Sunday, June 28, 2015

6/28/2015 Family Update

Hello everyone!  June was busy enough to warrant its own update so here goes. 

-June 5-7 weekend – Rocky Mountain Rallycross Challenge

This year our regional challenge was held in Grand Junction and we made the four hour drive on Friday afternoon.  We arrived to the site (a dirt lot next to an outdoor GoKart track) in time to swap out our street tires for rally tires and have the car tech’d.  We also gabbed with other competitors before leaving to check into our hotel.  It was decided to have dinner with other racers at a fancy Italian restaurant across the street from our hotel.  I think we had around fifteen people in our party by the time we ate and much revelry was had. 

The next day was the first day of racing.  In the morning all the competitors lined up their cars by class for inspections.  Basically we just looked at each other’s cars for non-class legal modifications and talked for around an hour.  Then there was a quick drivers meeting and we went to where we needed to be for the event to start.  Susan and I worked timing (as per the norm) first and we raced in the last run group.  The timing system was an upgraded version of what we use in our local region so was easy to figure out.  It was chilly, muddy, and windy for most of the morning.  By the time we got to go the dust was flying as the mud had mostly dried up.  The afternoon was a repeat of the morning’s racing but the course was in reverse.  When all the times were added up I was in first place and Susan was in a close fourth.  Before heading to the event-sponsored dinner we hung out with fellow racers at the GoKart track.  I wasn’t planning on it but ended up racing in one session.  It was fantastic fun even though I performed poorly (no surprise there).  Then we went to dinner at a brewery restaurant with all the competitors before going back to the hotel.  We did meet our friends Ken and Randy for cards but we were all very tired and didn’t play long. 

The second and final day of racing had the run groups the same but in order by the best times (the fastest competitors go first followed by the next fastest and so on).  The idea is that the first drivers on a fresh course are generally hampered by looser conditions thereby giving slower drivers a chance to catch up.  This is usually true but didn’t matter in our case.  In the end I extended my lead and kept first place for the event (I was also the fastest driver out of all the competitors there).  Susan was doing very well until her third run when she got distracted for a moment and made some tragic mistakes which added twenty two seconds to the run and dropped her from a close fifth down to eighth place.  This made for sad times for us both.  After the racing was done we packed up and went to the awards presentation for pictures.  The drive home was uneventful and we made great time. Here's a video of one of my runs.  :)

-June 12-14 weekend

Friday night had Susan and myself at Ken and Randy’s house to continue the odyssey which is making wine.  Ken and Randy are constantly in the process of brewing this or that so we had to empty one of their six gallon glass jugs before we could “rack” our wine (evidentially to “rack” one’s wine is to transfer it from abucket to a glass jug, who knew?).  Thus we cleaned and sanitized empty wine bottles and then bottled the previously finished contents of a chosen glass jug.  It contained a blend of cider and mead which is called cyser.  We tried this concoction and deemed it worthy of drink.  After bottling we cleaned and sanitized the glass jug before transferring our wine from the bucket it’s been in for the previous ten days or so to the now pristine glass jug.  This transfer is done as the dead yeast and sawdust from the prior step built up thickly on the bottom of the bucket and isn’t something we would want in the bottles of wine.  After playing around with wine and cyser we looked at pictures Randy took of the prior weekend’s rallycross. 

The next day was busy.  Our rallycross car was making some odd noises so we brought to a fellow competitor’s house for a diagnosis.  It turns out it badly needed new rear brakes (I really should have noticed earlier) and the driver-side front strut mount needed to be replaced.  After we got home we took Bella on a walk around the neighborhood.  She did alright and we only had to carry her four times in the thirty minutes we walked.  Then Susan and I got in our car, picked up Kari, and drove up to Matt and Jana’s house for a baby shower BBQ (I’ve decided this is the best kind of baby shower).  We all had a good time talking with his family and eating yummy BBQ.  A friend of Matt breeds corgis and brought an eight week old puppy he had recently gifted his wife.  This tiny little fluff ball quickly became our center of attention and we all took turns holding him while the children rudely tried to take him away.  The weather turned nasty and there was crazy hail for a few minutes but nothing big enough to damage vehicles.  It was a great time and we’re confident little Kainin will be a sweet baby like his older sister Elle. 

Sunday was more relaxed as Ken and Kari came over to help Susan with cleaning up the back yard and planting more plants along the path in front of the house.  This was a long ordeal of which I mostly stayed inside playing my guitar and researching how to install a wideband O2 sensor on the rallycross car.  I hung out with the pugs a lot and Susan and Kari got sunburned.  It was a great day. 

A wideband O2 sensor is a sensor (duh) that measures the air to fuel ratio in a car at a higher degree of accuracy than stock O2 sensors (of which every modern car has).  It is a tool used to safely tune the engine and turbo to get more power and efficiency.  We bought and installed one on the rally car as it wouldn’t hurt to have another fifty to sixty extra horsepower (booya).  It was a relatively simple process which began witha trip to a muffler shop to have the sensor bung (what the sensor screws into) welded into the proper place on the muffler.  I fed the wires into the cabin and Susan handled the power source.  It was a relatively painless install and seems to work as designed.  At some point we hope to have Alvin tune more powah out of the engine.   

-June 20-22 weekend (yes I know I’m including the next Monday, weekends work differently when they must conform to the subject of the email)

Saturday had us doing more work on the cars and running around town doing some shopping.  The HVAC vent dial in Jay (the old Subaru) was stuck on defrost so we had taken apart much of the center console and dash to be able to see what the problem was.  Long story short the cable that connects to the dial was detached from where it needed to be and a required clip had fallen from its perch under the dash.  In the end JB Weld (a strong epoxy) was able to compensate for the brittleness of eighteen year old plastic and the vent dial once again is functioning (for now at least). 

While Susan was putting Jay’s interior bits back together I removed the driver side strut from the rally car to get to the strut mount.  I’ve done this on several of the other cars and was finished in a snap.  Then followed a quick trip to O’Reilly’s to rent a spring compressor and a slightly longer time disassembling the strut.  Susan cleaned the parts using the garden hose and I packed grease into the new strut mount.  The strut went back together easily enough and was soon reinstalled on the rally car.  I realized after we were done that I hadn’t broken a major bolt or component in any the recent car work.  I think I’m going to make asign that says “X number of days since a bolt was broken” and hang it in the garage. 

On Sunday we were greeted by a beautiful day and drove Debbie (the black Miata) up to Susan’s folk’s house with the top down for a Father’s Day meal.  Kari and Alvin also came up, also brought their black Miata, and also drove with the top down.  I suppose it could have been embarrassing if we were still in high school.  The food was pulled pork acquired from a local BBQ joint in Aspen Park and other BBQy sides.  Everything was tasty.  After the meal we discussed how small independent BBQ places are popping up all over the front range where none or few were before.  Interesting to see new trends sweep across the state.  Once the food was cleared we played Cabo followed by Sushi Go.  This was my first time playing Cabo absolutely sober and, perhaps coincidently (perhaps not), I absolutely clobbered everyone.  To keep things fair I’ll make sure to imbibe while playing in the future.  Sushi Go was a new game for the others and took some getting used to.  By the time we were done everyone was getting the hang of it and we’re definitely going to play it more going forward.  We ate dessert, walked around the property, and then sat on the back porch for a couple of hours talking.  It was a really nice time. 

On Monday night we found ourselves at Ken and Randy’s house to perform the next step in the wine making process and play games.  Gregg and Sandra’s son Tristan asked if he could tag along and did so.  All we had to do for the wine was add some packets of ingredients and degas by stirring up the wine in the glass jug.  Ken had a tool that attached to a power drill which greatly sped up the stirring process and we were finished in just a few minutes.  We then sat on their back patio and talked about this and that before playing a round of Sushi Go.  This was their first time playing and by the end of the round they all were proficient.  I had been sharing a bottle of cyser with Ken and merely won by a handful of points. 

-June 27-28 weekend

Susan inexplicably seems to have caught the sinus infection I’ve been dealing with for the last several days but luckily we have no plans for this weekend so she can rest and get better.  Looking at our schedule I’m seeing that this might be the last free weekend we have for the next month and a half.  It stinks to be sick but at least the timing is good. 

Tidbits

The pugs are all healthyish and Sophie just went into heat again.  The symptoms have all been normal for her but I’m slightly concerned as it’s come on a little earlier than usual.  Sophie is going to have her annual vet checkup next week and is probably fine. 

We still like our jobs which keep us busy and Susan got an unexpected raise for her first six months of great work (yay Susan!). 

We’re endeavoring to eat healthier and it’s mostly happening.  I was going to buy a FitBit but found that, due to my ginormous wrists, the size I need is sold out until next month.  This is probably for the best since it’s realistically a coin toss whether I’d actually wear the thing longer than a month or two (then again… knowing myself I’ll probably get one next month anyways). 

We watched Jurassic World the other day and found it to be an entertaining summer rompfest which, even without the initial awe from the first Jurassic Park and some silly scenes (cross-species dino-teamwork…really?), is now my favorite movie of the series. 

We hope this finds you happy and healthy!


Max and Susan

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