Thursday, June 25, 2009

Another good week, complete with VACATION!

My friend Margaret was assigned to some training classes in Denver last week, and we got to catch up with each other at Panera Bread. When we walked in, a couple of women were having some sort of problem with their order, so the manager stepped in and gave them free sandwiches. Margaret and I then ordered and figured out pretty quickly that the young lady taking our orders wasn't the brightest star in the sky. I wonder if she costs Panera as much as they pay her? or more? Anyway, the manager had to make another raspberry mango smoothie for me, after the other women grabbed it and ran. Getting this smoothie was a LOT of trouble! Here's Margaret presenting it with her best Vanna imitation!I headed out to California on Thursday for vacation. Diann planned a summer solstice "Girls Only" weekend at Pine Mountain Lake near Yosemite. Her sister Melody and friend Kami flew in from Phoenix. Diann and a couple of other women came from Merced.

I flew into Burbank and spent the night with Melissa and Dean, then Melissa and I drove up the next day, picking up Tammie in Visalia. The plan was to meet at the Iron Horse Bar in Groveland, so we arrived and ordered a refreshing beverage.We waited for over an hour, and Melissa saw Diann drive by...not stopping...so we ordered another refreshing beverage. Then another.By the time Diann arrived, we were pretty refreshed! That's Tammie, Diann, Melissa and me.The Iron Horse is the oldest continuously operating bar in the state of California. We also had the oldest continuously serving bartender serving us--boy, was she grouchy! Good thing we were all in a good mood!One of the cool things people do in small town bars is throw money around. Look at the ceiling--those are ALL dollar bills, wrapped in a tack and shot up into the ceiling using a quarter. We guessed that there must be well over a thousand dollars in the ceiling!We finally made it to the cabin. WOW--what a great place! Yes, it's on the lake. The bedroom I stayed in is visible to the right--you can see the shades partially pulled down. The place had 5 bedrooms, a great room, big kitchen, amazing master bath, wet bar and pool table downstairs, and wonderful covered decks!

We had a wonderful time--good food, lots to drink, lots of wildlife (both critters and people!), beautiful views and terrific company. I'll get more photos up soon, but I can't find the charger for my camera, so I'm SOL right now.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Photos and plants in the ground

I just uploaded a new album at http://www.KarenBPhotos.com. There are photos from the 2009 Best Bawl Versatility Ranch Horse event a few weekends ago. I was one of 30 "judges." The event was a fundraiser for Renee's Friends Fund, which provides help for Breast Cancer patients and survivors. Yes, that's Tim Rose in a dress...real men wear PINK! That's me in the red shirt--wow, my hair is getting long, isn't it? Thank you, Margaret, for taking pictures!Jeff & Gerrie Barnes hosted the event at their ranch in Larkspur. There were about 70 horses & riders, on 6 or 7 teams. The "Hot Flashes" were "mature" breast cancer survivors. They had the "Harley Horse" team, dressed as a motorcycle gang, and a slew of other entertaining teams. They raised over $8000--WOW!

You can be certain that Ranger & I will be competing next year!

Speaking of...the boys will be moving to a new barn at the end of the month. I'll be sad to leave Cindy's; they LOVE being out on acreage. The new barn doesn't have pasture. However, it does have a full-sized indoor arena with wonderful footing, an on-site top dressage instructor, a full-sized competition outdoor arena, access to over 170 miles of trails in the open space park across the street, and best of all....

COWS!!!!!!!!

Yes, Ranger will have 5 cows at his disposal for cutting, harassing and chasing around. He's going to be in Horse Heaven!

I'm hoping that Beau will be ridden more. The barn is only 20 minutes away, versus the hour + drive I've been doing. Marci, the manager, says that there are several people who are good, kind riders that want to lease a horse, so Beau might be ridden regularly.

I finally got the rest of my plants into the ground. I bought 3 kinds of lavender, coreopsis, and salvia, all of which I planted outside the side door. I also weeded the strip between my fence and the curb, then seeded it with annuals and perennials. I chose drought-tolerant plants, since I won't be watering it much.

Some of the new roses are budding, and everything else looks as though it's off to a good start. I love landscaping! Can't wait to see some of my ideas get accomplished!

I'm headed to Yosemite for the weekend, for a girl-weekend with Melissa, Diann and a bunch of other friends. Three days of hiking, laying by the lake, boating, eating and drinking....should be fun! I can't wait to DO NOTHING for THREE DAYS! :-)

Friday, June 12, 2009

Good week!

This has been a good week! I finally walked across the street to City Park. What a jewel! The park has several lakes and ponds, as well as the zoo and the Natural History Museum. Egrets (both white and black-headed night egrets), and cormorants nest on the islands. There are a lot of Canada Geese, and they are totally unafraid of people. I sat down next to this flock. Pretty soon, one goose took a nap, while the other started doing GooseYoga! Can you see his leg stretched out behind him? This is SAS, on its way to Stockholm. Look at how the wings sag from the heavy fuel load! The high point of my week was flying with Brian! Brian, Odette & I have been friends for over 10 years. Brian was a student pilot with me back at Regal Air in Washington (so was Odette; I helped her finish up her Private Pilot's license). This is the first time we've flown together since Regal, and it's the first time I've flown with someone I've known outside of work. Brian did an excellent job--not a surprise, since Brian is a perfectionist like me! It was really a joy to fly with him--I don't think he realizes how highly I think of him, and how much fun I had! Thanks, Brian!
I hope your work week was as fun as mine! Enjoy your weekend!

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Still no armoire...no funnel clouds...but a cool view of DIA!

As you know, Denver had a bunch of funnel clouds on Sunday. I didn't get to see any of them--I was riding the boys, and drove home through the hail, pounding rain and lighting. I wanted to see a funnel cloud, so I drove almost to Kansas, chasing the storm. By then it had dissipated with no rotation, but I did see some of the damage--this is a semi that was blown off of the freeway. Down the road I spotted this lonely windmill.This is how we lock gates out here!Doesn't this barn look as though it's seen a tornado or two? Wouldn't you love to paint a picture of this?No tornados...rats. Guess I'll have to try again.

Back to the armoire. "All My Sons Moving and Storage" was supposed to deliver it last Thursday night. They never showed up. I called Friday morning to find out where my armoire was. Benjamin Andrews, the morning manager, said that he didn't know anything about what the night crew did. He started raising his voice about all of the "trouble" I'm causing over the armoire.

(Ummm...????WTF???? THEY damaged it!)

I told him not to speak to me in that tone of voice, since I'm the customer. He said, "I don't think you know who I am. I know who you are. I know where you live, I know you live alone, and I'm going to come and SEEEE you." The guy was beyond scary and creepy. Then he said, "You think you're a big bad ass...I'll show you a big bad ass. I'm going to teach you a lesson."

So, I called the police. Officer Ryan was terrific. He filed a report, he recommended that I file a restraining order, and that I have a Civil Standby when the armoire was delivered. He called Benjamin Andrews and made it clear to him that he was threatening the wrong person. Andrews backed down and said there'd be no trouble...we'll see.

"All My Sons Moving & Storage" is the WORST company I've ever dealt with.


They tried to deliver the armoire today...what do you think? Gashes, gouges scrapes...This is the piece of trim that was broken off. Where's the rest of it? Nope, not acceptable. Those are only a few of the photos of the damage. Back it goes to their "expert" repair guy...and yes, the Denver police did a Civil Standby while those guys were here.

The owner, Vic, called me a few minutes ago and I asked him if he knew what Benjamin had said. He said, "I've known Benjamin a long time and he'd never talk like that." I told him that the police were involved and that Benjamin had told Officer Ryan that he had threatened me, but wasn't going to cause trouble. Vic backed off and said, "Well, let me order the trim for this armoire and let's put this behind us." Whatever...I'll be filing a restraining order, and a complaint with the better business bureau.

This was the view coming into Denver today, from 13,000'.This view is looking south. See the concourse "jog" on the left side of the photo? That's "The Horseshoe." My parking spot today was the 6th spot to the right on the north side--the only open spot.
What a cool job I have, flying into and out of the nations's busiest and most complex airports! Hope you are enjoying your work week as much as I am!

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Finishing touches!

Guys seem to think that dinner and a movie is a good first date. They think they'll impress the woman if they choose the nicest wine at the trendiest restaurant. They think that dressing in a really nice shirt and tie is sexy.

Hmmmmm....I beg to disagree.

I think that jeans and power tools are sexy. I think that a good first date is a guy who knows you need some help and says "What do you need me to do?" That's a guy who is more interested in you, than in impressing you. That's a guy who cares about who you are.

Meet Joe.
Nice job on the new front & back screen doors at the duplex, don't you think?

And yes, I think he's sexy! This was a good first date! :-)

Flying...something to think about

This article was in today's Seattle Times:

Buffalo crash opened window into pilots' life
By CAROLYN THOMPSON
Associated Press Writer

Archive Family, friends mourn loss of co-pilot from Washington
CLARENCE, N.Y. —
Long-suffering pilots for commuter airlines say it's about time that Washington and passengers alike pay attention to the cockpit, after a federal hearing into the deadly crash of Continental Connection Flight 3407 exposed pilots who may have been exhausted, under-trained - and paid less than the bus or cab drivers who'd ferried their passengers to the airport.

"We have been calling for years trying to get the public to understand what their lifestyle is really like," said Capt. Paul Rice, first vice president of the Air Line Pilots Association, International, the nation's largest pilot's union, representing 54,000 flyers.

Like Flight 3407's co-pilot, Rebecca Shaw, Capt. Dave Ryter earned around $17,000 in his first year with a regional carrier and flew coast-to-coast just to get to work because of his placement in Miami.

"My wife held down a job and we lived in an apartment about 45 minutes north of Los Angeles International (Airport) and scraped by," said Ryter, who has 10 years with his regional airline and is a union officer with ALPA.

Regional carriers like Ryter's, and Shaw's employer, Colgan Air, handle about half of all domestic departures and about a quarter of the passengers, about 160 million yearly, often flying under the names of their larger partner airlines, like Continental or USAir.

But with smaller planes, shorter routes and less experienced pilots, they pay considerably less than their larger counterparts, despite pilot schedules that can include multiple daily flights for six days in a row.

Rice described draining 14- to 16-hour duty days, much of that time unpaid and spent waiting in crew lounges. With no food on planes, pilots grab meals on the run from airport fast-food stands.
Perks like holiday and overtime pay don't exist, he said.

To earn six to eight hours of pay, "you can come to work at seven in the morning for an eight o'clock departure and park your last flight at nine o'clock that night," said Rice, whose union favors tougher FAA regulations on how many consecutive hours pilots can fly or be on duty. The issue has lingered on the agendas of the FAA and the NTSB since the mid-1990s.

The National Transportation Safety Board's recent three-day hearing into the Feb. 12 crash near Buffalo that killed 50 people set off a cry in Congress for a review of safety at regional carriers, including training, scheduling and pay issues.

The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee has scheduled hearings Wednesday and June 17 on pilot fatigue and safety. A House hearing is also planned for June, although no date has been set.

Pilots said fatigue and lower pay are eroding the quality of pilots entering the airline industry, both at regional and major carriers.

"It used to be that airline pilot jobs were a coveted position," said veteran pilot Jeff Skiles, the first officer of US Flight 1549, which collided with Canada geese after takeoff from New York's LaGuardia Airport in January and ditched into the Hudson River.

"But even at the major airline level, with the bankruptcies and how they've decimated our contracts, it's just not an attractive job any more," Skiles said. "People aren't leaving the military to become pilots - there are plenty of other options. For instance, corporate flying has exploded quite a bit. What you're finding is the qualifications of the entry level pilots in the traditional airline business have gone from adequate to very inadequate."

During last month's annual meeting of the Regional Airlines Association, one executive said the NTSB hearing into the Flight 3407 crash provided a skewed view of safety in an industry that, he said, treats entry-level professionals no differently than any other industry.

"We have a very robust safety management system in place," said Joseph Randell, president and chief executive of Air Canada Jazz. "In a lot of industries, entry-level conditions are onerous for junior people who come in at a lower pay. There's nothing unique about the airline business in that respect."

Russell "Chip" Childs, president and chief operating officer of Delta partner SkyWest Airlines Inc., said his company's research shows no correlation between pay and proficiency.

"People need to understand also that first-year pilot pay is a little bit lower because the companies put in $30,000 in training costs into that individual that first year. That's very well accepted," Childs said.

"Regional airlines pay so little at that entry level because they can," said Louis Smith, a retired Northwest Airlines captain and president of FltOps.com, which tracks the industry for those inside it. "And the pilots are getting compensated in two ways: One is income, the other is the all-important qualifications, jet time, (pilot-in-command) time, basically trying to get as much experience so they can leave as soon as possible, in many cases.

"You can't live off the second compensation, which is experience," he said, "so you either rely on friends or family or you cut down to the bare bones and try to survive the hard times."

Shaw, who chatted with Capt. Marvin Renslow about career options during the flight, lived with her husband and parents near Seattle. Getting to her Newark, N.J., base the night before the crash meant a redeye aboard a FedEx plane to Memphis and then another flight to Newark.

That struck Dan Marzolf as "crazy."

"I wouldn't want to have to travel for 10 hours and get on an airplane and do my job," said Marzolf, whose sister Jean Marie Srnecz was killed when Flight 3407 crashed on a house as it approached Buffalo Niagara International Airport.

"They should be in the area 24 hours ahead of time and there should be a place for them to stay," Marzolf said. "It may mean passengers paying a little more money, but I'd gladly pay a little more money to know that my pilot was well-rested and ready for the job."

Airport crew lounges are stocked with recliners suitable for a few winks, but they're not supposed to be slept in.

Still, it happens.

NTSB hearing testimony indicated Shaw talked of a couch with her "name on it" the morning of the crash. It is unclear where Renslow, who was in the middle of a two-day assignment, slept the night before the trip, but he logged into a computer from Colgan's crew room in Newark at 3 a.m. on the day of the flight, according to NTSB documents.

"They don't have the money to get a nice hotel room with blackout curtains and an air conditioner and get three or four hours or sleep if they get there early enough to be ready to go," said Joe Mazzone, a retired Delta Airlines pilot. "You go to the crew lounge ... you sit down and you put your hat over your eyes and you try to get a few nods in the recliner before you sign in so you're a little more refreshed. That's what's going on."

But he said those conditions "open up a large window of vulnerability" in the cockpit, especially when pilots are inexperienced and lack the confidence that comes with time at the controls.
"One or two little errors can be tragic," he said.

Flight 3407 experienced an aerodynamic stall on approach to Buffalo Niagara International Airport before plunging into a house. All 49 people on board and a man in the house were killed. Testimony and documents indicate Renslow and Shaw made a series of critical errors, some of which may be related to fatigue, inexperience and inattention to regulations.

While NTSB investigators calculated Shaw was paid just over $16,000 in her first year with Colgan, airline officials said later her salary was $23,900. Renslow's salary was estimated at $55,000 to $67,000.
___________________________________________________________

I'm going to agree with a lot of what was said. The road to the airlines has always been (on the civilian side): Flight Instructing, then Cargo, then Regional Airlines, then Majors.

These days, a lot of Regional pilots come right from flight schools--where they were students, not necessarily instructors. Some still come from the Cargo pool, but a lot come without much, if any, real world experience.

I've flown with pilots who, like First Officer Shaw, have never flown in icing conditions. I've flown with pilots who have never operated around thunderstorms. I've flown with pilots who have never had to make a real life, real time, life-affecting decision.

I don't think that's a factor of low pay. I think it's the reality of the shift of the paradigm of the road to the airlines--we aren't getting pilots with a lot of experience. We aren't getting pilots with an interest in aviation--I flew with a First Officer recently who had no idea what a J-3 Cub was! He said, "I can't identify any of those airplanes. I'm just not interested." Daddy had paid for his flight training and degree at Embry Riddle--he'd never had to work for a single flight hour.

That blew me away. But a lot of these pilots aren't aviators...they are just pilots, and this is just a job.

I do think that the FAA and NTSB need to tighten up the hours that we can work. Currently, I can legally work a 16 hour duty day, although 10-12 hours is the norm. A "duty day" starts when I arrive at the airport and ends 15 minutes after I park my airplane. Getting to & from the hotel, eating, sleeping, showering--that's on my own time. It's often only 8-9 hours between duty days--try getting to the hotel after waiting for the van for 30-45 minutes, getting checked into your room by filling out the forms at the front desk, getting to your room, unpacking your stuff, setting up your stuff for tomorrow (ironing, etc), getting the room to a comfortable temperature because they didn't turn the a/c or heat on, getting to sleep in a strange place with strange noises on a sagging mattress with uncomfortable pillows that hurt your neck--and getting QUALITY sleep under those conditions, then getting up, showering, dressing, packing and heading down to the van to go back to the airport. By the way--did you see "eating" in there? We often don't have time to do that.

My trips usually have a decent amount of time at the overnight, but not always. Last night, we were supposed to be in Cody, WY for 11 1/2 hours. However, Cody's weather had gone down and we had to divert to Billings. It took 2 1/2 hours to coordinate the flight back to Cody. We got in around 10:30 p, and had to be on the 7:10a van back to the airport in the morning. The hotel van was nowhere to be seen, and we waited a half-hour for it. So, we got to our rooms around 11:15p. Did I have a chance to eat at that time of night? Do you really think anything was open at midnight in Cody? Or that I wanted to go out to eat, since I was exhausted after having to make some critical flight decisions in bad weather, while dodging thunderstorms? Do you think that I actually got a good night's sleep? How about breakfast? Think I had time for the extra cup of coffee that everyone knows I need? You do the math.

Don't get me wrong--I LOVE my job. I've been with my company almost 9 years. I fly one of the most sophisticated, newest jet airplanes available. I work with terrific people most of the time. My company tries very hard to take good care of us, and I appreciate it. I'm glad that I don't work for Mesa, or Great Lakes, or some of the other airlines out there. I'm very happy where I am.

However, flying takes a lot out of you. Dealing with mechanical problems, emergencies, weather issues and passenger needs is mentally and emotionally exhausting. Even though I only flew two legs yesterday, I was exhausted by the time we got to bed.

Because on top of all of the stuff in the above paragraph, I didn't have enough fuel to make a mistake.

Cody's weather was supposed to be good at our time of arrival. Billings is 80 miles away. That distance burns about 800-1000 lbs of fuel. I had 2800 lbs on board, and we try to land with 2500-3000 lbs, so the math already wasn't working. Billings weather wasn't terrible, but it also wasn't great--they were advertising a pretty strong crosswind in a rainshower with thunderstorms nearby, which makes the approach and landing more difficult and more likely to be aborted. Aborting a landing, or going around, burns about 500-700 lbs in fuel. We were a minimum fuel aircraft when we turned towards Billings, and would have been an emergency aircraft with low fuel in mountainous terrain and marginal weather had anything in the slightest gone wrong.

And did I mention the 48 passengers and 3 crewmembers that I'm responsible for? Do you think there might have been a little adrenaline and a high pucker-factor?

So yes, I agree with the article. I agree with the letter that I posted a few days ago. I do think that there needs to be an overhaul of the system. I'd like to see a minimum of 11 hours at an overnight, from the time you get to the hotel, to the time you leave. That gives you 8 hours to sleep, and 3 hours to eat, shower, and sleep a little more.

I wouldn't like to see Mr. Marzolf's suggestion of being in your domicile 24 hours prior enacted, though. We're away from home enough. Most people work 40 hour weeks. That means that they aren't home for about 60 hours a week, but they are home every night, and can go to the grocery store or wash a load of clothes after work. When we get home, we have to do everything--and if something doesn't get done, it gets rolled over to the next week. After a while, your list of "to-do" things is overwhelming. Take away an extra day at home, and pilots would really have a hard time keeping their lives together.

I was gone a total of almost 80 hours this week and worked 6 days straight (I got off this morning, Saturday). I'll have tomorrow off, then start 4 days of flying on Monday. I live in my domicile, so my commute only consists of a drive to the airport once or twice a week. When I lived in WA, though, I had to fly to DEN or SLC to go to work, and it could take 8-10-12 hours to get there, depending on whether or not I made the first flight, or the fifth, or had to connect through Reno or Boise or Los Angeles. If I were required to commute in a day early, that would mean that I'd only be home for 3 or 4 days a month--maybe one night in my own bed every 6-8 days. How would I maintain my home, my yard, my horses, my cat, my dog, my social life and everything else that goes along with living?

I think the Colgan crash is going to change the industry. I can only hope that the changes are for the better--that they come from our recommendations and pertain to our real lives and what's really going on, instead of NTSB and FAA band-aids. The FAA and NTSB have demonstrated that they don't have a good grasp of what goes on at the airlines--they had NO idea that airline pilots start out at $16,000/year (I didn't have a lot of compassion--I made $11,000 my first year).

I'd love to have a rule-maker sit in my jumpseat for a 4-day trip--and eat when and what we eat, use the restroom when we get a chance to go, carry 80 lbs of rollaboards and flight cases up and down steep stairs, sleep in the same hotels we stay in...and try to catch a nap on the same recliners we covet. Then tell me that a 12 hour duty day and 8 hours between parking the airplane and getting back into it before flying another 10-12 hour day is OK.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Two Quick Updates!

Got a call from Barbara Pultz at the City of Denver office, asking for more details about the incident involving the Parking Permit clerk. Apparently, there have been multiple complaints about her, and mine was the proverbial STRAW. The City of Denver is undergoing budget cuts, and Barbara said that I just made her job easier. She's going to review the video tapes (YES!), and meet with the City Attorney and the Manager of Human Resources to initiate the termination procedure.

I mentioned the episode to my FO after Barbara called, and he said that he had almost the exact same experience with the same clerk about 2 months ago! I asked if he had filed a complaint, and he said no, because he'd never have to deal with her again.

How many times have you witnessed, or been a victim of, similar bad behaviour and disrespect? Did you complain? If not, I hope you will in the future. It can be as quick as a phone call. If you want more impact, a letter or a note will get noticed. But please, don't just be silent when you see an injustice, or when you are the victim. It's OK to be a squeaky wheel. Really.

Alternatively, if someone does an outstanding job, I always notify their manager. One of the workers at McDonalds really impressed me--she's always got a smile, and she fulfills about 2 1/2 orders in the time it takes other workers to fill one. I called her manager over and told him how impressed I was, and that I hoped he would give her an "atta-girl" for her personnel file. He agreed, and thanked me for saying something, since most of the comments he gets are negative. It made her day, it made his day, and it made mine.

The brightest news of all: I've rented half of the duplex, and the other half is waiting on a Section 8 inspection! A delightful young mother with two darling girls saw the unit tonight and paid cash. Allaine was up-front about the fact that she is breaking her lease--she's living in a basement apartment, and it has been filling up with water when it rains. Mold is growing, and her daughters are starting to cough and wheeze. The landlord hasn't been able to fix the problem. She gave me her landlord's name and address and said that I could call him. She had called an attorney to see if she could get into trouble for breaking the lease, and he said no; she gave me his number as well. I hope she'll be a good tenant, and my gut says that she will.

I wonder if I'm tough enough to be a landlord--I think I'm happier about helping someone in a bind than I am about the rent...although that does help a LOT!

Samantha is the other tenant. She's on Section 8; this is a first venture for both of us. Section 8 is the government housing program whereby the federal or state government pays a portion of the rent for low or no income people. It's a good program for landlords, as the check comes directly to you, so you know that most of the rent will be paid. Most Section 8 participants pay their rent on time and are good tenants--they lose their Section 8 voucher if they are evicted, arrested or have any other problems. Cheryl, my realtor, rented to one Section 8 family for 20 years!

Section 8 will inspect the unit next week, and if it's approved, she'll be able to rent it. They look for stuff like exposed wiring, non-working windows, inoperative furnaces, leaky water fixtures, etc. As long as a place is clean and in good repair, with bedroom windows suitable for egress, they will approve a unit for Section 8.

Busy weekend, then, getting the last of the duplex projects accomplished. Mostly minor stuff--finishing the window cranks, fixing a loose on/off switch, repairing that last gutter downspout, mowing the last strip of lawn and cleaning the oven! Allaine will be moving in this weekend, and Samantha should be able to move into the other side by mid-June.

And then I can take a breath.....

Losses and gains

Sad news today. David Carradine apparently commited suicide in Bangkok, where he was filming a movie. Those of you who have known me a long, long time, since dinosaurs roamed the earth, know that the first film I was in was Lone Wolf McQuade, with Chuck Norris, Robert Beltan and David. I played Robert Beltran's ("Cayo") girlfriend. My lines were cut, but I'm still in there, in the dance scene. Anyway, David was always nice and polite, although rather reserved. I stayed friends with Chuck and Robert for a long time, but never became friends with David...still, what a shock.

Sadder news...Captain Gordan Hyde died yesterday. He broke his neck diving into a pool on Memorial Day. There was hope for limited recovery, but it didn't work out that way. Again, I wasn't close friends with Gordan, but we knew each other and always said HI. I'm so sorry for his friends and family, wife and children. Losing him is a tragic and unexpected loss.

I'm headed out to show the duplex. I have one young lady who has filled out an application and forwarded it to Section 8, so cross your fingers that one side will be rented within the next week or so.

Home Depot guy and I are going out again soon. :-) Maybe there will be photos before long?