Monday, August 06, 2007
Road Trip Day 4 - happy birthday Steve
Next we parked at 7th and Laurel and walked to the City Deli, a little kosher luncheon place. The kids weren't hungry but I wanted to try something. I had a pulled pork sandwich and it was pretty good! We then walked about 4 blocks to St. Joseph Cathedral. We went in and looked at the inside. Apparently they have confession on Mondays at lunchtime. Oh well. We were quiet but I did take a couple of pictures. The inside of the church reminded me of my own St. James in a way. By the time we walked the 4 blocks back to the car we were HOT. It was about 95 degrees and very humid. I drove by the Capitol Lake, parked and got out to take some bird pictures. The kids sat in the car with the A/C on!!
We got back to the hotel around 1 and played, you guessed it, BURNOUT REVENGE! Although first I finished my book. Jordan and I drove around to find the pizza place Steve wanted to go to for his birthday dinner, and we also stopped at Winn Dixie to pick up a birthday cookie for his "cake".
John finally got to the hotel around 4:30 or 5. We went to pizza. I tried this appetizer with sliced tomatoes layered with mozarella and basil covered with a vinigrette. It was pretty good. The pizza was good.
Back to the hotel for more BURNOUT REVENGE!! Steve enjoyed all his birthday presents. We left one at home so John wouldn't have to bring it on the plane. It was an Effects Board for his guitar. Can't wait to hear it!
BIRDS: Today I saw a Great Egret, a Snowy Egret, and I think a Neotropical Cormorant. Got photos of all three, so I will double check on the cormorant when I get back home. The other two were pretty obvious.
Road Trip Day 3
We stopped at Walgreens and bought batteries for my camera and a gallon of water (the same price as an individual water!).
Next we headed north on I-110 and then US 61 to Centenary College State Historic Site located in Jackson Louisiana. This was a really nice tour. Our tour guide was originally from Joplin Missouri which was neat. We got some neat pictures. In one of the old dorm rooms where the old lead paint had been peeled back, this exposed some handwritten messages from the 1800's. It was very cool! 19th century college grafitti. Nothing bad. "Sophomore class of 1857" and a list of names is one example. Latin quotes was another. The really sad thing is that the Main Academic building with its 3000 seat auditorium was torn down in the 1930's. Before the days of historic preservation. There was no one to save the building. Kind of sad.
http://www.crt.state.la.us/parks/icentenary.aspx
We headed southwest on LA 965 to the Audubon State Historic Site at Oakley Plantation. Apparently he taught their child for a few months during the time he was drawing and painting for his famous Birds of America book. We met Gus the turkey and got caught in a sudden rainstorm. Very fun. A small plantation, but really neat because it was in the same family since its beginning, until sold to the state in 1942.
http://www.crt.state.la.us/parks/iaudubon.aspx
Well, by 1:30 we were HUNGRY. The nice lady in the visitor center at Oakley mentioned a little place called the Audubon Cafe next to an antique shop. That sounded interesting so we headed over to St. Francisville and found this place, right next to the local grocery store. The place was very homey, just old tables and chairs and a kitchen tucked into a corner. But the food, oh, the food. I swear that must have been the best egg salad sandwich I'd ever had. The kids each had something called pita pizza which was just a pita bread base for a pepperoni pizza but it looked really good. Then we splurged for dessert. Jordan had Butter Pecan Cake, Steve had Chocolate cake and I had Coconut Pie. Oh MY! Wow. We all sampled each others and WOW is all I can say.
We headed back to Baton Rouge with the thought of a nap. That actually turned into a Burnout Revenge round. Then I thought I would try and head out to Bluebonnet Swamp (to look for birds - just a few miles from our hotel) but when I looked it up on the internet, found out it closed in a half hour, so that was a no go.
Jordan and I got a load of laundry started, stopped by University Lake for a few minutes, and picked up some Wendy's for dinner. We watched the 4400 and then The Dead Zone on TV. The Dead Zone was really good. I hadn't seen it before.
BIRDS: Today I saw a Swan Goose and a Tri-Colored Heron!!!!
Saturday, August 04, 2007
Road Trip Day 2
- Older style air force jet in someone's backyard (seriously-their backyard!) that was adjacent to I-55.
- Washington Monument style obelisk, complete with viewing holes at the top, about 50-75 feet high, right on the highway in the backyard of what looked to be some kind of commercial property.
- Big red barn with a rainbow painted on it!
Okay, now here's a little tidbit. If you're taking I-55 south through Mississippi, be prepared. EVERY rest area was closed. Can you say "bummer"? We did stop at the Country Junction Truck Stop in Wesson MS. On a Saturday afternoon the restaurant section seemed to be the local hangout for old guys. However, the restrooms were clean.
We crossed into Louisiana and the Welcome Center was a great thing to behold, just one mile across the border. *sigh*. It was really nice. We picked up a lot of literature. I found an AWESOME Louisiana Gulf Coast guide to birds! WooHoo. I got my first glimpse of the "southern fox squirrel". I got a great picture of it too. You'll have to watch for my "road trip recap with pictures" post when I get home. It was a cutie.
LOTR Book on CD Update: We finished "Fellowship" and got two chapters into "Two Towers".
We easily found our hotel when we got to Baton Rouge. It was right next to an Outback, so that solved the dinner question. Kids had burgers. I just had some potato soup.
BIRDS: I saw what I think was a Great White Egret. There's a drainage ditch / creek that runs behind our hotel and the restaurant. It was just standing around. It flew off though when I tried to walk towards it, so no picture. Can't wait to get to the coast! I might try and visit a park tomorrow and see if anything interesting appears. We're on the 3rd floor and our balcony faces the trees, but all I saw was Mockingbird, Cardinal and Blue Jay. The Usual Suspects.
Okay, back upstairs to play some more BURNOUT REVENGE. Um, fellow moms, I HIGHLY recommend this Xbox game! Great for stress relief. You'll especially like it if you enjoy demolition derbies.
Friday, August 03, 2007
Road Trip Day 1
Wednesday, July 04, 2007
It's been a long, long month. - Updated 8/3
July was just an awful month. What with Diane's , the family squabbling that ensued, and the bridge collapse on 8-1. There have been some good things happening too, but I just haven't felt like saying anything about how I'm feeling. It's just hard sometimes to put all that down in writing. Embarrassment? Afraid to share the deep stuff? Maybe.
Good things. Jordan's Lead America trip, Driver's Permit, and getting the job she really wanted. Steve's amazing guitar skills and my introduction to Halo 2 and Breakout revenge (the most awesome drive and crash game - I LOVE IT). Home improvements, much needed and turning out great! VACATION. Potential of a new job on the horizon? (hope and pray).
Time to move on.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~end of update~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I haven't blogged for awhile. I guess I'm just too sad to try and put down in writing what I've been expecting for awhile. Diane is losing. She has been fighting cancer for about 10 years now. After just 3 she had her first recurrence/mets. She's been close to several times in the past few years. Medical advances have given her more years than any of us could have expected, but eventually comes the day when they say "There is nothing more we can do". That day came shortly after Father's Day. We drove up to St. Joe and visited on Father's Day, and that was Diane's next to the last day at home. She was awake and enjoyed our visit I think. However, she has been in a lot of pain for a long time, and it just became too much. She returned to the hospital a couple of days after Father's Day and won't be coming back anymore. Each time we have visited, she's been slowly getting worse. Last night we heard news that 24 hours may be all the time she has left now. Their kids have made picture boards already over the past couple of weeks, and a picture book, preparing for the funeral and rosary that will be said. God be merciful.
Hail Mary,
full of grace.
The Lord is with thee.
Blessed art thou amongst women,
and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.
Holy Mary, Mother of God,
pray for us sinners,
now and at the hour of our .
Amen.
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Ohio Road Trip
Cool stained glass
ttp://www.jbonamassa.com/
This was pretty much one of the best
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Father's Day means sadness for some
- Old as she was, she still missed her daddy sometimes. ~Gloria Naylor
- The greatest gift I ever had came from God; I call him Dad!~Author Unknown
- When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be twenty-one, I was astonished at how much he had learned in seven years. ~Mark Twain, "Old Times on the Mississippi" Atlantic Monthly, 1874
- Fatherhood is pretending the present you love most is soap-on-a-rope. ~Bill Cosby
- A father carries pictures where his money used to be. ~Author Unknown
Saturday, May 26, 2007
Speaking of reason
Unfortunately it seems like the same group think I shouldn't question this friggin' war, or use my capability to reason and my human instinct, my women's intuition. I should just take everything that's dished my way because otherwise I'm anti-American or something. What a joke.
Just Faith
I'm teaching it again next school year. A 30 week long process with two retreats. A huge time committment but one I feel so strongly about. I've been thinking ever since I went through two years ago as a first time student and co-facilitator about what I can do with myself, where I should focus. I guess now I finally recognize and am willing to admit and embrace that I do have a gift for organizing things, and "bossing" people around (haha). But it's true that not everyone has this skill. So, I think that by facilitating another year of Just Faith I will be able to put that skill to really good use. St. James is hosting the city-wide seminar on July 7th which is pretty exciting. I know we'll have a lot of folks from all around the diocese. As I go through it this year I will probably do a lot of blogging about the classes, reflections, etc. There were some really sad moments in the program. It happens when your eyes are opened to a different perspective. It's UNCOMFORTABLE to say the least. The first time you see that little kids in Peru live at a mountain of a DUMP and go digging through trash to find things to sell, well, you realize that if you don't have that new thing you want today, it just doesnt matter.
Lie to yourself
Americans proved in the last election that they CAN make a difference, upsetting the balance. I hope and pray that the balance will be upset even more. This war is NOT RIGHT. I'm so sick, sick, sick of human beings dying for this horrible cause that's really just about money.
The fear campaign aimed at selling the Iraq war was timed precisely for the kickoff of the 2002 midterm election. The president's chief of staff explained the timing as a marketing decision. It was timed, Andrew Card said, for the post–Labor Day advertising period because that's when advertising campaigns for "new products," as he referred to it, are normally launched. The implication of his metaphor was that the old product—the war against Osama bin Laden—had lost some of its pizzazz. And in the immediate run-up to the election campaign of 2002, a new product—the war against Iraq—was being launched. For everything there is a season, particularly for the politics of fear.
Excerpted from The Assault on Reason Copyright 2007 by Al Gore.
Friday, May 18, 2007
What is Your Power Bird? Blog Thing.....Have Fun.
Your Power Bird is a Swan |
![]() You are a truly graceful and gorgeous creature. You easily see beauty in yourself and others. Intuitive and in touch, you can often guess what the future will bring. And you're flexible enough to accept the changes that life has in store for you. |
Thursday, May 17, 2007
The Killers in concert at City Market May 11 2007
Sam's Town:
Here are some pictures from our cell phone cameras.




May 16 - Girl Scouts at the Nelson/Plaza
May 16 - A Northern Mockingbird
Friday, May 11, 2007
May 4th - Landon's picture
May 4th...17th anniversary
John and I had dinner at the Texas Roadhouse and that was really great! They danced shortly after we arrived, very cool in a country sort of way. We did a little shopping at Vintage Stock, picked up Seven Samurai the old black and white movie.
Wednesday I took the girls scouts to the new part of the Liberty Memorial. I hadn't been yet but can't wait to go back and spend more time. They closed at 5pm so we didn't have too much time. While there we got to sit in a listening booth and listen to early 19th century poetry about the war, songs of the period and more. It was very interesting. I think our tax dollars are well spent here.!