Archive for category Family

Indianapolis

We spent the Fourth of July weekend in Indianapolis. We haven’t had the time to take a vacation this summer between summer school, baseball, swimming, mission trip to Mexico, Boy Scout camp, and getting ready for High School and Middle School. So we decided to take a long weekend, and made the reservation at the Residence Inn in downtown Indianapolis Wednesday for an arrival on Friday. While that kind of short notice is normal in my business trips, it isn’t for vacations. But we had a good time.

I was (pleasantly) surprised at the lack of traffic on a Friday evening rush hour in Indianapolis. The entire trip had an uncrowded feeling. I was also pleasantly surprised by the hotel, as it was located on the White River Canal which meant we could walk out of the hotel and enjoy a beautiful stroll along the canal while actually on our way to a lot of attractions.
View Of the White River Canal:
White River Canal


We went to the zoo on Saturday. We’re spoiled in St. Louis with a great zoo that is also free. The Indianapolis zoo cost real money to get into and was OK.Giraffe

We had fun, but I doubt we’ll be going back for a vacation anytime soon – like maybe when pigs fly:Pigs Fly

Yes, there is more if you can stand it!

Like any self respecting city (besides San Francisco) there is a river that runs through Indianapolis – the White River:bridge over the White River

And they also have a public garden, though only 3 acres. For me this was the best part of the trip, although I am alone in that assessment.Closeup of Flowerview of botanical gardenview of botanical garden


To get to the Garden you had to go through a Butterfly house, something didn’t exist when I was a kid but now seems to be everywhere.Butterfly


They had lilypads, so I had to get a picture. You’d be amazed how many hits I get of my lilypad picture in Denver.
Lily Pads


We also walked around downtown – we saw War of the Worlds at the downtown mall. In the center of the city is a memorial to Civil War and Spanish-American War veterans with a small museum underneath.Solidier's Monument


I didn’t photograph the memorials to the USS Indianapolis or the Medal of Honor recipients along the canal. I was moved by the memorials and we spent some time with our children experiencing them and discussing them.

We did have some time for fun and games as we rented a four place bike (Lance Armstrong, eat your heart out!) and pedaled around White River State Park.Bicycle built for four


After the bike ride, it was back to the canal for a paddle boat ride. We wanted to go in the evening, but after a poor experience at Bucca de Beppo we got there too late and the waiting list was too long. So we enjoyed a midday ride, after which it was time to enjoy the Monkathon on USA.paddleboat on White River Canal


I hope you enjoyed the pictures, and don’t forget a new season of Monk starts tomorrow (7/8).

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Be It Ever So Humble

I just got back from a long weekend in Indianapolis. The Fruit of the Murphy Loins are so busy this summer we couldn’t find a week to get away, so we had to go for the long weekend. It’s always fun to get away and nice to come home. The only down side was after not having comment spam for months, I came back to some pill pushing jerks leaving 34 comments.

On the way home I noticed a sign for the exit “Little Point”. There are a lot of exits that should be so labeled, but I guess Indiana has the gumption to actually do it. Not quite as good as the last exit before going west over the old Dumbarton Bridge whose sign said: “A Street Downtown”. Does it really matter? If you want to go downtown, go here. OK, it was A as in the letter, but as you drove by it wasn’t the easiest thing to figure out. Or my favorite, the Exit Without A Name in Colorado (I was ready for it the second time we passed it):

I’m willing to bet the Governor was called in to decide whether it should say “No Name” or just be left blank.

One last non-trip tidbit: The neighbors who watched our dog thought the way he goes up and down stairs was so funny, they invited another neighbor over to watch. Trooper must have been showing off, because the other neighbor promptly fell down the steps just watching him. Thankfully, she wasn’t hurt.

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All Raise You A Painting

In answer to Busy Mom’s question, no, I haven’t bid on something on e-bay, immediately regretted it, and then paid for it twice. What my daughter has done, however, was win an auction for a Chinese watercolor painting as Mother’s Day gift for our recently redecorated bedroom. So my daughter paid $3 for the painting, $17 for shipping, and now we’re paying $75 for the framing. I wish I could have only paid for it twice.

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As The Homeowner Turns

We’re moving into a new house. As part of the move, we get to sort through all that old stuff we haven’t even looked at in years and wonder if we should throw it away? I am convinced that this is what happened to the original copies of Flavius Josephus’ Antiquities of the Jews. These great historical works were not lost in battle, or destroyed by fire. No – some Roman guy said to his wife while moving from one villa to another, “Why do we keep that old copy of Josephus? We haven’t opened it in 10 years!” And so they tossed it into the paper recycling bin out by the curb. But I digress. 

We bought our present house 10 years ago when we were first married. In those early days before children, my organized wife used to print out all the interesting and funny e-mails and place them in 3-ring binders. From the year 1995 I found this old story that I thought was worth re-running. The date is December 1995. The context is that I am a new homeowner, exploring a newly purchased house and learning/fixing what the previous homeowners have done. So take a deep breath, and step back with me 10 years into: 

Chapter 5. Wherein it is told how Carl explores his attic some more, and what he finds there.

In preparation for the insulation fairies to come and blow an R50 layer of insulation up into my attic, I decided to go up there and prepare the crawl space by taking out things that didn’t belong there, installing a few boards where they would need to step across a pipe, and so on. My key objective was to fix a vent from the stove. The previous owners had arranged for a pipe to come up from a fan over the range where the fan would spew the exhaust skyward. There’s a nice-looking chimney vent coming out of the roof there. 

Unfortunately, they had neglected to connect the exhaust pipe to the roof vent, leaving instead a 2-foot gap in the attic space between the top of the pipe and the bottom of the vent! I guess they just figured that the heatons and greasons would just know where to go. Or maybe they had been reading the book of Job and knew that “Man is born to trouble as the sparks fly upward.” (Job 5:7) 

In any case, I don’t think I have 20 years of congealed bacon grease in my attic, but I wanted it fixed anyway. A bigger problem seemed to be that there was no valve to keep the cold air from outside (the attic) from creeping its frosty tendrils into my nice warm kitchen. In the mornings the stove top and kitchen floor were quite cold, and so as a temporary measure I had stuffed a washrag behind the vent grill and below the fan. But that solution wouldn’t do for long. No – this sounds like a job for – Super Homeowner! 

I put on my respirator and crawled up there, trailing a butterfly valve, a length of vent pipe, and tin snips, and a roll of duct tape. The pipe didn’t line up with the vent, so I had to re-direct the air flow in a 45-degree turn toward its destiny. The butterfly valve is forced open by rushing air, and it closes when you turn off the fan (Yay!). A few strips of duct tape (you can actually use it for ducts) made quick work of any minor leaks and made my little interior chimney as stable as the day is long! I tested it and it worked. Hah! Score one for the good guys. 

Well, as long as I’m up here, what else is amiss? On a previous foray into the Attic Of Doom I had seen something strange over against the eaves, in that narrow section where the roof slants down to meet the ceiling and everything gets wedged together. There was a board laid between the joists, and a hand mirror. Beyond that, right up against the eaves, was a lower section corresponding to the dropped ceiling in the kitchen above the sink. Hmmm . . . it looked as if somebody had wanted to peer down into the lower section. They had been unable to slide all the way into the wedge, so they had used a mirror to look downward. Hmmm again . . . the plot thickens. 

I wedged my body onto the board and held the mirror forward. It was one of those magnifying ones and I couldn’t see much. So I wedged forward some more, grunting and groaning, until my scalp was scraping against the roofing nails and my nose was brushing the joists. Unh, ugh, awh! I peered downward . . . 

. . . and saw nothing of interest. Just some drywall covered with insulation fuzz. But wait! What is that running next to my ear? It looks like a rubber hose. Yes, it’s an old garden hose running farther down into the wall between the studs. What on earth is that doing there? 

Well, I don’t want no unexplained hoses in our house! Somehow I pulled myself back from the abyss and freed my arms enough to pull on the hose. Gingerly I pulled it up out of the wall, taking care lest a spray of water should suddenly come gushing forth from somewhere. Easy, easy now. 

There was something brown stuck near the end, looking like a hardened bunch of rubber or that foam they use to fill holes. In the dim light of the flashlight I couldn’t really tell. I pulled up the entire hose and nothing horrible happened. Oh well, let’s get out here and back into the realm of the living. 

(This next part gets kind of gross, so if you’re squeamish you might want to check out the Boulder Cam with Netscape instead or something.) 

Back in the garage I looked at the hose and the brown thing. At first I thought it was some Alien child’s toy, like the one that almost ate Sigourney Weaver. It had that weird skull and a tail and some claws. But wait! This . . . is . . . a . . . very dry, very mummified, and very very dead animal! Gross!!!

The dead body had absolutely no hair, but was all dry and stiff and wrapped around the hose in a death-grip.  Yuck! I finally concluded that it was a squirrel. It was too big to be a rat, and the shape of the skull and length of the tail seemed to suggest a squirrel. I still haven’t figured out how it lost all its hair. 

I put the mummified body into the garbage, to join three dumb mice that I had trapped earlier that week in the Great Landfill In The Sky. So here’s what must have happened: The squirrel got into the attic through the vents and somehow got trapped in the wall next to the dishwasher. The homeowners heard it scratching around and went up into the attic to try to fish it out. They couldn’t, but they left a hose there in hopes that the squirrel could climb out of its own accord. 

The poor squirrel never did make it out alive. It either starved there or died of thirst, but clutched onto the hose with its last strength in hopes of someday, someday, making it back to the light. The original homeowners forgot about the whole episode. But many years later, I came along, pulled out the remains of the squirrel, and gave it a decent burial. Whimper, sniff, sniff . . . 

The attic vents now have screens on them. I also forwarded some postal mail to the previous homeowners and wrote a note on it explaining what finally happened to the squirrel that got stuck up in the attic, so at last they will know. 

Whew! 

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Carnelian Down, Aquamarine to Go

This saturday was The Murphy Family 17th Anniversary, so we celebrated in style at Bristols. We had planned to go see a movie afterwards, but there wasn’t much out we both wanted to see. Yes, I’d like to see Kingdom of Heaven, but my wife doesn’t go for sword epics. I’d like to see Hitchiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, but my wife doesn’t go for screwball British comedies set in outer space. She had already seen The Interpreter with my daughter, so I nixed that one. So we settled on Fever Pitch, despite my reservations that Jimmy Fallon could ever be in a movie that was worth seeing. 

But after such a fine meal, we decided to skip spending 17 bucks to see a movie we weren’t really interested in and rent one we did want to see instead. So we picked out Phantom of the Opera as we both enjoy musicals. I have to say that it makes a better musical than a movie (as soon as I saw Minnie Driver, I knew it wasn’t going to be as good as I hoped), but I still enjoyed it. The thing about musicals is that they rely on great music and singing, and the characters and plot are just incidental. With a movie version, the characters and plot can be explored in greater depth, but so what? A movie version of Chicago makes sense because it’s really a dansical, and so while again the plot and characterization is incidental at best, you can see the dance moves so much better at the movies than on the stage. And Moulin Rouge, which either you loved or hated (I’m in the love camp), was a creature all it’s own.

Happy Mother’s Day

To all you mothers out there, happy mother’s day. You’ve made us all possible. Thanks.

In honor of the day, here’s a portrait of a mother with children we hope you really like:mother and children

Hovercraft Hubbub

Since we were out of town last weekend, friends picked up my son’s Science Fair project — it made it to the Greater St. Louis Science Fair as both Fruit of the Murphy Loins’ usually do. But this time there was something different – he was picked to be part of Discovery Channel Young Scientist Challange which I have to admit I’d never heard of before. The paperwork says there are 3,000-4,000 projects picked to enter each year, and that the idea is to extend to younger children the fun and excitement of Intel high school science fair. Near as I can tell, there were 47 projects picked from the GSLSF this year. So we’re pretty happy.

We built a hovercraft (thus the title, Hovercraft Hubub – you can’t go wrong with alliteration) and tested his hypothesis that it could carry two children (to wit, the Fruit of the Murphy Loins) in style and comfort. It sounds impressive, but it’s a 4’x4′ sheet of plywood, a shower curtain, a leaf blower, a coffee can lid, and assorted fasteners made from plans we found on the internet. It only “flew” inside our garage about 1.5″ off the ground and didn’t travel more than a couple of feet – although I spun it as much as the fruit allowed. I don’t think we’ll be winning the paid trip to Washington D.C., but it was a fun project to do and hopefully will encourage both the Fruit in their appreciation of the technical side of life. All the kids knew about it from the school science fair. When parents find out how easy it is to make and how well it did, I think there will be more hovercraft built at his school next year.

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When An Old Cricketer Leaves The Crease

I sometimes think the fruit of my loins are growing up in a different world than I did. Oh, it’s still good ol’ planet Earth, Terra to you SF types, and yet it’s not. And of course, I don’t think I grew up in the same world than my progenitors did, either. For instance, space flight was the realm of Jules Verne for my father; for me it was a prime time TV event — the two things I watched on TV at school were the Apollo launches and day games of the World Series that the Cardinals were playing in. Now not only is the space program not big news, they don’t even play day games in the World Series. 

And that’s nothing compared to all the other changes. Radio was the medium of mass communication for my parents; for me it was TV, and now it’s the internet. There were no electronic gadgets for my parents growing up (the refridgerator is not a gadget, it’s an appliance); I had the TV and the Hi-Fi; my children have so many I can’t keep up. There are more ways to be bored than ever before.

Childhood itself has changed, though. At least I and my parents were allowed, nay encouraged, unsupervised play. In the summer my brother and I would set forth after breakfast, return home just long enough to have lunch, return home again when my father whistled to inform us that he was ready to eat dinner, and then venture forth again until long after sundown (unless there was something good on TV, but with 5 channels to choose from, that wasn’t too often). Who let’s their children play outside after dark anymore? How many children play unsupervised or without that modern invention, a play date?

Every sport my fruit play envolves an actual team with a coach, a league, and uniforms. I never played organized sports outside of school. We played in the backyard. We never had an umpire or referee — we just argued and had the ocasional do over. At Webelos camp, when my son and his friends were playing baseball at the camp site one would call umpire. Call Umpire! I about fell out of my chair the first time that happened. And they still had about the same amount of arguing and number of do overs as we did.

I don’t remember a lot of rushing around and business as a child, except at certain times like Christmas, or my parents stressing out over a general lack of time. Not too long ago my son asked when we had our next free Saturday, and I had to tell him it was at least 6 weeks away. Hope you make it, I’m not sure I will. We have tons more physical stuff but a lot less time. People get stressed because they can’t get around to doing everything they feel they need to do, let alone just what they want to do.

And safety. Boy, are we safety nuts now. When I tell my kids when I was their age, we didn’t have seat belts, or bike helmets, and that we roamed for miles without a parent around, or could be gone for home for hours without the police being called, they look at me like I’m from another planet. Yep, we were expected to have the sense of a dog who knows how to get back to his food and bed without outside help. Kids didn’t require constant supervision then, now they have to monitored in case something, anything happens.

One time I took my daughter and some friends to see a movie, and one of the parents asked me to see the movie with them because she was worried that otherwise they might be abducted. When I was a kid, we weren’t constantly barraged with every kidnapping, abduction, school bus crash, or incident involving a kid that happened anywhere in the good old US of A. We aren’t better informed now, we’re just poorly informed on an enormous scale.

We didn’t have extreme sports because we set up ramps for bikes or sleds without a second thought. I played iceless hockey just about every recess at school and was covered with bruises accordingly — my brother was high sticked in the eye but when it healed he kept on playing.

We didn’t worry about pesticides either on our food or in our homes, we worried about bugs in our food or in our homes. We didn’t watch what we ate but we were somehow thinner. And that’s the way it was.

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A Look Back

I had a good Christmas. Since I realistically lack for nothing but time (and I’m sure if I had my priorities right I wouldn’t even lack for that) I was happy to get a few things I wanted for Christmas, but more importantly to give a few things other people wanted. OK, I suppose if to love and be loved is a need, then I got to exchange something I and others needed.

My 2004 was a year like most of my others. The FunMurphys had a great time in Colorado this summer (you might get to see all the photos, you might not) switched jobs for the Very Large Corporation of America; the Fruit of the Murphy Loins are a year older and thus closer to the dreaded teenage years (OK, my daughter is already there, but just at the start), and I didn’t wake up to find what little I had taken away from me the day after Christmas. I suppose that sums up my look back at 2004.

What Does the Moon Look Like Above the Overcast Sky?

I was faced with a variant of the “if a tree falls in the forest and there is no one there to hear it (or blog it)” puzzle tonight when my younger son came inside very upset because he had to draw a picture of the moon but it was too overcast to see it. To draw a picture of the moon you have to see it (those of you with small children know what I am talking about as Dave Barry would advise), fortunately some googling turned up the Virtual Reality Moon Phase Pictures (courtesy of the US Naval Observatory).