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August 2008

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Help Kids!

Plan Now to See the Leaves of Autumn

Ever driven the Blue Ridge Parkway when the leaves are changing color in the autumn?  It's just awesome.  Ever wanted to spend a quiet weekend up there, absolutely away from it all and relax for a few days as you roam the area and enjoy the scenery?  If so, I have the place for you.

Sadie's Place is a small country house that Debbie and Steve Erickson have converted into a weekend getaway.  You can literally be on the Parkway in less than a minute from their location, but it also features a small creek running just yards away from the front door and a fantastic porch for sitting and sipping hot cider or your adult beverage of choice.  (Full disclosure: We're relatives, but I'd write this anyway if we weren't).

From Sadie's Place you can also be in Laurel Springs in just minutes and you can be in West Jefferson or Sparta in a little under 1/2 hour.  Laurel Springs is home to Thistle Meadow Winery and West Jefferson is home to all kinds of cool establishments. 

Debbie and Steve will be happy to take care of you, so give yourself a break this fall and spend a few days up in North Carolina's beautiful Blue Ridge area.  I'm sure Debbie and Steve would love to make you feel right at home.

Sadie's Place

For rental information contact:

Steve or Debbie Erickson
(919) 545-9204 or (336) 416-6080

Email: mooonbaby AT yahoo.com


   

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Real Adventure in Air Travel

Next time I complain about air travel remind me that it can always get worse/scarier.  For evidence I give you today's emergency landing of a small US Airways plane at our very own Piedmont Triad International Airport.  WXII has video of the landing here.

The short Greensboro-Charlotte flight is a very common flight for folks connecting to more distant locales from the Triad and so I think many of us can imagine ourselves sitting in that teeny-weeny prop plane and looking out the window to see one of the propellers stop working.  When I flew from Burlington, VT to La Guardia last week I was on a plane just like the one with the problems today and I can tell you that one of my thoughts was, "I wonder if they ever have engine failures on these things."  Of course you could think the same things about small jets too, but for some reason it seems so much more likely with a propeller.  I realize it's not logical to think that way, but maybe because you can actually see the propeller in action it seems much more vulnerable to failure than a jet with it's turbine function all but invisible to the naked eye.

Anyway, I can tell you that if I was on that flight I'd have given the pilot a loud ovation the second we touched down safely.  I also would have kissed the ground as soon as I was off the plane.  Not sure how I'd have felt about getting on another flight though.

links for 2008-07-23

Loving the BTV, Headed to GSO

I flew up to Burlington VT for my first all-hands meeting with my new employer, Fletcher/CSI.  I'd never been up here before, despite having siblings who attend(ed) the University of Vermont (I know, shame on me) and I have to say I should have made it here a lot sooner.  We had meetings all day yesterday and today, and my only glimpse of the town was when we had a company dinner at Sweetwaters downtown, but even based on that limited experience I can tell you I very much look forward to returning.  This is truly a beautiful place, and it's a travesty that I never visited my brother or sisters while they were in school here.  Actually I have one sister still in school so hopefully she'll be seeing me here a few times before she graduates.

Unfortunately on this trip I didn't have any free time to do any visiting, but I'll make sure to schedule extra time to visit when I return.  For now I'm sitting at my gate at the airport (BTV) and it looks like my flight to LaGuardia will be delayed 1 1/2 hours, which ought to make trying to get my connector to GSO a little interesting.  I just checked that flight on FlightStats and it's delayed too, so hopefully I'll be okay.

I know all this because BTV has free wi-fi and their landing page when you log in is a nice mix of local weather and updated flight status for all upcoming flights.  Since the flight status section is a feed from FlightStats it's easy to connect through the site to check the status of connector flights.  Very cool, and I wish GSO would offer the same. 

Ah, Kharma

Last time I typed and you read I was sitting in O'Hare waiting for my flight home.  I must say that I had an exceptional run of good travel luck over the last 10 days.  I had two business trips, one to San Diego and one to Chicago.  In all I had six flights and in all that only two delays, the longest being about one hour.  On the red eye home from California I had a young mother with a 7-month old baby in her lap sitting next to me and the baby slept the entire trip.  Last night I was crammed into my seat next to a rather large person overflowing from the seat next to mine when the stewardess asked me if I'd like to move three rows back to one of the two empty seats on the whole flight, the other empty seat being the one offered to me.  It's been years since I've been this lucky.

So it should have come as no surprise when I walked in my door last night at 11:30 to find our refrigerator pulled away from the wall and lots of towels on the floor.  It seems that while Celeste and the kids were at the kids' swim meet last night the water line to the ice maker/water dispenser in the refrigerator had a blow out.  Celeste came home to find water coming out of our basement ceiling and running down the wall just outside our storage closet.  Keep in mind that the drop down ceiling and wall were just added to our basement three months ago when we had it finished.  In other words it's all brand new.

Shaking my head I made my way back to the bedroom to find Celeste sucking down a glass of red wine.  She took one look at me and said, "I think I need to get drunk."  This from a woman who's had one too many drinks maybe two times in the 18 years I've known her.  She didn't proceed to get drunk, but she definitely bent my ear about the piece-of-**** refrigerator we bought when we moved here four years ago.

Can't say I'd argue with her on that point.  The auger that moves the ice from the ice maker to the ice dispenser broke exactly one day after the warranty expired.  Then the motor in the ice maker started making horrific noises so I decided to fix the whole shebang.  I got the motor fixed (see here), but never the auger. It really is a piece of crap.

Funny thing is that the seminar I just attended in Chicago featured two speakers one who works for Whirlpool.  Guess which company manufactured our piece-of-**** refrigerator?  When I get a chance I'm going to type a nice email to send him with some not-so-objective feedback on at least one of his company's products.

Kharma's a funny thing isn't it?

Ready to Sleep

Well, it looks like my last post, Random Stop?, attracted the most comments I've had on a post since I wrote about Ernest Angley.  Writing about a hot-button issue like illegal immigration and wondering aloud if the police were racial profiling at a trafic stop AND getting a link from Esbee will do that.  I haven't responded to most of the comments because I've been working in Chicago since Sunday night and I'm just now getting the chance to sit in front of my computer for the first time since then.  I'm sitting in O'Hare waiting for my flight back to GSO and honestly I'm too tired to respond effectively.  I'll do it tomorrow when my brain's a little less fuzzy.

O'Hare's fun for people-watching but not much else.  The internet connection I paid $6.95 for is agonizingly slow.  The same people who are fun to watch are often also rude, and many smell a little ripe.  Maybe that's the food court.  Anyway, it's a nuthouse.  That makes for a great contrast with the GSO terminal, which is so quiet you could hold a meditation session in one of the 80% of gates that aren't used at any given time. 

Here's how quiet GSO is.  My flight out on Sunday night was scheduled to take off at 7:50 p.m.  It was delayed an hour so I was hanging out in the little Sam Adams bar near the gates on the United side of the terminal. Tiger was struggling down the back-9 at the US Open and I was enjoying the show with about 10 of my fellow passengers.  Unfortunately the bar shut down at 8:00 (8:00!) so we all had to leave, but luckily the TV was left on while the cleaning crew was doing their thing so we watched through the security gate.  The cleaning crew finished right after Tiger teed off on the 18th and they shut off the TV so we all returned to the gate and a guy did a play-by-play while listening to the broadcast on his iPod.  Classic.

I think we were the last flight out since the approximately 30 people on our flight were the last people in the terminal and the gate agent was so desperate to get rid of us he helped clean the plane when it arrived from some exotic locale, Minneapolis I believe.  I think he had a party to get to. 

I love flying out of GSO, but I wonder how long it can survive with so few passengers.  Normally I'd mark up the experience to an anomaly, but the airport has been this sedate all four years I've been using it regularly.  Sadly, it only seems to be getting worse.

Oh well.  No more travel for a while, which is nice.  I've met lots of interesting people over the last week and a half, which makes the travel more than bearable, but I'm looking forward to being home for a while.  Not sure if Celeste and the kids feel the same, but they're stuck with me so I think we'll all adjust. 

Notes from the Road

The trip to San Diego ended up being a good one.  No flight delays and great weather definitely helped, but being able to spend a couple of days talking to some really smart people from companies in a variety of industries was really the highlight.  If I'm going to spend four days away from the family it's great to be able to learn a lot in the process, and the best way to learn is to surround yourself with people smarter than you are.

It's also fun to have a "small world" moment.  One of the people I met this week grew up a mile from one of the neighborhoods I lived in while growing up in Northern Virginia and since he's a year younger than my brother they actually went to elementary school together.  He now lives in Atlanta and since I had a layover in Atlanta we ended up on the same flight home, and when we ran into each other at the airport he invited me and another person from the conference into the Delta Lounge as his guests.  Drinking free cocktails is a great way to pass the time at an airport.

In one of the conference sessions I attended I set next to a guy from a health care company and in the course of the group discussion he talked about a technology that had turned into a home run for his company. Ends up they had licensd it from Wake Forest University.  That conversation helped reinforce to me how big a player WFU is despite its diminutive size and I'm darn glad we have it here in Winston-Salem.

Finally, on the last day of the conference I was trying to figure out how to kill the five or six hours I had until my flight.  A couple of other conference goers had cars and were staying for the rest of the week so they offered to drive a bunch of us into the town of Coronado from the hotel, and then after doing some sightseeing and dinner they offered a ride to the airport to those of us flying out that night.  So we got to walk through Coronado, see the beach, have a nice dinner and then have a comfortable ride to the airport.  And as I mentioned before we also got to hang out in the Delta lounge.  Nice!

Makes me wonder if fate has a nasty trip in store for me to try and even things out.

100 vs 70

I'm in San Diego to attend a conference being held at the Loews Coronado Bay Resort.  It's a great location any time, but when the temp outside is 70 with a gentle sea breeze and the temp back home is closing in on 100 with that lovely North Carolina humidity it's even better.  Thankfully the conference organizers have scheduled some form of networking event on the terrace each day so we don't spend all of our time in windowless meeting rooms.

BTW, it's a lot more fun to attend a conference than to organize/run one.  My company's a sponsor of the event, but the way the conference is structured we aren't stuck in an exhibit booth like at other events. We're expected to participate in the interactive sessions and we're invited to participate in all networking events.  Makes for long days, but considering how many truly interesting and smart people I've met it's definitely a great experience.

Conference link: Frost & Sullivan's 4th Annual Innovations in New Product Development and Marketing 2008

People Being People

I'm flying to San Diego today on business and of course it offers a great people watching experience. I connected through Atlanta which means I got to ride the train between terminals. The doors of the train began to close and a woman who had just gotten on and who was jabbering away on her phone realized thaty her teenage daughter wasn't with her. She jumped in the door to prevent them from closing and to give her daughter a chance to get on. She assumed that the doors would just pop back open like elevator doors but they just kind of squished her. A man standing behind her stepped up and helped pull them open and let her daughter on. Here's the deal; the woman never stopped talking on the phone except to yell at her daughter to hurry, not even to thank the man who helped her. She didn't even nod. The rest of us just shook our heads and kind of smiled at each other.

Sadly this type of thing is just too common, but this incident doesn't match my all-time favorite which was the guy in an O'Hare bathroom who was talked on his phone while using the urinal and walking out of the bathroom. Of course he didn't wash his hands, not that he would normally, but he was far too busy talking to do it anyway.

Shocked I Tell You

Something that verges on miraculous happened to me on my trip to San Diego:  I experienced a round trip of flying that experienced no significant delays and two uneventful flights.  Sadly that qualifies as miraculous in modern air travel.

I traveled on USAir and the only notable negative was that during the flight to California, which took off at 6:00-ish, they ran out of meal and snack boxes (available for the bargain price of $6-ish dollars) before the stewardesses made it half way through the cabin.  Go figure that a flight that took off at dinner time would have hungry passengers.  I have no problem with them charging for meals if they let the passengers know ahead of time, but good gracious you'd think they would have planned to have a few more meals available on a trans-continental flight that took off at dinner time.  Luckily I'd already eaten on the way to the airport so I didn't need a meal, and for the return flight I made sure I brought plenty of snacks to sustain me for the flight.

The way I see it the airlines' primary job is to get passengers to their destinations on time, or close to it, in something approximating comfort.  The fact that when they do so it feels exceptional says a lot about what's wrong with the airline industry.

Both flights were oversold so they spent a lot of time at the gates trying to bribe passengers to give up their seats in return for free round trip tickets anywhere in the lower-48 states.  That's why I was glad to read last week that the Feds are raising the minimum rates that airlines have to pay when they bump passengers.  I think they're going to need as much encouragement as possible to treat us right.

What to Do In Myrtle Beach When It Rains for a Week

Not a whole heckuva lot, unless of course you don't mind paying top dollar to go to one of the 79 Ripley's properties in town.  To me Myrtle has become the anti-beach, a place that seems to exist to show exactly how badly man can screw up a natural wonder like a wide sandy beach.

The highlights from our time in Myrtle:

  • Time spent together as a family.  We had some very nice meals together and managed to laugh.  A lot.
  • A trip to the Huntington Beach State Park about 20 minutes south of Myrtle.  We were there on a rainy day so we had the place to ourselves.  Beautiful place, even in the rain, and juxtaposed with Myrtle Beach it highlights how un-pretty Myrtle truly is.
  • Getting seafood at a joint in Murrells Inlet. You can never go wrong with fresh seafood.

I can't complain too much.  Our kids are getting old enough that I can see a day in the not-too-distant future when we'll not be able to easily get all of us off on vacation together.  Sure the weather was awful, and granted I'm not a fan of Myrtle Beach, but I'll take a week with all of us spending time together in Siberia over a week by myself in Hawaii. If nothing else this trip reminded me of that essential truth.

Hey Daddy!

So on Saturday I land in Charlotte after a 9 1/2 hour flight from Germany.  I clear customs without a hitch, get my checked luggage and before I know it I'm in my car heading north on I-77 to Statesville to meet my family at a hot air balloon festival.  I'm low on gas so I stop to tank up and as I stand next to my car I hear a man say "Hey Daddy!" and I look around to find a guy in his 50's and obviously down on his luck approaching me.  In one hand he has a plastic grocery back full of something and in the other he has what looks like a laptop case.

"Hey daddy", he says again and follows with, "you about a 40?"

"Huh?", I reply.

"You got about a 40 inch waist?", he asks.

"Uh, yeah I guess about that", I say more than a little warily.

"I got some boxers that'd look real nice on you and I give 'em to you cheap", he says.  I notice that he's missing a front tooth but his other teeth look really healthy and white.  It looks like he brushes pretty regularly which is a change from most of the people who have tried to hustle me in the past.

"Uh, no thanks I have plenty of boxers," I tell him.

"They're real cheap man, just $3," he says.

"No really I don't need 'em," I insist.

"Okay, I'll throw in a watch and it will still only be $3."

"No thanks," I say, a little annoyance creeping into my voice.  I'm tired and I just want to go see my family and I don't feel like messing with this guy.  Forget that he's probably having the kind of day that makes a 9 1/2 hour flight seem like nothing.  Hell, they fed me twice on the plane and this guy may not have had a square meal all day.  That's not on my mind though because I'm tired and I'm only thinking about seeing Celeste and the kids.

"No offense man, I'm just trying to hustle for some money, okay Daddy?"

"No problem, I'm just not interested."

"Okay daddy," he says and then moves to the next pump where another car has just pulled in. 

"Hey daddy, what you got about a 50 inch waist?  I got some boxers that'd look real good on you and they're only $3."

After I got back on 77 I thought about two things; I should have slipped the guy a couple of bucks and I should have told him that it's not an effective sales technique to remind middle-aged guys how fat they've gotten.  I feel bad that I didn't do either.

German TV

So I woke up last night at 2 a.m. Frankfurt time, and that was after sleeping five hours.  Unfortunately I knew right away that I wasn't going to get back to sleep any time soon so I decided to call home and then do some reading.  After the call and an hour or two of reading I clicked on the TV and started surfing through the 40 or so channels of TV that the hotel carries.  In the process I discovered some interesting things:

  1. Girls doing things to girls, if you get my drift, is a staple of German late night television.  At first I thought this was an interesting departure from the infomercials that are a staple of late night TV in the states, but then I realized that they were all hawking SMS p-rn services and s-x lines.  As I surfed the channels I counted at least five that ran these things, which means that over 10% of the stations had them.

    I'm still trying to figure out what kind of guy would get worked up with some supposed woman sending him messages like "U R so hot U R mkg me..." Of course the wireless services here are so far ahead of ours in the US that it would be a good bet that they deliver high quality video to pervs' phones and they're just using "SMS" in the same way that some people call all sodas "Coke".  Either way, you don't see the "commercials" or the wireless p-rn back in the states. 
  2. They carry Al Jazeera and I have to tell you that if it wasn't for the little symbol in the corner I would have thought it was another version of CNN, except with real reporters.  All the reporters I saw were British and considering that they were running opposite Wolf Blitzer they came off looking like geniuses.  Only when you get a chance to watch BBC, Sky TV and, yes, Al Jazeera do you begin to appreciate what unmitigated crap we have for national TV news programming in the states.  I think what I like best about the non-US networks is that they don't all assume that the average viewer is ADHD and on his sixth cup of coffee in the last hour.  Stories have depth, some running several minutes, and the reporters and commentators address the audience with a calm and reserve that we haven't seen on US television in at least 20 years.  What's interesting to me is that Sky and Fox are both owned by Rupert Murdoch, but Sky makes Fox look like a production of some local high school's Young Republicans group. Shows you what he thinks of we Amerikaners.  Not that Sky comes across as particularly great, but in comparison to our junk it seems almost NPR-worthy.  FYI, one of the most viewed videos on Sky's site is the manager at the KFC in Statesville NC (about 1/2 hour from my house) fighting off a shotgun-toting robber.  It really is a small world.
  3. EuroSport is the anti-ESPN.  Nary a studio full of retired players or coaches as panelists to be found and lets just say that the sports they carry are hard to come by on the west side of the Atlantic.  In the course of browsing I saw sumo wrestling, snooker and team handball.  The last is a hybrid of soccer and basketball that I'd love to give a try, but I doubt I'll ever get the chance.  Note to ESPN execs: can you please dial back the BS and start just giving us the sports?  You're beginning to remind me of MTV (what happened to the music?) and not in a good way.
  4. It's a trip seeing movies with German voice-overs, especially the male voices.  The Germans all sound much more "manly" than the original actors, especially guys like Steven Seagall. 

Hopefully that will be the extent of my German television reviews since I'd like to get at least a little sleep over the next few days.

Renting a Car in Europe?

Here's something I wish I'd known about six months ago.  Apparently if you're an American traveling to Europe and need to rent a car you should try to do so on the rental company's website for that country because it will cost you a lot less to rent the same car.  From a New York Times Travel section article by Michelle Higgins (found via bookofjoe):

FOR a trip to Barcelona, Jorge Cuadros, a lawyer from Alexandria, Va., turned to the Internet to book a rental car. On Hertz.com, Mr. Cuadros was quoted a price of 626.12 euros for an automatic Mercedes for five days in October. At $1.42 to the euro, that amounted to about $890.

Out of curiosity, Mr. Cuadros switched to his native Spanish tongue and checked Hertz’s Spanish Web site, www.hertz.es, where the same car was offered for 263.92 euros — about 58 percent less. He had stumbled upon a little-known trick that many online travel companies would rather keep quiet.

“It seems that the car rental companies are in some cases even charging twice the price to residents of the U.S. than to Europeans,” said Mr. Cuadros, who compares the practice to how some pharmaceutical companies charge more in the United States than they do overseas. “This is abusive behavior.”

And it's not just the car rental companies:

In an effort to expand their global reach, online travel agencies based in the United States like Expedia and Travelocity, as well as individual airlines and car rental agencies, are creating Web sites geared to foreign counties. Travelocity, for example, just started Travelocity.com.mx for customers in Mexico. It also has Travelocity.co.uk for Britain; www.Travelocity.de for Germany; and Travelocity.ca for Canada. Expedia has 13 foreign sites including Expedia.dk (Denmark), Expedia.it (Italy) and Expedia.fr (France).

The savings can be considerable. An Expedia.com search for a round-trip flight from Melbourne to Sydney in August yielded a $350 airfare on Qantas as the lowest available, including taxes and fees. The same flight was listed on Expedia’s Australian Web site, Expedia.com.au, for 224.34 Australian dollars, or about $187 at 1.20 Australian dollars to the U.S. dollar. Expedia.com.au also listed a lower fare (about 200 Australian dollars) on Virgin Blue, an Australian low-cost carrier; the United States site did not search that airline.

So how's this for a business concept: line up a company offshore that can offer multilingual service, promote discounted rates to American travelers and then have your offshore service book the travel and take a cut of the difference?

For my own sake I think I need to learn at least one other language.

No, the OTHER Left

Last week while I was in Northern Virginia on business I was invited to go with some friends to the Shenandoah Brewing Company in Alexandria to brew some beer.  Since brewing beer entails a lot of waiting and sampling the various products brewed at the facility we decided it would be prudent to take a cab there.  Anyone from that area can tell you that taking a cab is not as straight forward as it is in other parts of the contiguous United States.

First, you have to wait for the call from the cab driver saying, in barely intelligible English, that he can't find your location.  After giving directions in the same dialect you use when conversing with tech support for your computer, or phone, or DVD player, or MP3 player, or...you get the idea, you're picked up 1/2 hour past the scheduled time.  At that point you give the address of your destination, sit back and enjoy the ride while you wait for him to tell you you're there when obviously you're not because you've stopped in front of the one remaining vacant lot in the surrounding 300 square miles.  Eventually you realize you're only about a mile from your intended destination so you begin to bark out directions, which should be fairly easy except that every time you say "turn left" the guy turns right.  Literally you scream, "No the OTHER left" and he gets all flustered and starts making these guttural click-click noises that mean something on the other side of the world.  Here they just mean you know the guys cussing you out but you don't how, and since you just want to get where you're going you start talking to him like he's your four year old kid that you've just made cry.  "It's okay Mr. Cab Driver, just take it easy and turn left up there in front of that really bright red sign...the one on your left...NO, THE OTHER LEFT.  No, not the green sign, the REEEEED sign.  Ah, there you go."  Thankfully he manages to avoid hitting the one person in Northern Virginia who walks from one place to another and deposits you at your destination a mere 45 minutes late. 

That's exactly how our trip went last week.  We were mildly concerned about getting home because after brewing beer all night we weren't so sure we'd know right from left and were pretty sure we wouldn't be speaking intelligible English. Luckily another member of the group showed up late, stayed sober, and gave everyone a ride home.  Poor guy had to put up with us demanding a McDonald's Drive-Thru and then being boxed in when a police cruiser in pursuit of a suspect screeched to a halt at the end of the drive-thru and continued the pursuit by foot. 

Having a front row seat to a live episode of COPS! reminded me why I don't go out any more.  Well, that and the rather nasty headache I had the next day.  It ends up the stuff we were drinking had something like an 8% alcohol content, which means we were having a kind of 2-for-1 special on regular beer.  Add that to the fact that I'm no spring chicken and you have the recipe for a not-so-fresh feeling the next morning.

Despite my day-after discomfort I highly recommend the experience at Shenandoah Brewing.  After all, nothing says you HAVE to sample so much of the stuff and it is a really interesting process to watch and participate in.  If you have the choice use a designated driver since I'm not entirely confident you'll get home if you take a cab.

Tanks, Missiles and Guns in France of All Places

Tankmuseum17_2 When we went to France in the spring we took a day trip to see the Troglodyte caves and then the Musee des Blindes in Saumur, France.  For those of you who are like me and would travel to France without grasping a single word of the French language the Musee des Blindes is a tank museum.  If you're wondering why I'm bringing it up now, well, I finally got around to uploading all of our pictures from the museum onto Flickr.  If you like you can see them here.

Michaelerinjustinattankmuseum_vid_2 The picture at the top of this post is our family in front of the museum and the picture to the left is a heartwarming shot of my kids inside the museum.  Since I've never owned a gun in my life, and the preconceived notion we Americans have of the French as being, well, French, I find it ironic that this NRA-approved, warm and fuzzy image of the armed-to-the-teeth American family was shot in the heart of the Loire Valley.

One More Reason to Hate Flying

One of the folks at Boing Boing got caught up in a TSA snag at LAX:

  I flew from JFK to LAX today, and something really weird happened when I arrived (at about 230PM local time).

I walked from the arrival gate towards baggage claim, and when I was about halfway there, all of a sudden about a dozen or more TSA personnel and private security staff appeared, shouting STOP WHERE YOU ARE. FREEZE. DO NOT MOVE. Not just at me, but all of the travelers who happened to be wandering through the hallway at that moment.

Some of the TSA guards then backed up against walls in the hallway, and sort of barked at anyone who tried to move a few feet away from their "spot," like towards chairs to sit down or whatever...

After 30 minutes, the TSA people said, okay, you may leave now. And everyone unfroze, and went and got their bags. No explanation. I guess I should have pressed for an explanation, or demanded to know why we were being held without our consent and without a provided reason, but I was really tired and just wanted to get the hell out of there and go home. Perhaps I was wrong to have just walked away.

Add this kind of experience to extended delays, cancelled flights, seats that most 10 year olds can barely fit in and having to mull about with thousands of other travelers just as annoyed as you are and you can see why I don't fly anymore unless I absolutely have to.

Bikes, Bigots and Barns

We've lived in Lewisville, NC for over three years now and every other week for all three years I've heard the following from Celeste: "We've lived here for 'fill in the amount of time' and we haven't really explored the mountains."  So earlier this week I decided to plan a family outing to the mountains on the last official day of the kids' summer break, which was yesterday (Friday, August 23, 2007).  Well, let's just say we ended the summer with a bang.

First we rousted the kids from bed at about 7:00 so we could be on the road at 8:00.  We hit the road on time, a miracle in and of itself, and stopped at the McDonald's in Yadkinville for a utilitarian breakfast that we could eat on our way to our first destination.  Keep this in mind as it becomes significant later in our story.

After leaving McDonalds we headed northwest to the town of Damascus, VA where we planned to rent bikes for our entire family plus Michael's friend Daniel.  Although the mileage between Lewisville and Damascus wasn't too significant it still ended up taking us over two hours to get there because it was mostly two lane mountain roads and we must have been behind every driver in Appalachia that preferred driving 15 miles under the speed limit.

Upon our arrival in Damascus we found Adventure Damascus where I'd made our reservations.  For $23 a person they rented us bikes and provided a shuttle to the top of Whitetop Mountain where we could ride our bikes almost entirely downhill for 17 miles back to town on the Virginia Creeper Trail.  And they throw in a bottle of water!

P6150233 They wouldn't let me have my first selection for a bike (see picture at left) but after they found an appropriate ride for all of us they loaded us into their van (see picture below) and took us on a 40 minute ride up the mountain.  At the trail head we disembarked and made sure we all knew how to shift gears, which really wasn't necessary since we pretty much coasted almost the entire way.

P6150234_3Like I said we had about a 17 mile ride back to town.  After about three miles I started hearing complaints about butts hurting and thought, "This may not have been the brightest idea", but the kids and Celeste motored on and half way through the ride Celeste told me she thought it was a fantastic way to spend a day.  Score one for dad/husband!

The ride down the mountain really was great even though we picked a day of record high temparatures to make the trip.  The trail is an old rail bed that was converted over to use for bikers, hikers and horseback riders.  It's fairly wide, has almost no major obstacles, runs by a stream which provides a kind of natural air conditioning and is shaded almost the entire way.  Even better the grade is very gradual so it doesn't take a lot of skill on a bike to navigate it.  There are also plenty of places to stop and wade in the stream if you like.  In it's entirety the trail is about 37 miles long and ends in Abingdon, VA so if you're up to a more strenuous ride you can find it there.  We were happy to do the 17 mile coast.

After we got back to Damascus we decided to step into Damascus Eats for some lunch.  It's a nice little joint with sandwiches, burgers and such that we all found to be tasty.  Celeste opted for the daily pulled pork BBQ special and it was really quite good.  The kids and I went for burgers and sandwiches and all of us finished off our meals.  None of us saved space for banana pudding, but it looked good.

Unfortunately this is the point in the story where the import of our decision to stop at the Yadkinville McDonalds for breakfast became apparent.  To avoid embarassment I will simply say that two of the kids and one of the adults had the same thing for breakfast and all three began their suffering here.  One of the adults had to make two quick trips to the facilities before leaving Damascus for our next destination, which was to be the aptly named (for us) Blowing Rock, NC.  With the adult feeling much better we hit the road and headed south on VA-91 and made our way into Tennessee.

About 15 minutes into Tennessee one of the kids in the back of the van started groaning.  I, being your average Dad, ignored the growing sounds of discomfort.  Celeste, being your average Mom, whipped around and asked what was wrong.  The afflicted child said, "My stomach is burning really bad."  Celeste gave me a knowing look, so I piped up with "If you're gonna blow chunks let me know so I can pull over."  The afflicted child simply said, "It's not that end Dad.  I really need to go to the bathroom so can you find one fast?"  At that point another of the kids said "I really gotta go too."  That's all I needed to hear.

Fortunately we came upon a promising little establishment on the side of the road with a sign that said "Flea Market". I pulled in to the gravel lot doing about 30 and spit gravel as I slammed to a stop in front of a door that identified the establishment as a bar.  The kids jumped out and did that little dance we all know too well and then made their way with Celeste inside.  A minute or two later she came back out and asked me to go in and check on them.

Once inside I realized that we'd hit the mother lode of honky-tonks.  The place smelled of stale beer and the indefinable stench of ne'er-do-well drunks.  Fortunately the place didn't have any customers yet as it was still mid-afternoon and apparently the locals don't believe in starting their weekends early on Fridays.

I found the proprietor lounging on the back deck of the bar and asked the way to the bathroom.  He pointed me in the right direction and I found the kids in the ladies room since the men's room was standard honky tonk fare and had two malfunctioning urinals and one barely standing toilet.  Both kids seemed to be doing okay considering the circumstances and I made my way out to the bar to thank the owner for letting us use his facilities.  That's when things got real interesting and I'll relate the conversation as best I remember it.

Me: "Hey, thanks alot for letting us use the bathrooms.  The kids were really hurtin'."

Bar owner: "No problem.  Been there plenty of times myself.  So where you from?"

Me: "Winston-Salem."

Bar owner: "You got blacks down there?"

Me, just a tad surprised: "Uh, well yeah."

Bar owner: "We don't got them up here.  Well we got one black in town but he's been here his whole life so he don't count.  I'm from the Keys and found this place by accident; me and the wife took a wrong turn on one of our trips and we found this place.  Down in Florida we got lots of Cubans and blacks and I got tired of all the crime.  Up here I don't have to worry about my wife getting mugged walking to her car.  Anyway, when I saw how much land I could get for my money I decided to move here and open up my own place. It's great.  You know you can get a three bedroom house around here for $60,000?"

Me, wondering if this is some kind of setup: "Huh."

Bar owner: "Yeah it's real nice around here."

At this point I was still waiting for the kids and didn't really know what to say so I figured I'd ask him something to keep him talking.

Me: "So how's the bar doing?"

Bar owner: "Ah man it's great and it's only going to get better.  You see this was a dry county not too long ago but I was able to open up selling beer only and this place just rocks at night.  They still don't allow bars to sell liquor by the drink but I found out that I could sell it by the drink if I was classified as a resort.  To get a resort classification all you have to do is have eight hotel-like rooms and 13 camping lots.  So I put eight rooms upstairs and I got 13 camping spots out back.  Come on let me give you a tour."

That's when I really thought I was being set up.  I didn't have that tingly feeling on the back of my neck like I was about to get my bell rung, but I was having a hard time believing this was real.  I mean he didn't know me from Adam but he'd jumped to the conclusion that I was in the big white boat with him.  I'm thinking "this just doesn't happen anymore" and I'm wondering if he's just feeding me crap as the price for letting the kids use his john and I'm also wondering what the punch line is going to be. 

I'd already decided that now wasn't the time to break out my rhetorical arguments like "So you don't have any white folks ripping each other off around here?" since my kids were at the mercy of his hospitality, but I wasn't sure if I was pushing my luck by following him outside. Eventually I figured if he really wanted to mess with me he could just as easily do it inside as out so I followed him behind his building.  Sure enough he had a spot out back for thirteen campers (only one was being used).

Bar owner: "I'm putting another 40 camping slots up the hill and it'll get a lot busier once I have that done and put out some signs.  I'm also getting close to finishing up a fine-dining restaurant next to the bar."

Me: "Huh."

At this point we headed back inside to wait for the kids.

Bar owner: "You got a trailer?"

Me: "Naw, we're just on a day trip to check out the area."

Bar owner: "Well, you ever come back with a trailer you should camp her here and check out some of the land.  I had a good ol' boy who came in and got drunk last week. He'd just inherited two acres riverfront with 11 cars on it that he wanted to sell me for $60,000.  Can you believe that?  Really the only problem I had was when I was still driving my Hummer.  That stood out around here so something that would normally cost $100 was suddenly costing me $300, so I just went out and got me a GMC like everyone else and that stopped happening."

I thought about pointing out that price gouging was a form of mugging but discretion being the better part of valor I just said, "Huh."

Bar owner: "Now the education here ain't much.  I got two little ones and we home school them, but with what you can get for the dollar here it's worth it.  You oughta come on up here and check it out.  Like I said we got no crime here.  We're startin' to get Hispanics but not like down there in North Carolina."

Me: "Huh."

Bar owner: "Yeah you should definitely think about it."

At that point the kids came out and we were ready to go.  I thanked the bar owner again and he again extended the invitation to come back.  Then we were gone.

Feeling exhausted and wondering if the day could possibly get any weirder Celeste and I agreed that we'd do Blowing Rock another day.  We found 421 south and started home.

Of course Boone was one big traffic jam so we were stuck there for about half an hour and then when we got through that mess we were able to see thunderheads in front of us.  At Wilkesboro the heavens opened up and started pelting us with hail.  Celeste was a little freaked, and the kids were quiet for once which was weird in and of itself, but I decided to see if we could get through it and by the time we reached North Wilkesboro the skies had cleared.

We made it all the way back to Forsyth County before we were confronted with the coup de grace of weirdness for the day.  Just past the Shallowford Road exit we found a barn in the right hand lane of 421.  It had slipped off the trailer being used to haul it and stood not so majestically on the highway with the haulers and a couple of state troopers looking on with befuddlement in the case of the former and be-pissed-off-ness in the case of the latter.  I decided that was a fitting end to our escapade, so after dropping the kids off at the house Celeste and I circled back around to get a picture for posterity's sake.  And with this picture our tale ends:

P6160276

Something's Gotta Give

Last night we rolled back into town after spending a week at the beach in Corolla, North Carolina.  Corolla is part of the northernmost developed stretch of the Outer Banks (OBX) and is very popular with folks from Washington, DC and points north.  Most of this area has been developed only in the last 20 years and judging from the traffic on Rt. 12 it doesn't look like the area can handle much more, but that may not be an issue at least for the short term.

Now that the real estate market in the US is cooling down it will be interesting to see what happens to places like Corolla because I can't imagine that the current situation can be sustained for much longer.  We saw one 1/2 acre empty beachfront lot next to the beach access we were using that was selling for over $2 million.  That's just for land.  Across the street from that lot was another that was selling for $800,000.  The houses in that area are built so that multiple families can share the space which means they usually have enough sleeping capacity for 30 people and you aren't going to build a house that size for much less than $500,000. If you're spending $1 million for land and another $500,000 or more to build a house then you're looking at $1.5 million minimum to get into that market.  We (our friends and ourselves) were speculating that over the last 10 years people in the northeast have been leveraging the skyrocketing value of their primary residences in places like the DC metro area to finance their beachside McMansions in OBX.  With those markets now hitting the skids there will probably be a corresponding slow down in places like OBX.

As I've written before I'm no economist, thus it's dangerous for me to write about things like this, but I just can't see how the current situation in OBX can be sustained.  I guess I'll just have to sit back and wait for folks like my brother and David Boyd to come embarass me with obvious arguments for how it can.

That'd Buy a Lot of Space Rocks or Pinhole Cameras

When I was a kid my mom signed me up for a couple of Saturday classes at the Smithsonian Institution.  One was a photography class where we made our own pinhole cameras and then traipsed around the Hirshhorn Gallery taking our pictures and then developing them ourselves in a darkroom.  The other was a nature drawing class that taught me how to draw a beaver that looked suspiciously like an elephant (I've always preferred the abstract).  The Smithsonian was also the destination for countless school field trips and excursions when friends or family visited from out of town, all for free.  Well the classes weren't free, but the excursions were.

Now it looks like the guy running the show for the last several years, Lawrence Small, tried his best to ruin the free museum party for everyone (Source: Washington Post).  To wit:

Former Smithsonian secretary Lawrence M. Small took nearly 10 weeks of vacation a year during seven years running the vast museum complex and was absent from his job 400 workdays while earning $5.7 million on outside work, according to an independent commission report to be released today.

The Smithsonian's second-ranking official, Sheila P. Burke, was absent from her job as deputy secretary for 550 days while earning $10 million over six years on non-museum work...

Small, while taking substantial time off, earned his full salary -- $915,568 his last year on the job -- because he was permitted unlimited leave. Burke, who also had no restrictions on leave, earned $400,000 in her last year on the job. The terms of Burke's employment were known in most instances only to Small and Burke. Information about Burke's outside employment and activities on more than a dozen nonprofit boards and commissions was not shared with the Board of Regents, the report found.

Small resigned in March and Burke announced her resignation on Monday on the eve of the independent review report.

The investigators found that "Mr. Small placed too much emphasis on his compensation and expenses." Small's compensation far exceeded that of prior Smithsonian secretaries -- 42 percent higher than his predecessor's when he began in 2000 and 250 percent higher when he left seven years later.

Small "aggressively guarded each and every element of what he viewed as his rightful compensation package," including his $150,000-a-year housing allowance. Small's contract stated that the allowance was meant to compensate Small for his use of his home for job-related entertainment, but the review board determined that it was "simply additional salary."

The Post article goes on to point out that Small's exhorbidant salary was justified by his stellar fundraising, but the report actually shows that yearly fundraising had fallen during his tenure and some of the biggest fish he was credited with landing were actually landed by his predecessor.  In other words the guy was an overrated bum, and I'm willing to bet all those members of the Smithsonian Associates program are a bit peeved right about now.

A Travel Agent for $10.95

When we were in France last week we decided that it might be a good idea to stay nearer the airport on Friday night than where we'd been staying the rest of the week.  We had an 11 a.m. flight on Saturday morning so we would have had to leave Champtoce-sur-Loire at about 4 a.m. to make our flight in time.  I tried to get online and book a room near the hotel, but because the online access was so spotty at the chateau I kept getting knocked offline.  That's when I looked at my original travel itinerary from Travelocity and noticed their 800 service number.

To make a long story short I called Travelocity's customer service number using the calling card I'd purchased at the airport the day we landed in Paris, got a live operator, told him I needed a room near Charles de Gaulle on Friday night and how many people we needed to sleep. He couldn't find a single room that would fit all five of us within an 80 mile radius of the airport, but he found a Holiday Inn Express with two rooms available about 5 km from the airport in Roissy.  He was also able to tell me that they were the cheapest rooms in the area and they cost me only slightly more than a single room in the DC area has cost me on my recent business trips.  He booked the rooms for me, gave me my confirmation number and we were done.  It took about ten minutes and cost me a grand total of $10.95 plus whatever their normal fee is on room reservations.

I've used Travelocity for years and have never had a problem, and in fact I've always been very pleased with their service.  This experience only solidified my positive feelings for their service and at $10.95 I feel like I just got service from the world's least expensive travel agent.

Driving in Paris and Why I'm Pissed at Wachovia

A week ago Saturday (that would be May 19) we woke our kids, packed the car and headed for PTI.  Our ultimate destination was a place called Chateau du Pin near the small town of Champtoce-sur-Loire in France. Having a checkered history with flights out of PTI I was not at all sure that we would make it to France in less than three days, but thankfully our flight to O'Hare went without a hitch and we made our flight bound for Charles de Gaulle outside of Paris without a problem.  It was when the wheels hit the ground in gay Paree that we started to have an "interesting" trip.

We made our way through customs smoothly and headed to the Hertz counter to pick up our mid-sized family sedan.  All was going swimmingly until they tried to process our credit cards and all were declined.  This was interesting for two reasons: first, all of our bills are paid and with the credit limits on the cards we should have been able to buy the car (not saying we can afford it, just that Wachovia keeps upping the credit limit in an effort to get us to accumulate enough debt so that we'll stop paying all of our bills in their entirety and thus depriving Wachovia of interest on our debt), and second we had called the bank before we left to let them know that we were going to be in France so that they wouldn't put a security hold on our transactions.  Because I could only find an 800 number for Wachovia the folks at Hertz couldn't call them so we trooped off to figure out what to do.

Originally we thought we might take the TGV train out to the chateau and figure things out when we got there, but when we went up the escalator to get back to the terminal and head to the TGV station we found a log jam at the top.  The police were beginning to cordon off the area for some reason and at the same time a small woman speaking Spanish blocked the top of the escalator while she tried to get someone, anyone, to tell her where her gate was.  I started pushing my way through the crowd and Celeste and the boys were right on my tail, but Erin got caught in the crowd.  Eventually a woman was pushed down the escalator, letting out a blood curdling scream as she fell, and at this point Erin started to cry and get a little panicked.  In my infinite wisdom I shouted the following to her: "Hold it together until you get to us!"  How sensitive of me, huh?  Anyway, that seemed to light a fire in her because she made like Larry Czonka and pushed through the crowd to get to us and then collapsed in her mother's arms while sobbing and cutting me some not-so-nice looks.

So now we're stuck in between the crowd of folks trying to get away from the police scene and those trying to push their way in the other direction.  This lasted for about 20 minutes until we heard a loud whistle and then an explosion, which we found out was the police blowing up a suspicious package. Once the crowd thinned out a little I told Celeste that I was going to buy a phone card to call the Wachovia 800 number to see if I could get our card situation worked out. I figured it would be easier to do that than to make a two hour train ride and then a cab ride and still be without our car and then have to get the car from a satellite Hertz office in Angers.  (Note to self: invest in a mobile phone with a SIM card before traveling overseas again).

I bought a phone card at the American Express window (20 Euro got me 120 minutes anywhere in the western world), found a pay phone, muddled my way through the French instructions (I don't speak or read a word of it) and called the 800 number only to find that it had been changed.  Because I'd left my bag with Celeste I didn't have anything to write on so I had to remember the new number, which wasnt' easy considering I hadn't slept on the flight over so we're talking serious jet-lag and sleep deprivation.  I went through the whole process again and eventually got through to a live human being at Wachovia.  She was very nice, but what she had to say wasn't.  Here it is (I'm paraphrasing):

Mr. Lowder it seems that our system is down for routine maintenance and as a result all accounts have a $400 credit limit on them at the time.  I'm sorry for the inconvenience, but there's nothing I can do until the system comes up.

This was bad enough, but the Hertz lady had already tried to rent the car to me for one day in an effort to get me the car and allow me to get to my destination and then get the card issue resolved from there.  That amount was less than $400 I'm sure, so I asked the lady at Wachovia if her records showed that we had called and were going to be in France.  She said that yes her records did show that, so I asked if she could tell me when my cards would be usable.  She said that she was told the system would be up by 7 a.m. eastern time which was 1 p.m. where I was sitting.  I was on the phone with her at 11 a.m. Paris time so that meant I had a two hour wait.  Since I couldn't think of anything else to do I thanked her and hung up.

I found Celeste and the kids and decided to see if our cards would work.  We got back to the Hertz desk and a new woman was working and she tried my card and miraculously it worked.  I'm now pretty well convinced that Wachovia either screwed up with the whole security thing, or they simply decline your cards to make you call them so that they know for sure it's you overseas and then flip the switch to approve your usage.  Honestly whether or not the story about the system being down is true they still put me in a bind at a time when I was exhausted and had an exhausted family on my hands.  To say I was (am) irked would be putting it mildly.

Versailles46 It gets better.  Unfortunately for us the car we'd reserved was now gone as was the last of their portable GPS units and the only thing left of the size we needed with a built in GPS was a BMW 5-series diesel, which was gonna push the price higher than we wanted to go.  So the lady mentioned that if we dropped the optional insurance then it would cost the same as the Peugeot we'd originally reserved.  Thinking that our insurance is pretty good and covers us for accidents on rentals, and being in a WTF mood thanks to our escapades with the card I just signed the dotted line.  It wasn't until about a 1/2 hour later as I navigated the A10 outside of Paris that it occured to me that I wasn't entirely sure our insurance covered collissions outside the US (note to self: check the insurance before going overseas again).

But before we got to the A10 I had one last obstacle to hurdle: I had to figure out how to start the damn car.  You see, I drive a 2001 Saturn and I drive in the state of North Carolina in the good old US of A, which means I've not encountered an ignition system that requires you to stick the key fob into it. You know, the thing that has buttons that you push to unlock your door and pop your trunk?  Well in a BMW in Paris you stick the whole damn thing into the slot that normally takes your ignition key and then you push a button on the dash that says "Start".  I did both things, but it still wouldn't start so I grabbed a Hertz technician walking buy and asked him to help.  He spoke no English and I spoke no French and so he literally got in the car and put his hand on the brake pedal to indicate that I needed to have my foot on the break when I pushed the "Start" button before it would start. Thankfully I was too tired to be really embarassed and we were off to the races.

When it hit me that maybe my insurance wouldn't cover me in an accident I started to think that my childrens' chances of going to college were entirely dependant on my not totalling the car.  Since we were staying in the French boonies it really wasn't a problem for most of the week we were there, but of course we had to return to Paris and Charles de Gaulle last Saturday to catch our flight home.  We decided to get a room by the airport on Friday night since our flight out of Paris was scheduled for 11 a.m. on Saturday.  We left Friday morning and went to Versailles at the request of our oldest, Michael, before heading to the Holiday Inn Express in Roissy.

Arcdetriomphesmall The drive into Versailles was uneventful, but we didn't leave until about 5 p.m. to head to the hotel so that meant we were going to be in Paris rush hour on a Friday.  The GPS had us on the highway in no time but before long it informed us of a wreck ahead and re-routed us, and the damn thing sent us through the heart of Paris.  That means I did the roundabout at the Arch de Triomphe at 6 p.m. on Friday and I'm hear to tell you that it is the craziest thing I've ever driven through.  It makes Manhattan seem like a sedate drive through the mountains of NC by comparison, and for my friends and family in DC let me tell you that you could combine all the circles in Washington and you wouldn't come close to this monstrosity.

By some miracle we survived the traffic circle (my son informs me that I was given the French finger several times) and when we got back on the highway we passed an accident involving a motorcycle and my family had the unfortunate opportunity to see the EMTs picking up the body of a dead man to put him on a gurney.  Once past the accident we were starting to make progress towards the airport and the hotel in Roissy when the skies opened up with a deluge that created nice little lakes of water everywhere.  Again thinking of my childrens' education I started to drive like an 85 year old retiree on a Sunday drive to church.  I swear I could have been passed by a four year old on a bicycle at that point.

Eventually we made it to the hotel and I informed my family that we either were going to eat in the hotel or starve because I didn't want to go anywhere until we left for the airport the next morning.  All agreed and we had a great, over-priced meal together before going to bed.  The next morning the GPS pulled its first "brain fart" of the week and almost managed to get us lost in the 5 km between Roissy and the airport so we decided to ignore the thing and follow the signs to the airport.  When we pulled into the Hertz rental lot the nice man who greeted us asked if the car had performed adequately and I informed him that it had and gladly handed him the keys.  I loved the car, but I've never been happier to get rid of anything in my life.

So here are the lessons I learned:

  1. Never have all of your credit cards through one bank.
  2. Either travel with a mobile phone with a SIM card or make sure you have some form of back-up communications plan in the event of a snafu with your cards.
  3. Live within your means. If you're not a BMW guy, don't rent one.  The headaches just aren't worth it.
  4. BMWs go fast.  Really, really fast.  It is fun.

BTW, the trip was great and I'm sure I'll have many posts about it in the near future.  In the meantime you can check out these pics if you want. 

We're all happy to be home and if you see a tall goofy looking guy driving around Winston-Salem in a little blue four-cylinder Saturn and he has a huge grin on his face you'll probably be able to guess it's me.

A Tale of Two Cities

I spent much of last week in New York staying at the Marriott Marquis in Times Square.  Although most of my time was spent in a conference room I can tell you that even when I ventured out to get a late dinner at 11:00 pm on a weeknight I still found myself surrounded by thousands of people.  Cut to last night when Celeste and I went to Charlotte with our friends Bobby and Beth Figuracion to see comedian Brian Regan.  We pretty much had the city to ourselves until right before the show when the few thousand people that could fit in the Belk Theater showed up.  You could roll a bowling ball down Trade Street without fear of hitting an animate object, and this on the final day of a major PGA tournament being held in town. You know a town is sleepy when not even Tiger Woods can wake it up.

New York can make almost any other city in America seem sleepy, but Charlotte is downright somnolent. We got to Charlotte early so we could grab some dinner, but we found most of the restaurants closed and ended up eating at the Champions in the Marriott.  (About the restaurant: on a 1-5 scale I'd rate it a 1.5, but because we were eating with Bobby and Beth it seemed a lot better. Great company forgives a lot doesn't it?)  I'm sure if we'd kept looking we'd have found some other restaurants open, but I was amazed how many we came across in the immediate vicinity of the theater that weren't open. We're talking the heart of downtown, in the midst of all the hotels and they didn't open their doors at all on Sunday.  ZZZZZZ.....

By the way, Brian Regan puts on a great show, is about as "clean" a comedian as you're going to find today (i.e. safe for pre-teens and up) and the Belk is a great venue to see a show. 

Running on Empty

I apologize ahead of time for the whining.  This time of year is usually tough for me because there's too much work and lots of stuff going on with the kids, like baseball, soccer, tennis and such.  Truth be told this year feels worse than the last few because, truth be told, I'm not getting any younger.  Right now I'm sitting at the computer trying to wind up my day after getting up at 4:45-ish, heading to the airport for a 6:30 flight to DC, heading straight to SCIP