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17 March, 2009

Father-Son Motorcycle Time

So my Dad and I are planning a week long motorcycle trip down to South Carolina in mid-May to ride the Blue Ridge Parkway, Cherohala Skyway, Deal's Gap...etc. For those of you who don't know him, my dad is legally a Motorcyclaholic. Seriously. I think he has the world record for most miles on a motorcycle in one year for someone who was working full-time (it is going to be WAY higher this year now that he is retired!). To put this into perspective: You could blindfold my dad and drive him out to the middle of NoWhere, Michigan and within 5 seconds of taking his blindfold off I am quite confident that he could tell you where the nearest gas station is, where the bathrooms are inside of the gas station, the road with the best scenery and most curves to get there, and where you will most likely see a police officer waiting to catch you speeding. THIS IS NOT AN EXAGGERATION!!!

Anyway, my dad wanted to take me on a long ride to see how long I can stand on a motorcycle in one day to better help him plan our trip. I made it from just after sun-up (8:00AM-ish) to just before dark (8:00PM-ish) and I was still having a great time and could have easily done more... I think I passed the test!






We had a great ride and saw some really nice places. We stopped at a nice historical covered bridge in Ada, stopped in a really nice town called Rockford, drove through Sparta (and yes I did yell "THIS IS SPARTA!" ala the movie 300 in my helmet), and ended up at our destination in Muskegon where we got to walk through the USS Silversides WWII submarine (see image above) and the USS McLane WWII Coast Guard ship. It was especially neat for me because my dad used to be an officer on a ship and I got to see what that part of his life was like. In fact, the ship he was an officer on, the "Dar Pomorza" (see image below), is now at the Polish Maritime Museum in Gdansk and I am planning on going to check it out while we are in Europe next year!












All-in-all I had a wonderful day with my Dad and am looking forward to our trip to South Carolina in May!

~Daniel

For Love Of Water - FLOW


My family watched this documentary the other night on the world wide water "crisis". I say that this way because this movie makes you instantly present and conscious of this seemingly insurmountable global issue we have, and then brings you right back up high to realize just how simply we can augment, if not, correct it. It does an incredible job of demanding your awareness and consideration of the way water moves throughout our world, who it "belongs to" - if anyone - or everyone, and the unconscious way some cultures are using it up...
Here is a snipit I found that relays a little bit more info about the documentary:

Salina builds a case against the growing privatization of the world's dwindling fresh water supply with an unflinching focus on politics, pollution, human rights, and the emergence of a domineering world water cartel. Interviews with scientists and activists intelligently reveal the rapidly building crisis, at both the global and human scale, and the film introduces many of the governmental and corporate culprits behind the water grab, while begging the question "Can anyone really own water?" Beyond identifying the problem, FLOW also gives viewers a look at the people and institutions providing practical solutions to the water crisis and those developing new technologies, which are fast becoming blueprints for a successful global and economic turnaround. Run time: 84 minutes
Sound boring to you? I can understand. A few years ago, I wouldn't have even come close to picking up this film to give it a glance-over much less considered it worth spending 84 minutes of my life on. But now I am SO THANKFUL that I am in a place in my life where I don't spend much time concerned with my own well being and I have the space in my heart to consider other's lives and well being. In America, we, even the lowest income families, are some of the richest, most secure, people on earth. We truly don't have to travel far, or do something so extreme to find a place to sleep, something to eat, a helping hand, or water. I mean no disrespect to those who feel they do have these burdens here. I just mean that, if what we think or believe, is what we create, and what we live, then this country has one of the most limitless spaces for creating or believing in whatever you want. What a blessing. It always requires hard work, ample giving to receive a hefty taking. This is the cycle and FLOW of all things in this world. But wow, we have opportunity.
So if i have not caused you to turn away yet, you might like to know that this movie mentions the story about Nestle Co. and how they are pumping (for free) our water out of areas in Michigan, packaging it up and selling it back to us. Very interesting. There are so many wonderful points to this movie, it is hard to recall and post all of them. Like I said earlier, one of the main things I walked away with was a higher level of consciousness, an awareness of how I am effecting the world, of the blessing (and responsibility that comes with it) of having a faucet that, with very little effort, I can flip on and trust will supply me with adequate amounts of clean water.
I highly recommend you find 84 minutes and watch this movie. For the time it takes of your life, it will repay you many times over.
Much love,
Marlayna