.

Las Cruces Restaurant - our 1st night meal

Tuesday January 3: The next morning we drove from Las Cruces to Phoenix.  Today was a short day on the road – only 7 hours and 388 miles.  We stopped for lunch at the Village Bake House in Tucson. We both ordered sandwiches which turned out to be really tasty. Upon arrival we checked into the hotel we are camping in during our staty – the Hyatt House North Phoenix.  For dinner we tried out Beckett’s Table. The style is American Comfort food. Gwen had roast chicken and I had green chile pork stew.  Voted one of the 5 best restaurants in Phoenix and I believe. From my limited experience if I could only eat one meal in Phoenix it would be at Beckett’s.

the sign of the Turquoise Arches - only in Sedona

Wednesday January 4: We qdrove to Sedona  Wednesday. Ate lunch at Gwen’s favorite restaurant there – Oxaca – Mexican if you can’t guess, and started to hike the Soilder’s Pass trail. However, my knee started aching and since I am not supposed to be exercising anyway until the 18th we turned around.  I wanted to get a photo of the McDonalds there with the turquoise arches so we stopped there for a photo shoot. Next we drove to the top of airport Mesa for the best panoramic view Sedona. Finally, we drove by the local Wyndham. It was pretty impressive. We will have to stay there sometime.

Sedona from Airport Mesa

Can't raise corn in Sedona

Back in Phoenix we decided to go to a movie – War Horse. We grabbed a quick dinner at Claim Jumpers before the movie – okay. War Horse was a very good movie.  Glad I saw it.

Heard Museum

Thursday January 5: We started out the day at the Heard Museum.  It’s focus is the Southwest Indians.  The museum was interesting if you like history and especially Indian history.  I do so I enjoyed the museum.  Others may find it really boring. After examining the menu and noticing people we coming in just to eat at the museum cafe, we decided to eat lunch there.  The cafe stayed with the Southwest motif.  I had the posole which was delicious.  I would eat there again. We spent the afternoon at the Desert Botanical Garden. I never dreamed there were that many varieties of cactus. I enjoyed it and would recommend it except in the Summer.  The best time of year is probably mid-February through March which is when most plants are blooming.

Dinner was Italian at Aielo’s. The owner is from Brooklyn and could not stand NYC anymore so he migrated to Phoenix a few years back.  The food and atmosphere were good. I had the seafood linguine. It was homemade and delicious. I would eat there again but don’t order the calamari.  It was tough and chewy.

Great color on this barrel cactus

Many different types of cacti growing together

Outside of Phoenix

Friday January 6: We started home Friday. This was our short driving day – only 7 hours.  We drove from Phoenix to Las Cruces stopping in Tucson for lunch.  We ate lunch at an eclectic place called “Feast“.  It was really good food and I would definitely eat there again.  The food was quite varied.  For example, I ate the lamb meatball sandwich which came with a tossed green salad. We stayed at the Las Cruces Hilton Garden Inn again which I recommend if you are ever staying in Las Cruces.  Friday night we ate at a Southwestern place called “Peppers” whose sister restaurant is a steak house called “Double Eagle” which also received high ratings.  It is the best food I have had in Las Cruces. Of course I have only eaten at two restaurants, here and “La Posta” which was also good.

Saturday January 7:  We drove from Las Cruces to Dallas today.  The trip was 11.5 hours including a lunch stop at Midland.  Midland is really the only place to stop along the way unless you like McDonald’s and Whataburger.  Sara met us at the car rental at DFW with my car and between the 3 of us we promptly lost the car key.  We found it after a half hour of taking the car and luggage apart.

Wait, the fun is not over yet! To top off our road trip vacation we dined at “Vera Cruz” in Oak Cliff with Sara and Mike and went to the Mavericks game before finally arriving home at midnight.



My 2011

January 27, 2012

Better late than never I decided to publish my 2011 highlights and low low lights.  There weren’t many lows and none worth publishing.

  • Gwen beat breast cancer starting in April.  In her words it was a bump in the road.
  • Mavericks beat the Heat in 6 games in June to become the CHAMPIONS of the NBA.
  • We all survived the hottest Summer and the driest year on record in Dallas.
  • Installed GRM 683 at 3 locations which was a major achievement at work.
  • Attended my first ever Opera – Rigelleto – I was not impressed.
  • We bought a used 2007 MDX and gave away my 11 year old Xterra with 226K miles and a bad transmission.
  • Vacations:
    • Las Vegas – February
    • San Antonio – March
    • Marble Falls road trip with Mike Allen in April
    • Pagosa Springs in June
    • Seattle to visit Mike’s parents and then Victoria Canada in September
  • Tech
    • I started using Tumblr and Instragram on my way to social networking nirvana
    • Gwen became the owner of an iPad and I decided it is the greatest invention since sliced bread.
    • Steve Jobs passed away on October 5.
    • Installed a sling box and can now watch home TV from anywhere I get a wifi signal
  • 2011 goals
    • I lost 2 pounds.  I wanted to lose 20 but at least I did not gain any weight.
    • I blew away my goal of reading 12 books this year – did 24.
    • I had a goal to become a PHP expert but I blew that goal.
    • I achieved my goal of becoming VM knowledgeable.
    • We did make-over the hobby room at least in the sense we put up a lot of selves and free standing units to hold Gwen’s hobby material.

Marv’s 2012 goals

January 1, 2012

This year I am publishing my 2012 goals for the World to see not that anyone reads my blog.  I am doing this because publishing goals is supposed to be a great method to ensure you actually try to meet your goals.

I tried to keep the number down to 7 which is supposedly all one person can keep track.  However, I ended up with 11, but I could not choose 3 to throw away.  Since the last two are more like resolutions than goals feel I don’t feel bad about signing up for 11.  I will visit them from time to time with a blog post and next Christmas season will post a year end – how did I do.

2012 goals in no particular order:

  1. Get completely out of debt – pay off the house and the Acura TSX.
  2. Lose weight – weighed 228.5 on January 1. Goal is to weigh less than 215.
  3. Go back to school – never quit learning. Register at CCCC and take a class.
  4. Volunteer – Sign up for and perform some form of community service.
  5. Post to my blog at least once a month.
  6. Travel – take at least 3 vacations and and go somewhere.
  7. Learn PHP and do a project.
  8. Makeover the garage.
  9. Participate in 3 bicycle rallies including the HHH.
  10. Cut the stress – work fewer hours, get more sleep, exercise. This one is pretty vague.
  11. Spend more time with family and friends. This one is also pretty vague and may be hard to quantify.

January 8 Update: Added do 3 bicycle rallies and exercise in the gym 3 times a week.  Adding is okay

January 27 Update: Removed exercise 3 times a week in the gym.  This is really a sub-goal of 2 and 10.


Aggie/Longhorn Final Game?

November 26, 2011

Last night might have been the final game in the long storied history of Texas A&M/Texas football.  This was the 118th meeting of the two schools. The first meeting was in 1894.  Texas called the game off in 1911 for a couple of years because the Aggie players were too mean!!  A&M is leaving the Big 12 after this year for the SEC.  So another tradition bites the dust.  “They” say betrayed feelings over the Longhorn TV Network deal caused the rift.  We may never know the whole story but we do know A&M will be in the SEC next year and there will be no Turkey Day Aggie/Longhorn game!

For a re-cap of what the game meant: The only game in town.  USA today has a good summary of the game itself: USA today

We are ready to BTHOTU

Waiting for the Fighting Texas Aggie Marching Band

The Tubas come marching by in a blur!

Into Kyle Field we go - home of the 12th man

As usual the stadium if full, loud, and rowdy

Half Time: The Longhorn Band says thanks for the memories

Half Time: Fighting Texas Aggie Band in the famous block T A&M formation

Here is the token football photo since this was a football game.


Grandparents Sports Day

November 24, 2011

What do we do when the parents are out of town and we have the grandchildren?  Why, we spend the day at sporting events! Well not quite all day, just football, soccer, and hockey.

I don’t have any football photos because the darn game was so early it was half time before I realized we were up watching a football game. But believe me the game was worth the effort.  Turned out to be the last game of the year.  It was a playoff game and we lost in overtime.  Of course we had two touchdowns called back because the referee was blind, deaf, and dumb.  But, he could play a mean pinball – his name was Tommy.

 

Now onto hockey.

No Ball shall pass me ever!

Its a bad hair day

Hers we all go up the field just one more time - Soccer is hard

Don't thread on Me

We lost the soccer game but not for the lack of trying.  We were really proud grandparents!

And now for a slight change of pace, a little ice hockey

Cale scores!!! gooooaaalll!

The Streak

Playing defense is easy sometimes!

We did win the hockey game big time!  Now home to rest for a few minutes before we go to bed.


Seattle/Victoria B.C. vacation

October 21, 2011

Parliament House at Dark

September 1: We 1st class to Seattle. For a flight that long 1st class is the only way to go.  Sara and Mike flew with us.  Mike’s dad, Don, picked us up at the airport and drove us to their house where we would be spending the 1st  few days of the trip.  The Nuestat’s live on Lake Shammamish. The view from their deck is beautiful.

View from Don and Karen’s deck on Lake Sammamish

I never tired of sitting on that deck and just watching the scenery and thinking.

Friday morning we rose early and  went for a long walk in the woods. You could run all day here. The temperature was 52 degrees and the trail in the woods was almost like a sponge. If I lived here I would not have foot problems.

Later on we jumped in the car with Mike’s nieces and drove to Pike’s market in downtown Seattle. We arrived about 9AM which is the time of day to be there. The crowds were small and you could buy your produce, fish, and flowers and get out before the crowds. We came back around 11AM after the Duck ride and the crowd was huge. We could hardly walk at all. You just let the crowd push you along. We did do the duck tour. It was okay once but I don’t think I will go again.

Downtown Seattle from the Duck

Mike selecting some tiny donuts at the Pike’s Market donuts shop.

We ate lunch at the Pike Place Chowder House which was quite cheap. It was one of those typical walk up and order, get your food, and then go find a place to eat places that are in markets like this.

If I ever go to Seattle again Pike’s Market is a must place visit.

Unwilling participants at the Pike’s Market Fish Market

The World famous gum wall

In the afternoon we took a boat ride around the lake with a round of drinks. A great way to spend the afternoon.

Sara cooked a feat meal for dinner and we played a friendly few games of pool before retiring for the evening.

Saturday: Another great day, we had brunch at a place called Purple after the normal early morning jogs and  walks. Then we visited a couple of vineyards and the Red Hook Brewery.  I now know ESB stands for Extra Special Bitter and I believe it.  Saturday night we ate Sushi at a joint in downtown Bellevue.

Sunday: morning trip to Shoquamie falls which is higher than Niagra Falls. We ate brunch at the Inn there which was very good. I had the muesli which was delicious but it should be for $15.00. Sunday afternoon we just hung out at the lake house and had a another great meal cooked by Sara – hamburgers, corn on the Cobb and some strange corn/pepper/bean salad. I am having a problem with my sinus here, but probably has more to do with not working and finally relaxing than the conditions here.

Started Monday with and early morning run with Sara through the woods. With the scenery, the cool weather, and the soft forest floor I feel like I could jog all day.

Mike made breakfast which was a baking sheet covered with dough, eggs, sausage, cheese, and spices. It was very good.

Their friends from New Zealand spent the day with us. We took a long boat ride. The kids went tubing which looked like a lot of fun for young people such as them. After we finished I jumped in. The water was cold but okay after the initial shock.

We had an early dinner at the Crab Shack  in Bellveue and then had desert at a place called Hector’s in Richmond near the University.

Tuesday: We bid Don and Karen a fond farewell. The rest of the troop were still sleeping  at 6AM.  Don drove us down to the Seattle waterfront where we caught the Victoria Clipper to Victoria B.C. The trip takes around 2.5 hours and is very comfortable.  It is more like riding on a train than a boat or an airplane.  The seating is spacious and the rise is like riding on glass.

The Victoria Clipper ready to roll

After going through customs which was painless we walked to the hotel (Abigail’s) and checked in. The room is great! Next, we were hungry so we walked to a local joint called the Blue Fox but they had a 45 minute wait so we decided to

Abigal’s Hotel

walk down to the harbor. We found a very good Irish pub (The Irish Times Pub) on Government street. It was tastey. We spent the rest of the afternoon walking around the harbor area and downtown with a well deserved break at Starbucks

Victoria Harbor

For dinner we ate at Il Terazzo. It is tucked in an alley near the Johnson Street bridge. I had a seafood marinna dish which one of the best I have ever had. The sauce and pasta were fairly standard but the seafood was fantastic. For example, the mussels were the largest I have ever eaten.

We started Wednesday morning off with a great breakfast at Abigal’s which is included in the price of the room.

Mammoth at the Museum

Then we visited the Royal BC museum which was a history of BC – the land, the native peoples as they call them, and the whites. The focus was narrow enough to make a story that kept me interested and turned out to be one of the most enjoyable museum experiences I have had. After the museum we ate lunch at a little deli at the foot of Government Street (Sam’s Deli). I had the Montreal Smoked Meat sandwich and a real Greek salad wihtout any lettuce and plenty of cucumbers. Next we went on the Butchard Gardens tour. It was okay and better than the Arboretum for sure but not worth a special trip to Victoria.

Wednesday night we dined at Aura, a restaurant with an Asian flare.  It was also scrumptious and I would recommend it also.

Leaving Victoria Harbor on the Victoria Clipper

We had another great breakfast Thursday morning at Abigal’s and then rode the Victoria Clipper back to Seattle. This time we sat up top and I spent a great part of the trip outside watching the sea. Very relaxing. Once in Seattle we walked 1.5 miles to the Arctic Club Hotel and checked in. We have a very special room on the 10th floor (top floor). One downer is it used to be a smoking room or someone has smoked in it. After relaxing for awhile we took a long walk down to Pike’s Market and Pioneer Square. We had dinner at a tiny Italian place at Pioneer Square called Cafe Bengodi. It was very tasty and I would recommend it to anyone.

Cafe Bengodi ain’t much to look at

Cafe Bengodi spacious seating arrangements

Thursday set a all time high temperature for September 8 in Seattle – 86 degrees.  Why do I live in Texas?

Friday: We had a great breakfast at the Arctic Club Restaurant and then found out our plane was delayed 2 hours so we took our time going to the airport.  We rode the light rail.  The entrance was 1/2 block from the hotel and we paid $3.75 per person to ride so the transportation was dirt cheap.  The Seattle airport has free WiFi.  Why don’t all airports?  It really makes the wait much more pleasant.

The flight home was uneventful.  First class sure is nice even with the stewardesses we had on this trip. There seem to be two types.  The type we had on this trip did as little as possible but were pleasant enough.  The type we had going to Seattle bent over backwards to make the trip enjoyable.

Back home again on September 9 – a long long vacation for us but it seemed very short.

Victoria Harbor — A parting shot


Sedwick School School Photo 1954

September 21, 2011

This is a photo of the entire school and teaching staff at my primary school  during my 3rd grade.  The school was Sedwick and was at the corner of US 67 and Burgess road in Mercer County, Illinois.

Sedwick School 1954

 

I am the 3rd from the front in the middle row.   My, how much simpler the World was then.  In 3rd grade we still had no inside bathroom and used an outhouse, no TV, a “party line” phone where everyone had a different ring, and we all took a bath every Saturday night from the same portable copper bathtub we hauled into the dining room.  The youngest always had to take the last bath and by then the water was pretty dirty and not too hot.  And Gwen wonders why I do not like to take a bath.


Leaves on a Purple Wall

September 17, 2011

I captured this leaf at the Red Hook Brewery in Seattle.  I think the colors are pretty cool.

Put on your shades Dude


Climate change – myth or reality

September 16, 2011

The high temperature Tuesday this week in McKinney was 107 which was a record September 13. We also reached 100 degrees 70 days so far this Summer which is another record. The old record was 69 in 1980. Luckily, we don’t live in Wichita Falls just a couple of hours Northwest of us.  They have reach at least 100 degrees 100 days to-date this year.

Furthermore, Texas had the hottest June, July, August of any state ever since they started keeping records.

Oh, how could I forget, Texas had the driest Summer on record this year also.

Don’t let the smoke get in your eyes, but Texas is burning.  Wild fires are everywhere fueled by the dry, hot weather.

From down here in Texas it appears  climate change is a reality! The icecaps are melting, New England is flooding,  and Texas is burning.