Monday, August 31, 2009

Daddy - Proud Silly

She can eat using her own hands, poop sitting on a potty, and now pretty much walk unaided. She is daddy's little girl and I'm not afraid to show how silly I get over her amazing feats of development:

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Hiking Frenzy - Harriman and Bear Mountain

In the past few weeks we've been going hiking on the weekends. We bought a new child carrier (the Kelty FC3.0, highly recommended!) since our first hike up to Bear Mountain with the inappropriate front-carrying Baby Bjorn. We went back to Bear Mountain and followed the more challenging Major Welch trail (on the way down!). Then one Saturday we went up the popular Pine Meadow Lake Trail in Harriman State Park. When we got to the lake (2.25 and mild elevation gain - easy to moderate) we realized we should have brought bathing suits. The lake is relatively secluded and serene as cars cannot reach it (unlike Lake Welch, which is overrun!) with several rock outcroppings suitable as tiny beaches (I believe, officially, swimming is not allowed - so don't tell!). So we went back the next day and had a great swim with Lizzy. There are plenty of fish big and small and Lizzy enjoyed following them as they ate our bread crumbs (and the Cheerios Lizzy kept throwing on the floor). We have gone back twice since, both times in foul weather and even bought a pair of walking sticks mimicking the other hikers on that trail (mostly small and large groups of older Koreans). We were joined by one of my work colleagues on one occasion, and our friends with their two daughters on another. I feel we've now exhausted that portion of the trail, so we'll either do another or avoid the lake and continue on that trail further (there's a 10-mile loop we could try) on our next trip out hiking. You can see pictures from these various hikes here:

Monday, July 27, 2009

Some Sun and Lizzy's First Steps

Lizzy is starting to walk this month and we are excited and scared at the same time. We're proud of her, but wary of the new physical dangers. We've begun baby-proofing the apartment more seriously...
In the last month we enjoyed the Coney Island boardwalk and beach, took a ferry to Governor's Island for a Judy Collins concert-picnic, and visited the Prospect Park Zoo where Lizzy enjoyed feeding all kinds of sheep in the petting farm, as you can see:

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Early Summer With Savta Haya

We're making the best of the few nice weather days, but early summer is pretty much a wash-out... It's good to have Savta Haya here taking care of Lizzy and us (meals, domestic upkeep, etc). My dad visited as well and we celebrated his 60th birthday by eating outrageously for a week! Lizzy's been visiting the Bronx Zoo, Coney Island and the Aquarium, and various playgrounds around the house - as you can see:

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Tour de Cure: Mission (almost) Accomplished


Well, I tried my best, but I was completely unprepared for the terrain on this course (Tour de Cure, Baskin Ridge, NJ). Although it is described as moderate, there are a few steep hills and one very long ascent. The steep hills are all along the first 30 miles. I completed this portion at a fair pace (~15 miles/hr). At around mile 40, the course begins gaining elevation slowly but surely for a few miles. This is where I lost my company (an older gentleman who was kind enough to push me along the first half of the course). I was on first gear for a long while, before I reached the peak and began a quick - and therefore unsatisfyingly short - descent down to a rest stop where I caught up my buddy only to lose him again right after we started out from there.

I learned a lot about riding in a long-distance tour and toughing it out, but I cramped my right calf on the hill just before the 72-mile finish line turn-off and I felt I had done enough for my first bike tour, so I ducked out to the finish line, claimed my free lunch and collapsed into a chair for 15 minutes. This was 6 hours after starting out, and my final avg speed was ~13 miles/hr.

I managed to raise $250 from friends, family and co-workers (THANK YOU!!!). This was matched by Barclays and I received a nice gift from ADA for my troubles :)

Monday, May 25, 2009

Tour De Cure:Training Ride 2 (last)

I needed to try something close to the 80-mile tour I signed up for that is two weeks away. So today I rode for ~70miles which took the whole day (8 hours). I hope I can do better on the real tour because that time does not allow me to finish the 80 miles in the time allowed. On a more positive note, notice how the loop can circumscribe the entire island of Manhattan...

And on a more random note, I stumbled onto a Major League Eating-sponsored Clam Eating competition... I think you can hear me mumbling WTF in the last five seconds of the clip :)


View Last Training Tour - May 25, 2009 in a larger map

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Breaking Out of the House...

I'm still commuting to work twice a week and have been improving my time by ~10-15 mins each way. I can now get in to work in 55 mins flat, but there is still room for further improvement. I hope the heat and humidity doesn't slow me down too much.

Also, since the weather has finally started to warm up we've been going out on all sorts of trips with Elizabeth and her cousins David and Winnie: Botanical gardens, zoo, hiking, aquarium... She seems to be enjoying herself and so are we:



and...

Monday, May 4, 2009

Tour De Cure: Commute To Work

Last week I rode to work and back on Thursday. It is ~12.5 miles each way and it took me about 1.5 hours for one direction. About 30 more minutes than taking the train and I am sure I can improve on that speed, so perhaps a legitimate alternative. I will try to do it again as soon as the rain stops long enough for the roads to dry up. Sunday's wetness stopped me from taking my second scheduled practice tour (45-50 miles), but I intend to make it up by commuting some more this week. Here is a map of the commute route:


View Bike Commute in a larger map

I've also been going to the gym (stretching, yoga, rowing, leg presses/curls/extension). Toying with the idea of taking a spinning class, but would rather just commute every day. Towards that end, I've bought a rack and saddle for the bike and a better lock... I also got a cycling computer (speedometer/odometer) for my birthday (thank you Scott) to help keep me motivated to ride faster!

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Tour De Cure: Training Ride 1

I've registered to ride for American Diabetes with my company's team at one of the NJ Tour De Cure bicycle rides. I've elected to attempt the full 80-mile course, which must be completed within 8 hours (7am-3pm). Therefore I have begun training to make sure I don't thoroughly embarrass myself. Last weekend I intended to ride out to Port Washington but the ride did not materialize (and the bicycle required some maintenance, so I did that to make sure I would have no excuses the next time!). So today I rode 40 miles (in 5 hours, need to work on my speed). See ride:


View
Route for 4/25/09 - Tour De Cure Training in a larger map

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Juxtaposition: Atlantic/Pacific

We took Lizzy on her first international trip to visit my parents in Panama. The flights were a bit stressful but manageable. We had a great time with the grandparents - pool, beaches of the two oceans, the canal, Park Omar, Summit botanical gardens & zoo, food & drink, and we even crammed the Passover holiday into the mix! Lizzy loved it, as you can see:

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Spring is here!

Lizzy is growing big and strong. She is eating solids, learning to sit up, and exercising her vocal chords... Exploring the world with her is fun (museums, day trips to nearby cultural centers, picnics, and play dates). She loves water. She likes the sounds of gushing water. She enjoyed the swing in the playground. So far she likes being around new people and in new environments. She happily wakes up from naps in new cities, new beds (crib in hotel, sleeping tent in VT house, car seat), and around new people.

We've been training her to fall asleep on her own (took some terrifying nights of screaming), so now she settles down when we dim or shut the lights and that has made weeknights more bearable and something we don't have to dread anymore... Work is still OK. Doing new things and working with friendly teammates. So far, so good.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Lizzy's First IMDB Credit

Had some extra time (where DOES it come from?) one night last week... The latest Picasa release has a new quick-and-dirty movie/slide show maker feature so I played around with it. Only thing that took a long time was picking the audio track...

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Settling In, Digging Heels

I gotta just make some comments about Obama. Did I call his flakiness during the campaign? All this talk of changing politics and unity, etc. The congress is at its same old, his treasury secretary does not know how to pay taxes, and he has hired lobbyists for some key postings in his administration. Sure he is affecting some change (Gitmo, aid/abortion, transparent government), but anyone would have felt like a breath of fresh air after W... Not impressed.

Unrelatedly, I procrastinated until the last week before the deadline for this quarter's round of FSO tests only to find out that the whole section is booked solid. Globally! I guess foreign officer wannabes have been waiting in the wings, biding their time until the change in administration. Anyways, now I have to wait until June to restart the process. At least work has been pretty rewarding. Learning new things, keeping busy, collecting that pay check, and hammering away at the mortgage. I have been lucky to survive several rounds of job cuts but the future is still nerve-wrackingly uncertain.

Meanwhile, domestic life has been a delight - Elizabeth is growing (and growing; she is at the top of her age group in height... yes, height!) and getting more active. Play time is more staisfying with chuckles and smiley faces aplenty. Alas, sleep time is somewhat of a challenge. Especially in the last few weeks with her gums giving her a bit of grief. But she has been a sport about it - too cute! Speaking of which:

Monday, January 5, 2009

New Year Revolutions

It's a new year and just like every recent year, the Middle East is burning... No, not with the warm bright lights of Hannuka or the fireworks of the Gregorian new year, but with the artillery of many armies, insurgents, rebels and freedom fighters. I feel nothing but dread and apprehension when I contemplate Obama's first term... But he has Hillary by his side, and maybe I can help someday as well. I need to complete my registration for the February test ASAP. I have been short on time and long on wishful thinking.

Still, it has been an eventful month. Lizzy is going to be 4 months on Monday, and we just moved in with Connie's parents in our house in Brooklyn. The setup has pros (cooked meals, nannies and babysitters a-plenty, the comforts of a big family living together) and cons (little privacy, longer commute, and the horrors of a big family living together), but it'll have to do for the near future. And Lizzy seems to like the sich'. She's been practically sleeping through the night (~7 hours straight).

Speaking of which: