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Monday, April 30, 2007

4.30.07

The last day of April; 4 months of 2007 are gone already. WoW!

3 miles on the mill.

We will run the BIG Peach 5K on Saturday a.m. -- through the quaint neighborhoods of Brookwood... down Peachtree... The race is sold out at 1,200 people. Should be a nice after party.

But first, there is the First 100 Camp out on Wednesday. YES, once again [this will be our 5th] we will spend the night [notice I didn't say "sleep"] in a parking lot for free food. Well, not JUST free "food", FREE CFA! $500.00+ worth of FREE CFA between the two of us. We will have lots of time to talk... lots to talk about -- decisions to make [the job offer, Marine Corp marathon, etc.] It will be fun, and the weather looks to be nice. I can't wait!

Sunday, April 29, 2007

4.29.07

Lest you think I have lost [or am loosing] my mind, based on my facebook status "Patsy is on an emotional rollercoaster ride; She thinks the ride just ended, and she is wasted!", I'm not.

I have had, in the past 2 months, just as many interesting job offers. I don't know what the Lord is trying to do here, but I am trusting Him to give me the wisdom to make the right decisions. I'm not even looking for job offers -- these have just come knocking at my door. Both offers are still on the table at this moment. One I will have to make a decision on this week and it would mean picking up and moving, a new city, a new church, a new school, etc., etc., etc. The other, I'm waiting to receive some financial figures on and it would mean my office could be at the nearest Starbucks, beach, or where ever in the world I want it to be. So, thus the emotional rollercoaster ride.

No, the emotional rollercoaster ride is really totally my fault. For one of the job offers I had a meeting yesterday for which I have been hyped all week. I had GREAT EXPECTATIONS about this offer. However, it turns out that the job is just a whole lot more than I expected or was prepared for. I was really excited going into the meeting, but just absolutely wasted last night, because now I've got to figure out is this just me baulking at what the Lord wants me to do, or is this just Him testing me, or what? I'm not sure. I will pray about it this week and make a decision by the end of the week.

Friday, April 27, 2007

4.27.07

3 miles on the mill.

Last night I went to a funeral home to visit the family of a guy I graduated from high school with. Actually, he took me out on a date on my 18th birthday -- just one date. It was a year of MANY "dates" -- that's a WHOLE other post! Anyway, he died of a massive heart attack at his job on Monday. He had 3 kids, and It was a really sad situation. It's quite scary when people your age start dying, even though I don't feel that old.

I have been to more funerals this year than any other year in my life and it's ONLY April!


I saw a lot of people there that I haven't seen since high school, and was surprised at how old many of them looked. Fortunately, I was able to remember most of their names. However, there were some that I did not recognize -- they recognized me and introduced themselves. I wondered how many more there were that I did not recognize that did not introduce themselves. One in particular I was QUITE EMBARRASSED that I did not recognize -- she was in my wedding :~O The bad thing is, I saw her just a few years ago.

The funeral is today at 11:00 a.m. I have not yet decided if I will go. I feel like I should, but really don't want to. This is when "adult decisions" kick in -- doing things you know you should even though you don't want to. Humm.... I AM an adult now.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Well, I've spent much of the afternoon working on my portfolio. Gathering stuff, re-printing some, and discovering much. Something I've been thinking about doing for about 4 years now, but I'm such a slacker... "thinking" is about as far as it's gone -- until now.

I have been pleasantly surprise at how far my sense of design has come from the early days. The early days of PageMaker and the like, pre-Photoshop. Bless you if all you have to work with is PageMaker, Adobe's feeble attempt at page layout and design software. I still have the actually software from one of the very first versions of PageMaker, consisting of about a 1/2 dozen 3.5" floppy disks. Museum worthy!

As I gleaned through several files I realized that actually some of that early design work was really quite embarrassing! I guess at the time, I thought it looked good. YIKES!

I noticed w/i the last year or so though that my style has become much more contemporary. And while this is not earth-shaking by any means, I actually like it.

I need to find some sort of unique container to "contain" the portfolio. Don't know what that will be just yet, but it will come to me in time.

It's good to get started on a project that has been looming in the background of your mind for so long. A project that will never actually be finish, just ever evolving...

4.25.07

3 miles on the mill.

Today is Secretary's Day [Administrative Professionals Day]. There, doesn't THAT sound impressive!?!

We will go out for lunch and have the afternoon off. The days of the Sun Dial are llooonnnnggggg gone -- even gone are the days of Red Lobster... I guess the budget doesn't allow for such frivolities as that any more. Today, it will be Cracker Barrel, for which I am still grateful!

However, I feel somewhat guilty going out with the "secretaries". I don't answer phones, take messages, make appointments, get the mail, or any of those other gazillion things that secretaries do. I do very limited filing and that is only for my own personal self -- AND, it's probably a GOOD THING that I do very limited filing because my filing abilities are lacking! I have about 3 different methods of filing and who knows which one I will use today.

Basically, they pay me to sit around and play with Photoshop and Adobe InDesign, and do a few other things, but I never quite feel like I "fit in" with the secretaries, of which I'm not.

But today, I will pretend to be a secretary...

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

The BIG Peach 5K

Our next race:
  • Saturday, May 5, 8 a.m.
  • Start: at the Brookhaven MARTA station
  • Finish: BIG Peach Running Co. on Peachtree
  • Rolling course through beautiful, quaint, tree-lined Brookhaven
  • Proceeds benefit The leukemia & Lymphoma Society [AKA TEAM in Training]
  • HUGE post-race party w/food, drinks, & more!
  • Awards to overall male/female & masters + 3 deep in age groups
  • Door Prizes
  • Registration fills at 1,200; Last I heard it was at 1,000!

Monday, April 23, 2007

4.23.07

Hit the snooze 3 times this a.m. :~O Actually, I got up before the 4th. I read this week that's an average [3 times on the snooze], which means that somebody out there is hitting it like 5 times, right? I didn't have time for that. 3 miles on the mill.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

HA HA HA HA



Two hikers on a trail came around the bend to find an enormous brown bear about 75 yards up the trail. The bear spies them and begins running toward them at a full gallop. One hiker drops his backpack, sits down, throws off his boots, and starts lacing up a pair of running shoes. The other hiker says: "What are you doing? You will never outrun that bear!". The first hiker replies: "I don't have to outrun the bear..."

Hacker breaks into Mac at security conference

$10,000 prize for the CanSecWest challenge winner

April 20, 2007 (IDG News Service) -- A hacker managed to break into a Mac and win a $10,000 prize as part of a contest started at the CanSecWest security conference in Vancouver.

In winning the contest, he exposed a hole in Safari, Apple Inc.’s browser. "Currently, every copy of OS X out there now is vulnerable to this," said Sean Comeau, one of the organizers of CanSecWest.

The conference organizers decided to offer the contest in part to draw attention to possible security shortcomings in Macs. "You see a lot of people running OS X saying it's so secure and frankly Microsoft is putting more work into security than Apple has," [well, duh -- that’s because IE is an insecure piece of junk!] said Dragos Ruiu, the principal organizer of security conferences including CanSecWest.

Initially, contestants were invited to try to access one of two Macs through a wireless access point while the Macs had no programs running. No attackers managed to do so, and so conference organizers allowed participants to try to get in through the browser by sending URLs via e-mail.

Dino Di Zovie, who lives in New York, sent along a URL that exposed the hole. Since the contest was only open to attendees in Vancouver, he sent it to a friend who was at the conference and forwarded it on.

The URL opened a blank page but exposed a vulnerability in input handling in Safari, Comeau said. An attacker could use the vulnerability in a number of ways, but Di Zovie used it to open a back door that gave him access to anything on the computer, Comeau said.

4.21.07

Two laps around the Rock (10 miles) and then, as an added BONUS, we climbed the mountain! WooHoo.... haven't done that in like 14 years!!! I think we'll make it a regular part of our workout -- GREAT for the calves! They were starting to cramp about 2/3 the way up. I ONLY WISH I had had my Garmin on while we climbed the mountain. I would like to have seen the elevation when I downloaded the info to my computer at home!

The weather was so BEAUTIFUL! No more of that 20 degree stuff we had to put up with while training for the marathon. Our time was 1:44:09 -- that's including a stop for fluids -- didn't bother with Fuel Belts today. Not too good on time -- just a nice easy run. We weren't kicking it like the Kenyans who FLEW past us on occasion [and the guy on roller blades!].

Much preparation was going one for the Tour de Georgia that will wrap up today's leg in the park this afternoon.

Tomorrow will be an off day [as usual] with 3 miles on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday this week.

Friday, April 20, 2007

4.20.07

3 miles on the mill this a.m. NO energy whatsoever!


When the alarm went off I was dreaming about the Tour de Georgia. I was dreaming that they were on the last leg and I was standing on the side of Cleveland Avenue watching then truck up the BIG hill. They were dying. I specifically remember one biker coming by me with all this “stuff” – like everything he owned in the world – attached to his back and to his bike. He was like a “homeless person” on a bike – he was toast! I didn’t see Lance though. I know, I know, he’s not on the Tour this year – but at least you’d think he could show up in my dreams. Anyway, I was so worn out after that dream – I think it ZAPPED all my energy! Hope I get some before tomorrow. 2 laps around the Rock! I’ll take a SPIKE pill first.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

4.18.07

3 miles on the mill. BORING!

On Saturday, we will run 2 laps around the Rock (10 miles). My first long run (if you can call that long -- I really don't) since the marathon. CAN'T WAIT!!! It should be beautiful weather!

Yesterday, Sari Beri and I went to pick strawberries at Little Billy's for the first time this season. They aren't quite ripe enough yet, but it was open and the price and quality SURE beat the grocery store strawberries.

Monday, April 16, 2007

4.16.07

3 miles on the mill this a.m.

Finally, after 3 weeks of weirdness, I am back to a "normal" (if you can call this life normal) schedule.

Flood Warnings and Wind Advisories are in effect for much of the Boston area!
The 111th Boston Marathon kicked off at 9:35 this a.m. with heavy rain, high winds, and flooding on some parts of the course to greet runners. Over 2000 were "no-shows" for the race this year, primarily due to horrific weather conditions in the region no doubt. Power was out in some parts and there were many airport delays and cancellations as well. Glad I'm not running this year! I doubt there will be any course records set today.

Masazumi Soejima of Japan has won the men's wheelchair division of the Boston Marathon in an unofficial time of one hour, 29 minutes and 15 seconds.

Wakako Tsuchida of Japan has won the women's wheelchair division of the Boston Marathon.

Women's Winner

33 year-old Lidiya Grigoryeva of Russia won the 111th Boston Marathon in a time of 2:29:18. She reached into the crowd to grab a flag moments before crossing the finish line.

Cheruiyot Repeats

Kenyan Robert Cheruiyot is the repeat winner of the Boston Marathon, crossing the finish line in 2:14:13, 7 minutes off the course record that he set here last year.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

This is what happens when people spend too much time on the Internet!

Elderly Woman Found Alive Under Garbage Pile in Home

Saturday , April 14, 2007

AP

WOODMERE, N.Y. —

An elderly woman was rescued after being found buried beneath a pile of debris, garbage and animal feces in a home, authorities said. An elderly man was found dead.

Helen Bushwick, 85, was discovered Thursday when volunteer firefighters responded to the two-story house after relatives said they couldn't reach her. Debris mixed with human and animal waste was piled high in every room, some all the way to the ceiling.

"A six-foot pile of rubbish collapsed on her and trapped her in there," Erik Kinney, a volunteer firefighter, said of Bushwick.

The man was found Friday when authorities resumed a search. His name was not released.

Bushwick was taken to a hospital where she was admitted with dehydration. Officials weren't sure how long they had been trapped, but neighbors said they last saw them about a week ago.

There was garbage — "cans, boxes, clothing, papers, whatever you can collect in every room, some spots to the ceiling, some three feet to the ceiling," Kinney said. "Feces — raccoon, possum and human" were found in buckets and in the trash.

"The stench was very strong, as you can imagine," he added.

A sign was posted on the home saying it was unfit for human occupancy, John Rottkamp, first deputy commissioner of the buildings department in the town of Hempstead, which has jurisdiction over Woodmere. The gas also had been turned off.

The house will be boarded up, and the woman's relatives will be allowed to go through the contents, authorities said.

Another Reason to STAY ON THE COUCH!

Nailgun injuries soar among weekend warriors

Fri Apr 13, 2007 10:54AM EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Take a nation of do-it-yourselfers, add a ready supply of cheap nailguns and what do you get? About 37,000 nailgun injuries a year, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Since 1991, nailgun injuries have risen about 200 percent, the CDC said in its weekly report on death and disease.

"This increase likely corresponds to an increase in availability during the 1990s of inexpensive pneumatic nail guns and air compressors (to power the nail guns) in home hardware stores; however, no sales data are available for confirmation," the CDC reported.

But when the CDC looked at who was getting injured, it became clear that the number of work-related nailgun injuries had stayed stable since 1998. It was consumer-related injuries that had soared.

"During the 5-year period 2001-2005, an average of approximately 37,000 patients with injuries related to nail-gun use were treated annually in emergency departments, with 40 percent of injuries occurring among consumers," the report read.

Emergency departments treated three times as many consumers with nail-gun injuries in 2005 as they did in 1991, the report noted.

The CDC said more needs to be done to make consumers aware of the dangers.

Friday, April 13, 2007

3-miles on the mill.

Fast and Flat are both relative.
- Train Strong

Thursday, April 12, 2007

CAKE CONFIDENTIAL

[If you're like me and grew up in the big ATL you my have fond memories of the Rich's Bakery. If so, this my interest you as it has so many this week.]

Guardian of recipe spills secrets

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Published on: 04/08/07, By JIM AUCHMUTEY

Carl Dendy has the original recipe for Rich's coconut cake, but you probably wouldn't want to use it. The photocopied recipe from the department store bakery he ran during its heyday in the '60s and '70s would make at least 10 nine-inch cakes.

I wondered if we were going to bake every one of them when Carl e-mailed me the ingredients he needed to test a domesticated version at his house in Rockdale County.

5 lbs cake flour, 2 cans Crisco, 5 pounds granulated sugar ...

"Carl," I said, arriving at his front door with the requested groceries, "are we feeding the Rockdale County road crew?"

"We may need to make it more than once," he said, allowing that he might be out of practice.

A few minutes later, Angie Mosier, the Atlanta baker whose fond memory of Rich's coconut cake led to this story, walked in with an armful of pans. The two of them went straight to work reducing the recipe to more manageable portions. Sitting at Carl's breakfast table — under a sampler that read "Give us this day our daily bread" — they puzzled out the ratios on a yellow legal pad. "We call this baker's math," Angie said.

Only then were they ready to get their hands messy.

Carl had insisted on frozen, sweetened coconut — found next to frozen fruit at the supermarket — instead of the unrefrigerated bags of grated coconut that most of us know. At Rich's, he said, they always used the freshest coconut they could find without cracking the shells themselves.

"That was the most important ingredient. I imagine it accounted for a third of the cake's weight."

As Angie mixed the batter and creamed the icing, I asked Carl why he had specified Crisco and powdered milk. I mean, those aren't exactly from the pages of Gourmet.

"You wanted Rich's coconut cake," he said. "That's what we used."

And with good reason, Angie explained. Large-scale bakeries often use shortening and powdered milk because butter and fresh milk require costly refrigeration and raise food safety risks. Besides, shortening makes a pure white frosting that's easier to spread than one made with butter.

After the cakes came out of the oven, Angie turned one out of the pan. A couple of sizable chunks broke off.

"We fix that by spackling and cementing it with frosting," she said, not missing a beat.

"Happens all the time in bakeries," Carl agreed.

"Yeah, the more mistakes you make, the more goo you get."

It was time to assemble the cake. One of the secrets, Carl said, is the way the coconut is applied.

For the frosting between the three layers, he made a bowl of simple syrup — half water, half sugar — and added coconut to it. As Angie iced the tops of the first and second layers, she made a buttercream levee around the edges and Carl spooned the coconut/syrup on top of the frosting. It looked almost as moist as a trifle.

After she finished frosting the outside of the cake, Angie and Carl liberally appliquéd the surface with the rest of the coconut, which wasn't nearly as wet.

Carl, the man who launched a million coconut cakes, cut the first slice, looking as delighted as a boy at his 12th birthday party.

He took a bite.

"Strong vanilla flavor. Nice and moist. Very sweet."

Another bite.

"You know, I think we could have used more coconut."

Rich's Bakeshop Icing

16 servings
Hands on: 10 minutes
Total time: 10 minutes

1/2 cup vegetable shortening
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon salt
1 pound confectioners' sugar
2 tablespoons powdered milk
1/2 cup water (for dissolving milk powder)

In a mixing bowl, using an electric mixer, combine the vegetable shortening, vanilla and salt and cream together until incorporated. Slowly add the confectioners' sugar until it forms a very thick consistency. Dissolve the powdered milk in the water and gradually add, just 1 or 2 tablespoons at a time, until the icing is a nice, spreadable consistency.




Rich's Bakeshop Yellow Cake

16 servings (three thin 9-inch layers or two thicker 9-inch layers)
Hands on: 30 minutes
b>Total time: 50-60 minutes

Rich's always did a three-layer cake, with two layers of coconut filling, but some home cooks don't have three pans of the same size, so two would work just fine.

Shortening and flour for pans
2 1/4 cups cake flour (if you can't find cake flour, use White Lily brand all-purpose flour)
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon baking powder
1 tablespoon powdered milk
1/2 cup water
2/3 cup liquid milk (2 percent or whole)
3/4 cup vegetable shortening
1 1/4 cups granulated sugar
3 large eggs

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Prepare cake pans by lightly greasing with shortening, then dusting with flour. In a large bowl, mix the flour, salt and baking powder. Set aside. In a small bowl or measuring cup, stir the powdered milk into the water and mix until dissolved. Combine the liquid milk with the powdered milk/water mixture and set aside. In the bowl of an electric mixer, cream together the shortening and the sugar until fluffy. Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Add about half the flour mixture, beating until just incorporated, and then half the milk mixture, again beating until just incorporated. Repeat this step, adding the remaining flour with the remaining liquid, and beat until just smooth (about 1 minute). Be sure to scrape down the sides of the bowls once or twice during the mixing. Pour the batter into the prepared cake pans and bake in preheated oven for about 20-30 minutes. The cooking time will vary depending on how many cake pans you use and how full they are. The cake is done when it springs back when lightly pressed near the center with your finger. Allow the cake to cool for a few minutes in the pan, and then turn out onto cooling racks to cool completely.




Rich's Bakeshop Coconut Cake

16 servings
Hands on: 20 minutes
Total time: 1 1/2 hours

Angie Mosier tested and rewrote the recipe for home use.

2 pounds frozen unsweetened shredded coconut
2 tablespoons water
2 tablespoons granulated sugar
2 or 3 layers Rich's Bakeshop Yellow Cake (see recipe)
1 batch Rich's Bakeshop Icing (see recipe)

In a large bowl, thaw the frozen coconut. Set aside. Take 1 1/2 cups of the coconut and place in a smaller bowl. Combine the water and sugar and pour over this smaller bowl of coconut. This should be very moist but not soupy. Place one layer of the yellow cake on a cake plate and spread with icing. Spoon the moistened coconut over that. Place the next layer on top and spread with icing, spooning the moistened coconut over it. Continue this process until all your layers are filled; however, don't put the moist filling on the very top of the last layer, as it will be iced. Next, cover the entire cake with the icing. Make sure to use a thick coating of icing on the cake to eliminate any of the cake showing through. Take handfuls of the dry, thawed coconut and press the flakes into the buttercream. You may want to put a tray underneath to catch any coconut that falls as you do this. Continue pressing dry, flaky coconut all over the cake until it is completely covered. Chill for about one hour to set (it helps the coconut to stay) and then serve.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Number of morbidly obese growing rapidly

Study finds 3 percent of Americans are 100 pounds or more overweight
Reuters 11:35 a.m. ET April 10, 2007

WASHINGTON - People who are 100 pounds or more overweight are the fastest-growing group of overweight people in the United States, researchers reported on Monday.

They found the proportion of the severely obese was 50 percent higher in 2005 than it had been in 2000 — a startling rate of growth.

“The proportion of people at the high end of the weight scale continues to increase at a brisk rate despite increased public attention on the risks of obesity and the increased use of drastic weight loss strategies such as bariatric surgery,” said Roland Sturm, an economist at Rand Corporation, a nonprofit research institute.

“The explosion in the use of bariatric (weight-loss) surgery has made no noticeable dent in the trend of morbid obesity,” Sturm added in a statement.

The researchers found that based on self-reported height and weight, which tends to underestimate the weight part, 3 percent of Americans are already severely obese — defined as having a body mass index of 40 or higher.

Body mass index is calculated by dividing weight in kilograms by the square of a person’s height in meters.

The researchers, whose report will be published later this year in the journal Public Health, found that the proportion of Americans with a BMI of 30 or more increased by 24 percent between 2000 and 2005.

The proportion of people with a BMI of 40 or more increased by 50 percent and the proportion of Americans with a BMI of 50 or more increased by 75 percent.

The number of bariatric procedures, which include stomach stapling and stomach bypass surgery, rose to an estimated 200,000 in 2006 from 13,000 in 1998.

More than 30 percent of Americans are overweight, with a BMI between 25 and 29, and another 30 percent on top of that are obese, defined as having a BMI of 30 or above.

Overweight people have higher risks of heart disease, diabetes and some cancer, and obesity makes the risks much more imminent.

[scary stuff!]

4.11.07

3 miles on the mill.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

4.10.07

Bought BIG Tom a tux today :~)

Monday, April 09, 2007

4.9.07W

WoW! I did not intent to take such an extended period of time off from running -- it just happened... between recovery from the marathon to the CFA camp out to the trip to MOA, then Easter and having the family over, WHEW! It's been like 2 week I think since I've ran. My body is surely recovered from the marathon by now! It sure felt good to get back to it this a.m. 3 miles on the mill was about all I could handle. No seriously, I felt strong and like I could run FOREVER. However, I don't have time to run forever -- I DO have a life... I will limit my running in the coming weeks to 3 days a week (Monday, Wednesday, and Friday) 3 miles a day. I'd like to squeeze in a 10 mile run on Saturday the 21st -- a couple of laps around the Rock, if that works out. Our next race will be the BIG Peach 5K on May 5 -- supposed to have a REALLY nice technical Nike shirt, GREAT goodie bag and SUPER DUPER after race party -- we'll see...

Sunday, April 08, 2007

iBlog

I have been SO BUSY creating my iBlog "group" on facebook that I haven't had time to BLOG! What a funny thing!

If you haven't got a facebook account yet, you should! It's really a neat thing, although I think I must be the oldest person on there.

iBlog
now has 6 members just w/i the past 24 hours; 5 of which are officers. It's an Internet & Technology - Cyberculture type of group and the group's description is:

"If you LOVE to Blog, if you CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT your Blog, if you THRIVE on reading other people's Blogs, if you desire to uphold the integrity of the Internet through Blogging, if you’d carry your 8 lb. laptop though the airport just so you can Blog on your vacation… Well, shall we just say THIS GROUP'S FOR YOU! It’s Therapy for BloggersBloggers Anonymous… Journaling through the real person's experiences of life. Join today and invite your friends to join also."

There is a section for resent news, photos, and a discussion board, a members sections and a wall to post things on. If you love to Blog this group is for you, and there's not another group on facebook like it that I can find.

Check it out!

Friday, April 06, 2007

Waiting in the Airport

On our way...

Fun with the Shark at Underwater World

Trying on Sunglasses


Good Eats!

Bubba Gumps -- we didn't actually eat here this time.


Kokomo Island Cafe - we ate there and it was good.


We also ate at the Rain Forest Cafe, but it's very dark inside there and the pics didn't turn out that well.

Camp Snoopy

Trying on hats at the Mall of America




4.6.07

Jet Lag is just now setting in...

We tried to catch the 2:35 flight from Minneapolis to the big ATL yesterday afternoon but couldn't get on. Then we tried the 3:59... then the 6:15... last flight out -- didn't make those either. (I think all in all we spent more $$ on airport food then anything else. Spent 2 days in airports and 2 days at the MOA -- NOT what I had planned!) Ended up going back to the hotel with NO luggage, NO make up, NO NOTHING and spending a very short night. Got up this a.m. at 3:00 to catch the 5:30 out -- got first class which was nice, but I am SO tired now and I'm trying to work and this is just not working... GOT to FOCUS, concentrate....

ZZZZZZZzzzzzzzz....

OK, so after a brief nap under my desk and a few shots of espresso I'm back to my PERKY self, somewhat... Don't believe everything you read on the Internet. BTY, any pics posted on my running partner's facebook and marked "viewer discretion advised" cannot, I repeat CANNOT, be taken seriously!

To sum up the deals of the trip (for me):
  1. 1 Coldwater Creek dress @ 70% off, regularly $99.00
  2. 1 Brighton 2006 Think Pink charm bracelet @ 50% off, regularly $50.00
  3. 1 pair of red strapey sandals -- on sale of course
  4. 1 small eclectic beaded purse, 40% off
  5. 1 Red Horse jacket @ 80% off, regularly $78.00
  6. 2 skirts (to go w/the jacket) @ 80% off, regularly $98.00 each
  7. 1 box of Lindt truffles, 50% off :0 (should have bought 2 of these!)
  8. 1 pair of BIG black sunglasses, 20% off
  9. 1 blue stone & silver necklace & earring set from Coldwater Creek @ 70% off
I would think long and hard before ever attempting another trip to the MOA over spring break! ESPECIALLY if the final four was being played in ATL and ended the night before! The news said that added 20K people to the ATL airport on Tuesday morning when we were trying to get out. I'm not sure why we had so much trouble getting back on yesterday -- Spring break or Easter travels I guess. I've NEVER been bumped so many times that I had to spend an extra night. Oh, there was that time in Bermuda, but that was really because of a hurricane...

I think we might try to make another trip to MOA this summer. After we recover from this one, both physically and financially.

Pictures are forthcoming...

ZZZZZZZzzzzzzzz....

Seeing the Minneapolis airport come alive this morning was the coolest thing!

We arrived a little before 4:00 a.m. Now you have to understand, the airport was, for lack of a better word, ASLEEP when we arrived. About the only things stirring were the Burger King and Subway restaurants (if you can call them that) and a skeleton crew needed to operate the airport over night. The airport doors open when we arrive, some people are already in line awaiting the ticket agents to come on duty. At 4:00 a.m., and not a moment earlier, the ticket agents come out from behind the doors located behind the ticket counters, computer systems boot up, including the self-serve kiosks, the TSA agents (security) take their positions, and the airport begins to come alive for the day. It's been like a BIG sleeping giant until now, and now, it begins to stir...

After processing our tickets, we head for security and are cleared w/o incident. WHEW! Now, inside the "guts" of the giant beast (the terminal) we sit, before going to our concourse, waiting for the Starbucks and a French bakery to open. As we sit waiting, people begin pouring into the terminal from planes that have landed, buses, trains, taxis, limos and the like. We wait a while longer and the Starbucks opens. We get breakfast and head for our concourse. The French bakery doesn't open until 5:00, our plane leaves at 5:30, there's no time to wait for the bakery.

On the concourse the people continue to flood in, filling the void that has been left by the night. The beast is awake now, alive to live another day...

BTW: I should just tell you this little bit of information. Sari Beri and I sat in first class on the trip home -- nice... except there was this big man sitting (in first class) in the row directly behind us and I KID YOU NOT (!) he was snoring before we ever pushed away from the gate! Now, granted it WAS 5:30 in the a.m. but GIVE IT A REST! He snored the ENTIRE 3 hour trip to the big ATL! Unbelievable! Between that, and the screaming babies, who could sleep?!? Of course I was, when they brought around the snacks -- GO FIGURE!

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

4.4.07

WHAT A DAY!!! We shopped 'til we dropped -- almost... Literally, when we left the mall at 9:30 p.m. the paramedics were wheeling a lady out on a gurney to an awaiting ambulance -- we are sure she probably shopped 'til she dropped (or, ate too much Cold Stone Creamery ice cream).

There was snow on the ground when we awoke this morning but not enough to build a snowman or anything like that. After breakfast at the hotel, devotions, reading USA Today, catching up with CNN, checking email, surfing the Internet, doing a little Ebay business, and Blogging a little, we arrived safely at the mall a little after 10:00 a.m. and began our spree...

I have to tell you this VERY FUNNY thing: The MOA has this "famous" coupon book that is like 1 1/2" think, full of all sorts of coupons for all sorts of places in the mall and even accommodations, etc., etc., etc. Anyway, it normally goes for $9.95, actually, I'll bet NOBODY ever pays that much for it. There are COUPONS for the COUPON BOOK (which I think is really, really funny in itself) all over the Internet and everywhere. So, we had a $4.95 coupon for the $9.95 coupon book. As soon as we arrived at the mall we stopped at Customer Service to get out coupon book -- and just let me tell you as a side line, WE USED THIS COUPON BOOK! and it doesn't expire until the end of the year, so we can still use it this summer (if we go back) -- Anyway, so, I handed the guy (a kind of GOOFY looking guy behind the counter -- actually, when all was said and done, he probably thought we were a bit goofy as well) the coupon for the coupon book and $5.00. He handed me a coupon book and we walked off. My girlfriends and I immediately started flipping though the book and noticed that the coupons were Xed out and VOID was written across them. Hummmm... we turn and headed back to the Customer Service counter (and the goofy guy) who we discovered reaching into the cabinet behind him to retrieve a "real" coupon book. He he he he... Evidently, the one he handed me and we took off with was just a dummy, so that we could see what coupons are in the coupon book. He he he he... Now I know what a blond feels like. He he he he...

Best bargains of the day? For me it was a dress from Coldwater Creek, regular $99.00, I got it for like $28.00 WHOA! I got some jewelry (a necklace and earrings) at a good bargain there as well. For my girlfriends, it was a $7.00 jacket at Macy's and shoes for $7.49. WoW! We were good shoppers today!

Lunch was at PB Loco and dinner at Kokomo Island Cafe. A stop at Starbucks at mid-day, followed by the Rocky Mountain Candy Co., rounded out the day (for me). OH YEAH -- there were those truffles at Lindt :~O

Most fun of the day? Trying on prom dresses, he he he he...

Funniest of the day? When the guy in Lindt asked if he could hold all my bags while I looked around, and I thought he wanted to hold the 2 truffles I had in my hand, he he he he...

Tomorrow morning, we check flights and make a decision on whether to head for the airport early or to the mall for more shopping.

:~)

At the Apple store @ MOA playing on a new, FAST Macbook Pro -- almost Heaven...

quote from Atlanta magazine, April 2007, pg 98

"I understand now that love is a verb. It's nothing that happens to you; it's got absolutely nothing to do with romance. It's the action of commitment and the values that come out of it."
- Alton Brown

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

4.3.07

Rise & shine this a.m. came early, 3:45 for some! Some of us missed 1 flight, some 2. Our friends D & R gave up and went back home :~( Hope they come tomorrow. So, here we are at the MOA. We didn't get to the mall until like 5:00 p.m. :~( should have been here at 10:00 a.m. Spent most of the day in airports. Not my idea of a vacation but better than working. I suppose. Costly, but better than work. My girlfriend's flight was uneventful but the police took 4 people off mine when we landed. They refused to wear their seat belts -- How DUMB is that?!?

Dinner was a the Rainforest Cafe. Nice to finally relax. Shopped until the mall closed at 9:30. WoW! am I ever tired!

Got a GREAT deal on a Brighton 2006 Power of Pink charm bracelet that I'd been eyeing. So happy to get it! It was snowing like a blizzard when we left the mall. Will be interesting to see what it is like in the a.m.

The hotel is nice, clean, no frills, but has high-speed wireless Internet :~) Would upload some pics from the trip so far but BIG Tom gave we the wrong cable :~( That will have to wait 'til we get back home. OK, ok, ok, it's NOT exactly "no frills", it does have the high-speed wireless as mentioned above + FREE limo to and from the airport and mall (that's the norm around here -- and it's only 2 miles to the mall), FREE breakfast, chocolate chip Otis Spunkmeyer cookie and bottled water awaiting us in our room when we checked in -- not like we needed anything else to eat!, TV with all the good channels + Nintendo if we were so inclined, coffee maker, blow dryer, etc., etc., etc. the latter being the norm in hotels these days.

Really, really tired. Will Blog more tomorrow :~O That's me Yawning...

Monday, April 02, 2007

4.2.07

Well, the late p.m. run through the city didn't happen as planned for my running partner and me -- an isolated rain storm decided to hang out right over our neck of the woods :~(

It's off to the MOA tomorrow for 3 days of Shop 'til You Drop fun with the girlfriends! We'll be up early (4:00 a.m.) to catch the earliest flight. So, I'm signing off early tonight, hopefully to get a little early shuteye. MOA HERE WE COME!

This is Why I Run

Go to YouTube and watch it: Transformer - Propel Water Commercial

I want one of these


Weimaraner pronunciation= VI -mer-ron er

Description: The Weimaraner is a sleek, moderately large, athletic dog with beautiful lines and a short, fine, smooth gray coat. All shades of gray are accepted. The head and ears are a bit lighter in color than the rest of the body. The head is long and aristocratic and the muzzle is strong. The eyes are amber, blue-gray or gray - with an intelligent expression, and the nose is gray. The ears are moderately long and pendant. The topline slopes gently downward from the withers. The forelegs should be straight with dewclaws removed. The tail is docked to 1½ inches (4cm) when the dog is two days old. The limbs are long and muscular. The Weimaraner has webbed feet for swimming.

Temperament: Happy, loving cheerful, affectionate and very rambunctious. Intelligent, but can be highly opinionated and willful, therefore this breed should have firm, experienced training from the start. Quick to learn, but resistant to repetitive training. Reserved with strangers and sometimes combative with other dogs. Socialize them well at an early age. Protective on his own territory. Very brave and loyal, it has a strong prey instinct. Do not trust with small non-canine animals. This is definitely not a herding or farm dog. The Weimaraner needs to live indoors as a member of the family. He needs attention and companionship. If relegated to a kennel life or if left alone too much, he can become very destructive and restless. He is a natural protector. Weimaraners are often kind to children, but are not recommended for very young ones because they are energetic enough to accidentally knock a child down. Because this breed is so full of energy, the first thing they need to learn is sit, then praise only when sitting. This will prevent jumping in the future, as they are strong dogs and will knock over elderly or children by accident. This breed especially should not be hit to discipline, they become wary easily. Once they have a fear of someone/something, they look to avoid and training is all but impossible. They are so eager to please, and motivated by reward (food or praise) Once a trick is learned, the dog will leap to repeat for praise. Although they are often mistaken as dumb, because they have such focus, if the trick or owners request isn't their focus at the time, it will not occur! Spend a lot of time with short leash walk, next to you. If left to run ahead they will pull like a train. A loose prong collar, making sure the chain section is in the front, and only pull forward and down, with a quick release when walking. Do not use choke or prong to train, they become hopeless very quick and all is lost from this point. This breed likes to bark. Very hardy, with a good sense of smell, and a passionate worker, the Weimaraner can be used for all kinds of hunting.

Height: Male 24-27 inches (61-69cm), Female 22-25 inches (56-63cm)

Weight: Male 55-70 pounds (25-32kg), Female 50-65 pounds (23-29kg)

Health Problems: As they are prone to bloat, it is better to feed them two or three small meals a day rather than one large meal. They may also suffer from hip dysplasia, but are in general a hardy breed of dog. Hip dysplasia has been reduced to only 8% through conscientious breeding. Prone to hypertropic osteodystrophy (too rapid growth) and tumors.

Living Conditions: Weimaraners will do okay in an apartment if it is sufficiently exercised. They are relatively inactive indoors and will do best with at least a large yard.

Exercise: These are powerful working dogs with great stamina. They need plenty of opportunities to run free and lots of regular exercise. Do not exercise them after meals.

Life Expectancy: About 10-12 years.

Grooming: The smooth, short-haired coat is easy to keep in peak condition. Brush with a firm bristle brush, and dry shampoo occasionally. Bathe in mild soap only when necessary. A rub over with a chamois will make the coat gleam. Inspect the feet and mouth for damage after work or exercise sessions. Keep the nails trimmed. This breed is an average shedder.

Origin: The breed is several centuries old. A Weimaraner appeared in a Van Dyck painting of the early 1600's. There are various theories as to its origin. Some feel it is the result of albinism that overtook some ancient German pointing dogs. Others feel it is descended from the German hound, the Braken. And still others feel it is the fruit of crossings overseen by Grand Duke Karl August of Weimar between a regular pointer and a certain yellow pointer. The Weimaraner is a pointer and an all-around personal hunting dog. He was originally used to hunt, track and bring down big game. As big game became scarce, he was adapted to smaller game and upland birds. He also has a reputation as a fine water retriever, though he may need to be taught to swim. Weimaraners have been used as rescue dogs, service dogs for the disabled, and as police dogs in England and Germany. The breed was first imported to the United States in 1929 by Howard Knight who founded the U.S. breed club. Sesame Street often plays skits with this breed dressed up in human clothes. Some of its talents include: hunting, tracking, retrieving, pointing, watchdogging, guarding, police work, search & rescue, and agility.

Group: Gun Dog, AKC Sporting

Recognition: CKC, FCI, AKC, UKC, KCGB, CKC, ANKC, NKC, NZKC, APRI, ACR

APRIL FOOLS!

IT WAS JOKE!

The whole Gmail thing yesterday -- let us print your emails and send them to you via snail mail -- WAS A JOKE! A GREAT BIG April Fools JOKE!WHAT A HOOT! Can you believe it?!?!?!

This is what they write today:

A Google approach to email.
Gmail is a new kind of webmail, built on the idea that email can be more intuitive, efficient and useful. And maybe even fun. (Psst...if you missed it, check out our April Fool's Day joke.)

I LOVE IT! How COOL is that!?! Had me going!

Lesson learned - You can't believe everything you read on the Internet.

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Gmail launches free print service

Reporter / Mumbai April 01, 2007
Gmail has announced a new print service on its website, allowing its e-mail users to receive by post, free print outs of their e-mails. Users only need to select the e-mails they wish to see on paper and the company promises to send them printed copies of the same within four working days by post.

While office based users may not be delighted, students and users who do not have access to printers at home are sure to cheer the move. The company plans to recover the cost of print and postage by targeted advertisements which will be placed on the back of the printed papers. At the moment the company is also allowing prints of photographs and attachments.

Photographs will be printed on high quality glossy photo paper. Also, users are allowed to take as many prints as they want. On one hand while this will be seen as a helpful service by its users, it will also get Gmail another step closer to its users. By dishing out this service Gmail will have concrete profiles of all users who avail of its service, helping it leverage better advertising rates.