I haven’t been able to update this blog as much lately because of life. Firstly, I am really enjoying my new job and the work days seem to fly by. The phone that has been a constant fixture in my hand for the last 12 years is slowly working itself free. I actually forgot to bring it with me the other day. It was awesome. I’m not on-call any more which is WONDERFUL! I can work overtime… if I want. They like network maintenance to be done around 8:30 in the morning after shift changes at the hospital. No more 2am maintenance windows! I am loving that!
We are slowly learning to be a family without my son living at home. It’s taking some adjustment. But we’re learning to heal from all last Fall and Winter’s shennanigans. He seems to be adjusting to his new home too. I actually got to have lunch with him last week when his group home showed up at the hospital cafeteria.
I am flying every week. I work late on Fridays so I go in late. I’ll take my PPG out for half hour, maybe 45 minutes and then head into work. I fly again on Saturday morning. It’s been pleasant learning a new way to fly.
But other than this there are no earth-shattering happenings, no life-altering revelations, just living a simple and slower life. Despite the slower pace of life, the days seem to fly by. But the one constant in our lives has been Christ. We have definitely felt His presence in each and every day. And each and every day we are grateful!
And with that I leave you with a few photos of my flights this past week…
California’s vast Central Valley is known for it’s fresh fruits, nuts, and vegetables. They literally are farm fresh to your table out here. But we have another harvest that is not as well known; the California dust harvest.
Fruits are still hand picked for the most part but nuts are harvested in two phases. First the shaker comes along and shakes the tree causing all the nuts to fall on the ground, then the sweeper will come along and sweep the nuts up then dump them into waiting trucks. Above we see sweepers in the orchard. Sweepers are the prime cause of poor air quality in the Valley during the late Summer and early Autmn months. However, when a farmer looks at this picture do you know what he sees? Money! 🙂 Hey everyone’s got to eat.
I think you should know that to get this photo I had to go flying in my PPG (heh, ‘had to’ go flying.) And to get airborne it took me 4 tries. This intermediate wing is just so maneuverable that I have trouble getting it stable in the air so I can take off. I think I’m gong to have to go back to my kindergarten wing for a while.
Here’s the steely-eyed airman flinging his eager craft through footless halls of air…
In other news this weekend is my daughter’s 19th birthday. One of the things she wanted to do was learn how to fire my gun. I happily obliged and took her down to the shooting range.
I haven’t been able to post any updates lately because the past few weeks at work have been a blur. A nice blur but very busy. The days seem to fly by. I am enjoying working there though. The people are nice, the rate at which work comes in is manageable, and they make sure we have down time. I’m also blessed in that my boss, and her boss are both believers and prayed for the right person to fill their open position. I prayed for God to guide me to the right job. Everything worked out perfectly for both sides.
In my down time on the weekends I’ve been enjoying flying my PPG. Sometimes with my new friends from the PPG Facebook group, sometimes alone. It’s nice to finally be getting more comfortable with my launches, even when I mess them up. I have purposefully not taken any video or pictures on most of these flight in order to enjoy “being in the moment.” However, this past weekend I couldn’t resist.
The first two weeks at my new job have been awesome. Well, except for that one incident where I was cleaning up VLANs on the switches in the LAB building and accidentally deleted the management VLAN so I couldn’t get to the switch any longer. Huh? What did he just say? It just means I had to take the walk of shame over to the lab building to fix what I had broken. Luckily no end-users were harmed during my cranial flatulence. I was able to fix it quickly and move on.
Yesterday I took my wife up to Lake Tahoe to beat the heat in the Big Valley. Surprise surprise everyone else had the same idea! Traffic was thick and there was no roadside parking near any of the beaches. We got out and took a walk through Incline Village but ultimately gave up trying to make it to the beach. Instead we jumped back into my trusty minivan and headed back to our favorite secret lake back down in in the Big Valley.
It took us two hours to drive back down there and we made it 45 minutes before the front gate closed. We were able to park lakeside and get our chairs out and just enjoy the peace and quiet. There were other campers along the lake but it wasn’t that crowded due to the heat. Sitting there by the lake holding hands with my wife made the work week, all the traffic, the entire day’s journey to the Sierras and back completely worth it. We both felt the peace of nature descend on us; the trees, the lake, the turtles, the ducks, all of it. We spent the time talking, and not-talking. Sometimes just sitting in silence with the one you love is so very healing and peaceful.
Even though the weekend isn’t over, that is how I will remember the week ending for us; in peace. I thank God for that peace every day. I’m thankful for the new job. I’m thankful for being able to provide for my family (even though it is His provision, not mine). I’m thankful for my family; all of them. But I am most thankful for my wife who helps me find this peace. Life without her would be chaos.
I haven’t had time to update my blog lately because this new job has kept me hopping from the time I arrive at work until quitting time. This has been a wonderful experience so far. I really like the people I’m working with. For the first time in my career, I work in an office with a window! A corner office no less! Now, I do share the office with one other gentleman but we get along very good. It’s pretty much the same kind of work as my last job but there’s just… less of it. Most of my work here is going to be helping them organize their networking environment.
Since it is a hospital I can’t really post too many pictures of my work due to patient privacy but I will be posting some exterior shots. They have a mix of modern architecture and early 20th century brick work. Kind of reminds me of Gotham City. At any rate I am still here and will hopefully be able to update more as I get settled into my job.
I had to write one more thing about this job change and give God glory in the process. I was speaking to my boss (who is also a believer) about how we prayed for this job and the timing of it all. She then told me the rest of the story. How the job posting had been denied and closed. That as far as they knew they would not be getting a permanent employee. At some point the position mysteriously re-opened. They didn’t know the position had opened up until they started receiving applications and resumes. I was the last person they interviewed. My soon-to-be boss was shocked. She had been praying for a new employee to help out with networking. The last person they talked to on the last day was the one they had been waiting (and praying) for… me.
We usually take one family trip a year. We’ve been to Yellowstone, Sierra Nat’l Forest Redwoods, Disneyland, Maui, and The Great Smokey Mountains. This year we decided to keep it closer to home and went to Hollywood. We’ve never really been there and seeing the stars’ hand and foot prints was on my bucket list since I was a kid.
After a long drive down we were rewarded with not one but two bucket list items, one of mine and one of my daughters. We first made a beeline to the Chinese Theater to see the hand prints.
My daughter’s bucket list item was to attend a movie premiere. Well, she kind of got her wish. As we were walking down the street we stumbled onto the premier of The Legend of Tarzan. We saw (from across the street) Samuel L. Jackson, Alexander Skarsgård, and Margot Robbie. The pictures aren’t very good because of the distance but this is what that looked like.
We were pretty much beat after that so we headed back to find something to eat and then crash at the hotel.
The next morning we drove down to Rodeo Drive and pretended to be rich people. Real live rich people would not be awake when the stores opened but we had fun anyway.
It started getting warm so we continued on to our destination for today, Santa Monica Beach. We checked into our hotel early, got our swim duds on and headed out for the beach.
After a day in Santa Monica we finally got out of the LA area and headed up to Solvang for a day of shopping and decompressing from the LA traffic.
We stayed at the Solvang Garden Inn which had some beautiful English gardens around the entire grounds. We’re going to go back to this place when we have a few days to spend.
We enjoyed the grounds for a while and Angela and I played one round of bocci ball then we went into town and stumbled across their farmer’s market. We spent the afternoon and the next morning exploring the town and letting Cristy do what she does best… shop! I also got to meet a cousin whom I’d never met before and his wife. As the conversation turned to politics you could definitely tell we were related!
Æbleskiver and Danish sausage for breakfast
The next morning we headed down to San Luis Obispo (or SLO as we call it). We ate at their HUGE farmers market which I neglected to get many pictures of. It was very crowded and I wouldn’t really be able to ge a picture of anything other than the crowds. We browsed the many stands and had a nice Thai dinner on the sidewalk.
After dinner drinks
The next day was our return home day. We stopped in downtown SLO so Cristy could do some more shopping and Angela explored. I hadn’t had breakfast so I ordered a pizza and sat down to catch up on some emails. Around lunch time we drove out to Morro Bay so Cristy could have her favorite, fish-on-a-stick at Giovanni’s.
After lunch we began the long drive home after 5 days and 4 nights on the road. I sure enjoy travelling but not long trips home. I’ll sure enjoy taking my home with me when we start our full time RV travels. But even so, memories were made and those last a lifetime.
When I originally started researching this sport I decided I wanted two things; a Nirvana paramotor and a Dudek Universal wing. This came from a lot of different folks making recommendations. During training though, I just couldn’t seem to keep the Universal under control when I was trying to launch. Ryan Shaw switched out to a more docile and stable wing; a Dudek Nemo. That is the wing I ultimately bought and brought home. Why mess with something that’s working?
Recently Ryan put up a used Universal for sale on Facebook. I figured this would be a good way to finally try out that Universal and if it was a disaster I could always sell it again. Well this morning I finally had a chance to take it out. I proved no easier for me to launch. I had three blown launch attempts with this wing. I was about to pack it in but gave it one more try. I finally got the wing stable and flying nicely above my Cruise Carbon Trike so I fed in full throttle and got to fly it for the first time. Wow, what a difference! This wing is way more maneuverable, slightly faster, and way more stabile! The Nemo has a tendency to roll back and forth. This is easily dampened but you have to work to stop it. The Universal had no such tendency. I could stow the brake toggles and just fly hands in my lap rock solid stabile. I’m going to enjoy getting to know this wing!
Here is a short video this morning of flying the Dudek Universal!
This is a posting I have been holding back for a while but now I can finally publish it. After almost 12 years of working for McClatchy Newspapers I was told that my services were no longer required. My job still needed to be done, they just didn’t want me to do it any longer. Not just myself but almost all of the Information Technology employees in the company. Only a very small staff would be kept on for institutional knowledge.
It all started on a run of the mill Tuesday. We got a meeting notice to dial into a departmental conference call. These happen periodically and we listen over the phone about all the various intiatives happening in the company. This was what most of us were expecting. What we heard was a gut punch. Instead of hearing the normal cast of management characters talking about what their groups had been doing the last month we were told that if we were on the call, then our positions were affected. Affected?? Affected by what? We were told we were being cosourced. This is the feel-good buzzword management uses to describe training someone else to do your job and then getting laid off. Further, the people that we would be training to take over our jobs would be overseas workers. Bottom line, I had to leave the company so someone from another country could have my job. Upper management put all kinds of cheeful spin on the announcement and how it was going to streamline IT and make it faster to respond and cut costs at the same time. Yeah, cutting costs was what it was all about.
At first I thought it was just my group, but in the coming days I found it was all of Information Technology; it was a bloodbath. For the first week or so we all just kind of continued on doing our jobs in a haze. No one talked about it. Gradually people began talking. “Are you affected?” “How many from your group? All of them?!” That’s when the resentment started building. And that’s when people started talking. An article appeared in Computer World magazine where some employees spoke out: Newspaper Chain Sending IT Jobs Overseas and the follow-up article: Newspaper IT Employees ‘Angry as Hell’ Over Foreign Workers It was in this second article that I learned that it wasn’t just some overseas workings in India that would be doing my job remotely, McClatchy would be hiring foreign workers who had come into the country on H1B visas to do our jobs. In fact, I am the source of the “Mad as hell” comment in the article. And I’m not alone in feeling this way. Other IT employees have spoken out in this artlce on MediaPost and also Talking New Media.
At least McClatchy was kind enough to give us four month’s notice and if we stayed until our termination dates in August, we would receive two weeks’ pay for every year of service. That is fairly generous as severence packages go. So if I stayed, I would have pay until roughly the end of October. But I’m not the kind to sit still. If I’m on a sinking ship and have the choice between staying and having a guaranteed seat in a life boat, or I could get onboard a passing ship that is not sinking, I think I’ll just get on the other ship thank you. Keep your severence pay and best of luck.
I started a job search in earnest a week after I received the news. I happened across a job posting for San Joaquin County that said they were looking for someone with Enterasys switch experience. Hey! I have Enterasys switch experience! So, on a whim, on April Fool’s day a mere 9 hours before the position was closed, I applied via the county website. I didn’t expect to hear anything from them. Two weeks later I was asked to submit some more information. I did. Then I was asked to come in for a skills assessment. This is where they basically ask me about everything that’s already on my resume. Probably to make sure I really know what’s on the resume and really do know all that stuff. I met the three member board, answered their questions and didn’t expect to hear from them again. Again, about a week later I received an email asking me to come in for an interview with the CIO (Chief Information Officer) of San Joaquin General Hospital. I went into that interview, and again met with three people. The CIO, the Infrastructure Manager, and the gentleman who had my job and was trying to transition out. This was the interview that really counted.
Before…
I spoke with them at length about my qualifications and what I did at McClatchy, told them why I was leaving, and explain the up and down trajectory of my career as laid out on my resume. Finally they were done and asked me if I had any questions. I asked them what they were really looking for, what did they want the successful candidate to actually do? With no pause, they said they needed someone who understood Enterasys switches to come in, clean up their wiring closets and be able to hit the ground running. I explained to them how what I did at McClatchy would help them with that. I was their man. I sent a “thank you” email to the CIO later with a few before and after wiring closet pictures of some of the projects I worked on over the years. (Not that I did those single-handedly, nowhere near single-handed) Within minutes I got a reply thanking me for following up with an email and was told that they felt I was the ideal candidate and would be referring me to their HR department to begin the hiring process! What a way to end a
After!
week! The day was Friday the 13th. I asked for four weeks before I would start with them; two weeks notice for my employer and then two weeks off to vacation with my family. After going through all the preliminatry testing (2 TB tests, a blood test, and a drug test) HR contacted me and we set a start date of July 11th, 2016. I was finally formally hired!
Through all of this I prayed to God. I never asked Him to get me a new job. I KNEW He would find work for me. I only asked Him to give me the wisdom to recognize the opportunities He was placing before me. I know this job is a gift from Him. I applied nine hours before the filing deadline, I don’t belive I did all that well in the skills test, but all the in-person interviews must have gone well, I mean, I got hired!
Through prayer I was able to work through all the negative emotions and see this for what it really was, a God-given opportunity for fresh working environment and a better future through better retirement benefits. Chance? Coincidence? I don’t believe in that. I believe in Providence. I believe in a loving, caring God who provides for those whom He loves. Thank you McClatchy for the work you provided to me over the years. Thank you God for arranging every job I’ve ever had.
I FINALLY got hold of some video taken by a friend of mine of my first flight in my PPG at Oakdale, my home airport. It was the morning of our EAA Chapter 90 breakfast and the guys wanted to see a crash. I was glad I could disappoint them. 🙂 So here is the video of my first takeoff at Oakdale Airport.