adventures


27
Nov 11

Catching up

Tons of pictures this week, so they are broken up into two posts. This one covering Thanksgiving and another from the Iron Bowl.

The Yankee taking a sunset picture on Dauphin Island, Ala.

Yankee

The joke we’re going with is that this is the family crest:

Pinch

What does Thanksgiving look like on the beach? So glad you asked:

Beach

Here’s you a bit of soothing video. Be sure to play this when you’re back in the office this week:

The kids in the family had a marshmallow fight:

Marshmallow

No, I did not take part. I just shot video and pictures. In the family video library this is now set to the theme from The Good, The Bad and The Ugly.

Marshmallow

Also, they made sand angels:

Nice view we had:

Window

Do you ever wonder what other people’s families do together? Think they’re all getting along? Think anyone in this bunch is having their patience tested?

Marshmellow

Many more pictures can be found in the November photo gallery.


19
Nov 11

Samford at Auburn

Another beautiful day at Jordan-Hare Stadium:

JHS

Samford University’s football team traveled to Auburn for homecoming. My terrific employer facing off against my beloved alma mater. Both teams entered 6-4, and Auburn should have handled the game with ease. No matter what happened, though, I should enjoy the day, right? I’ve looked forward to this game more than any other this year.

Spirit

There are so many common ties between the teams and the schools, even though they are very different sizes and have different specialties and different formational history. Both play similar styles of football right now, and there are a handful of familiar faces on the Samford sideline.

Also, if you read the site yesterday you saw that Auburn’s first Heisman winner, Pat Sullivan, was returning home as the coach of Samford. They honored him in the pregame with a nice little ceremony:

And then Samford gave Auburn all they wanted and more for three quarters. Auburn would win by a 35-16 margin, but it stayed very close far longer than it should have. But the Tigers won homecoming. Samford played hard, like you’d expect a Sullivan team to perform. The Auburn Alumni Band marched. And there was a little bit of history:

Spirit

Sophomore Mike Dyer became the 10th leading rusher all time at Auburn on that very play. The guy he passed to take over the 10th spot? James Joseph, who coaches running backs at Samford.

Up next, deep breath, Iron Bowl.

Tomorrow: Crowd shots from the game.


10
Oct 11

The video that wraps the weekend

It is Monday — I am on fall break. There is a chill in the air. It is raining. I am still sick. (At times I think I am getting better; other times my sinuses and respiratory system are in full revolt.)

So, naturally today is a lot of fun.

Here’s a quick video from Saturday in South Bend, though. Aviation buffs will love the clips around the :45 second mark. Enjoy the whole thing:

All of this was shot on the iPhone and edited on my Macbook, during which I had the sniffles, the hacking coughs or the shivers.

An Apple a day keeps the doctor away, eh?


9
Oct 11

Catching up

The Notre Dame edition. We’re spending a lot of time behind the windshield today, but that doesn’t mean you have to go with out. Here’s more from our brief trip to South Bend.

You know of Touchdown Jesus. This is First Down Moses:

Moses

And, no, this isn’t awkward at all.

They have red squirrels on campus. Figures, since their Irish.

squirrel

This is one of 12 faux fresco paintings in the Main Building. On the border of one painting there is a carefully hidden Kermit the Frog. In another, a hula dancer. These came along with a restoration at some point, as the original Luigi Gregori work dates to between 1882-1884, predating Jim Henson and discerning hula art by some time.

squirrel

They all detail Christopher Columbus’ place in the American story, or one representation of Columbus at any rate. The university now takes great pains to point out that these paintings are symbolic of the predominately white perspective.

There’s no word on Kermit’s role.

Anyway. The local media came out to the tailgate to talk to some of the troops going to the game through the Gameday for Heroes program. This lady asked which team he was cheering for:

interview

I guess she didn’t see the ND tattoo on his calf.

The blimp was there:

Goodyear

Michael Floyd wasted little time opening up the game’s scoring. He would finish with six catches for 78 yards, including this acrobatic score:

Floyd

Air Force would try to respond with their dangerous offense. Quarterback Tim Jefferson ran the option with Asher Clark. He snapped off a nice 29-yard rush — speed to the corners was Notre Dame’s only weakness on the day — but fumbled near midfield. That would later become the Irish’s second score of the game:

Jefferson

Theo Riddick had eight catches for 84 yards:

Jefferson

And the leprechaun had a lot of work to do:

leprechaun

He’s just a short guy with a good beard, living the dream …

leprechaun

Jefferson led the Falcons with 159 total yards, a passing touchdown and another rushing score:

Jefferson

Finally, here’s a panorama of Notre Dame Stadium. Click to enlarge:

Stadium


8
Oct 11

On the Notre Dame campus

We made it to Notre Dame with no incident. The Yankee and I are staying with a friend who is in a doctoral program here.

Before kickoff the stadium announcer, who injected just a bit too much personality into the job, announced the weather conditions as “Bottle it up and sell it. High of 79 degrees!” The crowd roared. At this point last year they were already bracing for snow.

Fortunately, we brought the warmth with us. This is Touchdown Jesus, enjoying the day:

Jesus

I have the pleasure of doing a little work with this group, Gameday for Heroes, which takes donated college athletics tickets and sends veterans and servicemen and women to the games. Frank Julian — South Bend lawyer, Notre Dame man and a Navy veteran — organized the entire weekend and sent almost 100 members of the military to the Air Force-Notre Dame game:

tailgate

And they saw an impressive game. Notre Dame scored more points at home than they have in 15 years, striking early and often against an Air Force defense that couldn’t keep their offense in the game. Seven members of the Irish squad scored touchdowns.

Turnovers were key. Air Force fumbled on their first play, after a 29-yard gain, and the Irish would turn that into a score. A sensational interception would turn into another touchdown. Notre Dame wouldn’t be stopped after that, finishing with a comfortable 59-33 win.

Sophomore quarterback Tommy Rees threw for 261 yards and four touchdowns:

Rees

Senior running back Jonas Gray led Notre Dame on the ground with 69 yards and two scores on just seven carries:

Gray

And those military members had a great day to see a game.

Notre Dame Stadium is a different atmosphere from the familiar SEC. They still have the old wooden bench seats — this part of the experience we could improve upon — but it is hard to argue about much else. The marching bands are crammed into the corners of the field. Some 80,000 people stayed until the end. During the breaks they announced award-winning teachers and departments on campus. There was no piped-in music and no jumbotron to distract you from the actual event. Cheerleaders took to the field during media timeouts, to keep the crowd in the game.

At the end of the game Notre Dame’s team ran to the student body and sang their alma mater. And then they turned, crossed the length of the field and stood behind the Air Force team as they sang with their band and fans.

You can take all of the NFL-minor league stuff straight out of the SEC. This is what college football should be like.

Tailgating in South Bend has nothing on what we’re used to. And the fans are generally a sedate bunch. A gentleman next to me quietly asked a young man standing in front of him to sit down. And he guy did, without complaint.

These are Midwestern people and Midwestern values.

Frank Julian, the lawyer, said he still had people bringing him tickets to donate until just before kickoff. In the end he almost had more tickets than military. That’s not a Midwestern thing. Gameday is an easy project to like and is becoming a big hit on college campuses nationwide.

These particular men and women weren’t recognized by the public address announcer today, but others were. The people in Notre Dame Stadium are proudly patriotic. Air Force being there helped, the (awesome) stealth bomber flyover wasn’t bad either. Taken as a whole, you count this as a special day in a beautiful place.

More pictures and details tomorrow.