Posts Tagged ‘San Jose’

Recent developments: Teething and creeping

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

By Jason

Since we’ve been back from our travels, Athena has aggressively pursuing the relevant developmental milestones.  She’s getting very determined, and when she wants to turn around and be held facing forward or grab a particular toy, she is not easily distracted from her goal.

One major new skill is creeping.  Creeping is the term for getting around on her belly but not actually crawling.  What Athena does is actually more accurately called inchworming, since she plants her face and hands on the floor, scoots her legs up, and then inches her way forward before starting over again.  As of this writing, she’s getting very close to actually crawling, so I’ll have to get some video soon.

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The other major accomplishment to mention is teething.  Teething is horrible.  I don’t know whose idea this was, but her gums hurt and she doesn’t know why and she doesn’t like Orajel or baby ibuprofen, even though it makes her feel better.  Feeds have become a bigger challenge, and she’s too sore to be the reliably happy baby we’re so used to.  We ended up not going out to dinner for Mother’s Day (getting takeout instead) because we didn’t want to chance it.  Hopefully this tooth will pop out soon.

Visiting with Uncle Ahan:

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Playing Rock Band at Google on a Saturday afternoon:

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Athena hanging with Sandy:

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In general Ann and I have been doing alright.  I’ve had a head cold that refuses to completely go away for about two weeks, though it seems to be on it’s way out now.  I’ve been pretty busy at work and having my ears all blocked up has made it hard to lead meetings and such.  Ann has been busy drawing up plans for a grant application at her clinic, they’re hoping to redesign the floorplan and make their space more efficient.

In fact, it was after a trip to her office to measure walls that we stopped by Kelley Park in San Jose.  Kelley park isn’t particualrly famous but it reminded me a bit of the Metroparks back in Cleveland – there’s a lot of trees, a creek, picnic tables and interesting sections.

Athena enjoying the koi pond in the Japanese Friendship Garden:

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More fun with mom by the pond:

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The Japanese park is on two levels, with ponds connected by streams.  Here we are at the upper pond:

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This picture was fun – we tried to sit Athena down in the grass for a photo but she immediately flipped herself over and started pulling up the grass.  It was pretty much the most amazing thing she had ever discovered.  If we had left her there I have no doubt she would have defoliated the entire lawn.

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Athena also enjoyed clawing the bark off the trees:

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She’s not really waving, but we’ll say goodbye with this last photo:

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July Fourth weekend and other recent happenings

Sunday, July 13th, 2008

By Jason

This will be a relatively quick update, at least compared to some of my recent photo overload posts.  Last weekend was the July Fourth holiday weekend so we went down to San Jose for the fetsival there.  We got to see some great Japanese taiko drumming:

San Jose Taiko rocking the main stage

Japanese Taiko drummers on the Fourth

And Ann was very, very excited to get some funnel cake.  Almost too excited…

Ecstatic about funnel cake

We had dinner with some folks from work and checked out the working difference engine at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View.  It’s very cool – Charles Babbage designed the machine in the 1800s but was never able to complete construction.  A museum in London decided to see if they could build on using materials available during his time, and this is the result.

The difference engine at the Computer History Museum

It requires an operator to turn a crank, and prints results on paper at the other end.

Charles Babbage's difference engine is cranked by hand

The machine uses the difference method to calculate the values of polynomial equations.  For example, if you needed to solve x^3 – 2x^2 +5x – 7 for various values of x, you would solve it for x=1, x=2, etc and set the gears at the correct values.  The machine will then calculate for x=4, x=5, as far up as you need to go.

Columns of gears in the difference engine

One other thing happened this week – Apple release the new version of the iPhone along with the new firmware for current iPhones.  That means you can install new applications and do all kind of cool things with the phone you couldn’t do before.  Ann has been even more geeked out about than me.  Here she is, dozed off with the iPhone still in her hands.  It was too cute to pass up.

She fell asleep while using her iPhone, I had to take a picture...

A long-overdue post about my parents’ visit

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

By Jason

We are ridiculously behind in posting what’s going on in our lives in NorCal (this is what the kids call it).  We have been fairly busy, though, what with all the gestation going on.

Last month my parents came for a visit and we gave them our comprehensive tour of the Bay Area.  They flew in around noon and Ann brought them directly from the airport to Google for lunch.  I gave them the grand tour (which, despite all the practice, I have yet to master) and we ate at the No Name Cafe.  Within 10 minutes my Mom managed to get the all cooks singing Canta y no Llores.  It was one of those great moments that is both endearing and a little embarrassing.  Dad was impressed by all the different languages spoken and how people seemed so social and engaged in discussion.  It really isn’t like any other workplace.

The next stop on the tour for which I have pictures available was San Francisco – hopefully we’ll post an addendum later to fill in narrative gaps like this.  We parked near the financial district so that we could take the cable cars up California Street and then down to the Hyde Street Pier and Fisherman’s Wharf.   I think my dad could have ridden the cable cars up and down the hills all day.  Mom kept wondering whose idea it was to build a city up and down so many steep hills in the first place.  I think it was a conspiracy between cable car union and the post card industry.

To get an idea how steep the ride is, here’s Mom and Ann with Hyde Street in the background:

Hyde Street Pier

As always, you can click on the photos to see larger versions.  Next is a picture that should be pretty familiar to anyone who’s traveled with my Dad – reading all the informational signs:

Reading another sign

Next we took a cruise around the bay, out to the Golden Gate and around Alcatraz Island.  Here’s a photo on the boat with the bridge in the background.

Passing the Golden Gate

This picture is a little more newsworthy but also a bit sad.  Can you tell that the tug boat is pulling something?  That would be a dead whale, which had drifted under a pier and was stuck for a few days.  We just happened to be heading back as they towed it out to sea.  I wasn’t the only one taking pictures, it looked like the city’s entire fleet of news helicopters were circling above.

Dead whale found under San Francisco Pier is hauled out to sea

Next we wandered around Fisherman’s Wharf for a bit, taking a look at the Lefty’s leftorium, which is just like Ned Flander’s store in the Simpsons, and the other shops and galleries.  We walked down to the end of Pier 39, which you can see here:

All four of us in San Francisco

Our next adventure was to Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park, which we also visited with Ryan and Jessi.  Next door is the Roaring Camp Railroad.  We couldn’t take the ride because this part of the year they do group events like weddings, but we got to watch as one of the old steam locomotives headed out.

Train at the Roaring Camp Big Trees Railroad

Dad got to talk a bit with the engineer.  One thing you might notice in the picture is that the train doesn’t have the usual pistons and connecting rods on the sides of the driving wheels.  Think of the arm motions you would make if you were pretending to be a train in a game of charades.  Since these trains had to go up steep grades they actually had three big pistons up front with a central drive shaft down the middle.

Conversations with an engineer

Here we’re watching the train leaving the station.  Ann is eating old-fashioned horehound candy which does wonders for nausea.

Watching the train leave the station

The big attraction of the park is the giant redwood trees.  You can get an idea how big they are from the picture below.  We had a chance to crawl inside one tree that was completely hollow inside, maybe 15-20 feet up.

One thing I don’t have a picture of is a giant banana slug.  I have been hoping to encounter one every time we’ve taken a trip to the redwoods with no luck.  As we headed back down the trail we heard a bunch of commotion ahead of us.  On the ground was a (relatively) small, very stunned banana slug.  Apparently some kids had run ahead for their parents and found it on the tree.  They dared each other to kiss it, at which point on of the little girls freaked out and knocked the poor thing off.

Nest to the big trees

Our next day was spent in sunny San Jose, where we visited the Winchester Mystery House.  There’s no real mystery, but it is a great story – Sarah Winchester, wife of the creator of the Winchester rifle, was left a widow with a ridiculous sum of money.  She worried that she would be haunted by the ghosts of all those killed by her husband’s rifles.  Supposedly a psychic told her she must never stop construction on her house (ghosts don’t like loud hammering), so she didn’t.  The end result is a sprawling complex with no central plan and lots of expensive details:

Winchester Mystery House roof detail

Here’s a picture from one of the upper floors but this doesn’t really give you a good idea of how big the place is.  It’s a lot of fun, though the tours are a bit pricey and our tour guide was less than knowledgeable.

Bell Tower at the Winchester House

It used to be on a big estate but now it’s right in the middle of San Jose, you can see office buildings behind us.

On the Balcony

Mom liked the place because Mrs. Winchester had lots of mini-steps built in the staircases.  It was like the house was designed for her.

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As always, there are more photos of the trip here.

Up next:  shirt trips to Golden Gate National Recreation Area and Rancho San Antonio Open Space Preserve.