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 Saturday, July 12, 2008
posted on Saturday, July 12, 2008 5:28:10 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0]

We began the day at the Rodin museum, an impressive display of sculptures and other artifacts of his life (the museum is housed in his former residence). N.B - the sculpture below is my first attempt at HDR photography - criticism welcome. The green leaves from the garden were a nice contrast to the stark bronze of the sculpture, but I wanted to get the shadows and highlights on the work as well. This was hand-held, quick shutter burst, with +/- 2 stop exposure bracketing.

Rodin Sculpture - HDR

The gardens are nothing short of amazing at the museum - it would be worth an annual pass just for the privilege of relaxing on a bench and reading amongst such works of art.

Boys in Rodin museum park

The surprise highlight of the day for me was the war museum at Les Invalides. I wasn't expecting much, but the WWI and WWII chronological exhibits were very well done - nearly as high quality as the Imperial War Museum in London. Unfortunately we didn't budget more than about 30 minutes or this stop and I was continually shooed along.

Invalides

From Les Invalides we walked to the Musée d'Orsay, one of my all-time favorites. Museum fatigue was in full force for the boys, so everyone else did a quick highlights tour while I stayed for 2-3 hours for some more in-depth investigation. Rick Steve's guide (not far removed from the one I used when last visiting in 1990) does a great job of illustrating the transition and contrast into the Impressionist era.

d'Orsay

Everyone else left the museum to visit the Jardin du Luxembourg, an expansive public park that would prove to be a great resting and play area. Julie paid for Matthew to enter the playground area, with mostly injury-free results.

Matthew plays at the park

When I arrived Jacob and I wandered around in search of the chess games. There was some solid play going on, and some hot tempers at times. We decided to just watch and not play.

Chess at the park

We spent the evening wandering the steps and alleys of Montmarte, home of bohemians like Dali and Picasso and cabarets like the Moulin Rouge.

Monte Marte steps

There was music in the plaza, jugglers in the streets, and craziness in the cabaret district. Very thematic.

Moulin Rouge

We were ready for more Indian food and found a tiny but great choice in Shenaz. The staff was very patient and helpful and we had quite a feast. And, thankfully, no sausages.

Dinner at Monte Marte

Our final day began with a visit to the holy chapel Sainte-Chapelle. Beautiful gothic architecture and stained glass.

Cathedral

And how about this - the French edition of the Pillars of the Earth boardgame sitting there in the gift shop.

Pillars of the Earth in the cathedral

After a visit to the Jewish district and a great Israeli / Mediterranean lunch feast, our last stop was to the Pompidou Centre. The kids had a great time ogling the sometimes, shall we say, evocative art in this bastion of modern art and abstract expressionism. I figured the red rhino was a pretty safe picture to post.

Red Rhino

That's it! Only three months later and I finish my Europe postings. For those of you still paying attention, thanks for your patience.

posted on Saturday, July 12, 2008 5:20:39 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0]

Day 3 in France started with an early morning trip to Île de la Cité for a visit to Notre Dame de Paris, famous for gargoyles, gypsies, and hunchbacks. We saw at least 2 of the 3.

Strike a pose

We roamed the island for a while, visiting Ponte Neuf and the Mémorial des Martyrs de la Déportation before crossing to visit the Rive Gauche.

Crossing the seine

While most of the stalls along the river were close, Shakespeare and Company was not so we spent 20 minutes or so browsing the English book selection.

Shakespeare and co.

Our big museum visit of the day was the Louvre, and we devised a plan to keep the boys engaged that worked perfectly. We allowed them to roam on their own but gave them a checklist of exhibits to see. They had fun and we were able to browse at our own leisurely pace. The highlight for me was the Coronation of Napoleon.

Louvre

We opted to eat in our hotel room that night, icing / chilling our beer (from Orval) and champagne (from Taittinger) to go with... what else but Pizza Hut?

Julie shows off her ice cubes

Julie and Lisa surprised us with a collection of dessert pastries - very tasty. Also, if you happen to get a pizza in Paris from Pizza Hut, make sure you get it with "cheesy fun crust" - there's nothing like it in the US and we still talk about it today.

Dinner in the room

posted on Saturday, July 12, 2008 4:32:33 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0]

My goal is to finish my posts on Europe before my next trip to Europe. Nothing like setting the bar high.

We finished our tour of Belgium near the French border and drove through the countryside to our first stop in Reims (or Rheims) to break up the drive a bit. We started with a champagne tour at Taittinger, arriving without knowing when tours would run but fortunately we had another English speaking couple show up that allowed us to supersede their previously scheduled French language tour. We did have to wait in the lobby for a while to make sure nobody else would show up.

Waiting for champaigne tour

The tour was fascinating - we went deep into the cellars and witnessed a great overview of the process, plus some tasty sampling afterwards.

Champaigne

That evening we wandered around the heart of Reims, including a visit to the spectacular Notre Dame de Reims cathedral. This cathedral has been a participant in many historical events, including coronations of many kings and battles during WWI.

Notre Dame, Rheims

Early the next morning we departed our hotel to enter Paris. My navigation skills were a bit lacking as we missed a key turnoff on the south central loop around the city and we managed to get stuck on the freeway for several miles and unfortunately had to pay a tool to make our way back. Dave and I dropped everyone off at the hotel to check in so that we could head into town towards Les Invalides to return the car. We lucked into a fueling station near the drop-off and hopped on the metro to head south and meet up with the family.

Our hotel - Best Western

Unfortunately the catacombs were closed for renovation! Julie of course had a backup plan - the Musée de l’Orangerie where we could see some of Monet's finest works plus pick up our museum pass - an amazing deal if you are spending a few days in Paris. Julie was our guide throughout the Paris stay - it was rare to see her without the Rick Steves book in hand.

l'Orangerie

Next up was the hike up Champs Élysées from the Place de la Concorde (with obelisk) to the Arc de Triomphe. The weather was cool but clear and the skies a deep blue.

Boys at monolith

Except when the thunderstorm hit us and we had to hide away in the Grand Palais. One day into our Paris trip the museums were starting to wear on the two most likely suspects: Dave and Matthew. All the more reason to have a museum pass and allow us to hop and hop out without worrying about getting a full value from a single visit.

Bored in a museum

We enjoyed stopping in a few of the shops along the Champs - most impressive were the concept cars in the Renault Peugeot (I knew that! but thanks George...) show room.

Champs fancy cars

And of course, the culmination of the walk is the Arc de Triomphe. We climbed to the top - within a 24 hour period we would climb the Arc, the Eiffel [as far as we could), and Notre Dame - for a spectacular view of the city.

Arc

Note: this is not perfect scale - view of the tower from the Arc.

Dave poking the tower

We originally planned to climb the tower later in the week, but with the weather clear and our legs fresh we decided to take advantage of our location and climb it. We approached from the Trocadéro and got a few nice shots of the illuminated tower. Climbing as high as we could followed by the final elevator lift was a smart move and probably saved us an hour of waiting in line at the base for tickets and an elevator.

Night shot of the tower

We finished the day at a brasserie near our hotel, which was most notable for possibly the worst piece of sausage any of us have ever tasted. Lesson learned, we'll stick to sausages from Germany and England in the future.

Worst. Sausage. Ever.

posted on Saturday, July 12, 2008 4:09:55 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Friday, July 11, 2008

Gmail - iPhone Developer Program Enrollment Status - brookscl@gmail.com

posted on Friday, July 11, 2008 9:16:16 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Thursday, July 10, 2008

iTunes

posted on Thursday, July 10, 2008 6:08:53 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Tuesday, July 08, 2008
posted on Tuesday, July 08, 2008 7:55:43 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2]

We are half-way through our stay in NY, having spent week 3 with our guests the Ginns. The weather is warming up here with most days sunny, humid, and in the 80s - but we are still getting some windy days allowing us to sail. Jacob and his grandfather took the Flying Dutchman out on a shakedown cruise last weekend and we've had it out one other time since.

Keuka Lake 2008-13.jpg

We even managed to get Julie out on the Sunfish but the wind was noticeably... absent.

Keuka Lake 2008-81.jpg

The Ginn kids had a blast taking hikes into the gully, swimming, and of course tubing. Tristan became ever more adventurous throughout the week:

Keuka Lake 2008-151.jpg

We've never quite seen a smile on a first-time tuber like we saw with Logan:

Keuka Lake 2008-242.jpg

Caleb seemed to have a blast battle-tubing with Jacob and Matthew.

Keuka Lake 2008-320.jpg

Our daily routine involved the kids spending time on the water during the day while I worked, and gaming in the late afternoons / evenings with the two tubs of games that Jim brought. The kids played a ton of Magic: the Gathering and Jim and I played a wide range of board and lighter card games. We had a great game of Nexus Ops in a pretty nice setting.

Keuka Lake 2008-146.jpg

On July 4 we had some fabulous weather so took the gaming outside for a 3 hour session of Hammer of the Scots. This was an epic see-saw battle where I raced ahead, nearly lost it when King Edward rampaged through the north of Scotland, then bounced back in the final two turns for a victory.

Keuka Lake 2008-6.jpg

Jim and I drove up to Branchport for the fireworks display (everyone else took the boat up) - we went by car because I wanted to take some photographs of the show. I got some nice shots - nothing spectacular, but not bad for my first try.

Keuka Lake 2008-66.jpg

This week we have Julie's brother Mike in town, and on Sunday we are off to Camp Gorton.

posted on Tuesday, July 08, 2008 12:33:44 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Monday, July 07, 2008

Scott Hanselman and I met for lunch a few months ago and he showed off his Amazon Kindle to me. This product was nowhere near my radar, but as I approached my trip to NY for 6 weeks I started to worry about packing space for books for the extended trip. I had a number of technical references to bring along plus the usual casual reading material. I did some research on capabilities and the more I learned about the device (persistent network connection, the ability to email and transfer arbitrary documents to the device, and extensive battery life) the more interested I became. So, I succumbed and purchased one on June 6.

I'm a convert and very happy with the purchase. There is a great deal of free content out there (Feedbooks is a great place to start) and of course there's the option to purchase from Amazon. I don't have an viable connection while here at the lake house, but when we take trips into Hammondsport, Bath, or other towns along the interstate corridor I'm able to get online and download content. I've grown used to the interface and find the device very usable, if a bit awkward with the giant "Next Page" button along the right side.

That's the good news - the bad news is that my screen crashed today:

Cam
Uploaded with plasq's Skitch!

I'm sure I probably dropped or squeezed it to cause this damage, but it concerns me that the device may not be all that robust in the long run. Still, a call to Amazon Kindle support took about 2 minutes and a replacement is on the way. I suspect they are replacing these no-questions-asked to ensure that it doesn't get a bad rep as an unreliable device. As usual I'm absolutely thrilled with Amazon customer service and they will remain my first stop for just about everything I purchase (that's why I'm an Amazon Prime customer).

posted on Monday, July 07, 2008 12:51:50 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Sunday, June 29, 2008

Another great week at Keuka. We had our usual mix of weather but managed to get in a good range of activities, including some hardcore track work down in Hammondsport (Jacob is on a rigorous fitness program this summer), some golf in Hornell, the usual array of watersports, and some fishing (and eating of fish).

Julie's dad Jerry and step-mom are off to Maine for about 10 days on a harbor cruise, but Jerry managed to put in a lot of time working with both boys on scout merit badges, and we even brought up a neighbor boy or half a day to work on small boat sailing merit badge. Here they are working on some knots.

Keuka Lake 2008-16-1.jpg

We heard from a friend that their motorboat might be submerging, so the boys took it upon themselves to row down the lake a half mile or so to check out the situation and possibly do some bailing. Turns out things weren't as bad as we suspected.

Keuka Lake 2008-23.jpg

Matthew has a new interest in fishing this year and is working on his fishing merit badge. This is good as I'm the only adult that has a passion for fishing and I need some successors to carry the torch (Jacob is already into fishing). Around the cottages we catch a wide range of pan fish, bass, and now quite a bit of catfish. My strategy is to snorkel around to see what's what and where the fish are hanging out, and this year I was surprised to see no less than 8 decent sized (10-14") catfish within 20 yards of our dock. Matthew managed to stalk one of these and bring it, which provided a great opportunity to teach him how to clean and skin catfish for cooking.

Keuka Lake 2008-260.jpg

He needed some help (catfish are hard to skin!) but did a great job, and it tasted great. We cooked it in a foil pack on the grill with some bacon and seasoning.

The water was very flat for a few days allowing us to spend more time on skis and wakeboards. Jacob is learning the ropes on his own with the wakeboard as none of us have any experience, but he's picking it up quickly and starting to learn a few tricks.

Keuka Lake 2008-221.jpg

Julie continues her mastery of the slalom ski, putting the rest of us to shame.

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I'm generally happy just to get up on a single ski, though it has become easier over the years (I only managed to get up for the first time about 7 years ago) and am unable to lay out like Julie and her brothers. Still, I have fun as long as my stamina lasts.

Keuka Lake 2008-47.jpg

Speaking of fishing, the boys and I are heading out on the boat right now to try and land some lake trout. Unfortunately there are now sawbellies (live minnow bait) available on the lake right now so we are forced to try some new techniques with artificial lures, so I'm not sure if we will bring anything home. Hopefully I'll have some pictures to show.

posted on Sunday, June 29, 2008 9:05:52 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0]