Monday, September 27, 2010

Birthday Weekend

Jim and I were invited to a party at Comerica Park on Saturday to celebrate a friend's 50th birthday. We ate dinner at the Tiger Club Restaurant, then watched the Detroit Tigers vs. Minnesota Twins baseball game, which lasted four extra innings! The temperature dropped into the mid-50s before the duel was over, and my Texas-acclimated blood was secretly whining about the cool weather. The game was exciting, though, and the Tigers ended up victorious in the 13th inning.

On Sunday, Nancy hosted a BBQ for those of us with birthdays in September. A friend of mine offered to bake me a cake, and, wow, was I ever surprised when I saw the size of it! The thing was so huge and so heavy that I could barely pick it up. Jim stepped on the scale while holding the cake and it weighed 21 pounds! It had a total of eight sticks of butter in the frosting & mix, and, boy, was it ever delicious!

Saturday in the the park, bottom of the 13th and 54 degrees.

We stayed after the game to watch the fireworks.

Check out the vastness of my monstrosity next to Laura's cute cat-shaped cake and Pattye's normal-sized two-layer one.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Life is a Highway

We left our house in Texas late Tuesday afternoon and arrived back in Michigan Wednesday night. Our trip was relatively uneventful, with the exception of an 18-wheeler blowing out a tire right in front of us on I-40 in Tennessee. It made an extremely loud popping sound and sent debris swirling all over the freeway, but we managed to safely dodge the flying rubber. Other than that, the weather was good and the traffic was light along our route - until we got to Cincinnati. It seems as if there is always construction and some sort of jam between Cincinnati and Dayton. Always. The Michigan temperatures were well above normal today, but a cold-front will bring us much cooler weather this weekend. Jim and I are going to the Detroit Tiger game on Saturday night and the low is predicted to be in the mid-40s. Brrrrrr! I guess it is finally time to hang up the shorts & flip-flops and break out the blue jeans & sweatshirts!

A view of our little Texas palm tree that we planted in the spring. It has grown almost two feet. The orange lily-type things were in the yard when we bought the house.

The banana tree just keeps getting taller.

The yard from a different perspective.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Baseball

Jim, Jacob, and I met Jean and Jenna today at Minute Maid Park to watch the Houston Astros take on the Cincinnati Reds. There was a chance of rain, so the stadium's retractable roof - which is usually open - was closed. Being indoors for a baseball game seemed rather odd, but, at the same time, we were happy to leave the warm & muggy Texas weather outside.

Jim and I were torn over which team to root for this afternoon. While we would normally want our hometown Astros to win, the 27-year-old son of Jim's boss is a shortstop for the Cincinnati Reds. He did play in today's game, and we cheered him on, but in the end, Houston won.

Jacob found a big Astros boot.

Jake and I in our upper deck, front row seats, enjoying the cleanliness of the floor before the guy who showed up next to us spilled his giant-sized Coke all over our feet.

Our view, looking out towards right field. Notice the uphill slope in center field behind Jim's head. Also, there is a definite lack of seating in left field.

Jim, Jake, Jean, and I watched the game. Jenna posted important messages on Facebook.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Entomology

I have a collection of insects that I keep - outside - at our house in Houston. As soon as I capture a new specimen, I search the internet in order to determine whether or not it is dangerous. So far, I have not discovered many harmful creatures. Just very gross-looking ones. The bugs down here are enormous compared to those up north. The Banded-Winged Grasshopper in the picture below is about two-and-a-half inches long. The lovely Palmetto Bug (read: American cockroach) next to it is over two inches in length. The Cicada Killer, second from the right, curled up after it died. It has a stinger, but allegedly is not aggressive toward humans. The scorpion-looking thing is actually a gentle Southern Mole Cricket. Even though these critters appear pretty repulsive, they are fairly innocent. I must admit that I am becoming somewhat desensitized to all of the insects in Texas . . . as long as they are outdoors!

Some of the interesting bugs in my collection.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Sold

After almost nine months on the market, our house in Michigan officially has new owners tonight. The buyers made us a decent offer over a month ago, and we have been patiently waiting through counter-offers and inspections and repairs and more. The contract originally listed September 10 as the target sale date, and I must admit that I was surprised when everything actually fell into place before today's 4:00 p.m. closing time.

Back in June of 1991, Jim and I had put a down payment on an empty lot and a not-yet-built house in a new subdivision. We excitedly chose the brick and the siding and the carpet colors and the cupboards for our new digs. We watched the construction of the structure from the basement up to the roof. We eagerly moved into our new home on November 15 that year and lived there for nearly two decades.

When Jim's job was relocated to Houston last year, I was especially sad that we had to put the place up for sale. Finally, we were buoyed and delighted when - after 110 or so showings - a family came along that genuinely loved our house as much as we did. There were problems and issues and troublesome obstacles on the road to today's closing, but the buyers hung in there.

Welcome home Rebecca and Anthony! Take care of our old homestead.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Hermine is Here

On Sunday, Jean and Jenna came over to the house for a BBQ. The weather was very cooperative and we were able to go swimming and eat outside without sweltering too much. While watching tv later that evening, I was surprised to learn that a tropical depression was brewing offshore just south of Brownsville, Texas. Although the area of rain and wind was situated in the warm, hurricane-prone waters of the Gulf, it was close enough to land to assure that it did not have time to develop into anything too strong before going ashore in Mexico. The system became Tropical Storm Hermine and the outer bands of precipitation reached Houston on Monday. It rained in the morning. It rained in the afternoon. It rained at night. We didn't experience any terribly high winds, but it was blustery enough to delay Adam's flight out of IAH for about an hour. Luckily, our house is about 400 miles northeast of where Hermine's eye made landfall Monday evening, so we did not endure any real tropical storm conditions. Hopefully, this trend will continue for the rest of hurricane season.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

The Beach

Jim, Jacob, Adam, and I met Jean and Jenna at the beach in Galveston today. The weather was perfect - in the upper 80s and a bit overcast, which was good because when the sun is out full force I tend to whine about the sizzling heat. The water in the Gulf of Mexico is at the highest temperature that it typically gets to all year - 87°. It was great to be able to wade comfortably right into the ocean, and it feels so different from the shocking cold of Lake Superior's summertime 60° water temps. The wind was blasting along at around 15 mph today, and that made for some fun waves to bob around in. We all had a wonderful time, and, in my opinion, one of the biggest advantages of living in Houston is the close proximity to the Gulf. (But, don't quote me on that if a hurricane happens to head this way . . .)

Jacob, Adam, Jean, and Jenna frolicked in the swells. They are the ones on the right - I really need a better zoom lens on my camera!