Monday, July 30
New addition
As a fifth anniversary present to each other, Monica and I adopted our foster cocker spaniel Cocoa. Cocoa is very sweet and has fit in well here. Much like Emily did, he searches for any great place to snuggle with someone. When I watch TV, he jumps on my lap, and not just his head on my lap.
Welcome to the family Cocoa.
Thursday, July 19
Cubs and Steins
On June 3rd, Monica and I flew to Chicago. The Cubs not only snapped their losing streak that day but crushed the Braves 10-1.
Since Monica and I arrived, the Cubs are 27-13 and have moved into second place and are in the hunt for the NL Central title and the wild card.
You can call this a coincidence if you want, but I think it’s causation we just don’t understand yet. "Coincidentally" the Mariners have been hot since June 2nd as well.
Friday, July 13
Cool picture
Amid all the 787 roll-out hoopla, perhaps the coolest event went unnoticed. On Saturday night, Boeing had all of the 787 airline representatives at an event at the Museum of Flight. At 7:07 PM, an Omega Air Refueling Services 707 landed in front of the crowd (after taking off from Paine Field in Everrett). At 7:17, an AirTran 717 landed. This continued until 8:17 when an Air France 777-300ER landed. In the end, the 717, 727, 737, 747, 757, 767, and 777 were lined up nose-to-tail on the taxiway. It is the first time Boeing has had every 7-series airplane in the same place (not counting the 787, which couldn't make the flight, of course).
From right to left, 707, 717, 727, 737, 747, 757, 767, 777.
To the right of the 777, perpendicular to the 777 is the dreamlifter. This is a modified 747 that transports 787 parts.
Not a good view but similar to a 747 but with the hump extended towards back of airplane.
On the right, towards the top of photo is 5 airplanes. One is the first 747 (the largest one) and the concorde should speak for itself.
The other 3, I have no idea.
Enjoy!
Tuesday, July 3
See us on TV
Hargrove Resigns
Hargrove really didn't give a good answer why -- he said it was harder to give 100% than it had been in the past. There's lots of speculation but it boils down to two ideas -- one is Hargrove is battling with depression, two is with the last kid graduating high school his wife wanted/needed him home more and/or he felt the need to be home more.
On a personal level, this is sad for Hargrove. On a baseball level, this is good for the Mariners. Managers simply don't matter much in major league baseball (unlike football or basketball coaches, they aren't making plays and minute-by-minute substitutions), though Hargrove was a lousy manager who should have been fired at the end of last season if not before. I don't know much about John McLaren, but if he doesn't cost us games that's an improvement.