Saturday, December 31, 2005

Travels in 2005

This year, we did not travel too much. We were able to go to Okinawa, Japan, which was the first time for Jim. Kyoko had once previously been to Okinawa.

Here is a map of where we have been in 2005. An interactive map is available at:

http://www.frappr.com/jimandkyoko2005




By the way, this blog is "work in progress". As we have time, we'll go back and put in entries for previous trips and events for this year and previous years!

Sunday, December 25, 2005

Speaking of cold...

Actually, we have been experiencing some nice weather lately with temperatures sometimes up to 80F (27C). However, this past month as our heating bill can attest, there were some days when the high temperatures were in the 30s or 40s (0C - 9C) and the lowest was 15F (-10C). It's also been really dry, with some brush fires as close as Arlington!

Anyway, back to the topic at hand, we went to Ice, which is an ice scultpure exhibit being held at the Gaylord Texan. We've always wanted to take a closer look at the Gaylord anyway, as it looks impressive just by driving around it. The exhibit was quite pricey at $20 per person for about a 30-minute walk through the ice sculptures, but it was very interesting as well.


Christmas letter 2005

My how time flies, but we are sure everyone feels that way. We are now approaching the end of our 3rd year in our house, and we still enjoy it very much. We only wish that Jim could enjoy it more often. Jim continues his project which takes him to Vienna, Austria frequently. The current project involves deploying the application in Japan, so Jim has the opportunity to visit Japan on business. This year, we were able to go to Okinawa.

Kyoko continues to volunteer at a local high school for assisting in teaching Japanese. Kyoko also has some students she is tutoring.

On a sad note, Kyoko's grandmother anddog both passed away in 2005. Since Kyoko was her grandmother's first grandchild, there was always a special connection between them. And Santakun was Kyoko's baby, but even after Kyoko moved to the US, the family thought it was best to stay in Japan to keep the dogs together. She misses them very much and wish she could have been there for their last days. In Japan, it would be awkward to put the picture of someone who passed away on a someone's picture on a celebratory card, but Kyoko thought it would be ok to include Santakun's picture.

We have started to use Flickr for posting our pictures. You can see our pictures at http://www.flickr.com/photos/jimandkyoko. It would be helpful to have captions on the photos. One of these days... In addition, we have started a blog using Google's Blogger. You can see our blog at http://jimandkyoko.blogspot.com.

Saturday, December 24, 2005

Cold? Nahhhh...

When we compared similar usage from previous heating bills, we see that our heating costs are twice as high as two winters ago. We're so happy that oil companies and others are making record profits.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Christmas lights 2005

From GuideLive:

Ghosts are getting ready for the holidays. Are you?

Scrooge, Tiny Tim and the ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Future will greet visitors at a cul-de-sac on Parkrise Court in SpringPark, a neighborhood that straddles Garland and Richardson.

For residents on more than a dozen streets in SpringPark, choosing themes to dress up yards for the holidays has become a tradition.

Spring Park
Mark Buettner
Several streets in SpringPark have themed light displays. Homes on Newburyport Avenue feature stars as part of their holiday motif.

Parkrise's theme this year, A Christmas Carol, features illustrations based on the 1962 Christmas special Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol. According to block representative Kay Davidson, the street's lighted character illustrations and storyboards will be ready in time for the neighborhood's holiday lights competition on Dec. 15 and Holiday Hoedown on Dec. 17.

Winners will be announced at the hoedown, which is one big party for residents at the clubhouse with the roasting of marshmallows; a band; Santa; and free chili, hot dogs and homemade desserts. Ms. Davidson is excited about her street's participation.

"We're very competitive. And I think we're going to win!" she says.

Considering the plans for a dozen or more themes on other streets, Parkrise may have some stiff competition.

train
Mark Buettner
Lake Shore Drive's railcars are chugging along in their third season.

Lake Shore Drive is going full steam ahead with about 30 train decorations (including a train car transporting Noah's Ark) animating its "Lakeshore Express" theme, now in its third season. According to block rep Cindi Wakefield, all the participating houses are linked by a double strand of rope lights representing railroad tracks.

Mountain Ash Court is also going with a time-tested favorite, " 'Twas the Night Before Christmas," which will be highlighted by a manger scene.

Marla Howard, block representative for Newfield Court, says her street will illustrate the history of the candy cane with red and white lights. She enjoys the camaraderie of neighbors hanging out together and talking and laughing while putting up their decorations.

Ms. Howard says her 11- and 15-year-old daughters always look forward to the hayride to the hoedown at the clubhouse. And they get to enjoy the colorful yard displays along the way.

SpringPark comprises homes in Garland and Richardson. The neighborhood is off Jupiter Road, north of Campbell Road and south of Lookout Drive. From Central Expressway, head east on Campbell to Jupiter and then north on Jupiter. Entry to the neighborhood is at Jupiter and Springpark Way. Most displays will be on from about dusk to 10 p.m. on weekdays and later on weekends until New Year's.
Bindu Varghese

Other themed streets

Buckethorn Court "Stars at Night Are Big and Bright," with a large arch welcoming visitors. Decorations include stars on houses and hanging from trees.
Cottonwood Court Frosty the Snowman.
Cross Timbers Lane East Gift boxes, with a big box by each participating house and a sign elaborating on what the box contains (for example, peace, love and charity).
Debra Court Patriotic theme, with peace trees lighted in white.
Greenleaf Court "An Old-Fashioned Christmas," with wreaths and bows on participating houses.
Newburyport Avenue "Stars," with a star on each participating house. The street's cul-de-sac has a Christmas carol theme, with each participating house reflecting a different song.
Silver Maple Court Santa on vacation, with decorations such as Santa playing golf.
Vista Ridge Cartoons, with cutouts of Snoopy on his doghouse, Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Sylvester and Tweety Bird.
Wheat Field Road "Amber Waves of Grain," featuring all-gold light displays.


OTHER HIGHLIGHTS

'The Kolors of Kessler' in Kessler Park
OAK CLIFF

snowglobe
Nan Coulter / Special to DMN
Sydney Pierce-Kahn and Ariana Carr examine a Christmas globe at "The Kolors of Kessler" in north Oak Cliff.

For a diverse group of residents in an equally diverse area of Dallas, holiday spirit is one thing that brings people together. This year, the Kessler Park neighborhood of north Oak Cliff is celebrating diversity by expanding its community lighting display, with the colored lights signifying diversity. Volunteers were recruited to decorate trees on about a third of the neighborhood's 22 traffic triangles or parkways. "The Kolors of Kessler" features live and artificial trees of various types, each decked out in a different lighting scheme, along Colorado Boulevard, Winnetka Avenue, Clinton Avenue, Kessler Parkway and Canterbury Court. The largest tree, at Clinton and Canterbury, was the focal point for the neighborhood's Dec. 3 Christmas festival and is near one of the area's heaviest concentrations of home lighting displays. Ron Veech, chairman of the holiday lighting committee, estimates that about half of the residents of Kessler Park install outdoor Christmas lights, so there's plenty to see on a leisurely drive. "Christmas provides our residents an opportunity to showcase the neighborhood," Mr. Veech says. "We enjoy decorating with lights and welcoming others to visit the area."
Kara Kunkel

• Christmas lights along the streets and at individual houses can be seen nightly in Kessler Park through at least the first week of January. Most of the lights are on between nightfall and about 10 p.m. Kessler Park is in north Oak Cliff, just south of Interstate 30 at Sylvan Avenue. The neighborhood extends roughly from Interstate 30 on the north side to Stewart Drive on the south and from Plymouth Road on the west side to Sylvan on the east.


A very Texas Christmas in Glenbrook
BEDFORD

Texans often put their own spin on the holiday season. For the last 16 years, homeowners in the Glenbrook neighborhood in Bedford have used the lights theme "The Night Before Christmas – in Texas, That Is," based on a 1951 poem by the late Leon Harris, a well-known Dallas retailer and author. In 1998, Mr. Harris attended the neighborhood's lighting celebration. In addition to the lights display, his parody of Clement Moore's A Visit From St. Nicholas has inspired a children's book and a song. In Glenbrook, eight storyboards, which have been refurbished to make them easier to read, recount the tale of the Santa who wears a cowboy hat and speaks with a drawl. While only eight homes feature the storyboards, other houses (all with red lights) show off lighted figures and props such as a cabin with bunk beds, cowboy boots (not stockings) and horses (not reindeer). And while you usually won't find any snow here, there are plenty of longhorns, cowboys, cactus plants and armadillos, some of which are pulling Santa's sleigh. Only in Texas, y'all.
Toni Edwards

• Weeknights from 6 to 10 and weekends 6 to 11 p.m. through Jan. 1. From Airport Freeway, exit at Central Drive and go north to Cummings Drive, west to Brookside Drive and turn south into the Glenbrook neighborhood.


'Lollipop Lane'
RICHARDSON

lollipop
Brandon Thibodeaux / DMN
Candy-colored milk jug bottoms become glowing gumdrops on Opal Lane in Richardson.

Some Richardson residents call it Lollipop Lane. It looks more like Gumdrop Gardens. Red-, green-, orange- and blue-lighted squares, which resemble shoebox-size gumdrops in the grass, line the sidewalks and dot the landscape of several homes on Opal and Kirby lanes. One of the houses features mammoth red and white lollipops and candy canes – perhaps that's where the Lollipop Lane nickname came from. One thing is for certain: The folks in this Richardson neighborhood must drink a lot of milk. The illuminated gumdrop menageries are made of cut-off bottoms of plastic milk jugs, which are used as lampshades over strings of C-9 Christmas light bulbs to create the fantasy candy effect. Driving through the neighborhood, we couldn't help but wonder, "Who drank all that milk?" Also, several other streets in the neighborhood, to the south and east of the intersection of Floyd and West Arapaho roads, have some fun displays.
Nancy Moore

• Opal Lane is off Floyd Road, one block south of West Arapaho Road.


'To Christmas With Love' in Old Town
ROCKWALL

Christmas ornaments magically come to life in Bonney Miller's book, To Christmas With Love. The tale provided the inspiration for a lighted holiday drive in the Old Town neighborhood in Rockwall. Residents painted wooden figures representing the ornaments, ranging from a star to a donkey, for 11 yard displays that are accompanied by poetry from the book. The tour, which begins near State Highway 66 and Parks Avenue, covers about seven blocks, and some of the historic homes along the route are decked out with additional lights. The neighborhood usually hosts a holiday home tour, but residents opted for a light display this year instead.
Ann Pinson

• The lights go on nightly around dusk through Dec. 31. From the intersection of State Highway 66 and Parks Avenue, go north on Parks and follow the signs for the tour.


'The 12 Days of Christmas'
LAKE HIGHLANDS

angels
Randy Eli Grothe / DMN
Timberhollow Circle illustrates "The 12 Days of Christmas."

Donna Jenkins grew up on Southwood Boulevard near the University of Texas at Arlington. She fondly remembers how her neighbors would coordinate their holiday lights to visually represent the song "The 12 Days of Christmas." Nine years after she and her husband, Steve, built their house on Timberhollow Circle in 1980, "we realized that we have 14 houses on the street," she says. "The idea came back, and it was just right." So after talking with the neighbors, they raided a children's book for images to make into yard signs. "We had a projector, so we blew up the figures and painted them in our garage. It took two nights, all night on both." Now a 16-year tradition, the cul-de-sac's modest, charming display (the two corner houses serve as intro and end points) attracts plenty of local foot and car traffic and is cohesive despite an almost complete turnover of homeowners within that time. "We've never said, 'Put your stuff out,' " she says of the yard signs, which transfer to the new owners whenever one of the houses sells. "We've never had to have any meeting. Everybody just puts them out, and it's great neighborhood fun."
Mike Daniel

• Timberhollow Circle is in the Oak Highlands Estates subdivision. The entrance is one block south of Royal Lane off Abrams Road; from there, take a left on Moss Haven Drive, and the display will be on the right. The display lights are on from sundown until about 9 p.m. through December.

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

What's Christmas without Christmas lights?

We don't have all our lights up yet... Hopefully that will be changing in the next few days. This extreme cold weather does not help. It was 17F this morning and a current afternoon temperature of 29F. Hey, if I wanted this type of weather, I would have stayed in Illinois!

Anyway, someone in Ohio put together a multimedia Christmas light display (ie, with synchronized music). To quote from Engadget: "So many people ended up visiting the Williams’ sub-division, that two folks got in a minor accident (next time try parking while you watch, k?), and sheriff’s deputies asked him to put an end to the revelry indefinitely. Isn’t it just like mainstream media to ruin something so precious and beautiful?"

A video of his display is available at:

http://homepage.usask.ca/%7Eamn076/lights.wmv

Instructions for seeing the video (worthwhile in my opinion):
  1. If you are using Internet Explorer, clicking the link should allow IE to recognize it as a Windows media file and prompt you if you want to open it inside of IE or outside. (Not sure if it matters, but I always prefer outside). It will then use Windows Media Player to stream the video to you.
  2. If you do not have .wmv files configured in your browser, then you should right click the link and select to copy the link location. Then, you should open Windows Media Player (or any other media player which plays .wmv files), select File -> Open URL -> and then paste the copied URL.
  3. Of course, you can always right click the link, save on your computer, and then play from your computer as well.
Our Christmas display isn't multimedia. Here are some preliminary pics... I won't get a chance until around Christmas for more pics.

Sunday, December 04, 2005

Night at the Ballet


We went to see the The Nutcracker presented by the Collin County Ballet Theater. It was held at Eisemann Center in Richardson. Quite a nice facility. I am not an expert in ballet, but I would say some of the performances were very good. In addition, the costumes and sets were quite nice.

I did bring my digital camera with me. However, I had not previously tried to turn off the LCD screen so I thought it would be too distracting for those behind us if there was an LCD screen flashing at them. I thought it might be under "Settings" but it wasn't. During intermission, I did figure out it is done by pressing Display four times. Of course, I should have known. For the second Acte, I was able to take some pictures. I was surprised because I didn't necessarily expect any of them to turn out, but some were not so bad. However, shooting under low light requires quite an exposure... and those darn ballet dancers kept moving around!


Self-parking was in the garage for $4. We were fortunate enough to be seated near an exit and could quickly get out after the performance, but otherwise, I remember how difficult it was to get out of the parking garage after watching fireworks in Las Colinas.