Tour de Brew

This past week found Linda and I celebrating our 18th wedding anniversary.  We celebrated by participating in the Tour de Brew bicycle ride.  This is a ride that helped raise money for Bike Walk KC, an organization that promotes and lobbies for healthy living in the Kansas City area.  The tour travels along a route connecting historic Kansas City breweries; most of the buildings are now gone and some are still there, but in the form of loft apartments.

We met with neighborhood friends and did the 30-mile ride.  We averaged about 12mph and finished in just over 2.5 hours.  We had a great time and enjoyed the food and beverages after the ride.

Family Gathering

It’d been some time since we were all together (admittedly because of my very full schedule), but we were finally able to spend a day with Linda’s parents at Easter.  A delicious honey-baked ham and a whole array of side dishes filled our bellies well.

Afterwards, we all played dominoes and ate even more.

Thank you, Grandma and Grandpa Maag!

We are truly blessed with such wonderful family.

The Kia Goes in For Repair

Our trusty Kia Sedona minivan was struck from behind last week while Linda was driving the girls to their different activities.  Fortunately, nobody was injured and a great friend stopped to help get the Anna on to her  appointed destination.  After several days of insurance talks and body shop estimates, the Kia was delivered today for repair.  The tailgate is inoperable and will need replaced.

The bumper is also broken.  The bumper stickers survived; however, they will likely not make it back home.  Remember, this is Linda’s car – I’m sure she’ll find replacement stickers.

It was a nice surprise to arrive home to find a shiny, new Nissan Altima in the garage – but it’s only a rental.

Happy Easter – He is Risen

Happy Easter to all our family and friends.

None of us are providing music for any of the services this year.  It will be a pleasure to sit in the congregation and worship along with our fellow parishoners.

May your Easter season be blessed.

Gospel Reading from today’s liturgy:

On the first day of the week,
Mary of Magdala came to the tomb early in the morning,
while it was still dark,
and saw the stone removed from the tomb.
So she ran and went to Simon Peter
and to the other disciple whom Jesus loved, and told them,
“They have taken the Lord from the tomb,
and we don’t know where they put him.”
So Peter and the other disciple went out and came to the tomb.
They both ran, but the other disciple ran faster than Peter
and arrived at the tomb first;
he bent down and saw the burial cloths there, but did not go in.
When Simon Peter arrived after him,
he went into the tomb and saw the burial cloths there,
and the cloth that had covered his head,
not with the burial cloths but rolled up in a separate place.
Then the other disciple also went in,
the one who had arrived at the tomb first,
and he saw and believed.
For they did not yet understand the Scripture
that he had to rise from the dead.

(John 20:1-9)

Good Friday

Today we commemorate the death of Jesus Christ – dying on the cross for all of us.

A tradition of mine is to watch Mel Gibson’s “The Passion of the Christ” during the Holy Week.  It is such a powerful portrayal of the events of the of the Lord’s agony in the garden, his arrest and trial, the scourging and the crowning with thorns, His carrying the cross, and finally his crucifixion.

I am so thankful for the price paid for the freedom gained for me, my family, and my loved ones.

In the days when Christ was in the flesh, he offered prayers and supplications with loud cries and tears
to the one who was able to save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverence.  Son though he was, he learned obedience from what he suffered; and when he was made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him. (Hebrews 5:7-9) Second Mass reading from today’s liturgy

Image from www.art-wallpaper.net

The Doctors Lounge – New Sunroom Addition

This past month found the addition of a sunroom to our backyard.  We have tried our best to combat the mosquito problem we have in our yard – seven years of candles and repellants came to no avail.  We even put up a bathouse in hopes of attracting bats that eat thousands of mosquitos per hour.  Since none of this was working, it was decided that a screened-in porch was the answer.

The contract was signed in late December and then we waited for 10 weeks while our room and windows were custom built.  About a week before we were to leave on our trip to the Bahamas, we were informed that the crew was ready to build our room.

First , we had to deconstruct the small privacy fence that surrounded the patio.  This was done by a good friend, Jamie.  We also had to remove half of the brick patio that we painstaking placed about 4 years ago.

About 2 days before our trip, the old concrete patio was removed.  It was necessary to place a new pad that was level and had appropriate footings and foundation.  Unfortunately, I was working night shift during these few days – sleeping through jackhammers can be tricky.  Ear plugs and moving to the guest bed helped.

Upon returning from our trip, the new concrete pad had been poured.  The crew arrived the Monday morning and by Wednesday it was completed.

I celebrated the completion with a cigar from a new box of BOTL (Brother of the Leaf) cigars that had arrived.  The room was promptly named “The Doctors Lounge” and a buddy came over to test out the ability to withstand cigar smoke from two seasoned cigar aficionados.  However, the installed ceiling fan didn’t quite cut it.

Linda found an awesome patio furniture set at Costco.  She brought it all home and placed it in the room prior to my even knowing she got it – what a surprise when I got home from work.  The furniture is comfortable; the room is even more comfortable when the windows are open and the breeze is gently coming through.

I’ve figured out the ventilation and have fans that face outwards.  Any cigar smoke quickly exits the room with the breeze from the fan.  The Doctors Lounge is open!

Another month gone by already? New bike, though!

Work has been incredibly hectic for the past few weeks;  in fact, it’s been quite hectic with lots of problems.  What free time there has been has been occupied with getting miles in the saddle – that’s right – sitting on the bike and pedaling for hours.

I purchased a new road bike in early March and have already put several hundred miles on it.  Linda and I have been riding 20-30 miles on each ride.  We have just over a month before we ride all the way across the great state of Kansas.  Gotta keep riding until we are comfortable with 60-80 miles in a day (should be there soon).

I’m going to work harder over the next few weeks to have more regular content added to the blog.  I know that the girls have been doing activities – I’ve just not been able to make a lot of them.

By the way – may your Holy Weekend be blessed.

Carnival Cruise to the Bahamas

Spring Break came this last week – and we escaped the cool March to the warm waters of the Caribbean.  The girls have been asking to go on a cruise for several years.  After going on a Disney cruise eight years ago, they’ve wanted to experience the ship life again.

Linda worked diligently to create a fantastic 4-day getaway.  We first arrived in Orlando and drove to Cape Canaveral to stay the night.  The next morning we drove up to the Kennedy Space Center and did a quick tour.  What a massive and interesting place.  The space shuttle was on the pad and being readied for launch in April.

We then drove to the dock to catch our boat, the Carnival Sensation (pictured above).  We were on the lowest deck, but we did have a window.  The first thing Linda did was find a chair in the sun.  See if you can find her in the picture below.

I found time to sit in some shade and really relax – no phones, no emails, no work!

Our destination was Nassau, Bahamas.  We spent about 6 hours on shore at the Atlantis resort.  We went swimming at the beach and toured the Atlantis grounds, including the massive aquarium that is made to look like the ruins of Atlantis.  Very cool, indeed.

 

Just like any vacation – it was too short.  But we had a good time.  Be sure to ask the girls about staying up past midnight each night with the Circle C club (group of 12-14 year olds on the ship).

 

 

Enjoyed the K-State Run

You may remember my post in late January when I was down about how the Wildcats had dropped out of the polls and had tumbled all the way to tenth in the Big XII.  Shortly after that, the team found itself down a couple players (Freddy Asprilla and Wally Judge) and a second loss to Colorado stung all the more.  Changes were made and the boys won 6 games – including wins against Kansas, Texas, and Missouri.

Watching Pullen, Kelly, McGruder, Samuels, Spradling, Henriquez-Roberts, Peterson, and the other guys through the month of February was a blast.  It brought back memories of last year during the NCAA tournament and how tough the players were.  It was yet another “us vs. the world” scenario that has become so familiar to Kansas State fans.

Impressively, the Cats clawed their way back into the polls at #19 and was the #4 team in the Big XII.  Although far from the preseason #3 national ranking and favored #1 in the Big XII, it was a lot better than where we were just a month ago.

Unfortunately, our run came to an end – against Colorado.  After a first round bye, the Cats entered the game favored to win, but were trampled by the Buffaloes.  They sure had our number this year – sweep of all 3 games.  Oh well, at least we’re likely to go to the NCAA tournament (something unlikely just 4 weeks ago).