Showing posts with label Paul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul. Show all posts

Friday, February 7, 2025

Kooza!!!

(from the I Can't Believe They Can Do That! department)

Hi everyone,

We went to the latest Cirque Du Soleil travelling production last night - Kooza.  It was in a big tent at Marymoor Park in Redmond.  Really well done.  

I'll leave the description of the show to other bloggers, but it's kind of a modernization of traditional circuses.  There's a ringleader, clowns, acrobats, etc.  They're not exactly the same as a Ringling Bros. show - but the roles are there, just done in a Cirque Du Soleil way.  

A note about the aerial work.  Some of it is incredible.  There's a section they do with a spinning structure that defies belief.  The tightrope walking is pretty amazing too.  But - seriously - all of the performers were outstanding.  Hard to pick the best, really.

The music was really good too - really tight band playing live.  The current touring group features a drummer named Eden Bahar, who holds the Guinness World Record for "Most drumstick spins in one minute (one hand)".  He set the record of 149 on 13-Sept-2018.  They gave him a solo spot in the show - he really shined, without being overbearing.  

Finally - we did manage to get a picture at the event:


You'll notice I'm wearing my down jacket.  I had on a blue-green t-shirt that matched the backdrop.  I kept disappearing in the photos.  Luckily - I had a zip-up down jacket - or you would have seen a much different photo!

They also gave us the raw image:


All in all - it was a magical night.  We had a lot of fun!

Cheers,
Paul

Sunday, December 8, 2024

Merry Christmas from Santa and Rose (part 18)

(from the I Don't Think Rocky Had This Many Sequels department)

Well - we did it!  It was a mad whirlwind getting to the Santa photos today - we were booked in the last available slot.  But - we did it!!

Without further ado - Santa Photo 2024®!!


Rose is quite the young lady now.  But - she still asked Santa for a present!

Personally, I'm thankful that we were all available to be in the Santa photo this year.  We're working on staying healthy and optimistic this upcoming year.  (Health and happiness for all - that's what I'd ask Santa for!)

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays everyone - from the Pietromonaco family!

Cheers,
Paul

Friday, September 27, 2024

Haiku Writing - Moon Viewing 2024

(from the Just Splish! department)

Hi everyone,

This year, Rose & I attended the Seattle Japanese Garden Moon Viewing on Thursday, Sept. 12th, 2024, at the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle.

The event was a little more low-key than in previous years.  Also - the tea ceremony was only available for Friday's event, so this was even more low-key. Still - it was nice to get out of the house, stroll around the grounds - and watch the moon go behind the trees the minute we got there!  (At least there was a moon visible this year - previous years have been pretty cloudy!!)

(Original announcement here:  https://www.seattlejapanesegarden.org/events-calendar/2024/9/12/moon-viewing)

About the only event carried over from last year was the Haiku Contest.  Rose wrote one haiku - I managed to get two completed.  My second Haiku got an honorable mention!

Here's the Haiku:

Rose:

An angler fish rests in the sky
as he bites the moon
I feel light on my skin

Paul:

wind blows softly
gently pushing the clouds - 
moon sails above

Paul (honorable mention winner!):

viewer's footsteps - 
bundled against autumn chill
warmed by moonglow

(You might notice that the haikus don't necessarily follow the traditional 5-7-5 syllable pattern.  Modern haiku are less formal.)

Full contest results are here: https://www.seattlejapanesegarden.org/moon-viewing-2024-haiku-0912

Rose & I had a great time.  Looking forward to the viewing next year!

Cheers,
Paul

Sunday, December 17, 2023

Merry Christmas from Santa and Rose (part 17)

(from the Yup - That's Rose!!! department)

Hi everyone,

The streak continues - 17 years!!

So - I present to you - the Santa photo...


It's been a transitional year for the family.  I was let go by Indeed on April 1st - April Fools' Day.  (Heh - funny!)  I've been looking for a job since then.  Dana continues her volunteer work at the Seattle Aquarium, and has a new gig volunteering at the Seattle Asian Art Museum.  Rose has settled into her second year of High School - she's doing well!  This year she's been studying American Sign Language (ASL).  

Happy Holidays and Season's Greetings from the Pietromonaco family (Dana, Rose & I).

Cheers,
Paul

Friday, September 1, 2023

Haiku Writing - Moon Viewing 2023

(from the Splish, Splish, Splish! department)

Hi everyone,

Dana, Rose & I attended the Seattle Japanese Garden Moon Viewing on Friday, Sept. 1st, 2023, at the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle. 

This is a nice evening event where you can stroll around the Japanese Garden, see luminaria and lanterns, hear traditional Japanese music played on flute and Koto, and attend a real Japanese tea ceremony.

(More info here: https://www.seattlejapanesegarden.org/events-calendar/2023/9/1/moon-viewing)

This year, all three of us participated in the tea ceremony.  Simply amazing!  Then - we got to make a wish and launch a small boat with a candle.  (Well - a battery powered candle - no fires for us!)

Because of the length of the tea ceremony, Dana & Rose missed the Haiku Contest this year.  I barely made it in time - I only had five minutes to create a Haiku masterpiece!  Needless to say - that didn't happen - but I did get an honorable mention!!  (1 of 12 they handed out this year.)

Here's the haiku I wrote:

Paul:

Tea ceremony -
Small round cake
Calls to the moon

Not bad for 5 minutes!

(You might notice that the haikus don't necessarily follow the traditional 5-7-5 syllable pattern.  Modern haiku are less formal.)

And the moon?  It did show up later that evening, after the moon viewing was over.  Gorgeous moon tonight after all!

Cheers,
Paul

Monday, December 12, 2022

Merry Christmas from Santa and Rose (part 16)

(from the OMG - That's Rose??? department)

Hi everyone,

Well - we did it!  A 16 year streak!    

Without further ado...


It's been a busy year - Rose has started her first year at High School - Dana volunteers at the Seattle Aquarium - I'm doing more Java programming at work - and we're all still healthy!

Happy Holidays and Season's Greetings from the Pietromonaco family (Dana, Rose & I).

Cheers,
Paul

Friday, December 10, 2021

Merry Christmas from Santa and Rose (part 15)

(from the Look Ma - No Masks! department)

Hi everyone,

In these difficult times, it's more important than ever to try and maintain a semblance of normality.  

And - so - without further ado....

Don't worry - we're all fully vaccinated!  Everything was done quite safely.  And - check out Santa's cool "SC" belt buckle!  He was quite proud of it - and rightly so!

Happy Holidays and Season's Greetings from the Pietromonaco family (Dana, Rose & I).

Cheers,
Paul

Monday, September 13, 2021

Haiku Writing - Moon Viewing 2021

 (from the Splish, Splish! department)

Hi everyone,

Dana, Rose & I attended the Seattle Japanese Garden Moon Viewing on Friday, Sept. 10th, 2021 at the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle.  This is the first time they've held the event since the pandemic started.

As stated in my previous blog entry, this is a "nice evening event where you can stroll around the Japanese Garden, see traditional Japanese music and dance being performed live, enjoy a Bento Box dinner, and see the moon in all of its glory."

(More info here: https://www.seattlejapanesegarden.org/events-calendar/2021/9/10/moon-viewing-01 )

This year, they scaled back a little - no Bento Box dinner sadly - but it was still wonderful.  The only slight disappointment was the lack of actual moon to view, due to clouds - similar to the last time.

As is our tradition, Dana, Rose & I took part in the Haiku writing contest.  This year, we were limited to one haiku each - so we made it count!

Here's the haiku we wrote:

Paul: 

The air is still -
Suddenly three birds launch
Searching for the moon

Dana:

We gather to see
Lady Luna hides her face
The clouds make her shy

Rose:

Oh, my muse and moon
Will thee return my friend?
I'll wait below stars

You might notice that the haikus don't necessarily follow the traditional 5-7-5 syllable pattern.  Modern haiku are less formal. 

As it turns out - we did even better this year than last year!  Dana got an honorable mention, and I came in 2nd place!!

We had a lot of fun Friday night - and writing haiku is always a highlight of our evening!

Cheers,
Paul


Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Merry Christmas from Santa and Rose (part 14)

(from the How Are There 14 Of These Since Rose Is Only 13? department)

Hi everyone,

Wow - what a year!  Even though we're still in lockdown, we did manage to visit with Santa this year.  However - it was a little different....

Yes - we're smiling happily!!  Can't you tell??

It's been a heck of year, putting it mildly.  There was something comforting about seeing Santa - this year more than ever.  

Happy Holidays and Season's Greetings from the Pietromonaco family (Dana, Rose & I).

Cheers,
Paul

Monday, December 16, 2019

Merry Christmas from Santa and Rose (part 13)

(from the Omg - Rose Is So Big Now!!! department)

Hi everyone,

Well once again - completely at the last minute - we have our Annual Santa Photo!®


I guess Rose really is too big to sit on Santa's lap anymore - but she sure looks happy!

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays everyone - from the Pietromonaco family!!!

Cheers,
Paul

P.S.  Yes - same red shirt - I only wear it once a year, basically :)

Friday, September 20, 2019

Haiku Writing - Moon Viewing 2019

(from the Splish! department)

Hi everyone,

Dana, Rose & I attended the Seattle Japanese Garden Moon Viewing on Friday, Sept. 13th, 2019 at the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle.

If you aren't familiar, it's a nice evening event where you can stroll around the Japanese Garden, see traditional Japanese music and dance being performed live, enjoy a Bento Box dinner, and see the moon in all of its glory.

(More info here: https://www.seattlejapanesegarden.org/events-calendar/2019/9/13/moon-viewing-2019 )

We were really looking forward to this, since a full moon was expected!  Unfortunately - Washington weather conspired against us - the night of the moon viewing, the moon was completely obscured by clouds.

Still - we did have a good time - and even participated in the Haiku writing contest.  You could submit a maximum of two.

Here's the haiku we wrote that evening:

Paul:

Friday the thirteenth
Full moon hidden by clouds - splish
Now I swim with koi

Grey skies -
The promise of the Moon
Waiting to be uncovered

Dana: 

Moonbeams remind me
Of sharing summer secrets 
Whispered by sisters

Moon milk 
Cool the leaves' fire -
Warms my path

Rose:

Dear moon my friend
I shall see you again
When the flowers open and day ends 

Note - modern English haiku do not necessarily have to follow the 5 - 7 - 5 syllable rule, according to the rules of the contest.

As it turns out - Rose and I did pretty well this year!  We each got one of our haikus read out loud as an honorable mention!  Rose in the youth haiku category - and my "Grey skies" haiku as an adult!  

Sadly - my "Friday the thirteenth" did not make the humor category. 

Cheers,
Paul

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

I Found An New (Old) Track!

(from the Was I Really This Young? department)

Hi everyone!

I was going through some very old backups tonight - and I found a file from 2003 called "Personal Demos.wav".  

Hmm - that sounds intriguing...

Playing back the file, it appears that it contained some early attempts at doing twin-track recording in my apartment - possibly on my computer or on my DAT machine - or some combination of both.

There are about 4 song fragments in there - so I zeroed in on one that was mostly complete:  a cover of Mannequin by Wire.

Two basic parts:  acoustic guitar left channel - vocal right channel.  Talk about early Beatles! Super Wide Stereo!!

Although it was very raw - it was also recorded very cleanly.  It might take a little work - but there was definitely something there I could work with.

I started by importing the stereo file into Audacity and snipping out the song from the rest of the fragments.  

Next - I split the stereo file into two mono tracks so that I could work on the vocal and guitar parts separately.

First the vocal.  I decided not to compress it or tamper too much with it - I liked the live feel.  Instead - I just boosted the gain by 3 dB using Audacity's Amplify to balance it against the guitar volume.

Now - we need to make to sound like I'm actually in a room somewhere - instead of singing directly into the microphone.  I used Audacity's GVerb to add some ambiance - but kept the room small.

Roomsize: 10m
Reverb Time: 4s
Damping: 0.9
Input bandwidth: 0.75
Dry signal level: 0 db
Early Reflection Level: -22 dB
Tail level: -28 dB

(Adapted from The Quick Fix settings here: https://wiki.audacityteam.org/wiki/GVerb#Instant_GVerb_settings)

That did the trick - vocals sound great.

Next guitar.  After adding the identical GVerb to it, and doing a quick mix panning the vocals slightly right and the guitar slightly left - I realized the guitar needed more work.

Reading thru the GVerb documentation - they mentioned that it was a "mono" reverb.  They also mentioned that by inverting the original signal and summing it with the GVerbed signal - you could isolate just the reverb.  

Viola!!!

So - here's what I did:

  • I duplicated the guitar track 4 times, giving me 5 identical guitar tracks.  
  • I added the 10m GVerb setting listed above to track 1.  
  • I added the same GVerb setting - but with the room set to 20m - to track 2.  
  • I inverted tracks 3 & 4.  
  • I mixed track 1 (10m GVerb) and track 3 (inverted) and panned it 100% left.
  • I mixed track 2 (20m GVerb) and track 4 (inverted) and panned it 100% right.
  • I panned the original guitar track - track 5 (dry) - 50% left.

This left me with 4 tracks:
  • 10m room reverb (guitar only) - 100% left, 
  • guitar (dry) - 50% left
  • voice (amplified 3dB) + 10m room reverb (vocal only) - center
  • 20m room reverb (guitar only) - 100% right.
All that was left to do was mix it to stereo and make an MP4 out of it!  Here it is!


Pretty neat!  

Cheers,
Paul

Saturday, December 22, 2018

Merry Christmas from Santa and Rose (part 12)

(from the Holy Cow - This Means She's 11!!! department)

Hi everyone,

Well - a little last minute - but we got our Santa photo this year!!



And - yes - I'm clean shaven.  Again.  This may be a semi-permanent thing now.  

The fun part?  This isn't the first Santa photo we took this year!  We also took a Santa photo on the 1st of December, during the Island Lights Festival in Friday Harbor on San Juan Island.


Things are a little more relaxed in the islands - although I'm wearing my formal Hawaiian shirt. 

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays from the Pietromonaco family!!!

Cheers,
Paul

P.S.  Yes - that's the same red shirt.  Apparently, I only wear it once a year now.

Monday, December 11, 2017

Merry Christmas from Santa and Rose (part 11)

(from the Paul-dolph, The Red-Cheeked Daddy department)

Hi everyone,

We're on top of it this year!  Lights outside the house - festive spirit inside the house - and Santa photo taken early!


Again - this has been a transitional year for us!  But - a great year as well!  Plus - Rose is 10!  How did that happen??

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays from the Pietromonaco family!

Cheers,
Paul

P.S.  No new shirt this year.  It's just too festive!

Thursday, May 4, 2017

Tour of Tsue Chong Fortune Cookie and Noodle Factory - Seattle, May 4th, 2017

(from the You Should Try The Unfortune Cookies department)

Hi everyone,

We got a chance to tour the Tsue Chong Fortune Cookie and Noodle factory in Seattle's International District.  They're family owned and have been making noodles for 100 years.

We got up nice and early and lined up outside:





Soon our tour guide arrived.  He gave us a quick history of the company, then led us inside:



He took us to the 3rd floor - apparently it's a bit quieter there.  We started at the place where they make rice noodles and fried chow mein noodles:








After trying a couple fried chow mein samples, we then moved on to the wheat noodle area.  After giving us some sample noodles to munch on, he showed us the machines that cut the noodles and the noodle drying area:







We then moved on to the fortune cookie machines!  They used to make their fortune cookies by hand.  Then - they got nine machines - four of which are working today.  The rest have been cannibalized for parts, since the company that made them is no longer in business.

One of the machines no longer folds the cookies - it just makes round discs.  They call these "unfortune cookies".  They're still quite good!


These machines make one cookie at a time.  They had a newer machine that makes 4 cookies at a time.  You can see it over there:









After trying some fortune cookie samples, our tour was over.  We wandered around the corner to the small factory store:


and bought some cookies and noodles to take home.  Then - we escaped into a beautiful sunny Seattle day!



Dana surprised at the sun, maybe?

This was a fun tour!  And - it was nice visiting a part of Seattle history!

Cheers,
Paul

Wednesday, February 22, 2017

Anniversary Trip To Orcas & San Juan Islands - February 19 - 21, 2017

(from the It's Always Better In The San Juans department)

Hi everyone,

This President's Day weekend was our wedding anniversary. We decided to celebrate by taking a quick trip to the San Juan Islands. Rose was beyond excited - and bounced around the house just thinking about it.

We left for Anacortes at 11:00 AM on Sunday, Feb 19, to catch the 1:50 ferry. We made great time and arrived in plenty of time for our ferry reservation. (Yes - you have to reserve your Washington State Ferry now.)

There was quite a weather system developing, and for one of the first times I can remember, the ferry boat was noticeably rocking in the ocean swells. It wasn't too bad - but it was a little unnerving considering how smooth ferry rides normally are.

(Dana pic!)

Our first stop was Orcas Island, and the Outlook Inn in the community of Eastsound. (There's no official cities on Orcas - only communities.)

Our room was amazing:


and so was the view:


There was even a nice treat in our room, courtesy of the Outlook Inn:


That night, we taught Rose how to shoot pool in the local tavern.  We're so proud!

(Dana pic!)

The next morning, we decide to explore the west side of Orcas - we'd seen a lot of the east side on our last trip. We started near Westsound and a small marina near the Orcas Island Yacht Club:



(By the way - these panorama photos I'm posting were auto-generated by Google Photos on my new Android phone. Basically, if you take a series of photos in a short time period, the album software creates them for you. I've really liked the results so far!)

We explored around a bit - and saw this:

(Dana pic!)

We continued on to Deer Harbor:









One of the interesting things about the San Juan Islands is the history. There's a lot of old wooden structures on these islands that you don't find elsewhere. The theory I heard is, since the islands were isolated by the Puget Sound, they weren't ravaged by the forest fires that periodically sweep the mainland. Makes sense to me.

We saw one of these buildings in Doe Bay - the Post Office:





Attached to the side of the Post Office was a tiny, hand-carved book library:

(Dana pic!)



(Dana pic!)

It's a replica of this building - the Deer Harbor Community Club, built in 1905:


(Dana pic!)

Across the street from the Post Office, they were restoring another old building:


We traveled around the west side of Orcas for a while, then headed back to dinner at the Outlook at the New Leaf Cafe:




Then - I noticed the plaque inside the doorway:


Yup - history!

The next morning, we bid a sad farewell to our hotel room (and the in-room Jacuzzi!), and caught the inter-island ferry to Friday Harbor on San Juan Island. (Friday Harbor is the only incorporated city in San Juan Island county.)

We were on a mission. We wanted breakfast/lunch at Ernie's Cafe.

Ernie's Cafe is something only the locals know about. You'd never causally find it - it's hidden in the Friday Harbor airport, and not easily visible from the road. Named after the famed aviation author, and San Juan resident Ernest K. Gann (The Aviator, Band Of Brothers), it's the kind of place where you can walk in after after a couple of years away, and the owners recognize you and say "Hello". (True story)






We managed to get one of the amazing homemade pop-overs. They bake only 12 per day - if you want to buy more than two, you have to call the day before! (And I think it has to be before 11:00 AM!)

Suitably recharged, we headed over to Roche Harbor to get freshly made donuts (yum!) at the Lime Kiln Cafe and look at the boats:




(Dana pic!)

We finished up the day in Friday Harbor:




(Dana pic!)

and had a non-eventful ferry ride home. We actually even manged to finish one of the infamous ferry boat puzzles. (And - yes - we know about the missing pieces. There was a warning on the lid.)


All in all - a perfect way to celebrate!

Cheers,
Paul