Thursday, November 22, 2007

Happy Thanksgiving!

Today we are thankful that we still have our home! On Monday, I was getting dinner ready and I had a few pots boiling on the top of the stove. I turned on the oven and it started making a really scary popping noise and suddenly there was that awful, icky electrical burning smell. I called Kevin over to see what was happening and there were a few more little crackles and then POP!! and there was a flash and the whole stove went dead. Kevin told me and the girls to get out of the house. We were having friends over for dinner, so we called them and we all decided to meet for dinner at Burger King.

Kevin pulled the stove out and there was a scorch mark on the wall. There was a sheet metal box on the back of the stove that was covering the electrical wires, and there was a 1/4" hole burned clear through it. The electricity had arced so hot that it had gone through thick sheet metal! Kevin tried to take the face plate off the outlet, but the screws were welded to the plate and it is not going anywhere. He also checked up in the attic to make sure that none of the flash that we saw had started any fires we couldn't see yet. Thankfully there seemed to be no sign of any fire.

A few years ago we had a Family Home Evening on fire safety and we talked about how to get out and where we would meet, etc.. Well, this kind of freaked Rebecca out (she was five at the time), and so we went over to the fire house, which is only a block away, and they gave us a tour and answered all of Rebecca's questions. Ever since then she always prays that our house will not catch on fire. We appreciate those simple, faithful prayers!

On Tuesday a service tech came out and checked the stove. He said that the wiring had been installed improperly and that one of the wire connections was really loose. (I was amazed that this hadn't happened any sooner!) The electrical cable has to be replaced and the terminal box that all the wires connect in has to be replaced as well, as all the plastic parts were melted. Since the cord is a four-prong instead of a three-prong, it is a special factory order and we have to wait until after Thanksgiving to get the range fixed. Hmmmmm.

Thankfully I was only in charge of making some pies, and Kevin's mom is cooking the turkey. I had to go over to a neighbor's house on Tuesday to boil some spaghetti noodles, and yesterday I went to another friend's house to bake the pies. Thankfully the microwave is still great so we can have leftovers for the next few days until they get this fixed. Hopefully Monday. So even though our stove is cold and dead at the moment, we are thankful there was no other damage and that we and our home are safe.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Friday, November 09, 2007

The Life of a Survey Monument

Here's a Flash animation of the life of a survey monument by the Bureau of Land Management.

http://www.blm.gov/ca//flash/fb/survey.html

Sunday, November 04, 2007

More Geocaching & Getting lost.

We got up, had a continental breakfast in the hotel lobby, checked out and then headed out to do some more Geocaching on the way home. At one point we got really turned around and couldn't figure out where we were in relation to the 101 freeway. We had thought we were on the east side of the 101, but we were somehow on the west side of the 205. The three maps & the GPSr were not helping. The AAA map we had was of the city of San Francisco and didn't show the part of town we were in, and the Thomas Mapbook didn't have enough detail. We were driving semi-aimlessly, when Kevin said, "Geocache 'GC10JFA' just came on the GPS screen." I was able to look up the cache and see that it was right in front of the City College of San Francisco. From that, we were able to figure out where we were, and in the bargain, find another cache! Geocaching is so great!

We finally got back where we wanted to go, drove out to Treasure Island and spent some time exploring the old naval base. We left the city and headed to Pleasanton for lunch and some more geocaching. Then it was time to head home. It was great to see the girls and have them run out to give us hugs as we drove up and to hear of all the adventures they had this weekend.

See the pics here.

Saturday, November 03, 2007

Aimlessly Wandering

We got back to the hotel at well after midnight, and the next morning we were delivered breakfast in bed. Pretty neat. We wish we could have stayed longer to enjoy the hotel more, as it had a "living room", with a couch and a fireplace. Next time we need to spend the night in San Francisco we want to stay there again!

We checked out of the hotel and then drove around downtown for a while doing some Geocaching. We really figured that without the kids it would be a lot faster and that we would get a whole ton of caching done, but we haven't done a lot of big city caching before, and we were frustrated because each cache took at least twenty minutes a piece, trying to find a parking place, sometimes driving around the block four or five times in order to find one. After a while we were in Chinatown and we looked up and saw Coit Tower and decided to go there. We enjoyed all the murals and the views! There were some great scenes in the murals, including two surveyors. As a fun side note, while we were at the top of the Coit Tower on the west coast, we got a call from Weston and Laura, and at the same time they were at the top of the Statue of Liberty on the east coast. We traded picture messages on our phones and wondered what the odds were of that happening. Pretty cool!

We stopped at another cache at Alamo Park. This is where you see the view all the time of the six "painted ladies" houses when you see pictures of San Francisco. For example in the Cingular ads and at the beginning of the show "Full House". While we were there we saw a movie being made, so we went over to investigate. It was a Bollywood movie with a cast and crew almost entirely from India. We watched for awhile and then went on to Golden Gate Park. On the way we stopped for a late lunch at Tony's Cable Car Restaurant. That was a fun little place.

When we got to Golden Gate Park, it was such a gorgeous day. We really enjoyed walking around as we looked for other caches. We went by the Conservatory of Flowers, the de Young Museum and the Rose Garden. As we walked by the Rose Garden we were surprised to see the same Bollywood movie being filmed there as well. We watched for a while, talked to some of the crew and took a few more photos. What a coincidence that in a city as large as San Francisco we just happened to be in the same two places at the same time. We spoke with one man who turned out to be one of the film's producers. He asked if we'd ever seen an Indian movie.

"Well... yeah.... late at night, while flipping thru the channels", Kevin said.

"Really", he asked. "Which ones?"

"Uhh... I have no idea what they were.... but the girls were pretty."

He smiled and said, "Yes, they were".

We left the Park and Kevin noticed that we were about to cross Haight Street. A quick right turn and we were in the Haight Ashbury District - the area that made the 60's the 60's. Saturday night was obviously the best time to be there.

By this time it was getting late, so we drove out of downtown and headed down to our second hotel, near the San Francisco Airport. We had to get a second hotel, as by the time we had decided to stay for the second night, the hotel that we were going to be staying in was booked up. This one was nice too - not as nice as the Carriage Inn - but good enough for us. We went out and watched the airplanes take off and land and then went and had a nice meal (read: expensive) at a neighborhood Italian restaurant. We went back to the hotel fat & happy.

See all the day's pics here.

San Francisco - Nightwish!

On Friday afternoon we left our girls with some friends and we drove to San Francisco for a concert and some time together. It was the first time we've had together since Amanda was born. For those of you who may be counting, that's more than ten years. We LOVE our girls, but we had such a great time by ourselves this weekend! We left home later than we'd hoped and by the time we got to San Francisco it was dark. We did get to see all the lights as we drove into the City though. It was great.

We got to our hotel, and they had upgraded us to the 3 star hotel next door. We don't know why and it doesn't really matter. It was a really nice room at the Carriage Inn Hotel. We didn't have time to enjoy it right then, as we changed quickly and headed over to Slim's, a club where we were going to go see a band called Nightwish. The band is a symphonic/metal band from Finland and they are doing a six week American leg of their 2007 tour. Nightwish is: Anette Olzon (Vocals), Tuomas Holopainen (Keyboards), Emppu Vuorinen (Guitar), Marco Tapani Hietala (Bass & Vocals), Jukka Nevalainen (Drums).

The concert was AWESOME! The opening act was a band called Paradise Lost, and they were pretty good. We have to admit though, that we were so looking forward to hearing Nightwish that we really weren't paying that much attention. At about 10:30pm, Nightwish came out and they opened with "Bye, Bye Beautiful". It was amazing to see them live! Annette is great! The band was really tight and they were a LOT of fun! They sang a few songs off their last album "Once", but the majority of what they played was off of their new album "Dark Passion Play". The band played around with the audience, with each other, and it was obvious that they were having a lot of fun. It was easy to see that Anette fits in really well with the band. (Anette is a new singer to the band, replacing Tarja Turunen after ten years.) After they had been on stage for a little over an hour they said that the song that they were about to sing was usually the last in the set, but that they were having such a great time that they were going to sing some more. They sang another two or three songs, ending with "I Wish I Had An Angel". They also sang some of our other favorites: "Sleeping Sun", "Amaranth", "Sahara", "7 Days to the Wolves", and "The Islander". They played for an hour & a half, but it seemed like it was waaaay tooo short. We could have listened to them all night.

Nightwish is going to be in Las Vegas in May.

Guess where we are going to be.

See all the concert pics here.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Logic : kid style

Amanda and Rebecca were watching the DVD of the movie "Surf's Up!" which is about a bunch of surfing penguins. One penguin says to another, "It's so cold, I can feel it in my nuggets."

Rebecca asks Amanda, "Why did he say nuggets?"

Amanda says, "Because that's what chickens become."

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

62,000 Miles

I rolled 62,000 miles on the BMW R100GS on the way home tonight. I'm aiming at 100,000.

Friday, October 12, 2007

Essay Contest

Amanda participated in the Kerman Library's Essay Contest (open to 5th and 6th graders) and Amanda won first place for the 5th grade! She won a $25 gift certificate to Barnes & Noble and will have her picture in the Kerman News. Pretty neat! We are really proud of her. In honor of Columbus Day, the essay was to be about discovering a new country.

Here is Amanda's winning essay, just as she wrote it:

My name is Crusty and my huge, brown ship's name is Cowabunga. My crew has five people, Skippy, Jack, Megamouth, Spot, and Fluffy. We were carrying fresh food, pure water, shimmery silk, shinny gold, dried seeds, lots of books, and energy drinks with us.
We had been voyaging for three long, hard years. We had been through five violent storms, and three vicious battles. In the storms we almost sank! In the battles we almost had to jump off our own vessle!
We finally spotted beutifful land! We couldn't resist, so instead of going in our rickety lifeboats we jumped overboard and swam instead. I named the land Dipperfish, because if you look at it from above, in a helicopter, it looks like a fish in a dipper. There was lots of fat blueberry buses, pokey cactus and tall cocanut trees. There was lots of juicy apples and oranges. There was also lots of big seagulls, little deer, and gray, fluffy koalas. We had lots of success. We pitched our canvas made tents and ate a big lunch. Then we went exploring to find out more about the island.
As we were exploring we heard movement in the bushes, we drew our shining swords. Then, we saw that they were just Dipperfishens. Before they could do anything else we gave them bright gold and shimmery silk. Then they gave us a bright yellow corn and scrumptious meat. We became great amigos. We would be nice to them, and they would help us nourish our land.
I made a government so that when I came back to this land it would still be in order. I made the cheif president. I made his son the governer. I made his other son the judge. The government was in order.
Now since I had made a good government I decided to leave. I told the Dipperfishens, and they were very somber. I told them I would be back with more food to plant. So we got ready to leave. Since we had swam to shore we had to send Jack to climb the heavy anchor and come back to shore in a rickety lifeboat. When we were finished packing we said our good-byes and left.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

2008 President

Kevin was elected 2008 President of the San Joaquin Valley Chapter of the California Land Surveyor's Association. He is currently acting as Treasurer for the Chapter, and has been maintaining the Chapter website for five years.

The Chapter covers the 14,400 square miles of Fresno, Kings, Madera, & Tulare counties. There are 140 Licensed Land Surveyors in the four Counties.

Monday, October 01, 2007

The Water Watcher

Here is an article about Kevin's aunt who lives in Los Gatos Canyon, San Benito County, west of Coalinga, California. She's been watching a weather gauge for the NOAA for more than 50 years.

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The Water Watcher
By Julie Sevrens Lyons
Mercury News
Article Launched: 08/26/2007 01:37:10 AM PDT

http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_6723864
http://www.mercurynewsphoto.com/2007/08/24/rain-recorder/

Clorene Akers doesn't remember exactly when she was picked, or why. But there the strangers were, half a century ago, snooping around her remote ranch in San Benito County, asking if they could install a rainfall gauge to help chronicle the nation's weather. Oh, and if she wouldn't mind checking it every day it rained.

The year was 1952. The pay? A little more than $3 a month. And Akers, 38 and pregnant at the time with her fourth child, wondered how she would ever manage to scale - in inclement weather with a growing belly - the protective fence around the crude equipment. But she said yes, launching what would become a 55-year career as one of the National Weather Service's "cooperative weather observers."

The pay these days? $7.60 a month, after her last raise. In 1984.

"I've enjoyed doing it," Akers said between sips of sun tea in the great room of her century-old ranch on a recent balmy day. "Everybody's anxious to know what the weather is."

That includes the National Weather Service. And it's no stretch to say that if not for the 93-year-old great-grandmother - who still tills her own garden and does her own laundry, all while keeping tabs on the rain gauge - weather officials would not have an accurate idea of how wet or dry it is in Akers' part of the state.

She is one of about 3,000 weather observers across the country, from Gibson Dam, Mont., to quite possibly your neighbor's back yard. And while it might seem that the only folks who care about the precipitation 66 miles southeast of Hollister are the few who actually live there, meteorologists and policy-makers rely on Akers' work to determine rainfall patterns in the rugged hills near Coalinga. For half a century, her data has been influencing flood forecasts and drought reports, guiding dam operators on how much water to store, even helping track climate change. "Her little piece of the world plays a whole big role," stressed Bob Benjamin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service in Monterey.

When she started, Akers would trudge outside at 8 a.m. on cold and wet wintry days and use a special stick to take her measurements. She would jot the numbers down and then empty out the gauge. But during the heaviest downpours, she would have to repeat the process several times a day to keep the gauge from overflowing. Vacations were impossible in the winter and spring months.

There was the El Niño year of 1982-83, the wettest season yet, when Akers' ranch was deluged with 43.90 inches. Then there was 1969-70, her driest year, when just 6.90 inches of rain fell. In the year that ended July 1, the area got just 9.67 inches.

The drought isn't the only reason Akers' job has become much easier. She still marvels at the day the weather service installed a new rain gauge in her back yard, one that basically measures the rainfall itself and prints the data on a spool of paper. Now instead of measuring and emptying, Akers is charged with monitoring the paper to make sure it doesn't get stuck, and then mailing it in at the beginning of every month.

When Akers sends in the official tallies (courtesy of envelopes and stamps provided by the weather service), she'll usually send along a nice little note. And, Benjamin says, she's the only one of the 24 observers in the San Francisco/Monterey Bay region - and probably of the thousands nationwide - who doesn't have a phone. And she never fails to send a Christmas card.

But it's Akers' length of service, unrivaled in the extended Bay Area, that's been most remarkable. Surely, when those weather service workers first came across Akers' sprawling, 2,400-acre ranch - christening it Station 04-3928-04 or "Hernandez 7SE" - they wouldn't have expected her to take diligent records for so long. Locally, hundreds of weather forecasters have come and gone since she started.

"At some point, they usually hand it off to their children or take a little retirement," said George Cline, observation program leader for the National Weather Service in Sacramento. "It's wonderful that she's still going."

Despite all the toil and trouble, Akers says she only really considered quitting once. That was three years ago, when an infection left her permanently blind in her left eye.

"I suggested they find someone else," she said, recalling that the weather service would have none of it.

"You're the best reader we have," she was told. "It would be wrong to take it away from you."

Akers isn't too sure, but she's kept at it. And she's proud of what she's done, even if, she concedes, it isn't the highest-paid calling.

"But," she says, "it gives me a little spending money."

She's also earned some fame in the ranching community south of the Pinnacles National Monument.

"I have lots of people run into me and ask, `How much rain have you had?' " she said. "That's quite a subject to talk about."

Most city dwellers see rain as a nuisance, snarling commutes and keeping bored children indoors. But in Akers' area, it's the lifeblood, a crucial factor for every farmer.

With irrigation difficult in the steep terrain around her property, Akers relies on a small spring in the back hills for her water supply.

One year, after her husband died 14 years ago, the land was especially dusty, the cattle particularly thirsty, and Akers realized she was in a conundrum. Unable to haul in enough water for her Herefords, she had to ask her children to help her sell them.

An abundance of rain, however, also creates problems, stirring up the river that carves through her property. When that happens, her long driveway floods, leaving her stuck on the ranch for days at a time. Even in lesser storms, she said, it's foolish to venture the more than 30 miles into Coalinga, where Akers and her daughter stock up on perishables and fill up the tank to the pickup.

Living off the land all these years, she said, "We've always respected the weather."

Akers was joined on the ranch two years ago by her daughter Nancy, 66. Nancy does some of the hard work and heavy lifting on the sprawling property, and tends to the ranch itself. And someday she might have to take over watching the rain gauge, too. But Akers still cleans her house, and grows cucumbers, corn, beans and apples in her backyard garden.

As she talks about her life, how she used to can her own meats for the winter, how her children used to ride an old, portable bathtub as a sled when it snowed, how the frost ruined her apples this year, the conversation often, if not always, makes its way back to the weather.

Telling its daily story has been part of her routine for the past 55 years, and Akers is thankful for that.

"It isn't everybody," she said, "who has the privilege of doing this."

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Contact Julie Sevrens Lyons at jlyons@mercurynews.com or (408) 920-5989.