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Sunday, December 22, 2013

Dusseldorf

It's great to be back in Europe for the holiday season, especially with German Christmas markets such a short drive away.  After last year in Prague, we thought that we'd return to the German roots.  All of our Dutch friends have always talked about how nice Dusseldorf is.   Honestly, I was very skeptical.   I've driven through the Ruhr many times on the way south and from the highway it always feels like a scarred, industrial landscape.  It is the heart of German manufacturing and from all of the factories and smoke stacks, it always felt more like an area to avoid rather than seek out for Christmas markets.  But, I also needed to meet with a new colleague of mine from Frankfurt and he suggested that we go to the office in Dusseldorf as a 1/2 way point.  Expecting 1970's decaying Pittsburgh, I reluctantly agreed and booked a hotel for the weekend.   Driving through the rats-nest of autobahns, chemical factories, and smokestacks, I really thought I had made a mistake.  But as we got deeper and deeper into the city, it quickly became clear how wrong I was about Dusseldorf!  This is a rich, progressive, modern, and extremely healthy, vibrant city.  And the Christmas markets were unparallelled....even with Prague.  Fantastic!

View from the 17th floor of our office building on the banks of the Rhine.




It's not London, but the wheel dominates the old city skyline.  It sure looked permanent to me.

The old city center was rebuilt after the war in it's original fashion.  I've never seen so much shopping in my life!  It went on and on and on and on.   And the markets were fantastic!   This year's street food was Wild Boar stew, sauteed mushrooms, and of course bratworst.

We put on 23 kilometers walking the city and markets.   I'm glad we have an office here....I'll definitely be back.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

The final countdown

It's amazing to me how quickly the time has gone.  When the sabbatical started, there was still snow on the ground here in Mountaintop Maryland.  Now, after a cool spring and wet summer, the air is starting to carry the crispness of fall and the return date to Holland is quickly approaching.

It's been an interesting adventure.  There is still much to do on the Glamping business, but the time with family and long unseen friends has been priceless.  Below is a photo update of the construction project and a few, much needed vacations.


There was a fantastic weekend with some of the old crew up at IUP.  We stayed at the Niederitter "huntin' camp", ate loads of great BBQ, drank buckets of great beer, and spent most of our time acting like irresponsible college kids again.  Gezellig!

Of course we hit the campus and several of the mainstay bars up on Philadelphia Street, but the best times were had out at the camp, playing cornhole and laughing late into the evening.   I didn't get a picture, but we drove past the old house on Water Street that we all shared senior year.  Man, that place needs condemned!  I still remember my mom coming up and ripping the landlord a new one when he put up siding and boarded up most of the windows in the process...aren't mom's great?  There were 12 kids sitting on the rickety old front porch, drinking beer and smoking cigarettes...some things never change.

 Speaking of campus, so many of the old buildings have been torn down...even the Quad is gone!!!!  But this old Econ building is still standing.  The 5th window down is the famous one.  Jim and I had a three hour class together and on the last week, we killed a bottle of gin in the back of class and climbed out the window.  The professor never said a word.  I got a B in the class.


I also promised Grace that I'd post a picture from the demolition derby at the county fair.  Small town America weekend fun doesn't get much better than this!  I'll never look at firemen the same way. :-)


Then there was a wedding in Toronto.  I hate weddings.   But this one was actually really great!  Well done Heather and Dan!  You somehow managed to impressed this cynical old fart.  Your vows were really awesome.  I love laughing like that at a wedding.  Here we are with the "Ya-Ya" club, waiting for a school bus to the ceremony.  Guess who was the only guy on the bus not wearing a tie?


And then there was Idaho.  Ahhhh...Idaho.  A place very special to my heart.  It was wonderful seeing old friends, making new friends, and visiting some of the wild country again.  Howling wolves, bugling elk, and soaring eagles.

The Sawtooth Range from the Salmon River Valley
Saddleback Lake, high in the Sawtooths after a 3 hour hike.


I also hit my goal of climbing Bogus Basin on a road bike.  This was an important, personal milestone for me.  I have been training all summer and it paid off with a relatively easy climb, 15 years after the first leg-burning time. 



I ran into an old friend up in the mountains.  I haven't seen him in more than 10 years.   It was a Thursday morning and I was signing us up for the Redfish lake shuttle boat over to the Sawtooth Wilderness area.  This is as remote as you can get in the lower 48.   I walked up to the dock and there was a guy in front of me, decked out with a full-on backpack.  I recognized his voice immediately.  Dave Baldiga.  He hired me into my first job in Idaho and got me into mountain biking.  The odds of seeing someone I knew in this spot, at this time were miniscule.  So, as we are catching up on the short boat ride across the lake and I was telling him about my climb up Bogus, what does Dave say?  ....  "Did you break an hour?"   Are you freaking kidding me?!?!?  Although I bet Dave could probably do it.  Great seeing him.


Business?  Oh yea, that's right.  There has been some progress on the business.  The bath house is up!    There is even some electrical work completed.


The fire rings were also delivered, so I distributed them around to each site.  I still have to dig them in and set them in concrete, but I'm pleased with the choice.

As seems typical with this project, there have also been some setbacks.  Today was particularly rough.  The well is finally being drilled and I have received two calls that they are running into clay and shale much deeper than they anticipated.  They needed me to approve additional liner...cha-ching!  But what can you do?  It's like hiring an SAP consultant.  They are the keepers of the keys.  If they tell you that you need 30 hours of programming to get a customer number from the system, how can you question it?  It's the same thing with well drillers.  It's not like a carpenter's work that I can look at and say, "Damn! You pound a mighty fine nail!"  How do I know what shale and clay tailings look like?  I need water at the glamping site and I am compelled to believe what these guys tell me and pay what they say I need to pay....Shit.

Also had the beds delivered for the glamping huts.  It took a lot of maneuvering for the truck to get around the well drilling truck, but he finally made it.  When he opened the door to unload the first bed, it was painfully obvious that the order was wrong.  I need double beds...he had singles.  Shit.  That's going to cost my schedule.  These were special order hospital-grade beds.  It'll take another 3 weeks for correcting.

But, ce la vie.  Take a deep breath and remember the smell of those Idaho mountains...it'll all work out.


Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Progress

Who would have thought that the fate of this little construction project would hinge on three truck loads of concrete?  Well, maybe an experienced person in the building trade would have had a clue, but this IT hack kind of missed the key indicators.  A single decision more than a month ago concerning said concrete has cost us the prize of opening on time.   Rain, more rain, and a fishing trip to Lake Erie where 8 guys got sicker than dogs on a small skiff completely unsuited for the rough water also contributed to the delays (don't ask about the fishing trip...it's complicated).

Anyhow, the concrete trucks finally arrived and building has resumed.  Where has this summer gone?

Truck # 1 on a misty morning
The bath house and pavilion taking shape

View from the field.  This was an old farm dump at one time.  I can't find the pictures of the dump, but the transformation has been astounding.

In the meantime, We've been busy with all the little details of setting up the site.

Remember the picture of this being hauled out of the woods with the tractor?  It's going to make a great sign post.
Now that the "tree" is set, it's time to start working on the sign.
I've also been working with a friend in the cabinet business to collect some sinks for the bath house.  These will serve as the dishwashing sinks.  He's sending me down to Moorefield, WV to pick up some marble inset sinks and counter tops.   "Turn right just past the chicken processing plant."  Great!   But at only $80 for 2 six foot countertops, I'll do the drive and smell the chickens.

A new sign in box for the trail head.  It's always nice to see where guests are from.

The information board turned out really well.

This massive mud hole has been the bane of my existence for the past two weeks.  It started out as a small, clear water little puddle on the main trail from the glamping site.  I had the bright idea to get my tractor in there and "clean it up".  Boys with toys...it's pretty much a total mess now.  I think I'll have to put planks across it.

Sage has been having fun.  Here at Schoolhouse Earth's petting zoo, staring off with a very ornery goat.

But she is completely fed-up with the "job site" and frequently just climbs into the truck while I'm working.  Some nights, I really feel like joining her.


Thursday, August 01, 2013

Good wine, eh?

The construction project was at a point where there really wasn't anything that I could do last weekend, so we decided to hop in the car and get away for a much needed break.   We were looking for a good blend of relaxation, wine, sight seeing, wine, and city, so we built the itinerary around a friend's cabin up in Western Ontario.  Here are some pics from this short summer break. 

Niagara Falls, from the American side.  I'm a sucker for waterfalls.

Niagara Falls, from Canada.  That's a lot of water!

Niagara on the Lake.   A bit too cutesy for me, but still a great home base for exploring wine country.

Tres Chique!  Shopping in Niagara on the Lake.

But the real draw was the wine.  We took a bike tour of some wineries.  There are hundreds in the region and the wine was fantastic!  A great reason for a return trip.
Then it was "into the wild" of Western Ontario.  Beautiful countryside.

Heather and Dan's "cabin" in the woods.

On the return trip, we stopped in Toronto.  I was very impressed with this city!  It was incredibly vibrant with loads of downtown living and community.  One evening wasn't nearly enough. 

 Now, back to work!


Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Details

A quick update now that the major construction has started - the past week has been spent on some of the details which will be important after the dust settles.  This is the fun stuff!

I loved building this massive bonfire with 8' flames to clear brush from the site.  I haven't had this much fun with fire since those summer evenings in Darlington when we'd build them like this after a day playing softball.

We used just about every piece of equipment available to get this log out of the woods.  It'll be the post for the main business sign.

I hope it lives up to the image in my head...

I've also been building an information board which will show the trail maps and rules/regs of the glampground.   Oh yea, and I've been building more freakin' picnic tables.  I can put these things together in my sleep!

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

A quickening pace

After so many months of very little visible progress on the glamping project, the activity has now picked up significantly.  In fact, it's moving along at a blistering pace!  I've got contractors stumbling over each other and heavy equipment that is using the new road on the same day that it is being completed....not that I'm complaining.  It's about time!  The bad news is that all of the big checks are going to be due at the same time.   Here are some pics from the last 5 days...yes, 5 days!  THAT's what I'm talking about!

Waiting for delivery on a beautiful Saturday afternoon. "It'll only take an hour."

The glamping huts have arrived!

The glamping huts promptly get buried axle deep in the mud!

The customer tows out the glamping huts...and works 6 hours unloading material!  I paid for this privilege?
The construction crew knocking out the huts.

Meanwhile, my excavator was realigning the entrance...

...and resetting the gate.
I've been keeping busy as well.  Here, looking for the perfect natural post for the glamping sign.

I've also been building loads of furniture.
Two days later, three huts are up!

The road is finished and the bath house pad is graded.  Construction on that building starts next week!


Tuesday, July 02, 2013

Eindelijk!!!!!

All that work for this little permit..
It's hard to believe that we embarked on this little sabbatical almost three months ago.  I began the permitting process almost immediately upon landing in America and thought that I'd be much further along in the project by now.  But, after much stress and a few less hairs (yes, I had a few left when I started), I finally picked up the building permit today!!!!!  Now if the freakin' rain would just stop....

Blazing the road

The finished loop connection - drainage ditch yet to come.


Entrance to glamping site - Uzes.  Construction starts next week!