Aug 20

A headline on the front page of yesterday’s USA Today caught my eye: “Climate plan calls for forest expansion”. I thought, “didn’t Canada already go down this road?”

Turns out Canada already has plenty of forest, so they weren’t attempting forest expansion but rather examining the assumption that lots of forest helps suck carbon dioxide out of the air. What they found, at least for the Canadian forests, was a bag of mixed results in the past and a high probability (based on computer modeling) of those forests emitting more carbon than they take in for the immediate future.

“The forecast analysis prepared for the government… indicates there is a probability that forests would constitute a net source of greenhouse gas emissions,” a Canadian Environment Ministry spokesman told the Montreal Gazette. From the Canadian Forest Service’s own web page on the issue:

Each year, the managed forest becomes a sink or source depending mainly on the extent of the area affected by fire and insects. Projections therefore required assumptions about the area that could be affected by fire and insects based on scientific and historical information, as well as the current conditions of the forest. But because the extent of future fires or insect infestations cannot be predicted with certainty, the model was run hundreds of times using different scenarios of the future to estimate the likelihood of the managed forest being a sink or a source.

…the analysis showed that there was a greater than nine in ten chance of it being a source in 2008–2012.

I’m hoping that, at the very least, the monitoring provisions in the bill are worded properly to make sure we avoid paying for forests that are actually carbon sources.

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Aug 19

Kelly pointed this out to me this week, while we were on our longest trip yet as a family of four. In my car. With french fries and goldfish on the floor.

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Aug 12

In many ways, this week is the beginning of the end of summer for us. Kelly and her mom realized that today was the last day they had together before Kelly went back to work.

A little over a week ago, Candie departed to head back to Seattle. The week and a half that she was here was a super-concentrated funfest of her (and our) favorite things to do in Muskegon. We did mini-golf at Craigs Cruisers, went to the beach, spent a day at Michigan Adventure, went out for ice cream at Frosty O’s, and of course the numerous runs to Starbucks.

The weekend that Candie arrived also saw my parents visit, which is always good times for Owen. It’s also a nice break for Kelly and I, as (between both grandparents) there’s actually very little parenting that gets left up to us. We spent the weekend grilling, taking a walk at a local park (with a lovely view of the lake), and playing in the back yard.

The reason for the visit, the whole point, was that Sunday when Macy was baptized. For those unfamiliar with Reformed theology, it’s basically a baby dedication only with some dabbing of water. There’s also a confession of faith once a member decides to publicly declare their faith, which is baptism only without the water. We promised to raise Macy and model Christ to her and the congregation promised to be part of her life as well.

But I’m beginning to wander… the beginning of the end:

On Saturday we head to Detroit for a wedding and then come back on Sunday. On Monday we head out to Ann Arbor for three days at my company’s offices in order to meet my new manager. (I spend most of the time working remotely out of our home.) On Wednesday we’ll get back to Muskegon in the evening and on Friday BarCamp GR kicks off.

BarCamp GR is a local technology conference that I’ve helped organize for the past four years. As conferences go, it’s pretty laid back and we try to keep the organizing to a minimum but the week before is always a little hectic getting the final details nailed down.

That takes us into the last full week of August, which will be a little breather before September starts. September is also when Kelly goes back to work from her maternity leave and her fall classes (for her Masters of Science in Nursing) begin. September is, in my mind, officially the end of summer.

There will hopefully be some lazy, warm days in September and maybe even an Indian Summer in October so that we can live in denial. We’re also hoping to attend at least one more drive-in movie before the theater closes for the season. With that said, when it comes down to it, this is the beginning of the end.

written by Kyle

Aug 10

Owen recently had the chance to go toe-to-toe with an entire litter of labrador puppies. The scene was cute in motion.

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Aug 07

As Macy’s birthday was June 15th, we decided to celebrate Father’s Day a bit early this year to take advantage of having everyone around. Big brother Owen was particularly happy to have both sets of grandparents in one place.

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Aug 05

I was trying to discretely snap a photo of a dressed-up Macy sleeping through the service. The photo itself didn’t turn out like I’d hoped, but I did catch someone else who was also checking Macy out.

Sneak a Peek

Check out the original photo on Flickr to see who.

written by Kyle

Aug 05

These moments are the ones to remember when they’re awake at 2 AM and screaming.

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Aug 04

OK, so I already missed a day. In order to catch up, I’ll be posting twice today. This first one was supposed to go out yesterday.

We baptized Macy last Sunday (August 3). She was up most of the night and ended up sleeping through almost the entire service. Even though she was asleep, one of her superpowers is the ability to break wind while sleeping. Which she did during church. And it was quite loud. Sigh.

Here’s the video we showed during the service:

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Aug 02

I’ve been chastised from all directions – friends, family, total strangers – for not updating the blog with anything recently.

Here’s my promise: I’ll post a new video or set of photos every day for the next two weeks.

Continue reading »

written by Kyle