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NHL Draft 2007

3 min read

2007NHLDraft.jpgThanks in no small part to the old adage "It's not what you know but who you know" I recently had the opportunity to go to the NHL Entry Draft. A friends brother is an executive with the NHL so he provided my family with amazing tickets that put us in the front row of the section reserved for draftees and their families. From this vantage point my two youngest brothers, my father, and I witnessed the first round of the draft. While, in all honestly, it did get a little boring at times (it is just a sequence of names being called out) it was still pretty interesting and a neat experience that I don't regret going to at all.

We arrived just before the actual draft began so we missed most of the Commissioners opening remarks and basically just had to wait a few moments for the Blackhawks to make their first selection - a young American named Patrick Kane. He was sitting in another section reserved for players exactly opposite us inside Nationwide Arena (in Columbus, OH). In fact the first five selections were all on the opposite side of the stadium. The third pick, Kyle Turris by the Phoenix Coyotes, was upstaged by the man who announced the draft pick, none other than "The Great One" Wayne Gretzky. I believe Wayne received the loudest and longest ovation of the night - even surpassing the announcement by Commissioner Bettman that the local team, the Blue Jackets, were on the clock.

I have been a lifelong Boston Bruins fan. My seat, however, was directly behind the Montreal Canadiens table. This is their "War" table where about ten team executives sit and debate who their next pick will be. If you know anything about the Bruins you know their natural rival is, none other than, the Canadiens. While the Bruins were able to pick with the 8th overall selection (Zach Hamill) it was the Canadiens who occupied most of my attention as I regularly sent out "boos" in their general direction. Their first pick was the 12th in the draft and they picked a guy right out of high school - Ryan McDonagh. I thought that was pretty cool, but interesting all the same. The NBA recently put a block on drafting kids out of high school yet baseball and hockey continue to do so. There was an uproar when kids were drafted into the NBA - so why is the media so silent on the same drafting policy of major league baseball and hockey? Inquiring minds want to know.

I took a lot of photos of the event but many didn't come out very well because I am a poor photographer however I put up the best ones I had in an online photo album. You can also read a much more humorous review of the draft over at Page 2 on espn.com courtesy of Bill Simmons

Three Birthdays

2 min read

Well Shannon's birthday celebration is finally complete! After three long weeks she is finally, officially, 6. She had three celebrations, three cakes, and eighteen candles to blow out but eventually she got there just in time for her 11 day spring break to end and for her to head back to school. I think she enjoyed all of the events and all of the gifts she eventually received.

As I have already discussed she had her fairie party with all of her friends. Then last week, on Easter Sunday, we had a Carvel Ice Cream cake when my Dad, step-mother, and youngest brother (Chris), came over for dinner. This past weekend we had the official family party for those family members who could reach our home. My father and his group were back down (sans Chris) with a friend from Oregon, Lisa's parents made it as well, as did Patti and her friend from the convent Barb. It was a nice little get together and Shannon was the recipient of a bunch of nice loot. She got some new clothes, some new bedding, some nice toys, a tinkerbell necklace, and some neat art supplies. As an added bonus both Emily and Shannon got a special treat from my dad and step-mother, Patty.

When Lisa was little she had a step stool that also could act as a small seat. The back folds down over the seat so a little person can more easily carry it. My dad borrowed the stool and managed to duplicate it exactly in size, scale, and shape. He made one for each of the girls. Then Patty brought her decorative painting skills to the table and with the help of all the party goers she managed to transform them into really pretty Tinkerbell and Bambi stools. Lisa's Mom traced the art onto thin vellum, I printed out a bunch of stuff on the computer, Lisa, Patti, Barb, and maybe even Joe all got involved in the painting process, and then Patty put the finishing touches on them that completed the transformation. They look really good. I'll put photos of them up later today (when I am back at home).

Pixie Party

5 min read

This past Saturday we began the celebration of Shannon's 6th birthday. In what seems an unusual trend we are having multiple parties for her this year. The first was her "friend" party in which all of her school friends, and other kids her age, came over to play, eat cake, and have fun. The second party will be more sedate as it will have more adults will focus on family members who can make it in town (the weekend after Easter).

This past weekend was the friends party and Shannon planned most of it with just a little guidance from Lisa and myself. The totality of my input was that it would be a "no-present" party. She has so much stuff, and always gets so much from her family, that her friends really didn't need to be getting her anything. If any of her friends families felt compelled to get her a gift then we would donate the gift to a local charity that helps out needy kids. Many of the parents were a little put off by this stipulation but, in general, they did a good job of respecting our wishes.

IMG_4821.JPGThe theme for the party was "Peter Pan" with a focus on Tinkerbell and fairies. Most of Shannon's classmates and friends are girls so Shannon decided she wanted to have a costume party were all the kids would dress up as fairies. If anyone didn't want to dress up as a fairy they could dress up as a pirate or a lost boy from Peter Pan. In general all of the girls dressed up as a fairy (with one exception - she was Wendy in a dress her grandmother made just for the party). There ended up being just about 20 kids and nearly as many moms on hand for the event. Needless to say the house was full of fun.

We had a play dough table setup, tents and tunnels they could climb/crawl though, the Wii was setup for some of the adults to play, we had hopscotch on the porch (it rained a bit), and pin the wings on the fairy (another great Shannon idea) as well as pin the hook on the pirate (for the boys - she is very thoughtful).

I don't know if you have ever had apx 20 5-6 year old girls in your home before or not but let me tell you - they can be loud. They run, they scream, they scream, they scream, oh and they scream. They had a blast. Little kids in tights and wings fluttering around the house with about four pirates/lost boys tormenting them. It was hilarious and fun to watch.

IMG_4829.JPGFor the first hour of the party though the true hit was Joseppie the Clown. Joseppie made balloon animals and took the demands of the kids in stride all the while wearing a huge red smile. He had a pretty good repetoire of animals as well; he made dogs, mice, giraffe's (a big hit), swords, and even one crown. He was a great help and we really appreciate him not just doing it but volunteering for the role in the first place. Shannon loved having a clown at the party and, for as long as we can keep it, she won't know his true identity. The other parents were all really impressed by Joseppie and I think he could make some good money if he were willing on occasion.

IMG_4826.JPGEventually we had the cake and ice cream and then we ended the party with a mad dash for candy from the Pinata. Every kid had a ton of fun and I think the party was a huge success. Most kids parties now-a-days are held at party places like Chuck-E-Cheese (Billy Bobs Pizza here) or a Bowling Alley. By having the party at our house though the kids all got to actually play together and just have fun. Plus, with having a no present policy but having it be a dress up party all of the kids ended up getting a gift of a costume (if they didn't own one already). One of Shannon's friends, who normally won't go to the parties (due to lack of funds to by a gift) was able to come which was really cool.

IMG_4852.JPGShannon was great. She was totally cool with the idea of a no present party, she seemed to play with everyone and made an effort to make all the kids feel welcome, and even shared most of her candy from the Pinata with kids who weren't able to really get any in the mad scramble. I often say she reminds me of Lisa and in this regard she is no different. I don't think I have ever met two nicer people. Now if only I could get her to give a natural smile for the camera. There are a couple more photos in our online album.

Wii are Family

5 min read

Nintendo WiiA couple of weeks ago Lisa "surprised" me with a Wii. My coworker, and friend, Ed had bought two of the three Toys-R-Us had (one for him, one for his sister) but it turns out his sister got one the same day in D.C. So Lisa bought the extra one and let me tell you, it is really fun. It comes with five basic sports games; bowling, golf, boxing, tennis, and baseball. I'm not too fond of boxing or baseball (in fact I don't like the baseball game at all) but I really enjoy the golf, bowling, and tennis games. I would probably like the boxing a bit more if more of my swings actually registered (read: if I didn't suck).

I haven't owned a new to market console since the Sega Genesis even though I have eyed the PS2, XBox, XBox 360, and the PS3. Lisa isn't much of a gamer and the girls aren't either so it was hard to justify the spending of hundreds of dollars on a game machine if I was the only one going to play it. While the Wii hasn't suddenly turned the family into avid gamers it has managed to draw Lisa in to play some games and Shannon really enjoys it (though Emily hasn't even tried it and won't for another year or so).

Tiger Woods PGA Tour 07We have bought a few extra games for it; Sonic and the Secret Rings, Tiger Woods 2007, Madden 2007, and Wii Play (a set of nine mini-games). I haven't tried Sonic yet but Lisa, Shannon and Joe all played it. Lisa and Shannon seemed to like it somewhat but Joe didn't care for it. The Wii Play games are mostly lame but they can be kind of fun - particularly an old Atari 2600 rebirth of Combat! (the tank game). I am no good at Madden 2007 which is no different than my skill level at any other Madden game however the controls are a lot different so I kind of like it - even though it can be very, very frustrating. Tiger Woods golf is cool but the graphics are rendered a bit darkly on our TV so it is hard to see the hole on the green plus the Wii remote doesn't always register my swings when I'm putting so it can be very difficult to have good "touch" for distance.

The Wii has definitely taken up a lot of our time - we have reduced our overall TV watching substantially because we are playing Wii games (mostly Wii Sports - the five games that came with the Wii). The only real gripes I have with the Wii so far are that there is no online play, the graphics, and the controls. I really wish there was online play because I would really like playing some of these games against my friends without having to have them come over. While the graphics are "ok" they just aren't very good - particularly in Tiger Woods golf. The people all look "weird" and the animations of them are really awkward plus everything is too dark. If I squat and have the TV at exact eye level it is better but the point of the golf mechanics are that you stand up and swing the remote like a real golf club. Finally, the controller. Sometimes it is overly sensitive and other times it doesn't register my moving of it at all. While I love the concept of the controller and have a blast playing the games with it it just doesn't work well enough for sensitive movements. It's perfect for abrupt moves (baseball, golf driving, tennis smashes) but sucks for putting or tennis drop shots - you just can't be delicate and that really gets aggravating.

I have hope that the mechanics and online play stuff will be resolved eventually. I'm resigned to the awkward graphics and think the sports games designers should as well and not try so hard to be photo realistic with the people (Tiger) because they just look odd. My overall impression of the system is a positive one though. My arms have actually been a touch sore after playing a lot of boxing or tennis the next day and, at least with boxing, it is easy to break a sweat so I figure I'm doing myself some minor good by playing some of these games. The price still seems kind of high - and the $50 a game sucks - but that is only because I am cheap. I have gotten my monies worth in hours of entertainment already (as compared to going to movies, amusement parks, etc) so it really isn't all that bad.

As soon as I manage to get my "Mii" off the "Wii" I will get a screen grab of him and put him on the blog for you too see.

Five Year Old Anime

1 min read

IMG_4817.JPGI'm not a huge fan of manga or anime so if you are, and I'm misusing the terms, cut me some slack. Shannon spent a bit of time drawing this morning created this, anime-like self-portrait. She loves to draw and is regularly drawing people and things however this drawing is definitely an improvement on her normal style. Because of this I have started a new online photo album of bits of art she creates. As of this post this drawing is all that is in it. However, if you want to see it in a larger size you can (just click on the image)

Its Snowing Like Mad

1 min read

Snowy DayIt is snowing like crazy outside today. I've lived here (Huntington, WV) for about 11 years (wow) now and it is snowing about as hard as I have ever seen it. It is also really, really cold - it was 1F today on the way to work. Brrr.

If school is delayed or canceled tomorrow morning I will probably go into work late so I can play in the snow with the girls. If, and this is a big if, I can convince Emily to actually play in the snow. Last time she just stood still.

Everyone else has already left work in order to avoid bad traffic on the way home.

Super Bowl - and Super Clean

3 min read

Unless you are living in a cave, and then you wouldn't be getting this email, you know the Super Bowl was played last night. You probably also know that the Colts won (sorry Nate). We had our traditional party and this year the crowd was about as large as it usually is (somewhere between 20-30 people. We had buffalo wings, chili, and pulled pork bbq sandwiches (bbq courtesy of my boss Tom - thanks Tom). Everyone seemed to enjoy themselves thanks in large part to a very entertaining first half.

The festivities wrapped up around 10-11 and after everyone cleared out Lisa tidied up the house; a completely crazy and selfless act considering she had to be up at 5:30 this morning so she could head out and catch a flight to South Carolina for work. She will be basking in the chilly 50's of Myrtle Beach for most of the week so for the next few days it is just the girls and I.

Shannon had a few friends over for the party as well (granted they are the kids of our friends) but she and Emily seemed to have a lot of fun and Shannon was able to show off her gap-full smile to everyone because about a week ago she lost another tooth - this one is one of the top front bad-boys so her smile is really chunky right now - it's great because she is loving it so much. If you didn't know she plans on being a tooth fairy when she grows up (I'm thinking that translate to Dentist or Oral Surgeon).

ROOMBA iRobot Roomba Discovery Cordless Robot Vacuum Cleaner 4210On January 26th on woot.com I bought a Roomba Discovery vacuum. It is a bit of a frivolous purchase I realize but I couldn't resist. I have wanted to get one for a while now and the price was about $130 off retail so I jumped at the chance. It arrived at the office today (via FedEx) so, after making sure it is fully charged I gave it a test in the office - it worked like a charm.

My office is about 30' x 15' and is broken up amongst four people. Two of us have our desks out in the open and the other two have partitioned themselves off behind cubicle walls; one of which has made his space almost like a closet. There are also a few free floating guest chairs, two parts of a sectional sofa, a small fridge, a bookshelf, a filing cabinet, and a few extra computers on the floor. The Roomba handled all of these wierd obstacles without a problem and even focused on the dirtiest parts of the room starting with the area just in front of the door. After roaming around randomly picking up bits and pieces of dust and debris it found its' way into each cube and under each desk. It spent a bit of extra time under each desk right where our feet rest signifying it had found a particularly dirty spot. Once it was done I turned it off and opened it up to see how much crap it found - it was a pretty good quantity; especially considering we have a maid service that vacuums every 2-3 days.

Tonight I'll test it out on the hardwood and tile floors of the first floor. It will be nice, if it works well, to come home to a freshly vacuumed house every day!

Keep Up With Your Daily Goals

2 min read

I just hit upon a site called "Joes Goals" that seems to be really easy to use and could really help me achieve a variety of daily goals. It builds a small weekly calendar you can just click on when you achieve either a good goal or perpetrate a bad habit.

You can also setup a "journal" that takes in small entries about what you did for various things. For instance, let's say you wanted to set up a goal of exercising 20minutes a day, four times a week. You just add the goal "20 minutes Exercise" and then,when you actually exercise you can click on the day and a little checkmark will appear. You can also set up a journal called "Exercise" which will also be in the same calendar grid. After you exercise, if you want to mention what you did you can click on the exercise box for the day and quickly enter some details about your activity.

The site is free and seems to generate all of its' revenue via Google Ads. Sign up is exceptionally easy (provide an email address, first name, and password) and adding goals and journals isn't much harder. You do need a pretty modern web browser to use the site (Firefox, Opera, or IE7+) due to it's slick interface.

If you have any small daily type goals this site might be just the ticket for you. I don't think it would be that great for big goals that have a lot of parts to them - but for small tangible goals it looks great. It is also good for keeping yourself from doing bad things (say, like eating dessert) because you can setup negative goals that you check only when you mess up.

Here are some other "daily goal" suggestions:


  • Read to my child
  • Clean Kitchen before going to bed
  • Write a blog post
  • Eat Sensibly
  • Jog

I'm sure it will be easy for you to find plenty of your own little life improving goals or bad habits to try and avoid such as (the following are "bad goals"):


  • Go out to eat
  • Yell at kids
  • Pick Nose
  • Lick frozen lamp posts

Most of all have fun and use the tool to help make small, but positive changes in your life!

Disney World Redux

18 min read

IMG_3961.JPGAs you may know we went to Disney World last week. We were there for about six days and did a ton. Amazingly, we still didn't do everything and we only rode two rides more than once (both of those were during "extended hours" we paid extra for); however, we did have a lot of fun - especially Shannon. This image of Shannon links to about fifty of the 400 plus images from the week.

The trip started out smoothly with a flight from Charleston, WV to Atlanta where we caught our connector and headed south to Orlando. We actually had a delay in leaving Charleston (about 30-45 minutes) but it wasn't important because it just reduced our layover in Atlanta. Emily slept on both flights but Shannon had some issues going into Orlando and suffered some inner ear pain. She dealt with it pretty well (though I'm sure the guy right in front of her probably disagrees. We then shuffled through the airport to baggage claim (where Disney had already claimed our bags) and then loaded on a shuttle bus we had to wait about five minutes for. The bus (a rather nice one) took us to the hotel (All Star Music) at which point we unloaded, checked in, and then had our first meal at the All Star Music Cafe.

The food was barely passable. I had spaghetti and, while it was decent, it was barely enough and made me nervous about our dining plans for the trip. Lisa had done her homework and had bought our park tickets in a package that included a meal plan, hotel accommodations, and park tickets. It was a great deal but I wasn't really thrilled with the meal plan. Each day, on the plan, we had a "counter service", a "sit down service", and a snack. We used our "counter service" for lunch (except that first meal and our "sit down" for dinner. A counter service meal consisted of a main course, a dessert, and a drink. You must select all three before you go to the checkout (you can't get the meal piece-meal) or else you miss out on whichever parts you had not decided on. Of course, I didn't know this when I arrived. I was taking care of Emily and our meals. I grabbed some food for her and my spaghetti, a chocolate milk for her, and planned on getting a fountain drink. I didn't bother with dessert selection because I was hoping to have ice cream and didn't want it to melt while I ate my dinner. The cashier, William, was less than friendly and basically told me I was out of luck on the dessert plan. Had I had dessert the amount of food would have been fine (as it was the rest of the week) but that night I wasn't very happy. Fortunately, my later experiences with the food plan were better.

After dinner we headed to our room which was a family suite; a new concept on the Disney properties that took what was formerly two separate rooms and combined them into one. The room was nicely sized. Half consisted of a living room and a bathroom while the other half held the bedroom, a small kitchenette, and another bathroom. The living room had a couch, a large chair/love seat, and a very large ottoman. Each of those three pieces folded out into beds (a queen, and two singles respectively). There was also a 27" tv and a small "bistro" table with two chairs. The kitchenette had a microwave, a dorm fridge, a small sink, and some paper dishes (Disney themed of course). Considering the room was barely more expensive than two rooms and we had the kitchenette I was pretty happy with the accommodations. However, our bags hadn't arrived from the airport yet and the girls pj's and all of our toiletries were in them. We waited up until nearly 10 with the girls before we gave up. Lisa and I stayed awake until 11:30 but the bags still didn't arrive so we decided to go to sleep. Lisa had called the front desk earlier and told them to deliver the bags regardless of the hour which, unfortunately, meant I was awoken at 3am by the guy with our luggage. He had knocked a couple times before I got out of bed then tried to open the door to the room (which we had latched) so, for a second, I thought someone was trying to break in. The door to the room enters into the living room and, amazingly, once all the bags were in and the bellboy was gone, the girls were still asleep. I took their cue and went back to bed myself.

IMG_4200.JPGThe next morning we got up, got dressed, and headed to the Magic Kingdom. Shannon and Emily were very excited! We got into the main gate and immediately found some characters who were signing autographs and getting their photos taken; starting with Chip and Dale. At this first stand there was a professional photographer who handed out a "photo pass" card which you could use all over all of the parks. Basically, all of the Disney photographers would scan your card and then the photos they took would be connected to your account; later you can view those photos online and decide if you want to buy the whole package ($99 for up to 300 different photos on one CD). We then went around the first building, rented a stroller (about $100 for the entire trip; but well worth it for reasons I will explain later) and then got in line so the girls could meat Pluto and Daisy. Once we were done with that we headed down main street, checked out a couple stores, saw a small "Oklahoma" type rendition on a street car, and then saw a neat musical thing involving dreams and nightmares on the patio in front of Cinderella's castle. Once that was over we called Ted (my older brother) who was also coming to Disney with his family. They were nearly at the front gate so we headed back up main street and joined up with them for the start of a fun filled week.

Now that we were all together (Lisa, Me, Shannon, Emily, Ted, Cyndy , Austin (11), and Heather (7)) we headed for the first set of rides which included "It's a Small World" and "Dumbo". The girls (Shannon, Emily, and Heather) really liked all of the rides in that part of the park. Then we headed off toward "tomorrowland" where we rode a ride just like "Dumbo" but with Rockets and then Space Mountain!

Shannon is a little timid about rides and had, earlier in the day, waited in line for the haunted house before backing out at the last second so I was pretty sure she wouldn't want to go on Space Mountain. Heather, on the other hand, wanted to go on every ride and had no hesitation about the Haunted House or Space Mountain. If you haven't been there before Space Mountain is a roller-coaster, but it is inside and isn't an obviously "scary ride" so Shannon wanted to go with Heather. I looked at her surprised but didn't disillusion her - I wanted her to go on as many rides as possible. We waited in line (for about 10-20 minutes) listening to very mellow mood music and looking at peaceful holograms. Finally, when it was almost our turn on the ride I saw that Shannon would have to sit alone (I had thought it would be like the rest of the Disney rides were you sit two in a row). Shannon decided the order of seating would be Austin, her, Heather, me, Ted, and Cyndy. We piled in (I was pretty nervous for her) and the ride took off. The first few turns were cool and you could hear Shannon saying "Wee!!!". By the way, this ride is mostly in the dark so you can't see what is coming. Shortly after those first two turns we hit the first "drop" and the wee turned into a paniced scream for me. I yelled back that she was alright, I was there, and that the ride is fun. I repeated my mantra "This is fun Shannon, I'm right here" until the ride stopped. After I unloaded she staggered out of the ride and walked/stumbled with her arms outstretched in, what appeared to be, a state of shock, until I picked her up. Then she cried briefly until I told her how brave she was and that she did something even her mom wouldn't do. That perked her up and she seemed to recover well. She wasn't interested in going on it again but she spoke positively about the ride the rest of the week.

Later that night we headed to the Contemporary Hotel via the monorail and had our first "character dinner" at Chef Mickey's diner. There we ate from a decent buffet and the girls got the chance to meet Mickey, Minny, Donald, Pluto, and Goofy. Shannon really enjoyed it and Emily started to warm up to the idea of giant stuffed animals wanting to hug her. She still wouldn't do it without me holding her but you could tell she was loosening up. Shannon, on the other hand, needed no encouragement and would run and hug the various characters. She also took a book with her that she used as an autograph book. Over the course of the week she must have gotten close to fifty different signatures from various characters (some of them more than once). She really, really, enjoyed meeting the characters.

The second day we went to the Animal Kingdom where we saw some cool creatures, dinosaur bones, and shows including a 3-d movie involving "Flick" from "Ants." At some point during the day we had to split up so that Ted, Austin, and I could go on the Mt. Everest roller coaster while the girls went to see Rafiki and another show. At the show Shannon and Heather were pretty outspoken and drew the attention of the singer/songwriter who was leading things. He then changed up a song to be all about how the two of them Invented Everything! From that point on if you asked Shannon she invented whatever you had in your hand ranging from the stroller to the chicken we ate for lunch. We also went on a safari ride were we saw a bunch of animals roaming around including a pride of Lions. At some point during this day Emily started to feel a little funky and didn't really have much energy. At this point the stroller came in very handy.

We had considered bringing our own stroller to Disney with us but it had a couple drawbacks. First we would have to lug it around on the buses between parks and secondly it could only hold one of the girls. The strollers at Disney are pretty low to the ground and you can get a double wide that both girls could share. Even better the foot area was so big we were able to push all three (including Heather) at times. However, the best part of this stroller became evident once Emily started getting sick and wanted to sleep. We had Heather and Shannon get up and walk and Emily could sprawl out and crash. For the next 2 days she was either sleeping in the stroller, on my shoulder, or in a high chair with her head on the table. On the second day I stayed back at the hotel with her until her temp (which seemed very high) broke and she regained some of her energy. She was never 100% on the trip but she still had plenty of fun.

IMG_4345.JPGAfter Emily started to bounce back we met the crew back at the Magic Kingdom where we went to "Frontierland" and "Adventureland" were we hit a few more rides and then had to cut out so the girls could get dressed for their dinner at Cinderella's castle. Emily dressed as Snow White and Shannon dressed as Tinkerbell for the meal. Earlier in the day they had gotten their photos taken with Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, and Belle. At the enterence to dinner they got to meet Cinderella again who assured them she remembered them from earlier in the day (a nice touch) and they had another professional photo taken (this one was delivered at dinner as part of the meal package). We then headed upstairs to the main dining room of the palace (I wasn't sure there was an upstairs). We had a decent meal (though the prime rib was overcooked) and the girls got to meet two of Cinderella's mice and her Fairy Godmother. At the end of the meal the nights fireworks (Disney does them every night) started to go off. It turns out they use Cinderella's castle for a launching point for many so we had a good view out the window for the lights. Emily really digs fireworks so she fully enjoyed that part of the meal.

The next day found us at MGM Studios were we saw two really cool stunt shows (Raiders of the Lost Ark and a Car Stunt Show that even had a few tricks that impressed Ted (who has been trained to do a lot of wild driving stuff). Ted, Ausin, and I went on the Tower of Terror and the Aerosmith Roller coaster. The Roller coaster is cool simply because of how fast you start the ride. I also had a really good strawberry Ice Cream snack over near the Tower/Rollercoaster part of the park. Overall I think my favorite part of Disney to walk around is MGM Studio's because each part is so well done you really feel like in your different areas/time periods. It's pretty cool.

Honestly, the days are blurring together in my mind so I may be messing the order of things up a bit - so I apologize for any inaccuracies at this point.

We ate a late dinner at MGM at a 50's style "Mom-n-Pop" type place. The food was OK (we almost all had fried chicken) but the price was crazy. OUr food was covered on the meal plan but Ted and his group had to pay over $100 for a fried chicken dinner. I was pretty disgusted at how expensive it was. I was feeling pretty wierd that night so I gave Austin my dessert which was a brownie sundae that looked really, really, good. I'm still partially regretting that bit of generosity on my part!

IMG_4402.JPGThe next day we were at Epcot where, I have to say, I was the most disappointed with the entire park system. Epcot has some cool stuff (including my favorite ride Mission: Space) but it is also the most blatantly commercial part of Disney. I know Disney is a big commercial for Disney - but Epcot is more than that. Everything we did was sponsored by one company or another. In the imagination place there was thing sponsored by IBM, another by HP, and another by Microsoft XBoxs. You could rent a Segway there (which I was tempted to try) but I decided against because I figured it would be exorbitantly priced. We went on a ride with Lisa's favorite Epcot character "figment" which was kind of neat but then when we got off we were injected into a live infomercial for Kodak digital camera's and printers. Even the end of Mission: Space had a room filled with activities that were sponsored, once again, by Hewlett Packard (I think). I understand people need to advertise but I thought the gross commercialization cheapened the Epcot experience.

Not all of Epcot was bad. In fact two of my favorite parts of the trip took place there. The first was the ride Mission: Space. I really wanted to go on the ride and I was not disappointed. It simulated a couple g's of force as you take off in your X-2 rocket, slingshot around the moon, avoid asteroids, and then perform a crazy landing on the surface of mars. I would have gone on that one again if I had the time. The second thing we did was go to a German BeirGarten for dinner in the German part of Epcot's walk of nations. Our waitress was from Germany (as were most of them) and she had lived about 30 miles north of where Ted was stationed when he was there. Ted and I each had a huge stein of Franziskaner Hefeweizen (one of Ted's favorites and our waitress's favorite). The glass was huge and had to hold close to half a gallon of beer. There was live music performed including two guys who played the bells (that was very cool) and they both played the alphorn (a really long horn made famous in the states in Riccola commercials). I had a huge plate of Schnitzel (I love Schnitzel) and a bounty of desserts. We had a blast but had to end the night early.

That night we had to cut out and head back to the Magic Kingdom for our night of extended hours which was part of a Christmas party. Mostly the party consisted of free hot cocoa and a parade. I'm not much of a parade person but Lisa, Shannon, and Emily all really enjoyed the parade. The weather at this point also took a turn south and dropped from the mid 70's to the low 50's (wind chill into the low 40's). We, of course, weren't dressed for the weather so I bought the girls a really nice soft Tinkerbell blanket. After the parade we went on Dumbo and "It's a Small World" again before deciding we were all too tired to hang out any longer. We headed back to the bus for the hotel where we ran into a huge group of young (7-15 year old) cheerleaders from Dracut Mass. My father is from Dracut and his part of my family still lives out there. One of the girls (an older high school aged "chaperon") actually dated my cousin Joey Huntress (a WR for the Dracut High football team). It was pretty crazy. It really is a small world? On a similar note Ted ran into his across-the-street neighbor at every park we visited and they didn't even know they would be at Disney at all before the trip.

Boo: Kitty!On Friday the temp stayed cold so we headed to downtown Disney to do some shopping. Earlier in the week Lisa put Emily's hair in pigtails for the first time ever and I commented that I thought she looked a lot like Boo from Monster's Inc. At an art store at Downtown Disney we found a small statue of Boo that captures Emily nicely so we bought it along with four small Tinkerbell lithograph's for Shannon's room. They paintings are really pretty and Shannon is very excited about hanging them in her room. They are about 8x11 in size so it should be cheap for us to frame them for her.

That night was our final character breakfast, back at the Magic kingdom, this time with Pooh and company. We were joined by Pooh, Tigger, Eyeore, and Piglet. Emily, at this point, was fully comfortable with the big characters and hugged each of them when they came up. Shannon, of course, continued to enjoy herself. After dinner we walked around the park a bit before heading back to the hotel to meet up with Ted and Cyndy for a final night's hangout. They had spent that day relaxing back at their condo. The next day was our flight home.

The flight home was even smoother than the one down there but the temperature was much colder here in WV than it was in Orlando. Both girls were great and had a fantastic time. Amazingly, with everything we did, we didn't see everything. We didn't go to portions of the Magic Kingdom, we didn't go to either water park (Blizzard Beach and Typhoon Lagoon), and I'm sure we missed a bunch of the Epcot bits as we went through so fast. I am not sure how much the trip, in total, cost but it was not cheap. However, based on Shannon's and Emily's reactions to everything it was worth every penny. We will probably end up going back again one more time when Emily is close to 6 but I'm not sure when we will do it considering school etc kind of gets in the way.

Why The Cowboys Stink

1 min read

My friend, Ryan Parker, is at it again. This time he has put together a song and video about why the Dallas Cowboys stink.


This is a really funny song written from the perspective of Bill Parcells.