Monday, June 28, 2010

Dream Weaver




Retirement Trip, January, 2010
St. Augustine, Key West, Everglades, & Suawnee



It has always been our dream to purchase a motor home, travel with a group of people who love Auburn University to see the our favorite team and our Alma mater play on a beautiful fall Saturday. Also after Mike retired, we have dreamed of traveling this great country of ours onthe back roads and not the freeways, a Charles Ca rote type of adventure, weaving our dreams
along each route that we would travel.

On January 29, 2010, we began our first journey. This was the last day that Mike worked at the Alabama Farmers Federation (Alfa) and we planned to be in St. Augustine, Florida by night. We made it and spent 3 days there. St. Augustine is one of the oldest towns in America. It was discovered by Ponce de Leon who thought he had found the mystical Fountain of Youth. We drank water from the fountain that he thought would spring eternal youth. It did not work for him or for us. After visiting around the town and seeing the sights for a couple of days, we traveled to Key West via Miami. Mike made a wrong turn and we circled the stadium while hundreds of thousands of people were trying to enter the Pro Bowl, one week prior to the Super Bowl. After this, I realized that I could maneuver the 42 ft bus around most any place and my confidence level was increased. We spent 5 days in Key West and then went to the Everglades National Park for 3 days. We then traveled up the west coast of Florida to the yellow jacket RV park on the Suwanee River. This place was beautiful and we could have stayed longer than the 2 nights allowed. Afterwards it was back to Alabama to visit with parents in Foley and Nauvoo.



HAPPY TRAILS!

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Shuttle Launch, April 5, 2010

Approximately three weeks prior to Easter Sunday, 2010, I received an email from Paul Martin saying the next shuttle launch was on Monday, April 5 which was the Monday after Easter. Paul had always wanted to see a launch and he had heard me state that was on my bucket list, along with a few other things that I wanted to experience. To digress briefly at this time, it has been my firm belief that Television has cost us to keep from experiencing things on a first hand basis. People stay at home and watch whatever they desire but miss the emotion of witnessing the event first hand. It is like watching a ballgame on TV verses being in the stands with the decibels so intense that your ears ring for hours after the game, It is nothing like being there! I have seen many launches replayed on TV but can truthfully say that there is nothing like being there in person. Several years ago, Al Hammond (a good friend and co-worker at Alfa) and I played golf with a NASA employee that invited us to personally see a launch. Due to work, children, personal schedules, I never did and had always regretted not making this a priority. Paul Martin's email gave me a second chance and I was not going to miss this opportunity. Paul and I both had one problem, Easter Sunday and the launch was at 5:21 am the morning after. My son in law, Tommy Treadwell, was to sing at First Baptist Church in Montgomery on Easter Sunday. With Linda being a willing partner we were able to go to the early service at 8:30 am, hear Tommy sing, leave by 10:30 am, drive to our home, transfer to our Motor Coach and head out by 11:30 am. The Martin's left from Auburn at 9:30 am. We had an 8 hour drive ahead of us but we were in Titusville, Fl. at 8 pm setting up our Rv on US 1 in the JC Penny parking lot. People kept coming in all hours of the night from everywhere. There were to be only 3more launches after this one. From here we a short walk at 4:00 am across the highway to the water that separates Merritt Island from Titusville. The night view of the shuttle was spectacular, like the time I viewed the Statue of Liberty at night. The space program symbolizes the technological superiority of my beloved country, that we were the best and that we could achieve whatever we determined as a country with the proper leadership. I was proud to be an American. The next morning was filled with excitement as people began to fill up the vacant lot that we had set up in earlier. When the launch began, people began the countdown and then the sky lit up like a bomb had gone off. It took several minutes for the roar to reach us. As day broke you could see the gaseous tail of the rockets and magnificent colors. Scratch this one off my bucket list. It was worth the wait! Thanks to Tommy Standard and Paul Martin for making this one possible.