Happy Father's Day! Rather than getting gifts I prefer to go on a field trip for Father's day. (Though I did get socks, cards, a paper weight from Carter and a friendship bracelet from Callie that she planned for and made all on her own.) This year we headed to the Space Center. Callie is fascinated by the stars and constellations and has been looking forward to this day for weeks.
From the outside the Space Center would appear to be a world class facility. I went a few years ago with Kerry's grade six class and it seemed like a great place to take your kids. There was a flight simulator similar to Star Tours at Disneyland, the planetarium and the place was packed.
A lot has changed in six years however. It's June and you would expect this to be peak season for tourists however the place was virtually deserted and there have been several unfortunate changes. They were only showing one movie, the gift shop closed two years ago, we saw no evidence that the flight simulator was working, they've switched portions of the facility into the Vancouver Museum and another portion was being rented out to a church. (I'm curious about a church that sets up shop in a facility that looks like a flying saucer.) Vancouver has had some trouble keeping facilities like this open recently with the closing of the petting zoo at Stanley park. We just don't seem to draw in enough people and Vancouver is spending all it's money on bike lanes. I do hope they're able to keep this facility open but to draw more people they're going to have to make some changes.
Despite the changes Callie and Carter still had a great time. We got to see a presentation on rockets and since there were only 8 of us in the room Carter got to go on stage and help. We also went to see a planetarium presentation in honour of Galileo's 400th birthday. (Or maybe the 400th anniversary of the telecscope.) This was what Callie was looking forward to the most because it showed stars. They use the strange contraption to the right to project the stars and another to show the movie. She really enjoyed the show and we might have to back to see the upcoming show called "The Constellation Makers".
This blog is intended for friends and family of Evan, Kerry, Callie, Carter and Oliver.
June 19, 2011
On The Move
If you asked Kerry why I chose to move the shed she would probably say I did it so I could say I did. She may be partially correct however there are several more legitimate reasons.
1) It was sitting on top of a retaining wall that has long rotted out. I'm not replacing the retaining wall now but in the fall or spring it will need to be done.
2) It frees up a great area beside our house where we can potentially put a pond.
3) It had sunk into the ground and was starting to rot.
4) So that I can say I did it.
I did consider getting people to come over and help me move it but that would have required a lot of beer and it would probably have cost too much. I also didn't really know how much it weighed so I'm not sure how many people it would have taken. Once I got it as light as I could I think it was still around 750 lbs which would have been at least 6 or 8 people. I ended up raising it up on two 2x4 skids and used a come-along winch. I drove an aluminum fence post into the ground a few meters ahead, connected the winch to some steel cable and started to pull. About 1 inch per pull and about 8 feet before I had to reset the post.
Callie and Carter weren't quite strong enough to move it but they still helped by pulling on the winch for the first few pulls before there was any tension on the cable. This was quite exciting for them.
It's now tucked safely away in it's new home. I put it up on new concrete pier blocks with a gravel base and we should be able to get at least another 5 years out of it. Right now it's quite ugly but a new paint job and some landscaping should spruce it up nicely.
1) It was sitting on top of a retaining wall that has long rotted out. I'm not replacing the retaining wall now but in the fall or spring it will need to be done.
2) It frees up a great area beside our house where we can potentially put a pond.
3) It had sunk into the ground and was starting to rot.
4) So that I can say I did it.
I did consider getting people to come over and help me move it but that would have required a lot of beer and it would probably have cost too much. I also didn't really know how much it weighed so I'm not sure how many people it would have taken. Once I got it as light as I could I think it was still around 750 lbs which would have been at least 6 or 8 people. I ended up raising it up on two 2x4 skids and used a come-along winch. I drove an aluminum fence post into the ground a few meters ahead, connected the winch to some steel cable and started to pull. About 1 inch per pull and about 8 feet before I had to reset the post.
Callie and Carter weren't quite strong enough to move it but they still helped by pulling on the winch for the first few pulls before there was any tension on the cable. This was quite exciting for them.
It's now tucked safely away in it's new home. I put it up on new concrete pier blocks with a gravel base and we should be able to get at least another 5 years out of it. Right now it's quite ugly but a new paint job and some landscaping should spruce it up nicely.
June 7, 2011
Oliver Half Iron-man
The reason we decided to go was that my in-laws have retired there and their house is situated perfectly to view all three legs. You can see the swimmers in Tuk-El-Nuit, the bikers across the lake via binoculars, (or noculars as Carter refers to them) and the run goes right in front of them 4 times. It ended up being the first really warm day there with temperatures in the 30's and we had a lot of sympathy for the participants as we ducked inside to the air conditioning periodically to ensure we kept our strength up for the entire event.
One other reason for attending was that Kerry has a colleague at work who participates with her husband. She's in the 45+ age group and had a very respectable time of under 7 hours. I just may have to learn to swim properly so I can at least try out a mini-triathalon. Or we can just continue to go up each year and drink wine on the deck.
Bike to Work Week
Last week was Bike to Work week. I've always been a supporter of such a thing but I've always had good "reasons" that I couldn't participate. For several years I lived relatively close to work but I didn't have a bike in operational order. Then I moved out to Surrey and worked downtown. That would have been close to 70 km round trip which isn't exactly a comfortable distance. For the past several years though I've worked in Burnaby and the round trip was only about 45 km. My excuse for that trip though was that there wasn't a good route that would keep me out of traffic.
This year I decided I would at least give it a shot. The lower mainland has been doing a lot in recent years to improve biking routes and after a bit of research I found out that there were bike routes I could take that would keep me out of traffic almost the entire way. The first day was a bit of a nightmare because some of the routes weren't exactly the most direct however by day two I'd mastered my route and it turns out there are dedicated bike lanes or back streets designated for bikes for 80%. The other 20% has bike lanes beside traffic that are clearly marked. The most harrowing part is probably the Pattullo bridge but only because it seems like the bridge could collapse at any moment. The sidewalk you ride on is separated from traffic with a one foot curb and plenty wide to ride on.
By weeks end I'd traveled 225km rain or shine. On Wednesday it was definitely more rain then shine. It took 2 hrs in the drier to dry my shoes. Despite that minor set back I've now decided I'll bike to work at least two days a week. When you include the 45 minute trip each way on transit and the hour I would spend at the gym anyways I'm actually saving time.
This year I decided I would at least give it a shot. The lower mainland has been doing a lot in recent years to improve biking routes and after a bit of research I found out that there were bike routes I could take that would keep me out of traffic almost the entire way. The first day was a bit of a nightmare because some of the routes weren't exactly the most direct however by day two I'd mastered my route and it turns out there are dedicated bike lanes or back streets designated for bikes for 80%. The other 20% has bike lanes beside traffic that are clearly marked. The most harrowing part is probably the Pattullo bridge but only because it seems like the bridge could collapse at any moment. The sidewalk you ride on is separated from traffic with a one foot curb and plenty wide to ride on.
By weeks end I'd traveled 225km rain or shine. On Wednesday it was definitely more rain then shine. It took 2 hrs in the drier to dry my shoes. Despite that minor set back I've now decided I'll bike to work at least two days a week. When you include the 45 minute trip each way on transit and the hour I would spend at the gym anyways I'm actually saving time.
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