A couple weekends ago some friends got together to go skiing. On the way up it was pelting rain, and I kept waiting for the rain to ease up. It did get moderately better, but continued to rain on the mountain throughout the day. A fog was settled over the mountain. I regret not taking my gloves off on the ski lift to get a shot of the treetops that had been frozen over from the icy rain.


My gear mostly held up to the rain, but my pants were still soaked afterwards. After spending the afternoon drying off, I headed out to a showing of the old silent film Metropolis at a concert hall in the city, with the Seattle Symphony playing the music while the film was shown on a projector. All the driving I’d done that day left me completely unable to keep my eyes open, and this being a silent film, I have no idea what the last half of the movie is about 🙂 Music was nice though.
The next day I flew down to California for a quick business trip. On the way down I noticed that I still had Season 5 of Deep Space Nine on my laptop, so I watched the finale (the one with this epic dialogue). As we were de-planing someone came up behind me and asked if I’d ever heard of a podcast called The Greatest Generation – apparently dedicated to discussing Star Trek episodes. If I were the podcast-listening type I’d give it a spin.
Business trip was productive. Returned on Wednesday. Thursday night was pickleball. My old YSA bishop, who was there on Thursday, invited me to be his partner in a doubles pickleball tournament the next day. We had fun, won our first two games and then got knocked out the next two games (beaten by the eventual champion team so I don’t feel too bad about that).


In preparation for biking the Camino de Santiago in April, I figured I’d need to get in a few miles, so yesterday I biked from my place down to Tukwila, near the airport. About 25 miles, took two and a half hours. Will need to go about that distance each day for a week.



It was a cold foggy morning out. I’d never seen the lake like this; there was no discernible break between the water and the sky.
My plan had been to catch a train back home, then change and make it over to Seattle in time for soccer with friends. I mis-judged the time though, and ended up just catching a train straight into Seattle instead. So I wasn’t at the top of my game, but still had fun. Made it back by bus after dark, and soaked in a hot bath. My backside is still sore; will need to do that a few more times I think.
Today after church I headed out to James and Karen’s for dinner. Afterwards we played Jokers and Marbles and Kingdomino, then headed out to see Phoebe perform at a community symphony concert held at the local high school. The skills and ages ranged widely; Phoebe was in the more-skilled cohort, and I really enjoyed her group’s rendition of Debussy’s Rêverie (like this but just the string parts).
I felt for the woman sitting in front of us; on her right was a toddler that wouldn’t stop flailing around trying to tear up the program, and on her left was her husband who was fiddling with both their phones for the entire evening trying to capture every performance on video. I wanted to tap him on the shoulder and say, “Psst. No one’s ever going to watch that recording.” Relief was had when the toddler got to be too much and the father took him outside.
In any case they should start these things with a PSA about recording etiquette:
- Live in the moment.
- If you must capture it, snap a quick pic between performances.
- If you must capture it on video, sit in the back.
- No matter what, turn the screen brightness all the way down.
Anyways. Great show overall.





























































