Saturday, June 21, 2008

We are a week into our 6-week stay at Keuka Lake, and the pace is intoxicating. Rather than trying to squeeze in every possible activity over a 7-10 day sprint, we are pacing ourselves and enjoying some quiet time.

Keuka Lake 2008-28.jpg

The boys are working on several Boy Scout merit badges with Grandpa Jerry - motorboating, water sports, small boat sailing, and possibly rowing and canoeing. Each merit badge has a similar set of first aid and swimming requirements so we completed those during the week. Matthew struggled a bit with the swimming test but after some coaching from another terrible swimmer (me) we got him through it.

Keuka Lake 2008-31.jpg

The boys' current project is staining two wooden beach chairs with some guidance from grandpa, who built the chairs over the winter in his wood shop. The color is coming out different than expected but we think we'll stick with it. They are finishing up the final coat as I type this.

Keuka Lake 2008-3.jpg

As for me, I had mixed results with my first week of working remotely. I had a ton of calls to take during the week (I'm hiring an Executive Director for TechStart and had several interviews to conduct) but as the week went on I got my groove and was very productive by Friday. I keep my camera close at hand in case anything worth shooting wanders by my view.

Keuka Lake 2008-8-2.jpg

Matthew's favorite activity is still tubing behind the boat and we accommodate his passion on a daily basis.

Keuka Lake 2008-35.jpg

Jacob lives for sailing and had the pleasure of indoctrinating a cousin in the finer points of capsizing and righting the Sunfish last weekend. We haven't managed to get the Flying Dutchman out yet as the sun and wind have yet to conspire together for the right conditions.

Keuka Lake 2008-92.jpg

We have a little more than a week on our own here before the Ginn family joins us for the 4th of July week - the boys are excited to have more like-aged and like-minded company, and I'm excited to get some gaming in with Jim.

posted on Saturday, June 21, 2008 3:54:56 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0]

Day 2 of our Bulge tour was geared more to accommodating our tourists stops, so there was not much rhyme or reason to the sites we visited. We ranged from Hotton to Diekirch (Luxembourg) to Bastogne.

hotton, belgium - Google Maps

After visiting the caves near Hotton, we stopped by the Hotton War Cemetery, which commemorates over 600 casualties from the Commonwealth countries. The scene was all the more striking with the 2 inches of fresh snow that had fallen in the past hour. Hotton marked the limit of General Manteuffel's advance:

The commander of the 116th Panzer Division, as well as General Manteuffel, would later pay tribute to "the bravery of the American engineers" at Hotton. They had reason for this acknowledgment (in which they could have included signal and service troops, unknown gun and tank crews) because the failure to secure the Hotton bridge was decisive in the future history of the LVIII Panzer Corps. Credit must also go to the Combat Command Reserve at Soy whose fire, as the enemy acknowledged, caught Kampfgruppe Bayer in the flank and checkmated its single-minded employment against Hotton. Finally, a share in the successful defense of the Hotton bridge should be assigned those elements of the three 3d Armored task forces which, on the 21st, had engaged the bulk of the 116th Panzer Division and 560th Volks Grenadier Division and prevented a wholesale advance into the Hotton sector.

Source: Wikisource, The Ardennes: Battle of the Bulge/Chapter XVI

British and Commonwealth War Cemetery near Hotton.jpg

Next it was time to leave Belgium and explore the northeast portion of Luxembourg. While there are Bulge museums in many of the towns in Belgium and Luxembourg, my research indicated that the National Museum of Military History at Diekirch is one of the best (also check out their suggested Bulge tours - some great trips if you want to focus on the southern shoulder).

National Museum of Military History in Diekirch Luxembourg.jpg

The museum is deceptively large - when we first arrived we were a bit disappointed as we saw the first room, which appeared to be a somewhat random collection of military equipment tightly packed into a large hanger-style room. To our surprise, the museum went on and on with an amazing array of diorama-style displays and probably the best collection of equipment and armament from WWII that I've ever seen. The boys had fun pointing out the various weapons they've had the pleasure of firing in Call of Duty.

My great uncle Charlie served in the 17th Airborne in the Bulge (he was a Lt) and was shot in the foot during the push-back from the north in January. He served under the controversial Montgomery for the bulk of his time in the Bulge.

Model of 17th Airborne Paratrooper in Diekirch.jpg

We made a brief stop in Clervaux and found a marker for the Liberty Road, marking the allied trail of liberation from France through Belgium and Luxembourg.

Clearvaux marker.jpg

We also made the obligatory stop at the tank and artillery static display near Clervaux.

Tank and Artillery near Clervaux.jpg

We ended the day in Bastogne, perhaps the most notable and recognizable town from the battle. Bastogne was a key objective for the German advance because of its strategic location at the convergence of seven key roads. By December 20, 1944 the town was surrounded by German forces with elements of the 101st Airborne Division digging in to defend what would become known as the Siege of Bastogne.

North of town is the impressive Mardasson Memorial, a dramatic tribute to the USA from Belgium.

Bastogne Monument.jpg

The top of the memorial offers dramatic views of the Bastogne landscape to the south, with annotated maps showing key actions and events during the battle.

View from the top of the Bastogne Monument.jpg

This portion of the memorial best describes the Belgian view of the significance of the battle and liberation of their country.

Inscription at Bastogne Monument.jpg

posted on Saturday, June 21, 2008 10:18:10 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Tuesday, June 17, 2008

About a year ago Julie and I committed to spending a full 6 weeks at Keuka Lake in 2008, and we are making it happen. This meant no baseball for the boys this year and some challenges managing our pets at home, but we are here and excited to settle down for a while and enjoy the lake.

I am back at work (more on that later) and will be working full time for the duration. Here's a snapshot of my "lake office":

Keuka Home Office

We will have some guests here throughout the summer, and the boys and I will spend a week of Boy Scout summer camp at Camp Gorton on the next lake over in mid July.

4241 County Road 25, dundee ny - Google Maps

Yes, I do expect to finish my Europe trip postings this week.

posted on Tuesday, June 17, 2008 10:30:58 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3]
 Monday, May 26, 2008

Apologies for turning these Europe posts into a drawn out series of publications not unlike a pulp serial series. Life has been busy again and blogging usually is the first thing to go when priorities compete for my attention.

I already posted about the non-Bulge related tourism we did in Belgium, so what remains is three posts on our visits to various significant locations related to the Battle of the Bulge from December 1944 - January 1945.

Bulge 101

My readers range from folks who know little more than that the Battle of the Bulge may have happened in WWII, to those that know a lot more than I. My deep(er) study began about a year ago after some email conversations with Tim Cockit and Max Michael where they provided recommendations after a few trips they made to the Ardennes. My primary sources were:

The first two were easy to read overviews of the battle from the Allied and German perspectives, while the Tour book is the indispensable guide book that I brought on the trip. You can fill in some more details by reading the fine Wikipedia article on the Bulge.

By the fall of 1944 the allies had resigned themselves to waiting out the winter along the German Westwall (Siegfried Line) after heavy fighting around Aachen and the Hürtgen Forest. The Allied supply lines were over-extended and most divisions were significantly below their full strength levels. The result was a focus on stabilizing existing lines as much as possible and awaiting warmer weather and stronger supply before the final push to Berlin.Hitler had no plans to sit still and wait for the Allied advance.

Starting in September Hitler began formulating his plan code-named Wacht Am Rhein (watch on the Rhine) an assault through the Ardennes region of Belgium and Luxembourg designed to split the Allied troops in half by marching to Antwerp. The objective was to isolate the troops under Montgomery to the north from the rest of the Allied forces in France as well as Patton's army marching from the south. Hitler originally planned to launch his offensive in late November, but a combination of delays from his Generals and too-nice weather delayed the assault until December 16, 1944.

For the allies, the Ardennes front was the "Ghost Front" where soldiers went to get away from the real action and where new recruits learned the ropes on patrols will little chance for real confrontation. For over two months the Allies had mostly rested and stared at the other side and avoided conflict. The Ardennes front stretched from Echternach, Luxembourg in the south to Monschau, Germany in the north. Before daylight on December 16 the Germans opened with artillery fire and shortly thereafter infantry in white snow gear marched on the allied lines. Tanks followed the infantry through the ghost front, and it took the allies some time to realize that this was a general assault and not isolated incursions on the line.


Google Maps
Uploaded with plasq's Skitch!

The German offensive succeeded in pushing a bulge in the American line, pushing near Dinant and Namur on the Meuse River but running out of time, supply (mainly petrol) were eventually stopped by the Allied forces. The tide turned around Christmas 1944 but the fighting in the battle would continue through the end of January with significant casualties on both sides well after the battle was lost by the Germans.

This was a devastating battle for both sides - over 80,000 casualties for both armies with nearly 20,000 Americans killed. This was the largest pitched battle of the war for the Americans and the death toll surpassed any other engagement in the war.

The Northern Shoulder: Monschau, Wallerscheid, and Hollerath

Map of northern shoulder

From the train station in Liege we set off for the village of Monschau which marks the northern edge of the German assault. Almost on cue, snow started falling as we worked our way up the 2 lane highway through the hills to the Belgium / Germany border. It was Easter Sunday and the road was full of families driving into the hills for cross country skiing and other wintry fun.

Monschau was mostly spared in the battle - apparently General Model was fond of the historic latticed houses and wished to preserve them from destruction. This area was very active before the battle started with skirmishes occurring frequently in the area leading up to December 16. In the village of Höfen on the southern edge of Monschau we stopped at Gasthaus Schmiddem, a B&B nestled on the Rur river. This is where soldiers from the 395th Infantry of the 99th Infantry Division holed up to withstand the opening barrage of rockets and shelling that marked the start of the battle.

Moving south through along the ridge highway marking the border, we stopped at a national park in the Schnee Eifel (now called Schneifel, Schnee == snow) about 100 yards from the Wahlerscheid road junction. This became known as Heartbreak Crossroads - American troops of the 9th Infantry Regiment (the "Manchus") had been engaged in a staggering assault on this fortress for several days leading up to the start of the Bulge. They captured the crossroads only to lose it with the opening assault of the Bulge, but they significantly slowed the advance as a result.

National Park in Germany near Heartbreak Crossroads.jpg

The crossroads today is little more than a west-bound junction into Belgium from the north-south highway in the Eifel. The Americans would finally retake this critical road junction in February 1945.

Heartbreak Crossroads.jpg

Next up was a stop in Hollerath to visit a local war memorial featuring a broken church bell found in the ruined church after the battle. One bunker in this village served as the forward command post of the 12th SS Hitlerjugend Panzer Division at the onset of the attack.

Church in Hollerath.jpg

The weather was crisp and clear and the town was eerily quiet on this Easter Sunday. We entered the church as well and saw some beautiful modern stained glass.

Broken Bell at Church in Hollerath.jpg

Our last stop in the Eifel was to a picnic area south of Hollerath and was our most dramatic visualization of what the terrain may have looked like during the war. This was the eastern-most point (the start) of Rollbahn (highway) A, the panzer assault route leading west through Krinkelt-Rocherath across the Elsenborn Ridge to the Meuse River. From where we parked we could stare into the forest line marking the Belgian border where American troops were positioned at the start of the battle. The road into the forest was nothing more than a dirt trail in 1944, and as you can see the dragon's teeth marking the Siegfried Line still remain in force.

Dragon's Teeth near Rollbahn A.jpg

This was about all of the stopping I could cajole the group into for the day, so it was time to make the final scenic drive into La Roche en Ardennes, our home for the next three nights.

Memorial Sign in La Roche.jpg

La Roche is probably most famous as one of the link-up points of the American and British forces towards the end of the battle shortly after the (re)liberation of La Roche in January 1945. There's a nice Sherman tank near the town center, along with an British Achilles tank destroyer perched above town looking down on the river.

Sherman Tank in La Roche.jpg

posted on Tuesday, May 27, 2008 1:47:10 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [5]
 Friday, May 23, 2008

Jacob is doing quite a bit more programming these days. In addition to some of his self-study of Ruby he is enrolled in a game programming class at Sherwood High School where he is refining his skills with GameMaker and learning how to write simple games using VB.Net.

A few weeks back we were working on a small programming problems together - how to detect if a given string is a palindrome (i.e., reads the same both forwards and backwards). I start by walking Jacob through some simple string operations whereby you can walk through a string character by character forwards and backwards, then showing him how to loop and walk his way into the middle, testing for equivalence along the way.

Jacob then says something to the effect of "Dad, why don't you just call reverse on the string and see if it is the same as the original."

Oh. I guess that could work. If you were into that sort of elegance and time-saving. Whatever floats your boat I guess.

posted on Saturday, May 24, 2008 12:42:05 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [4]
 Thursday, May 22, 2008

I had the pleasure of helping stage the first Oregon Game Project Challenge (ogpc 1.0), a state-wide project and team oriented computer game programming contest. The event was a big success (we think) - you can read the press release issued jointly by TechStart and the Oregon University System.

Chris Sells had some great things to say about the event as a judge and keynote speaker. He did a great job and was very well received by this smart and savvy high school crowd.

ogpc 1-0-23.jpg

Each team spent the day in a mix of activities:

  • Visiting with two separate judging panels
  • Presenting their project to a group of peer teams
  • Observing presentations from computer game industry professionals
  • Playing other teams' games in our arcade
  • Playing a bit of Rock Band at the end of the day to wind down

ogpc 1-0-22.jpg

I was the head judge and coordinated the recruiting of judges, the rubric for judging, and the final deliberation process (though I recused myself from leading it as Jacob was on a competing team). In the end an outstanding team called Phred from Philomath took the Champion Cup.

ogpc 1-0-42.jpg

We'll be back even stronger next year. We have grand plans to expand in multiple dimensions - stay tuned.

posted on Friday, May 23, 2008 3:15:50 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1]

Jacob won the Sherwood middle school chess spelling tournament earlier this year and was given the chance to compete at the county (actually Northwest Oregon) level and he won. This will be his second trip to the state contest, which will be held Labor Day weekend at the state fair. Congrats Jacob!

Jacob is County Spelling Champion

posted on Thursday, May 22, 2008 7:53:59 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Sunday, May 18, 2008
Would somebody please start providing some competition for these guys?

Ticketmaster Billing
Uploaded with plasq's Skitch!
posted on Sunday, May 18, 2008 1:12:29 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [5]
 Sunday, May 04, 2008

We've had a great relaxing weekend here at the coast. The weather was sunny, warm, and calm on Friday and we met some Sherwood friends for some tide pool action at Devil's Punchbowl near low tide in the early evening. Not a very "low" low tide, but still we saw plenty of sea stars, fish, crabs, and anemones.

Devil's Punchbowl

We also had a marathon session of the Czech game Prophecy that I traded for last year. Matthew and Jacob stomped us (Matthew won by collecting 4 artifacts) but we need to try the short game version next time. Jacob and I also played a game of Manoeuvre and had a blast - it was nice to get back to some 2P wargaming with the two of us, something that has been missing in our lives lately. We played the fixed setup with the French and British and I squeezed out an end-of-day victory in a close match. I'm looking forward to exploring this game more - should have nice replayability with the various countries and different card mixes.

posted on Sunday, May 04, 2008 1:27:23 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0]

The weather in Belgium was very thematic for Bulge historical site visits, but not so nice for some of the activities we were hoping to do. Matthew helped plan the Belgium portion of the trip, and his #1 priority was visiting the Plopsa Coo amusement park near Stavelot. We averaged about 2 inches of snow per day and experienced some severe whiteout conditions while driving from Bastogne to La Roche on our 2nd night. That wouldn't stop us from making the most of the amusement park, however.

Matthew ready for Plopsa Coo.jpg

Plopsa Coo is a clean, smallish amusement park not unlike the regional parks you'll see in the USA and as good as anything we have in the Pacific Northwest which is surprisingly devoid of thrill ride parks. It is geared toward smaller children but has a few rides to keep bigger kids interested.

Matthew Rides the Scary Bunny.jpg

Not that the kid rids kept Matthew away. We had to wait quite a while for the roller coaster and log flume to open up as they cleared snow and prepared the rides for safe use. Matthew stayed busy with the evil bunny ride, the slow cars that you can't actually steer, and good old fashioned playground rides with Jacob and Julie. The rest of us tried to stay warm.

Jacob and Matthew ride the coaster at Plopsa Coo.jpg

We took a few rides on the roller coaster which was most enjoyable because of the snow and beautiful scenery - the ride itself was rather short and not terribly thrilling. The key is that Matthew had a blast and I earned some credits allowing me to spend more time visiting WWII sites.

After finishing at Plopsa around 1pm we made our way into Stavelot to visit the Abbey. The interesting parts of the abbey are surprising - there's a nice English language audio tour of the museum which goes into great detail on the local area history as well as the construction of the abbey. Things get really interesting in the basement where there is an automobile and motorcycle racing museum complete with Sony PS2 and PS3 kiosks that kept us entertained.

Abbey in Stavelot.jpg

The ruins in front of the abbey made for a nice battlefield for a snowball fight for the boys. After visiting a few more Bulge sites we made our way back to La Roche for a bit of rest followed by our last evening meal in town.

Snowball Fight outside Stavelot Abbey.jpg

We strolled around town looking for some interesting dinner options and ultimately made our way across the Ourthe to eat at La Brasserie Ardennaise. They had a fine selection of beer, wine, and local flavor dishes - highly recommended. Of course David and I had to order our standby favorite Trappistes Rochefort 10.

Our Favorite Beer, Again.jpg

The picture below is from the bridge just in front of the restaurant with the feudal castle in the background.

Our Family with La Roche Castle in Background.jpg

This would be our last night in Belgium - next day we head to Reims, France but not without a few more stops in western Belgium.

Outside Hotel Luxembourg in La Roche.jpg

Our first stop was the Castle of Bouillon near the French border. Fortunately we left our puppy behind, because apparently it is commonplace for the local raptors to fly away with the cuter ones.

Puppies Beware of Angry Raptors!.jpg

Raptors at the castle? Yes indeed! One of the surprises at this outstanding castle was the birds of prey show put on by a local falconer. Even though the production was in French, the demonstrations of owls, hawks, eagles, condors, and falcons was first rate and kept us very entertained.

Owls during Bird of Prey show in Castle Bouillon.jpg

Our final stop in Belgium was the Orval Abbey, famous for its beer, cheese, and yellow stone ruins and new construction. The weather was spectacular and the boys had a great time playing some hide and seek in the ruins. I also had Matthew take a picture of our group to ensure that people would believe that I actually went on this trip.

Yes Chris was in Belgium Too.jpg

We thoroughly enjoyed wandering the ruins for a while and finished our visit at the gift shop where I picked up a 4-pack of beer with an Orval glass.

Orval Abbey.jpg

That's it for Belgium, the highlight of our trip for me especially when you consider the Bulge / WWII sites we were able to visit. That will be the subject of my next few posts, followed by a wrap-up of our visit to Reims and Paris.

posted on Sunday, May 04, 2008 1:16:53 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3]