Friday, July 6, 2012

Chance House


Chance house is up for sale.  It sits in downtown Sylvania on a lot that is slowly being bought up by the local Baptist church.   We expect they will be the buyer.  Hard decision by family but probably the right one. 

Friday, June 8, 2012

Stephanie graduates from High School

Cypress Creek 2012 Graduation at UCF
They does has come where Sally and I know longer have kids in K-12. She is going to Florida Southern College.

Thanks,
Gregg

This message was composed on a mobile device, please excuse brevity and typos.

Friday, May 11, 2012

Moab day 2

Day two in Moab took us to Poison Spider where we rented really nice Mountain Bikes (MTB).  We also rented a rack to put on the back of our rental SUV and we took off for the Bar M trails.




Did I mention Sally had never ridden a MTB?  She did real well before Chance veered off onto a technical trail.  Sally ended up going down three times, each time at a spot where it was extremely steep.  She also gained a new respect for the pretty yellow flowered cactus!  Through all that Sally kept riding but was a bit more cautious.

 We finished riding those trails in the middle afternoon and went back to the hotel to eat lunch and get our hiking clothes on. We did not want to over do ourselves day one because we had two more days of bike riding.    Off down Potash road to hike to Corona Arch. 





This arch was made famous by a You Tube video by a videographer that Chance was following.  He shot some friends who made the arch their personal swing with climbing rope and repelling gear.  Unfortunately for Sally and I Chance found the rock path that went to the top of the arch. The path went straight up.  He put us over the edge climbing and filming everyplace he could.

 

Thursday, May 10, 2012

MOAB bike trip day 1

Sally, Chance and I flew into Salt Lake City May 10th. We originally planned to ride in Moab's Grand Fondo but the route had an elevation change of over 5000'.  We are flatlander that ride skinny tires in  Georgia and Florida.  We chickened out and decided to Mountain bike in the area instead.

Moab is an incredible place.  For the adventurers there are mountain bike trails that are considered to be some of the best in the world.  For roadies there are some great routes that offer incredible scenic views.  Mountain climbing, skydiving, ballooning as well as Colorado river rafting  are all activities that are in Moab.  The most popular activity which I have not mentioned is four wheeling on the solid slickrock that makes up Moab's scenic views.  This was my second trip and I am not one who returns to places I have vacationed before but Moab is like Disney you can stay a month and not do it all.

Day one - Drive from SLC to Moab through Provo, Price and Helper, UT.



Views from the car.



  In Provo we diverted to Bridal Vail falls to hike up to the base. This was a surprise for Sally and Chance who were along for the ride.  We then stopped in Price for a Mexican lunch that ended up as a feast.



 Another side excursion was a ghost town called Sergo.  There is a active town that looks like Radiator Springs but the remains of sergo are north about 5 miles.  The old coal mining town left some ruins and a number of ancient Petroglyphs. There are few internet sites that explain Sergo.  We arrived into Moab in the late evening and went to the local brewhouse which ended day1.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Passing of a very special Aunt.


Aunt Charlotte was Sally's real mothers sister.  She was a teacher of many, she wrote prose and traveled to see all the nieces and nephews.  She will be missed.

The nieces and nephews

Sally's siblings

"Chance" house established 1909


Inside Trembletoe (Sister's house)

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Disney Fantasy Preview Cruise March 16th 2012

Our latest cruise was on a preview cruise onboard the Disney Fantasy which was Christened March 2nd 2012 in New York.  I walked on the blocks of the Fantasy when I was in Germany last November but I had not done any work on her after that.  My transition to the Shanghai project moved me from the DCL team as the focus on the newest and last ship was ramping up.  The Fantasy is the sister to the Dream and structurally identical.  Some areas were rebadged either to help support that this ship will be a seven day ship or they tweaked areas that were not as popular as expected on the Dream.
Since the Fantasy preview cruises were seven days and the transatlantic crossing were during school time the kids could not join us.  I even floated the idea of flying them from St Maarten to minimize the school impact but our kids were mature enough to realize that missing that much school at the end of a semester would be a problem and they both declined the offer.  For the first time Sally and I did a non-working cruise together. 
Every aspect of the operation was better prepared and there were very few times that made us realize we were on the 2nd cruise with guests.  The crew was a mix from being new sailors or from the Dream and the other classic ships.  Our stateroom was on deck9 and was a CatA which slept 3 with no garden tub.  We went to a couple of shows and did our own excursions in St Thomas and St Maarten. Castaway was spent walking around looking at the changes since I was there last there a year ago.  We did not see any other Disney ships and there were no big ceremonies when we pulled into the Fantasy’s ports of calls.  

Disney Fantasy outside of the Shipyard

Create your own dinner show

Castaway from our balcony


Satellite Falls

New water play area on the Fantasy



Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Braves spring training

At the game with Sally and a hundred IT nerds thanks to the folks at North Highland.




Gregg
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Sunday, February 26, 2012

I bombed my rear end on the FJ

This was at the truck stop we stopped for gas on the way back towing the FJ.

Pictures never can portray how steep something is; but I had both feet stomping on the brake while they rigged a double winch line to my bumper.


Here are all the gory details of how I made an expensive mistake.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Tampa-Gasparilla 2012






Sally and I went to Gasparilla 2012.  Great parade with a lot of bead throwing then on Sunday we went for a bike ride up the coast. Good time and I think we will go back. 


Thanks,
Gregg
This message was composed on a mobile device, please excuse brevity and typos.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Shanghai Map with things to do in the city

After I returned I found this map in some paperwork from the hotel.  The map is printed on odd sized paper so the scanner could not get the complete map.  When you look at the tourism items along the bottom, I have been to:

 

Pearl TV Tower - Did not go up

World Financial Tower – Ate dinner at the top

AP Plaza – Bought fake memory cards - Doh!

Yu Garden – Beautiful and a lot to see; until you see the large Haagen-Dazs and Dunkin Donut signs in the square

The Bund – Beautiful at night

Nanjing Road – people, people and more people

Xintiandi – Very hip western area set in old Shanghai

 

I did not realize how well I have done when it comes to the official tourist places.  I really need to buy a book and learn some more before my next tip.

 

    Gregg

   

 

Sunday, January 1, 2012

What's making Americans so fat?



What's making Americans so fat?
Many think the answer is that we eat too much and don't exercise enough, but the reasons are more numerous and complex, say obesity researchers. And so are the solutions.
In the early 1970s, 14 percent of the adult population was considered obese, compared with 34 percent today. What's happened since then?


During the next four days, local and national obesity experts will weigh in with their theories. We'll serve up 40 reasons we're fat — and what you can do about them.
Today's list explores what we eat. Coming up: the influence of heredity, lifestyle and the environment.
The Food Pyramid: Established 30 years ago by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the Food Pyramid led directly to the increased consumption of refined carbohydrates — a leading cause of obesity, say nutritional scientists. Wrongly accused, dietary fat was placed at the tiny tip of the pyramid, which pointed Americans toward eating more carbohydrates; a recommended seven daily servings of cereal, bread, pasta and the like sat at the base of the pyramid. Though the government has modified its stance and today promotes the My Plate guidelines, with far fewer carbohydrates, the die was cast, and the trouble began.
Fat phobia: As Americans reacted to the avoid-fat message, fat-free and reduced-fat products flooded store shelves. The consumption of sugar — a carbohydrate — skyrocketed. Sodas were fat-free, so Americans began to tank up. "The country's big low-fat message backfired," says Dr. Frank Hu, professor of nutrition and epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health. "The overemphasis on reducing fat caused the consumption of carbohydrates and sugar in our diets to soar. That shift may be linked to the biggest health problems in America today."
Carb consumption: Americans, on average, eat 250 to 300 grams of carbs a day, accounting for about 55 percent of their caloric intake. The most conservative recommendations today say they should eat half that amount. Some recommend far fewer. "If Americans could eliminate sugary beverages, potatoes, white bread, pasta, white rice and sugary snacks, we would wipe out almost all the problems we have with weight and diabetes and other metabolic diseases," says Dr. Walter Willett, chairman of the department of nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health.
Dietary carbs convert to sugar in the blood and stimulate insulin, which moves sugar into cells, where it's stored as fat. "Over time, as our bodies get tired of processing high loads of carbs and insulin, which evolution didn't prepare us for, cells become more resistant to insulin," says Dr. Stephen Phinney, a nutritional biochemist and an emeritus professor at the University of California-Davis who has studied carbohydrates for 30 years. Insulin resistance leads to obesity, diabetes and other metabolic disorders.
Sugar consumption: "Sucrose and high-fructose corn syrup very likely contribute to insulin resistance," says Gary Taubes, science writer and author of "Why We Get Fat." "The more resistant your tissues are to insulin, the more you move calories into your fat tissues, causing you to burn less and store more." Most Americans consume three times more sugar than the USDA currently recommends.
The nature of fat: Like a tumor, fat tissue wants to grow, Taubes says. "It has an agenda of its own, and will grab available energy first." To expand, fat tissue snares the energy available from what you eat. This explains why the fat get fatter. Driving that agenda are hormones, mainly insulin and leptin.
Cheap food: Our food supply has become more plentiful, more varied and a lot cheaper, says Dr. Steve Smith, an obesity expert and scientific director of Sanford-Burnham Translational Research Institute for Metabolism and Diabetes, in Orlando. As a percentage of income, Americans spend 75 percent less on food today than they did in the 1960s.
Calorie consumption: Today, Americans eat on average 300 more calories a day than they did in 1985, and 600 more than in 1970, according to the USDA.
Bigger portions: Americans value two-for-one and super-sized products. Marketers know that, and have realized that amping up portions of cheap food is an inexpensive way to attract customers. Hence the 44-ounce Super Gulp. Twenty years ago, the average bagel was 3 inches wide and 140 calories; today it's 6 inches and 350 calories, according to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Consumers still count the inflated bagel as one serving, though it's closer to three. Research shows that people eat more if more is presented to them.
Fewer breast-fed babies: Children who are breast-fed have lower rates of obesity, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics, which, along with many other health organizations, recommends exclusive breast-feeding for the first six months of life. However, according to the CDC's 2010 Breastfeeding Report Card, only 13 percent of American mothers breast-feed exclusively through six months.
Westernization: Obesity happens when populations become westernized, Taubes says. People who eat an ancestral diet don't have nearly as high an incidence of diabetes, cancer or heart disease as those living in Western societies do. "Go back to the 19th century, then add sugar and refined grains, and you get obesity," he says. "When you don't have those in your diet, you don't see those diseases."
What can we do about it? Start by modifying your diet to match the government's My Plate Guidelines, which recommend filling half your plate with fruits and vegetables, about a quarter with lean protein and a quarter with complex carbohydrates. Eliminate sugary sodas, sweets and refined starches, and be more mindful of portion sizes. Be aware of how food affects insulin levels and eat to keep insulin levels low and steady, so you control hunger and don't store fat. Eat more foods from the land, and fewer from a box.
mjameson@tribune.com or 407-420-5158
Understanding why Americans are fat — and getting fatter — is as important as knowing what doesn't contribute. "It's not gluttony, and it's not lack of willpower," says Dr. Steve Smith, an obesity expert and scientific director of Sanford-Burnham Translational Research Institute for Metabolism and Diabetes, in Orlando.
"No scientist in the field will say the problem is strictly one of willpower," he says. "It's a result of the way our genes are interacting with an environment that is stacked against them."

Chance's Key West Video

This is the final edit of Chance's Key West bike ride

Monday, December 19, 2011

Chance's 2011 Adventure Cycling trip

I arrived in Orlando Sunday night. On Monday, a day I stayed home to let my mind catch up with my body, Chance decides to go on a seven day Adventure Cycling trip. He takes the van in the rain to the city of Cocoa and starts on a bike ride around South Florida. He made a bee line to Key West.


View Keys Ride in a larger map
Day 1 - Cocoa to Ft Pierce
Day 2 - Boca Raton
Day 3- Miami
Day 4 - Everglades and Florida City
Day 5 - Pine Keys
Day 6 - Key West
Day 7 - Fort Meyer to Sarasota

Chance took a ferry from Key West to Fort Meyers and then rode up to Sarasota. Sally, Stephanie and I were visiting colleges so we planned to head his way afterwards so we met him in Sarasota right as the sun was setting. He never claimed of being sore or out of spirits. He did over 80 miles a day. He camped, slept in a Hostel, a motel and on the beach; he has many stories to regale.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

HK to Chicago

About to board my plane back home. Head congestion has reared backup. HK airport is bigger than I remembered it was a long walk and train ride to our gate. It seems there are thousand of stores from news tands to Tiffany. Who buys Jewelry in an airport??

Thanks,
Gregg
This message was composed on a mobile device, please excuse brevity and typos.

LKF

We ate at the Disney hotel restaurant, which was incredible. We let Susan and another cast member order the meal. During our taxi ride home a consultant that was traveling asked if I was going on an adventure tonight; I said if you want to go somewhere we should go to LKF. Lan Kwai Fong is where the Expats party and the Chinese come to watch :)
After two Erdinger beers we headed home. I was explaining about another cool area to visit and unknown to me the taxi driver understood English and took us sightseeing. So I am now back at the Shangri-La hotel packing for my return flight to the US. I leave HK at 11AM and arrive in Chicago at 11:05AM Sunday, I just cannot get my brain to understand that mathematical word problem of a 5min flight :)
.
Thanks,
Gregg
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Farewell HKDL

Thanks,
Gregg

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America in its a small world

Thanks,
Gregg

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Down from the Peak

This is the view going down from the peak.

Thanks,
Gregg

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Central & Western District- of Hong Kong.jpg

View from the peak. To get here we took an incline plane... Except the car was not at an incline so you get pushed back into your seat.
Thanks,
Gregg
This message was composed on a mobile device, please excuse brevity and typos.

Friday, December 9, 2011

Victoria harbor

Saturday brings a visit from the HK IT director for breakfast then a hike up the peak with a cast member that is lobbying for a job. We will end the day with a park visit.This picture is from my hotel room. The odd building on left is called the kuala bear building by the locals. Can you see why?

Thanks,
Gregg
This message was composed on a mobile device, please excuse brevity and typos.