
Survivor Journals
Bob of If I Die Before I Wake
has invited nine journallers to participate in a Cyber
Survivor Adventure.
Every couple of weeks, the
group will be issued a "challenge entry". The
site will post a excerpt from the challenge entries, as
well as the link to the complete entry found on the
journaller's own journal site.
After the challenge entry is posted, the nine journallers
will vote one of the writers off the site.
The "ousted" journaller will actually remain on
the site, but rather than posting further challenge
entries, they will act as a judge and commentator.
The first challenge entry has been issued, and can be
found at the Survivor Journal website. The actual entries
should be completed by
October 1, 2000.
Please take the time to visit, especially once the
challenge entries are posted. There is a message board to
post your thoughts/comments and also a instant poll where
visitors can vote for who they would want to see kicked
off the site.
The reasons behind Survivor Journals are simple.
1. To try something new.
2. Increase the interaction of the journal community.
3. The challenge.
4. Increased exposure to all journals involved.
So take a look around, explore all the journals involved.
If you would like to take part in Survivor Journals, Year
Two (around Nov/Dec 2000), let Bob know!
Diet Week #12
Goal :
lose 100 lbs.
Immediate goal:
the next 10 lbs.
Lost to date:
18 lbs
this number updates
on Tuesdays --
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A WALK IN THE WOODS...
October 8, 2000
Today we walked in the woods... the
cornfields... the pumpkin patch... among sunflowers...
and the length of a mall. It was a lovely day.
I had plans to take Peggy to meet
my mother and then for the three of us to drive to
Guerneville, on the Russian River, for lunch, after which we’d go and look
at the Coast Redwood trees (the tallest trees in the
world). Despite getting a somewhat late start and
encountering more traffic than we’d bargained for,
we managed to make it to Guerneville in decent time. We
had a nice lunch in town and then couldn’t pass up
the inviting "SALE" sign on a shop across
the street. Peggy made a killing there, getting some very
nice things at end-of-the-season cut rate prices.
It’s been very fortunate for her that she is at the
end of our summer and will be returning to Australia for
the start of theirs.
We then drove out to Armstrong Woods. Most
people who come to the San Francisco area and want to
look at the redwood trees drive to Muir Woods, which is
just across the bay from San Francisco. But Muir Woods
becomes a parking lot on weekends and it’s like
trying to commune with nature during rush hour. It has a
souvenir shop that is packed with tourists and you meet
lots and lots of people on the trails. I have always
preferred to take people to Armstrong Woods. Same big
tall trees, you get a redwood slice so you can see the
dates back to 965 AD, when the tree started to grow, but
when you walk along the pathways you can go for long
distances without encountering another soul. You can
really commune with nature, take time to check out the
moss growing on the trees, investigate redwood burls,
take lots of pictures and really get the feel for the
mighty forest. You can hear voices in the distance, but
nothing seems intrusive. Your own voice gets lost if you
move too far from your companion.
We hiked for about an hour,
stopping to take pictures and read the signs on the path.
Eventually we had to leave the soft path and return to
the pavement and go back to the parking lot. It was
really a lovely afternoon.
We decided it was too late to drive out to
Bodega Bay and home along the coast road, so we went back
to Hwy 101. En route we passed a pumpkin farm with a
cornfield maze and a patch of sunflowers. We had to pull
off and go investigate.
Finally Peggy was able to take
photos of sunflowers and she got some lovely ones (check the
whole lot, as well as the redwood photos, on Club Photo).
We went to the pumpkin patch and took more pictures there
and Peggy was also able to get her wish of seeing what it
was like to walk in a cornfield. We bought a small
pumpkin to bring home and cook up for dinner tomorrow
night.
And then down into civilization,
leaving all this nature behind, we went to the Northpoint
Mall in Terra Linda, where Peggy and I both bought new
clothes at Lane Bryant (for once I out-spent her), after
which we tried out a new Chinese restaurant for dinner.
The evening ended at my
mother’s, where Peggy used her sewing machine to fix
the hem on some new slacks she’d bought ('cause
obviously there is no available sewing machine here!),
I was able to give my mother a refresher course in
viewing photos on Club Photo and, after a cup of coffee,
we came on home.
Peggy decided she was very pleased
to have met my mother. The two got along very well, as I
knew they would.

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