Chapman Kids Blog

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

Moving to Texas

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We are on the move again. One of the things for which I am most grateful is the opportunity Lorena and I have had to live in lots of interesting places in the United States and Mexico. It would have been nice to do that around the entire world, but the USA has been good to us. Giving the kids the perspective that there are lots of nice people in lots of nice places. We enjoyed our time in Washington a LOT–especially the apples and the people. We very much look forward to Texas–we love the people and the culture of friendliness there, but will still buy Washington apples. God willing, we will be living in Texas by mid-May.

Casa Mexicana 001: Empezando con limpieza

Lynn esta llegando al fin de la demolición en la casa y, después de cortar unos agujeros para instalar escalares, esta limpiando escombro para poder empezar en construir cosas en espacios nuevos que son mas abiertos. Aquí están las ultimas fotos de demolición antes de empezar la reconstrucción.

Aquí se esta cortando un espacio para construir una escalera
Qui esta el plan de la escalera nueva
Esa área antes estaba toda dividida entre paredes

Casa Mexicana 001: Starting the cleanup

Lynn is getting to the end of the demolition in the house and, after cutting a few holes for things like stairways, is cleaning out the debris so he can start building new things in the new, more open spaces. Here is the last set of demolition image before the building starts.

Cutting a space to build a new stairway
The plan for the staircase
The wide open area that was once full of walls

Casa Mexicana 001: Demolición

Read in English

El plan es de convertir la casa para una sola familia en un edificio con cuatro departamentos para estudiantes. Se empieza con demolición. La idea es de convertir el balcón y la entrada de abajo a unos espacios adicionales que están adentro de la casa. Después, unas escaleras, paredes, y otras estructuras permanentes tienen que estar derrumbadas para acomodar los cuatro departamentos estudios con baños, cocinas, roperos, salas, y ventanas con luz natural para cada uno. Con este fin en mente, el paso de demolición ha empezado.

Área debajo del balcón tenia que estar bajado porque había un paso por arriba pasando de adentro de la casa.
La misma área después de que el escombre ha estado quitado.
Esta es la escalera interior que fue destruida–observe la vieja silueta del escalón en la pared posterior.
Escalera temporal.
El inicio de la demolición de la cocina.
La cocina después de la demolición.
Llevar la cocina a la calle fue un trabajo duro.
Más trabajo de limpieza de la cocina.
Los escombros se llevan a la banqueta enfrente de la casa donde un camión de servicio de la comunidad los recojerá.
Cargando el escombro al camión.
Un camino lleno de escombro.
Estado actual de la casa.

Mexico house 001: Demolition

Leer en Español

The plan to convert the single family home into a four unit student apartment building starts with demolition. The idea is to turn the balcony and the lower entry area into additional inside space. After that, stairways, walls, and some other permanent structures must be demolished to accommodate the plan for four studio apartments with bathrooms, kitchens, closets, living rooms, and windows with natural light for each of them. To that end, the demolition stage has been started.

The area beneath the balcony had to be lowered, because there was a step up from inside the house.
This is that same area after the broken concrete is removed.
This is the inner staircase that was destroyed–notice the old step silhouette on the back wall.
Temporary stairway.
The start of the kitchen demolition.
The kitchen after demolition.
Taking the kitchen refuse to the street was hard work.
More kitchen cleanup work.
The debris is moved to the sidewalk in front of the house where a city service truck and crew come to take it away.
Loading the truck with debris.
The loaded truck.
Current state of the house.

Casa Mexicana 001: Empezando la remodelación

English version

Lorena y yo hemos empezado un proyecto nuevo en México. Compramos una casa media viejita en uno de los municipios de Monterrey que se llama San Pedro. Previamente había escrito de esa casa aquí. El hermano de Lorena se llama Lynn quien es abogado y desarrollador nos ayudó buscar y comprar la casa. Él está administrando la remodelación para convertir la casa en cuatro departamentos. Esperamos que podamos venderla cuando esté completa y comprar otra en la misma área. Aquí está cómo se veía la casa que compramos.

La remodelación empezó ayer. El primer paso fue remover el balcón para extender la medida de los cuartos en el segundo piso de la casa. Al mismo tiempo su equipo limpiará la entrada de la primera planta de la casa. La nueva fachada de la casa será mucho más moderna y segura. Estamos planeando escribir de toda la remodelación y reportar que clase de suerte tendremos en vender la casa. Si todo va bien, intentaremos de nuevo con otra. Aqui esta el dibujo arquitectónico y sofisticado desarrollado por el diseñador (Lynn) para guiar su equipo en el reemplazo de la fachada.

La proximas fotos son del proceso de derrumbe.

Mexico house 001: Starting the remodel

Versión en Español

Lorena and I have started a new project in Mexico. We bought an older house in a municipality of Monterrey named San Pedro. I wrote about that previously here. Lorena’s brother Lynn, who is a lawyer and a developer helped us find and buy the house. He is also managing its remodel into a four unit apartment building. Hopefully, we will be able to sell it when it is complete and buy another in the same area. Here is how the house appeared when we bought it.

The remodel started yesterday. The first step is to remove the balcony to extend the size of the rooms on the top floor of the house. At the same time, his team will clean up the entry to the lower story of the house. The new facade of the house will be much more modern and secure. We plan to blog the whole remodel and report on what kind of luck we have selling the house. If it goes well, we will try it again. Here is the sophisticated architectural drawings developed by the designer (Lynn) to guide his team on the replacement of the facade.

The next few photos show the first day of demolition.

Spinning GaugeCam back up as an Open Source project

My PhD adviser, Troy, and I have decided to spin back up the GaugeCam software as an open source software project with a commercial friendly license for the GRIME2 program. GRIME2 stands for GaugeCam Remote Image Manager (Educational) version 2. It is planned as kind of a Swiss army knife for hydrology research. So far, it only has functionality for measurement of water level using a target in the water, but the code to do machine learning with a variety of image and non-image features has been tested out and works well as represented by this paper.

Lorena graduates from community college

Lorena is finally through Clackamas Community College with an Associate Arts Transfer Degree that she can use for the first two years of her Bachelors degree (if she wants. We are very, very proud of her. It was a 28 year effort in the middle of raising two kids all the way through their PhD and Masters degrees. The beautiful part is that she really did learn a ton in a degree the exemplifies the very spirit of a liberal arts degree. Congratulations for your perseverance and hard work.

Christian gives Lorena a Roborock vacuum cleaner

Christian shocked us all with an amazing gift for Lorena’s birthday–a robotic vacuum cleaner. He got one for himself to clean his apartment and absolutely loved it. I have to admit I was skeptical about how good the thing might be, but have to admit I am a complete believer after seeing it do its thing.

One of the most amazing things about the device is how easy it was to set up. It took about a half an hour to unpack it and get everything installed. Lorena and I can both start it, stop it, adjust what parts of the house it should clean, watch it move around on a map as it is cleaning, etc., etc.

On top of that, the height of devices is low enough that it can go under things that were hard to reach with our regular vacuum. The path in the map in this post is in our bedroom. The side-ways ‘T’ in the middle of the room is the post holding up the middle of our bed. In addition to that, it was able to clean under the sofa and the Barcalounger in the living room. The amount of cat hairs and dust and the repository was nothing short of amazing.

One thing I can say for sure, though, is that it is not really saving us any time because it is so fun that we usually just sit there with a cup of coffee the whole time it is doing its thing.

Our house in San Pedro

All the paperwork for the house we have been buying in San Pedro Garza Garcia, Nuevo Leon is complete and we are now the owners. I have actually never been to the place and I am not sure how long we will own (we have a potential buyer looking at it now and our eyes on the next place), but for now, it feels pretty good!

Google Earth Engine API class

My class on the Google Earth Engine API is about to end. It has been a very interesting class from a professor who is giving it online for the first time. She has actually done a stellar job. There are two difficulties in this class: How do you give a good online experience (via Zoom–hate it, there are much better tools) and how do you teach a class to a group of student who fall into two very distinct groups–those who are programmers, but know little about earth sciences and those who are very knowledgeable about earth sciences, but know little about programming. I have to admit that I have gotten a LOT more than I expected out of the class and, if I can work it in and have time, I am going try to work it into my dissertation. The professor really did strike a good balance between getting the programming across and getting the earth science across without making either of those parties either crazy or bored. Loved it.

A gift from Flagstaff

We received a package in our mailbox yesterday with this spectacular gift–a pie server. Our friend Harvey turned the handle on his lathe, put a nice finish on it, and put it in the mail. We LOVE it! Really, really nicely done. Lorena wanted to hang it on the wall as a piece of art. I wanted to use it with as much apple pie as possible. We are probably going to compromise and do both. It was an especially nice gift because it just came out of the blue with zero

Deleted accounts

I deleted my twitter account today. The next step is to start moving from gmail and outlook email to ProtonMail.com. They are untrustworthy. After that, I will be leaving instagram. I have been using duckduckgo for search but have recently switch to swisscows. Same for WhatsApp and Hangouts–I have mostly made the stitch to Signal. The funny deal is that all the new ones actually work better for me than the ones they replaced.

XXTRA Flamin’ Hot

A box with three bags of XXTRA Flamin’ Hot Crunchy Cheetos arrived from Christian today. We got some regular Flamin’ Hot Crunchy Cheetos when he was here over he holiday and we loved them. He told us the XXTRA ones were too hot to eat. We wanted to try them, but there were none on any of the shelves, so unbeknownst to us, Christian ordered us some. They were a lot hotter, but we really liked them anyway. Sadly, they are not exactly on our diet, so we need to make them last as long as we can. Lorena is rationing them out in a very miserly fashion.

New Year upheaval in 2021

Today, everything that is going on just seems crazy. We do not have a new U.S. President yet and whichever one ends up in office will make half of the country go crazy. The morality of the culture at large is abjectly bad. We are in the middle of a pandemic for over which there are additional levels of crazy on all sides of the issue. The funny deal is that at this one snapshot in time, our lives are going well, at least in a temporal sense. Lorena just earned her Associate of Arts degree in December. Kelly and Christian both have good jobs that would preclude them from being taken into the military if there is war. They both got good little, end-of-year raises at a time when that is quite uncommon. I have a job I love that, if we can solve a few more problems, we will speed up and provided a more controlled environment for virology and other types of research that require the growing of cells under specific conditions. What happens over the next few weeks with respect to the President will not have a huge effect on any of these things, but life could get a lot more insecure with respect to financial, moral, and physical security. In the meantime, we have a great view out our living room window.

Class #2 (PhD) Google Earth Engine

Tomorrow morning I start the second class for my PhD program. The first one was a one month course on time series analysis that met for a couple hours twice per week. I received one credit for that course. The course that starts tomorrow is also a short course which meets three times per week for two hours of lecture via Zoom and one our of lab. It is a course on how to use the Google Earth Engine API (javascript) and the publicly available datasets. I got myself an account and went through the first tutorial. It looks pretty slick and fun to program. The cool part is that Lorena played with Google Earth (not the API) in her last Geology class. That gave me a sense for how powerful it is for visualization and research. I am really looking forward to learning this material.

And they’re gone…

We ran Kelly and Christian to the airport in Portland this morning so they could head back to Baltimore and Boston to return to work on Monday. Their visit this holiday season was a category difference than those in the past. They have been adults making their own way in every sense since they left home to go to graduate school six and a half years ago. They have been adults, making their own decisions for years now, but it just seemed more real this time that they really are grown and gone. We got a little melancholy about that, but also there was a gratifying satisfaction. This is the way it should be. We are grateful for opportunities for them to be here that probably would not have happened if it had not been for the pandemic.

Happy New Year 2021

It has been great to have Christian and Kelly here for a couple of weeks. We drive them both to the airport tomorrow morning to fly back to the east coast. We cooked a turkey, donuts, creme puffs, and a ton of other stuff to see in the New Year and have way to many leftovers with two less mouths to eat it all. This is definitely not going to help me keep my New Year’s resolution until we get it whittled down a little. I now longer have any excuses with the rowing machine and treadmill. It is no just a matter of will and taking the time to get some exercise. In broad strokes, the goals are to

  • get to 170 lbs. by my birthday in September,
  • write and submit my next journal article by the end of the year, and
  • sell our house in San Pedro Garza Garcia and buy another one there, also by the end of the year.

I am going to try to remember to review this post at the start of 2022 to see if I was able to stick to my resolutions.

Old diplomas

Lorena is finishing up here degree at Clackamas Community College and her diploma is in process. We have already framed the kids’ diplomas and put them up on the wall, but we have not yet done our own. We are going to put what we have in good frames and mount them on the same wall with those of the kids. Lorena dug around and found all my old diplomas except my Bachelor’s degree from Oregon State. I am kind of surprised that the one from OSU is the one for which I am least proud and rightly so–I was not really paying attention when I got it. When I was living through it, I thought this was the very best time of my life. Looking back, though, I realize that I was definitely not living my best life and built up a lot of bad habits and a track record that had to be overcome rather than built on.

The one “diploma” of sorts, for which I have a sense of satisfaction is the Kodokan Judo Black Belt (Shodan) I earned. It was a result of hard work and great joy. I still very much love the sport and believe it was a positive good in my life, along with track and field. It was very much unlike football and basketball which do not seem like much of an indicator of athletic ability nor a place where much character is built, especially in how it is currently practiced in middle and high schools, at the university level and especially as professional sports.

The other degrees were the result of efforts for which I can took increasing satisfaction. I had a sense of purpose and increasing knowledge in school, not only about the subject matter, but also the also with respect to the discipline to do something which would provide me with a sense of self worth (unlike sports in general) and an ability to pay the rent. My goal is to extend that through my PhD. So far so good.

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