"In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." –John 16:33

Author: Dad Page 14 of 201

Retirement PhD candidate in Natural Resources at University of Nebraska Lincoln. Married Christian man with two children, homeschool graduates working as (hard) scientists at national labs of renown. Oregonian (family arrived in 1846 along the Applegate Trail). Living and working from home in Washington state. Lived in North Carolina for seven years, Texas several times and South Florida among other places--kids graduated from NCSU, LOVE North Carolina and NCSU, Texas and South Florida). Judo Shodan. Graduate of Oregon State University (B.S. Business Administration, Marketing), Oregon Institute of Technology (A.E. Computer Systems Engineering Technology), University of Texas at El Paso (M.S. Industrial Engineering). Computer Vision Research Consultant. Bilingual English/Spanish.

Audio CD’s from Ebay

I found an amazing new source for audio CD books. Ebay. I cannot believe I did not think of this before. I am going to start loading up on these things so I have books for my walks. I was going to save the audio books for just my walks, but there are so many available and they are so cheap, Lorena and I are planning to listen to one on our 10+ hour drive to Nebraska and back. These books make my daily walks much more enjoyable.

Neighborhood greeters

These are my two new friends who sing to me on my daily walks whenever they are outside and they feel like it. Sometimes they do not feel like it. Beautiful dogs! There must be one of those wires around the yard that sends a signal to their collars to give them a little shock if they get to close. They just look like happy dogs.

My walks have been going great. I have many hours of audio books I got from the Hood County Library Bookstore. It makes the whole process more enjoyable. I am trying to up my game to walk seven days per week and when I actually accomplish that it really pays off.

Thanksgiving backsliding

Well, I did not do as well as I wanted over the Thanksgiving holiday in terms of weight gain, but I suppose I could have done a lot worse. I was up around five pounds. I absolutely think it was worth it. The time with family was just amazing, but the food, drink, and camaraderie facilitated by cooking, eating, and cleaning up together were priceless. I am planning to do the same thing for Christmas, but maybe on a smaller scale. We are going to be with the kids for Christmas, but the kids are going to go off and do their own thing for New Year. Lorena and I have a ton of big travel coming up this winter so we decide to just stay home and cook a small turkey–principally so Lorena can make turkey enchiladas with the left overs.

A stellar but quiet finish to a beautiful Thanksgiving

This might have been the best Thanksgiving ever. At the very least it compares favorably to when we invited all my siblings and their families, my folks, our cousins, Tim and David Mecum, and Uncle Warren Bone to our place for several years when we lived in Albany. There were not as many people here, but we did have a dozen–way up from the last two or three years. Ralph and Olivia were a stellar addition to our crew which included Kelly, Christian, and Grandma Conchita, and Rigo and his family. After Thanksgiving we had a couple of days just with the kids. That was absolutely stellar. We are hoping everyone returns next year an more. We grew last years event which was nine people so we are going in the right direction. It was sad to see Kelly and Christian head to the airport just now, but we are scheduled to see them again in Omaha on December 14 and then again at Christmas time. We are working at reducing the time between when we see each other as much as possible.

Grandma’s dissertation

Grandma Conchita has now displayed my dissertation in the highest place of honor in the dining room. I am very gratified. She is not shy about her pride in her children and I count myself a very fortunate man to be on her list of approved people. She was here for a few weeks and we are very happy she was here, but she very much likes to be in her own home. Hopefully we will be able to get down there again very soon.

Projector and screen in the media room

We pretty much had to trash our exercise room to get it done, but Christian and I got our new projector installed, hooked up to a NUC (mini-computer) and pointed at the screen on the back wall. The screen was the biggest part of the project, but it was truly a marvel of engineering. The combination of the projector and the screen are nothing short of amazing in terms of image quality, especially with respect to how much we had to pay for the thing. This is actually going to be a great place to even do things like take video conferences.

Back at Oz Coffee Bar

Back at the coffee bar in Granbury while Lorena, Kelly, and Christian shop. Love this place.

Thanksgiving aftermath

Thanksgiving was phenomenal this year. The addition of Ralph and Olivia injected a ton of energy and we hope they can make it back again next year. They are leaving a little later today. Grandma Conchita went with Rigoberto and family to meet with Jorge in Houston where they will hang out with cousins for a day or two before they she returns to Monterrey with Jorge and his family and Rigo and clan head home to Austin. Only Kelly and Christian will be with us know for a few days more. It will be nice to have some time with them alone.

The turkey is in the oven

I got up early this morning to get everything done in a somewhat relaxed manner before I got our 25 lb. turkey into the oven. I really enjoy the whole process a lot. I am even getting pretty good at carving the turkey. I get to do one more this year at Christmas time, but next year, I would like to start roasting some chickens. The problem is that it is almost as cheap to buy them already roasted at the grocery store as to do the roasting at home. Still, it would be fun to do some experimenting.

Happy Thanksgiving 2023!

I got up at about six this morning to read my Bible, drink some coffee and enjoy the morning before all the bustle and noise associated with a Thanksgiving celebration for a dozen people gets started. I get to cook the turkey again this year, but it is a lot bigger one than I have ever cooked before–25 lbs. I think we (and when I say we, I mean I) probably made a mistake by getting one so big. We really did not need one that big and my gut feel is one that big might not be as tender as the 14-15 lb. turkey we usually get. Still, it is going to be fun. In addition to our own kids, Grandma Conchita, and our great Atlanta friends, Lorena’s brother, Rigo and his wife and three kids will be up for the evening, too. We have WAY too much food and there is really no way for most of them to take any of it along with them when they leave because they are either flying home or driving a long way to some place other than home. All that good food definitely is going to be a temptation. I have already put my weight-loss program on hiatus until everyone leaves.

Thanksgiving camaraderie

Ralph and I do not have all the problems of the world solved yet, but we have made a good start. It is becoming obvious, though, that we will have to take it up again soon–possible in Mexico.

Thanksgiving early arrivals

The first wave of Thanksgiving visitors have arrived. Ralph, Olivia, Kelly, and Christian are here and we are having just a great time. The first event is to head out to a Mexican grocery store to stock up on cooking supplies.

Morning views from the apartments

Lynn sent me a couple of images from the lower terrace at the apartment building. I thought they were really nice. Things are not as hazy in the morning. This is a lot lower on the hill the house we are remodeling so the view from there should be even better. I can imagine how nice it will be to sit on the balcony up there in the morning, drink my coffee, and enjoy the view. The top image is of the Huasteca. To its right, out of view, is where the new Tesla plant is being built. The bottom image is of the “M” formation. Below the M is the rich part of San Pedro. The part you cannot see from the apartments that is visible from the house is out of view to the left of the bottom image and includes a bunch of big skyscrapers and more mountains.

Grandma Conchita’s Thanksgiving visit

It is a great joy to have Grandma Conchita with us for Thanksgiving this year. We can hardly believe that, after quite a few years of smaller gatherings, it appears we will have, God willing, a full dozen for Thanksgiving dinner. Lorena’s brother, Tio Rigo, and this family who are now living in the Austin area will be with us for the second year, but also Ralph and Olivia from Atlanta/Sweden will be with us. Ralph is an amazing cook, so we are hoping to co-opt him to create some of his specialties. Also, they are huge art buffs so we are hoping to take them to see the Kimbell and Sid Richardson Art Museums in Fort Worth. Both of them are spectacular. We also want to go to the Cowgirl Museum and there is much more, but we are not sure how much time there will be to do it all.

Work up the hill starts in earnest

Lynn has started sending updates on the house on the top of the hill again. The goal is to get the first floor apartment livable enough for Conchita, Lorena, and I to survive there while Lynn is working on the rest of the house. We plan to take a trip down there in February with an outside chance that it will be earlier or later depending on the progress. Lynn promises me that the house is going to change rapidly now as most of the infrastructure work is complete.

Post Ph.D. research collaboration

Now that I am about to graduate, my Ph.D. adviser, Troy, and I have identified a volunteer research project on which I can collaborate. Troy’s GRIME Lab is working with collaborators in the U.S., Europe, and Latin America to develop methods for the crowd sourcing of hydrologically interesting water scene images. With this project, the biggest problem is figuring out how to extract meaningful information from the images. There is quite a bit of mostly failed work on extracting information from unconditioned images–that is, images where there is nothing in the scene to help calibrate the images so that measurements can be taken. Our plan is to take a step back, make minor changes to the staff gauges that are commonly in those scenes and see if we can start gathering more meaningful information than what is already there. The problem with that is the size of the calibration target (the octagon in the scene) is very small compared to what we used during my Ph.D. research. It looks, though, like I can find the target fine. The problem then is to figure out how to make the calibration right after the target is found.

Weight milestone

It has been well over a year since I have weighed under 200 pounds. This morning, I made it. I expect to fluctuate above and below that for a week or two, but God willing, I will below for good very soon. My next big goal is to move from obesity class 1 to merely overweight which is when I get to a BMI of 29.9. In my case, that is 191.2. The long-haul goal is to get down in the mid-150 range–anything at or below 159.3 pounds puts me into the normal weight range with a BMI of less than 25, but I am not sure yet whether that is even healthy based on my body type. All that adds up to 40-45 pounds left to go. I am down 35 pounds since I started a little over two months ago.

One month to graduation

God willing, we will be up at University of Nebraska–Lincoln one month from now getting ready to walk in the graduation ceremony. I keep checking my student account to see if I have missed anything, but nothing new has come up for a long time, so I think I am ready to go. It is a little bit of a hard thing because the kids are planning to come home for Christmas, but that comes right after the graduation, so we think they might just watch online so they don’t have to either fly twice in a week or miss too much work.

New google street view images

There are new street view images for virtually every house we have ever owned except the one we are in now which is a gated community and they cannot get in. The new images were all taken in 2023. I can hardly believe it. The houses are spread all over the place–Cornelius, Sherwood, and Albany, Oregon, Raleigh, North Carolina, and two houses in San Pedro, Garza García, Nuevo Leon, México. Pretty cool that they continue to update all these street views.

Hard copy of the dissertation

Most of the hard copies of my dissertation are still with Troy in Lincoln, but he graciously sent me a few via FedEx. It is very cool to be able to hold one in my own hot little hands. They came out great. One thing I did not expect is that there would be only one-sided printing, but that is a good thing. Another surprising thing is that all the pages in the book are full color I am very pleased with how it all came out and thankful Troy was willing to take the time to send me a few advanced copies.

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