Monday, June 30, 2008

5 more days!!!


only 5 more days till the fun starts! woo hoo! we're gonna have pancakes and tacos and cheezy spaghetti and coconut pie and home-made donuts and cheese burgers and popsicles and candy and apples and smoothies and steaks and shrimp and crab legs and ice cream and snow cones and popcorn and chocolate pie and peach cobbler and home-made chicken fried steak and mac & cheese and mcdonalds and rumbi's and cinzettis and then a nap . . .


Wednesday, June 18, 2008

tic toc, tic toc


only 18 more days!!!!

Thursday, June 12, 2008

sometimes i wonder

so i'm sitting in a meeting in Milwaukee yesterday afternoon with all the techno-babble you'd ever want to listen to. after a while it just sounded like blah, blah, blah to me. then i started thinking, "what am i doing?" a thousand miles away from anyone i love or really care about. another day is ticking by and i haven't kissed my wife. i haven't hugged my son, daughter or son-in-law. i haven't chased or tickled my grand babies in weeks. i hate those moments. and for a fleeting moment i even imagined standing up and saying, "you know what, this just isn't that interesting to me." . . . and then walking out the door and heading to the airport. then someone said something in the meeting that must have gotten my attention. ugh! escape was so close!

a canvas in the sky



On Wednesday afternoon, June 2nd, a cloud formation on the east side of Longmont developed into this massive display. I raced home to get my camera just in time to capture the striking colors of the sunset bouncing off these monster thunderheads.

There were people all over the place standing outside watching this unfold and the photos can't really depict the moment. Standing there watching God paint this picture in the sky is something you won't quickly forget. And to think . . . the one who painted this knows my name and calls me friend. It's times like these when you can feel really, really small.


(The posted photo is actually two separate shots I put together. I needed to shoot one exposure for the clouds and another for the house.)