Sunday, December 4, 2011

Cora is THREE!

In an effort to catch up again I will make it mostly pictures and little writing. After all, the kids are the stars.

This was Cora's third birthday we celebrated in Edina, MN. in 2010.

Hazel was still crawling and had straight hair.
Let's do presents first!

Dad lent a hand with unwrapping. As did Mom and anyone nearby.

Cora was beaming. She was so happy to be '3'!
Hazel dances to the music.

Happy Cake and Ice Cream! Hooray!

Cora is ready to party.

The girls have changed so much in this past year.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

P-A-R-T-E-E

We drove to Minneapolis for Cora's third birthday. Yes, we are getting loaded up with birthdays at this time. Piper on 11/03, Cora on 11/09, Kyle on 11/20, Hazel on 12/05 and mine on 12/07. It's going to get tough to make to all of those events.

Grandma and Grandpa are sitting the girls while Mom and Dad have a "date night". It is a fun time for everyone!

Grandma gets in some tickle time.

Cora helps Grandma in the kitchen. Grandma is getting the Italian beef ready for dinner.

The three girls mug it up for the camera.

And here is the action! Grandpa gets to enjoy it all from behind the camera.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

New Arrival: Piper Marie Lambert

I suppose I should preface this post with a date. This did not just happen in May 2011! Piper arrived November 3, 2010. I have had a mental block and have fallen woefully behind in my posts. So far behind, in fact, that it has become overwhelming when I approach the blog. But I am resolved to continue. Not only to continue; but to catch up. These next postings may not be the verbose versions of the past.

Kyle and Sarah added another daughter to their family and to our family's grandchildren. We now have six total. Each has been a miracle gift. They are all unique, special, etc. Words fail to fully express our feelings.

Newborns always seem so small and fragile regardless how big they are.

Piper has a good grip and a hidden full head of hair.

 Grandma provides some special loving for Big Sister Logan. Logan was really taking it well in stride.

And with a Little Sister this precious, why would Logan do other wise.

Grandma gets her share of quality time with our most recent arrival.

Logan is right at Mom's side. She is so sweet to her little sister. I'm sure she will be a great sister for Piper.

Last and certainly NOT least is Dad. Kyle and Sarah are a pair of great parents. Don't take my word for it; ask Logan.

The twice happy daddy and his newest bundle of joy.

The most hair of any of the six. What a doll!

This is the last time I have seen Piper keep a pacifier in by herself.

Friday, February 11, 2011

Trick Or Treat!

WOW! It is finally HALLOWEEN!
Well yes! It is way past; but, for the purpose of our blog it is "finally here".

 We were able to pull together the pieces of a new vignette. Smoking cauldron, witch and broom, even a little "fire". It was put together just for the one day.
  
It looked different by night. This wasn't the picture I thought it was. This one is real blurry.
A little video conveys a much better realization of the concepts.


And again at night. It was all I had hoped it would be. Little kids were impressed. Often not watching where they were walking. One must keep an eye on those witches.




We also celebrated Ashley's birthday finally. They were too busy to get together before now. The important thing is that we celebrated! Right?


Logan enjoyed trick or treat with Ashley and Alex.
Cora "The Butterfly" and Hazel "The Lady Bug" were not here. We missed them, but understand that they had a good time in Edina, Minnesota.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Oklahoma, OK?

October 21, 2010


Sally wanted to stop at the Oklahoma City National Memorial on our way.

We stopped at a rest stop Visitors' Center as soon as we crossed into Oklahoma from Texas. The lady was very helpful. She suggested that we stop at Bass Pro shop just off highway 35 and take the trolley from there to the museum and memorial. Parking is free there and it is a short ride.

The information was right on the money. It was easy off and the Bass Pro is right there at the exit. Parking was free and the trolley stops right at there door. There is no charge for parking and no charge for the trolley. We road within a block of the memorial and walked around.

 
 This reflecting "pool" is only a fraction of an inch deep over black granite.It circulates through slits and thus stays clean.

At one end is represented the time of the bombing.

This is a remnant of the Murrow Federal Building foundation(
structural not financial)

This fountain was at the site already.

These chairs represent the victims. They are arranged by rows emblematic of the floor on which the victims were. Their sized for adult and child. Each had the victim's name and a light beneath it illuminates it in the evening.

The building behind the federal building has been turned into a museum. It was closed already by the time we got there.

It is landscaped beautifully. Hard to imagine that it was long enough ago for these trees to have grown to this size.


Sally  reflecting? Definitely.

 The large tree on the knoll was at the site at the time of the bombing. It was scorched and otherwise damaged. The legend has it that it looked dead. The memorial designer  had designated that it be removed as it was ugly a dying. But an emotional plea kept it during the development of the park. It has come back.

At the other end of the pool is the arch denoting 9:03, the moment after the explosion.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Austin, Texas: Bright Spot Of Insanity

Austin, state capitol of Texas, is interesting. We Ended up staying in the Hilton Gardens in downtown. It is very nice and it was cheaper than the affiliated hotel. When we went in to register, the clerk told us that all parking was valet and $24 a day. Or we could park across the street in non-affiliated parking lots for $5 to $7 a day. The difference was $24 was unlimited in and outs and in a secure garage. The lots charge for every entrance and open public access

We walked a couple blocks down the street to a recommended restaurant, Moonshine Patio Bar & Grill. The food descriptions were intriguing: Smoked steaks; Green Chili Macaroni?  And it was one of the least expensive dinners we had.

Then we walked back past the hotel a block to the SegCity Store. We had an early tour time the next day and didn't want to miss it. Segways are a great way to see a city.

Much like Chicago's water tower, this is a landmark in Austin. At one time the tallest structure, now dwarfed by almost everything around. Located on the shore of Lady bird Lake
This is City Hall. It was the result of a design competition won by a renowned architect. There was some controversy and is said to resemble an armadillo from the air. 
  
 There has been a lot of building in Austin. The architecture is modern and beautiful, contrasting with the old preserved structures.

 Lady Bird Lake, as our tour guide pointed out, is not really a lake. Texans think it's a lake because there is a dam on down the Colorado River; but really it only maintains the water level. The bridge is called "Bat Bridge".

It is famous for the colony of Mexican brown bats that emerge en mass every evening. The parks and river walk are often crowded with spectators. The sky will be darkened for twenty minutes or so.

Hannah, our guide is from Houston; but has become a naturalized Austinian. I asked what the philosophical climate is in Austin. Hannah replied, "Austin is this little tiny speck of blue in this great big sea of red." Austin is proud of being weird. It is very open and accepting of diverse people and ideas. Their motto is: Austin -- keep it weird.


 This building is said to look like an owl when viewed on an angle. The clock faces form the eyes. The corner structure forms the beak. The peaks seem like feathers.
 (It is seen in the picture below between my right hand and head.)

 This is the view from Butler Hill in Disch Field. There is a spiral walkway that circles the hill three times In the background is the downtown skyline. There is an ordinance that no building can be taller that the state capitol. But according to Hannah, money talks; variance after variance has been granted and the skyline now almost hides the capitol dome, which is only visible from certain angles between buildings.

This guitar is one of the many placed around the city. They were a project like the Chicago Cows of a few years ago. Various people and organizations painted them and now some are local landmarks. This particular one is about nine feet tall.

We discovered
Lambert's BBQ.

The Texas State Capitol is a beautiful building. It was made of red granite. Of course there is a story about that. Part of the design criteria was that it be one foot taller that the Capitol in Washington D. C. It seems that when they decided on the design red granite was specified. That had to be imported and transported at some expense. 

When construction began, or more specifically excavation, they had a problem. The excavator hit rock. As luck would have it of course it was red granite, which had to be blasted and hauled away.

There were several more stories that I can quite recall the details of. Some were about people, actions. We took a break here and Sally and I went inside while Hannah stayed with the segways.

Inside the building were officers and screening machines. I was a bit apprehensive since I carry two pocketknives. But I put everything I had in the basket, stepped through and the officer handed me my basket of goods without blinking. 

There were legislative offices and a museum. While I was taking a picture of the woodwork around an office door, a woman came out and was kind of taken aback. But she continued out and said to me, "You don't want to take my picture. I'm one of those evil people."
Apparently she was a vampire; because when I looked at my pictures there was no one there.


 This is the entrance to The Driskill. It is an old hotel in Austin. This is the place that LBJ proposed to Lady Bird was the Austin base of Johnson's operations.


The University Of Texas at Austin is north of our hotel. After our tour and lunch we went to see the LBJ Presidential Library and Museum.


There was a temporary exhibit on Walter Cronkite. It garnered Sally's attention as she spent considerable time looking at it. There was an exhibit on LBJ's life and times not much bigger if any. Johnson's papers (seen above the bronze wall) are not available to the public. Only vetted researchers can access the papers by appointment only.

There were only five state gifts on display. Clinton for instance had hundreds of gifts on display. The bronze wall is a type of art created by globs of bronze placed on the six feet tall sheets in various density to create an image. Very much like pointillism. 

Harry S Truman, done in bronze.

An 8/9ths scale recreation of the Johnson Oval Office. I have no idea why it was done in scale. 

Lady Bird's Office is full size. That is a television on the credenza. There were no computers back then. Well to be exact none for personal use as we know them. Only the largest of organizations and agencies had computers.

But one of the many stories told in LBJ's voice, by an animatronic.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

San Antonio

Texas makes some people very happy. They were getting settled in and we were ready to leave.

 We made it to San Antonio and wanted to see the Alamo. I've heard many complaints and disappointments.

It's true. The Alamo does not sit in the middle of an open field where the troops of Santa Anna laid siege to it. It does sit among modern buildings and city streets. But it is not disappointing. The grounds are historically maintained and much of the structure remains or has been restored.

This is an historic live oak that cover a great deal of the courtyard near the well.

The iconic facade of the mission. This is what we recall from the movies of the Alamo. There are no photos or video allowed in the buildings. The museum displays are in the mission, the long barracks. Only photos on the grounds and outdoors are allowed. There is video surveillance as you can see near the beginning of my video.

This wasn't so obvious in  the video. The camera is in the upper left corner of this window. There were many planted all around the grounds and in the buildings.

These are the doors to the church. They are old and thick.

Colorful flowers were few; but there were a lot of cacti and succulents.

I'm sorry; but I think someone working in an "International Attraction" should have recognized this error. I assume it was an error. Hopefully they didn't melt medals to make these tumblers.

The Alamo 360.