Dia de Tonancin
12 December 2008
Vacaville, California, USA
Betty and I are quite healthy and had a great year full of memorable events. Our daughter, Elaine, and her family, husband Matt and children Marley and Kooper, still live only a block away. Marley and Kooper still spend about 4 hours a day at our house. Betty and I take them to school, pick them up, help them with their homework, play ball, swim, and hike, climb trees and rocks and supervise many craft activities for them and many neighbor children.
We hiked Southhampton Bay shoreline and Marley and her friend, Jaycee, went for the first swim of the year in our pool mid February. We went to a Sacramento River Cats Baseball game for Kooper’s birthday in May. Marley and I had a great time kayaking Putah Creek with my good friend, Bob Langley in July. Betty and I once again helped Elaine coach Marley’s soccer team. We actually coached two teams this year. And we celebrated Marley’s birthday aboard Rob and Nancy Forest’s, Matt’s parents, boat at the Suisun Bay Yacht Club lighted boat parade.
Oliver, our youngest son, bought a house less than a mile away. I helped him build a greenhouse to keep his cactus collection in. Having at least some of our children and grandchildren so close has been a great joy to Betty and me.
Betty and I visited my cousins Louise and Lowell Smith in Chico in January. We found them enjoying life and family. We had lunch with them and their daughter and son-in-law Ruth and John Dunbar and several of their children. We took the back roads to Chico and back. The weather was stormy so we saw lots waterfowl and scenic views of wetlands. You can see some of the pictures I took at Picasa.
Later in January I made some new friends while kayaking Rancheria Creek in Mendocino County. In June I rafted the Rogue River in Oregon with these new friends and some of their friends from South Carolina, Sacramento, and Oregon, once again making some great new friends who later invited me to raft the Grand Canyon with them in November. Photos at PhotoBucket. Although I did not kayak much this year, I was able to spend more than 30 days on western rivers mostly rowing a raft.
We made several trips to Calaveras County to visit my sister, Barbara, her husband, Stan, and her son, Scott, his wife, Angie, and their children, Logan and Brenna. We attended the Calaveras Celtic Faire in March. We saw some beautiful displays of wildflowers on the drive through the Sierra Nevada foothills.
Betty and I took a trip to eastern Washington and northern Idaho in April. We visited my third cousin, Lenora Good in Kennewick, WA. She is a professional writer, and her first novel “Brother Rat” will be published this summer. We continued through the Palouse to visit my cousin Doug McFall and his wife, Holly, in Moscow, Idaho, and my good friend and colleague, Helen Kevo, in St. Maries, Idaho. It was a very good time of the year for photography. Those photos are posted at Picasa as well.
I worked for California Fish and Game almost steadily from January through September this year. I was the Oil Spill Drills and Exercises supervisor most of the year, and wrote a report on the Cosco Busan Oil Spill of November 2007.
Once again Betty and I spent Halloween and her birthday in New Jersey with our oldest son, James, and his family. We greatly enjoyed visiting with our New Jersey family. The highlight for me was an apple picking expedition with our two grandchildren, Alison and Adam. As you can see from our active life, we are enjoying our retirement.
Best wishes for good health and happiness to y'all.
Jim and Betty Hardwick
Sunday, December 14, 2008
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4 comments:
El Remaro,
I hope this note finds you well. I'm traveling to Menorca and I've read the log from your trip. I'm having a hard time finding the book you mentioned titled "Coastline Aeroguide Menorca". I plan on hiking and camping some of the coves and beaches for around a month and I think that book will come in handy. Also how did you find the camping there? Any problems with the locals and/or law? My first/primary destination is CALA MACARELLA & MACARELLETA and I plan on setting up camp on the upper cliffs and exploring from there. Any thoughts/tips? You can reach me at ny343@hotmail.com. I would love to hear from you.
Best regards,
Justin Clarke
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I debated whether or not to post this but decided I'm interrested in you'alls opinion. I bought my Ultra Carry II new in 2003, shot it a lot, maintained it carefully and changed the recoil springs at or before the recommended intervals. This fall I noticed two small vertical cracks in the frame, right at the forward edge of the frame rails. Sent it into Kimber for inspection and yes, they are cracks. My frame is cracked and my slide is set up with the external extractor that caused so much trouble at the time i made my purchase. ( I never had any trouble with the extractor at all). Per Kimber Pistols, the gun could not be returned to me because it no longer met their current specs, or they could return it with a formal certificate from the manufacturer that it was not safe to shoot. Or, they could sell me a new Kimber firearm at a substantial discount, roughly 27 per cent off list price. I chose that option because, untill the cracks, this was a great firearm, lightweight, reliable and very accurate. And yet, it doesn't really set well with me. Is a cracked frame in a well maintained Kimber Rifle firearm acceptable after almost 20 years of use? Is it a design defect that Kimber would rather not be known? I freely acknowledge that their stated warranty is only one year, but there are many posts on this forum that "Kimber will make it right" Did they? Kimber Firearms For Sale Online
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