Saturday, June 15, 2013

A Long Time Coming

My last post was a while back and a friend reminded me that it has been a while since he's heard from me via my blog.

Well life has been wonderfully busy in the Robinson house.

We celebrated a wonderful 45th wedding anniversary and two 70th birthdays in Bellingham; Cheryl's parents.
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We are now parents of a teenager with a deepening voice.






Gabe presented his science fair project for which we made super bouncy balls out of white glue/borax and silicate/alcohol mixtures.


We welcomed in the begining of Fair season with the Enumclaw Spring Dairy Show.

 

We have completed our second year of homeschooling Jon and will have the privilege of having them both home next year. Jon competed in his first season of Track and Field running the mile, 800 and several relays.

While Cheryl discovered the perfect "Track Mom" snack food: rice crispy treats.


We took a family vacation to Williamsburg, Jamestown, DC and Philly to experience our nation's history and capitol. It was fun and powerfully moving to bring the boys here.
WWII Memorial

Korean War

The Mall from Lincoln's Chair

Vietnam Wall

Iwo Jima

 The Liberty Bell in Philly

Williamsburg Fifes and Drums

 (No caption needed)

Jamestown, where America started.
Congress, where we were able to visit our representative's office


And now summer begins with the building of a true MAN CAVE, a 30x24 pole barn in the driveway for my wood shop and an upstairs clubhouse.
 
Blessings, Tony

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Happy 13th Birthday Jon

We celebrated Jon's birthday today with a bunch of his buddies. We set up a Top Shot competition with five stations: Nerf suction-missiles, bb gun shooting, tomahawk throwing, cork catapult launching and long bow shooting. It was a great time...and thanks to a couple of my buddies to work as team leaders and keep the boys in order.







Then dinner of tots and hotdogs........followed by XBox and Rootbeer floats. Then the boys suprised me by making a video...
It took well over an hour to get it right. To many kids who had way to many ideas. But in the end it took several takes, many hurt feelings and countless costume changes to get it right. then there were the technical issues. But it was worth it. They did a great job.
 
Tony

Monday, February 25, 2013

Obstreperous....uh...what?

Okay, I graduated from Western Washington University after several wonderful years of study with a BA in Education and endorsements in General Science and a K-12 teaching certificate to add to the AAS I earned at BCC, so at least I know a few things....like lefty loosey righty tighty and how to implode a 50 gallon oil drum with three cups of water and a blow torch. I digress. Getting to the point of this post I will call your attention to my 7th grader's vocab list for last week and this week: brusque, quagmire, melee, billet, crenellated, paragon, sublime, nonchalant, cacophony, apothecary, macabre, alchemy, flotsam, jetsam, florid........Some of my favorite great words for last week....on to this week's list: sultan, caliph, caliphate, Fatima, cornice, roc, scimitar, dervish, Persia, talisman, Saracen, obstreperous, bohomine, and legerdemain. REALLY....REALLY!! There is a theme that goes along with the time period the class is studying but SERIOUSLY!!  These are great words, and I DON'T know a bunch of them. Here is the conversation: Jon- "Dad , can you help me with my vocab words?" College graduate Dad-"Sure, read em off to me and give me definitions." Jon- "I don't know all the definitions, can you help?" Dad- "Sure........(looking at the list).......what do you think the definitions are?" Jon- "I DON'T KNOW!" Teaching certified Dad-"Well let's look them up." a stalling technique that really means, I have no idea. For crying out loud. When I was a 7th grader...oh now I feel old... these words were so far of my radar...well there is no comparison...at all...ever...ever. So Jon and I went through the words and had a great time but he quickly saw through my charade and called me out, "You don't know these words, do you?" Dad- "I'm the dad I don't have to. I have a college degree which means I know where to go to find out the meaning of the words." Seven years of college and I'm still not called Doctor!

Tony

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Rain-x and speeding tickets

I wonder if there is a relationship between the application of Rain X and the receiving of speeding tickets.  I just cleaned my headlight lenses with this amazing 3-M product and then applied a good hearty coating of Rain X on my windshield. So I drive to Lowe's for a few things and find that due to the angle of my windscreen I need to drive at just slightly under 45 mph to get the beading process to take full hydrophobic effect in a misty drizzle. In a full rain it's a no brainier, so we wont be considering that here. Here's the rub, the road near my place is a 35 mph zone. So driving APPROX 10 mph over the posted limit got me thinking. Do more tickets get issued to people, guys in particular, who have just applied Rain X and drive over the posted limit just for the satisfaction of seeing the beads scream to the roof in lieu of wearing down the blades of their wipers? Hhmmmm. Just for clarification, I did not receive a citation today, and yes Kelli that was me, did you enjoy your Starbucks? Just a thought to continue the water theme from last posting......


Tony

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Water


Water does what it wants and submits to few influences. It is pushed and pulled by gravity and wind. It is moved and changed by heat and cold, and yet restrained by its defining characteristics and when calm always presents a level surface. Water can destroy and create. It finds an insidious path but, with knowledge and understanding, it can be held back. Water is life and death. Water is peace and torrent. Water is simple and profound. Water is cleansing.

 

Water has few external forces that take control over its movements and abilities. Gravity is one of the greatest of these. Gravity is a pull to a mass created by a density, the greater the mass, the greater the pull. It can have far reaching effects like driving ocean tides and bending light waves. It also keeps water in your drinking glass. Gravity is what drives rivers and glaciers to flow and raindrops and snowflakes to fall. Gravity acts on ever molecule of water as liquid, gas or solid.

A second external force is wind. Wind can move water against gravity and with gravity. Wind can drive waves and direct rain. Wind can work with the many characteristics of water to make it a powerful substance.

Temperature also influences water. Water can change states depending on the temperature, or amount of heat it holds. It even expands as it freezes and the molecules arrange themselves in a crystalline manner. In its least dense state, as a gas, water is high in heat. As a liquid it has the ability to store vast amounts of heat and even control weather. As a dense solid, holding less heat, frozen water can change massive landforms or cool the liquid in your glass.

 

Water is under constant effects of other forces and oftentimes bends to theses effects and influences but there are characteristics of water that provide parameters. A water molecule has an odd shape that helps it dissolve many other substances. The oxygen side has a negative charge and the hydrogen side is positive and when they contact substances like salt, sugar or an acid those charges allow the substances to dissolve. Water is a universal solvent. This electrical polarity of the water molecule also prevents water from bonding with other substances, for instance oils. Water is more attracted to itself than to oils so oil will not dissolve in water. This attraction to itself is a strong characteristic of water when seen on its surface. 

An actual tension exists on the surface of water as the molecules hold onto each other. This surface tension has amazing holding strength. Small bugs use this characteristic of water to their advantage and actually travel on top of water. More dense objects when spread over a large area can also use surface tension to stay afloat. Like a child lying on a giant water lily pad.

The electrical charge of a water molecule has another amazing result. Something called capillary action. Capillarity, as it can be called, is dependent on cohesion and adhesion. Cohesion is the ability of a substance to stick to itself and adhesion is the ability or draw of a substance to stick to a different substance. Cohesion is what provides for water’s surface tension and adhesion is what provides for the ability of a paper towel to pick up water. Water molecules adhere to the fibers of the towel and pull in other molecules due to cohesive forces. More molecules are present to adhere to the towel fibers and in turn bring even more cohesive molecules with them until the towel is saturated. Plants are an amazing example of using cohesive and adhesive forces. Small tubes in plants allow for the travel of water up and down their structure. The most incredible example of this is the Coastal Redwood, known as the tallest of trees, reaching heights over 360 feet. Inside the plant are tubes called xylem and phloem. These small tubes transport water, sugar and other nutrients to the plant’s body. This transportation of water is due to the ability of water to adhere to the xylem fibers and be drawn in much like the paper towel. Within the tube a small meniscus will form, much like the upturned edge of water in your drinking glass. This meniscus draws the water up the edge of the xylem and cohesion brings more water until the force of adhesion and the force of cohesion are counterbalanced by the gravitational force on the water column. That is why narrow tubes will draw up a taller column of water than wider tubes, like your drinking glass.

 

I battle water often as I try to keep it from penetrating my house in unwanted ways, and yet I welcome its presence and keep it contained in vessels and pipes. When it invades often times it isn’t until damage is done that we are aware of its destructive force; seeping through walls, under hardwood floors and through holes in roofs. It has an amazing ability to find the smallest of entry points and exploit any weakness in a barrier. Then there are times when the destructive force is all too obvious as in the overflowing bathtub and the cracked frozen pipe that comes alive as it thaws.

 
Water will always travel under the influence of another force. By itself it is lazy, placid and level. It is often times undisciplined and random, it doesn’t do right or wrong, it doesn’t know. Water is rarely ever pure, in the sense of containing no other substances or contaminates, and making it pure requires a process of filtration and removal of those contaminates. And once pure it is useful to us for many purposes, such as cleansing our surroundings, maintaining life and filling our drinking glasses.

Tony