Miles Biked Update: June 30, 2008
Steve 202.2 miles
Kristi 151.9 miles
Kylee 126.9 miles
Kenna 128.4 miles
Labels: biking
Labels: biking
Labels: kids
Labels: web sites
They are probably close to being booked for 2009, so if Family Camp is something you are considering, you'll want to check into it soon. Also, here is a link to a sample schedule from this year's camp.
Labels: family, family camp
This look?
It's the look of "Dear Lord, Save us from all these three-year-olds running around with marshmallow roasting sticks!"
Labels: family camp
From my Family Camp journal:
6/19/08
After breakfast and chapel they had the fun fair. The kids had a ball bouncing, eating, doing crafts & playing games.
After lunch we went to the beach area. One of the teen staffers blobbed Kristi and me. He jumped from the high platform and both of us really got blasted into the air. I hadn't been that high above the surface of water since my dad and Larry used to throw me into Wanda & Audley's pool in the early 80s. (I actually was probably higher than that today.) I did sort of chest / throat smacker. It hurt. I'm glad I did the blob though.
Chapel services have been great. Mark is a fantastic speaker. He's interesting to listen to. His messages are challenging & he offers suggestions on how to put the knowledge he conveys into practice.
After chapel they had cookies / game night in the lodge.
Makenna & Me
Blobbed
Labels: family camp
Listen
Everyone booed this guy for picking a little girl to go against. We tried to get Makenna picked though. It was part of our strategy, because the loser got to pick someone else on their own team to try next. We were afraid everyone would feel bad picking a little girl to go against. Which could mean we would have to go last and only get one try to win, so we had the girls hold up their hand, in hopes of getting one of them picked. It worked. And thank goodness because we needed three tries before we won.
Labels: family camp
Labels: family camp
Listen
At Family Camp: Makenna's on the bike, Kylee's on the scooter. This hill was a blast to ride the scooter down! I could coast all the way to the lodge, which you can't even quite see in the picture.
Labels: biking, family camp
Labels: family camp
Labels: family camp
More than just fun and games for the kids, these camps bring your family together with the best activities summer can offer.We have a lake (what is camp without one?), but the rest may surprise you. Yes, we have paintball. Yes, there’s a waterslide. Do we have fields and playgrounds? Absolutely.
What you’ll find most helpful—even beyond our facilities—is the spiritual environment. You’ll hear biblical messages regularly. Your children can partake in special clubs, and our family assistants will guide your family through the day’s events, assisting with activities, child care, tours, and whatever else you may need.You’ll love our summer camps. But be careful; they’re addicting.
Life Action's description humbly states, "You'll hear biblical messages regularly." This statement is true, but please understand that Life Action has put together a line up of speakers who are outstanding communicators of God's word.
This year our speaker was Mark Vroegop, senior pastor at College Park Church in Indianapolis. Life Action provided each camp family with a CD of Mark's messages. I asked Mark if I could post them on my blog. He said I could. So, I'm going to post all seven of his messages from the week.
Mark spoke on being:
The sound quality of the recordings is excellent. Mark is easy on the ears, challenging to the heart. I recommend this series to anyone.
If you are considering attending Family Camp, this will give you an idea of what chapel messages are like. They're great!
You can listen right on this blog page, or right click the link below and choose "Save Target As..." to save the file to your computer. They are MP3 files, so I guess they could be saved to an iPod.
Download Mark's Monday evening Family Camp message here.
We got home yesterday from a week away at Life Action's Family Camp in Buchanan, Michigan. God is using Life Action's ministry to have a huge impact on families, reviving hearts for Christ. I feel blessed to have been able to spend the past week there.Labels: family camp, my walk with god
Avalanche Lake in Glacier
This was quite a hike for six year olds! We are standing on the continental divide at the Grinnell Glacier Overlook, elevation 7600 feet! That's Lake McDonald in the background.
A few thoughts.
Labels: my walk with god
We are extremely satisfied with our geothermal heating and cooling system. Now that we've had one for two years, I would not want to live in a house without one. I'm really surprised that geothermal systems aren't WAY more common than they are.
Labels: house
Labels: electoral college forecast, politics
I was saddened to hear of the death of Tim Russert today. I enjoy following politics and Tim was by far my favorite political pundit. He was part of the reason I enjoy politics. I will miss him.Labels: politics
I don't know if this is a great list for a kid to use, but I wanted to provide my daughters with a starting place. Spending meaningful, daily time with God is something I struggled with for decades. I hope that the list I gave them will point them in the right direction from the start.
The Protege 8.0 adds:
The Protege 9.0 has all of the features mentioned above, plus a thermometer.
The instruction manual is easy to understand. Installing a Protege bike computer takes about 30 minutes. If you can set the time on a digital watch, you should have no trouble setting up the computer. It is important to measure the circumfrence of the tire accurately. To do this, I put the valve stem directly at the bottom of the tire, draw a line with sidewalk chalk, then walk the bike until the valve stem makes one revolution. I then draw another chalk line and measure the distance between the lines. The direction book tells you how to convert the measurement to millimeters, which is what you enter into the bike computer.
It can be a little tricky getting the magnet lined up with the sensor correctly. They do need to be lined up correctly and come really close together.
Once installed, using the computer is a breeze. You simply push it up in the holder for a few seconds to reset the trip odometer. The display is easy to read, even in bright sunlight. The information is amazingly accurate. How accurate? We did a family test of their accuracy today on the way to the supermarket. We reset the trip odometer on all four of our computers at the same spot, then checked them when we got home. Here is the result.
In our test all of our computers recorded distances within .03 miles (highlighted in yellow.) Some of the slight distance variation could be from tiny variations in routes as well as differeing riding habbits (like swerving back and forth.) All in all, our test shows the computers are very accurate.
We have never had an actual Protege computer fail, but we have had two wire harnesses fail over the past few years. Also, my mom lost a Protege computer because it fell out of the holder. I can think of no other negatives to these comptuers.
We have also tried a Schwinn bike computer and found the Planet Bike computers much nicer to use.
I highly reccomend the Planet Bike computers. They run about $15 - $25 at most online stores. If you enjoy riding and like gadgets, you'll love a Planet Bike Protege.
Labels: biking, product reviews
If you come across truth in any form, it isn't outside your faith as a Christian. Your faith just got bigger. To be a Christian is to claim truth wherever you find it. It's not truth over here and Jesus over there, as if they were two different things. Where we find one, we find the other. . . . if Jesus shows us what God is really, truly like, and God is truth and all truth is God's truth, then Jesus takes us into the truth, not away from it. He frees us to embrace whatever is true and good and beautiful wherever we find it. (Velvet Elvis, Movement Three True, Logos)
Labels: blogs
Labels: movie reviews
Labels: my 80s journal
The link can be tested on the Preview screen.
Labels: blogging
Labels: kids

Labels: biking
Makenna's Goals for the Summer
Our Family Goals are:
Labels: kids
Want to know more about your fitness level and overall health? The Omron HBF-500 Body Composition Monitor with Scale is a big step in the right direction. The device offers highly accurate full body sensing technology, and monitors your weight, body fat, and visceral fat for healthy weight loss. You can even use this highly sensitive measuring device to monitor your skeletal muscle and resting metabolism to keep weight off. Meanwhile, a memory display helps you track your progress.
The weight display measures weight up to 300 pounds in .2-pound increments, while body fat percentage can be measured from 5 to 60 percent in .1 percent increments. Meanwhile, skeletal muscle percentage is measured from 5 to 50 percent, also in .1 increments. Visceral fat classifications are available, too; the device will tell you if your visceral fat levels are normal or high.
One of the keys to weight loss and management is tracking your body mass index, or BMI. The HBF-500 rates your BMI from 7.0 to 90.0 in .1 increments. BMI is classified at three levels: underweight, normal, overweight, and obese. You can also assess your resting metabolism; the device measures your resting calorie consumption from 385 to 5000 kcal in .1 kcal increments. All of the measurements taken by the HBF-500 can be stored in memory for later comparison with your current statistics and goals. The device can display information from up to three months prior to the current day.
My body fat percentage of 21.4% is still in the "high" category.
Labels: product reviews
Google Alerts is yet another cool, useful and fun tool from Google. You simply set up a search word or phrase, tell Google where to look for the phrase; web, news, blogs, groups or video and Google will notify you of new pages that match your search via e-mail.
I use Alerts to keep up with some former students, find follow ups to interesting news articles, and track things that affect me.
Last year as we planned a family road trip to Montana, I used a News Alert for the search "Going to the Sun Road." This kept me up to date on this road that I was hoping would be open in time for our visit to Glacier National Park.
My favorite alert is a Blog Alert for the search 'Nappanee.' With this alert I am notified daily of any blog posts that are published that contain the word "Nappanee." It's interesting to read about stuff going on in town, who's visiting, etc.
Here are some "Nappanee" blog posts that Google alerted me of in the past few days.
Three things: