Random Rants

The folks made it into town yesterday and we are having a pretty good time catching up, shopping, and eating.

My Woot-Off items arrived. I got a Lowepro camera bag, two Phillips extension cords, a Mad Catz Power Pro to power and charge iPods, a ball cap, and a Sandisk USB cable and ear piece. Not a bad haul.

Woot Off Items

My personal Christmas gift also came in this week. It is a Hi-Point Carbine 9MM.

Hi-Point Carbine

Have a great holiday everyone!

A man was walking back home when he noticed a most unusual funeral procession approaching the nearby cemetery.

A long black hearse was followed by a second long black hearse about 50 feet behind. Behind the second hearse was a solitary man walking with a dog. Behind that were 200 men walking in a single file.

He respectfully approached the man walking with the dog and said, “I am so sorry for your loss, and I know now is a bad time to disturb you, but I’ve never seen a funeral procession like this. Whose funeral is it?”

The man replied, “Well, that first hearse is for my wife. My dog attacked and killed her.”

He inquired further, “Well, who is in the second hearse?”

The man answered, “My mother-in-law. She was trying to help my wife when the dog turned on her.”

After a moment of silence he asked, “Can I borrow the dog?”

The man with the dog replied,

“Get in line.”

Woot.com just completed an unprecedented (at least to me) three day woot-off. I ended up with three items.

I got the early version of the Yukon Spotting Scope. They had a better and more expensive one later that I would have picked up if I knew it was coming, but alas that is the point of the woot-off.

One of my buddies and I are splitting a Penfolds Bin 28 Shiraz four-pack. We did the same thing a few months ago and it was a great pickup.

While I was at the data center this afternoon, I got a bit lucky and got a Random Crap. They changed the order process so you can only get one and it costs $3. We shall see what comes of it in a few weeks.

After doing a market research survey earlier in the week I was planning on picking up a new carbine and have it shipped for Christmas, but they are out of stock. Big bummer.

I spent six days of holiday time with my Brother and his family in Columbus, Ohio this past week. It was a nice change of pace even if my sister-in-law does not get my fascination with college football.

I flew in on the craziest travel day of the year but was able to fade all crying babies for both legs of the trip. The only hiccup was the fact that they could not use one of the cargo holds due to a mechanical failure. Somehow (and thankfully) they were able to get the door closed and it stayed closed the entire flight. We were late, but these things happen. My parents were there to pick me up from the airport.

Turkey Day itself was good. The food was delish and I slept like a lamb that night.

Friday we went to a model train store. My nephew is trying to get into HO scale trains and with some help we starting building a 8′ x 4′ train track for him to build on. I skipped a small family outing on Saturday to watch the VA Tech/Virginia game and missed, for the most part, the only family drama. Two ten year old kids tend to add a lot of drama… And now VA Tech gets to try to earn it’s way into the BCS. Somewhere along the way a few old model railroad magazines were picked up. It intrigues me, but I do not need another hobby- really I don’t.

Due to one of my parents’ friends passing, they had to leave Sunday morning to head back to Georgia. This left me alone with my brother and his family. We ended up heading to the Wexler Center on Ohio State’s (The) campus for an Andy Warhol exhibit. While I don’t get his Pop art, I find it interesting. His video and TV show art projects are just flat out weird. Take Empire for example. Film the Empire State Building for 6 hours. Slow the film down to 8 hours. Then show as an art project. The highlight of the film is the fact that in reel seven you can see Mr. Warhol’s reflection in the glass window in front of the camera. Yeah. I’m glad we went, it was interesting in a lot of areas and I do want the fish wallpaper for something but I’m not sure what.

It was snowing the morning I left Columbus so I am glad to be back in Austin. There were more crying babies on the return flights but I was lucky enough again to dodge all those bad beats. And thanks to the pretty lady in 11B on that incoming flight for being so pretty across the isle. 🙂

The parents are coming to Austin for Christmas so I am done major travel for the year. And for that I am very thankful.

What was up with the end of the Chargers/Steelers game yesterday? Was it a touchdown? Yes. I mean no. Times Up. I mean yes, but the outcome does not change.

Ummm… The line was 4. The outcome certainly does change when the Chargers are covering before the call and would not be if the right call was made at the time.

Did the lead official’s brother-in-law have money on the game? Hmmm…

Happy Monday folks, I have a short week before the Holiday. For that I am very Thankful.

Early voting is here in Texas and I took care of it this morning.

I won’t bother you with my political leanings, mainly because I just enough informed to be dangerous.

Either way:

I Voted

I am looking at getting a Hi Point Carbine 9MM for some fun. All of the dealers on GunBroker need to ship to a FFL holder where the background check can be done. So I am looking for a FFL holder here in Austin that can be trusted and is reasonable in terms of costs. Anyone know one?

Put about 200 rounds though the .40 Monday and Tuesday at the Ranch. Also got a chance to shoot a lever action 30-30 and a few shotguns. I had never shot clay before, that is actually a ton of fun.

This is the eulogy my brother gave for my recently deceased Grampa Lenny. His obituary is here from the Worcester Telegram.

Lenny.

My grandfather’s name was Leonard Gribbons. But only his elementary school teachers and telemarketers called him Leonard. He was Lenny. If anyone lived life to its fullest, it was Grampa Lenny.

Over his 34,702 days he was twice a loving husband. He was a dad, an uncle, a grampa, a great grampa, a good friend. He was a security guard, a prison guard, a soldier, a police officer. He was a champion boxer, a prize winning marksman, a Boy Scout leader, a basement dance instructor, a hunter, a fisherman, an amateur photographer.

Nearly all of his life was devoted to public service. As a police officer he was a friend of the bartenders on Millbury Street when he was walking the beat. He brilliantly prevented ugly protests during the Vietnam War. He practiced community policing before it became known as that. He ran the records bureau, the motor pool and helped the department move into its new headquarters.

When he retired, his work seemed to increase. He served as the secretary, treasurer and presidents of many organizations – sometimes serving different roles simultaneously. He published their newsletters and audited their books.

But his remarkable biography is not what made him special. It was not what he did during his life but how he lived that we’ll all remember.

He was generous and always put others needs before his. He never stopped helping his children, grandchildren, nephews and nieces. On a policeman’s pay and working special duty assignments, he helped put Len and Tom through college and his Eileen through nursing school.

He always overpaid anyone who helped him around the yard or around the house. After snow storms he would take his snow blower up and down Ararat street and Delaval Road clearing sidewalks and driveways. Every week he brought the coffee and cookies to the Greendale Y and never asked for help.

As a young man he was mischievous. In grade school, he’d pick the cooties from the student sitting in front of him and with great dramatic flare, drown the insect in his ink well while his classmates howled. He’d hide in the woods off Providence Street and shoot bb’s at the lunch pails of the wire mill workers walking home after their shifts. He spent a few nights avoiding punishment by hiding from his father in the basement coal bin.

He was a practical joker. When my dad came to pick up my mom for their first date, Grampa Lenny casually greeted him with his service revolver.

He loved to tell stories. He loved to perform. In the army, he was the clown, the guy poking fun at officers, getting in trouble but boosting morale. During the war, he performed on stage for soldiers in France, bringing down the house with his act, even catching the eye of a Hollywood or Broadway agent. But he never considered that life. He sang songs at Len’s Vernon Hill birthday parties.

And he played the bugle. He was the phantom bugler at National Guard and army bases. His revelry called his brothers and hunting buddies from the woods. Not everyone enjoyed his playing. There was they guy who lost a prize deer because of Lenny’s revelry. And one time he used his bugle to get rid of hundreds of birds perched in the big oak tree in his back yard. He scared them off but they covered him with so many droppings that my grandmother would not let him in the house.

But he also used his bugle to play taps so mournfully at a funeral that the priest said his playing did more to help the grieving family heal than any words spoken at the service.

He loved to see his name and picture in the paper. Once after arresting a most wanted bank robber, he was driving the suspect back to Waldo Street. But he took the long way. When the rookie in his cruiser asked him what he was doing, he said he wanted to give the photographer from the Telegram, who was listening to the police radio, time to get to the station. The next day, there was Sergeant Leonard Gribbons and his prisoner on the front page, above the fold.

He loved to have a good time He and my grandmother hosted so many parties in their basement it became known as the L and M club. He loved to dance, in his basement, at parties and especially at weddings. If he was at your wedding, no doubt your wedding album has a picture of Lenny dancing.

You would never know that this man suffered more grief in his life than he deserved, grief that would bring him to his knees. But he always lifted himself up and not only carried on but lived life so joyously than he spread joy to those around him.

Grampa Lenny had his quirks. He loved to keep records – on index cards or in little note books. He tracked the mileage to the Berkshires, the number of miles back. He tracked the mileage to John and Millie’s house, the number of miles back. He noted how many beers he drank at a party. He recorded his bodily functions, the bodily functions of his pets.

He was a perfectionist. He would say perfectionists do good work, but seldom finish. That’s why it took him 50 years to paint his house.

He put dates on everything – canned vegetables, light bulbs, batteries, his boxer shorts.

These little idiosyncrasies made Lenny unique, but what made him special was his devotion to his country, his community, his faith, his family and friends.

He cared deeply for his sons and daughter, his 7 brothers, grandchildren, great grandchildren, nieces and nephews. He made friends wherever he went and had dozens of adopted children and grandchildren.

His first love was Ann who was taken from him too soon. Recently I stumbled upon some pictures of him and Ann when they were dating or just married and you could see they were truly happy, truly in love.

He spent 50 years with Maisy. They were soul mates and could talk for hours, granted he did most of the talking. During the war, he wrote letter after letter to her. When she got sick, he went to her nursing home every day. When she was gone, he missed her terribly.

He left behind a symbol of his love for May. Before bed he would lift her picture off her dresser and kiss her good night. His hands were so bad that when he was putting it back, the metal frame would slip, and a corner would hit the dresser. Today when you pull back the linen on that dresser you’ll find hundreds of tiny marks, a circle of little indentations left by the corner of that frame, like a tiny woodpecker would leave. It’s a symbol of his love and loneliness later in life.

Grampa Lenny was not perfect. He had deep regrets, regrets that troubled him through much of his life. He made mistakes he wished could have been undone. And in his later years, he tried to correct them.

Even in his last few years, at Holy Trinity, while it was tough to see him like that, he was a joy to be with. He couldn’t talk, but he’d give you a wink or a little wave. He’d dance a little jig in his wheel chair.

The last couple years cemented Lenny’s legacy. All those years of helping others taught them how to help him. So many of his friends visited him. Donald and his family – especially Francis, Sue Marc, Jessica and Ann were among his most faithful visitors. And. no one was more devoted than Tom. Underneath that serious military, high school principal façade is the caregiver who each night gently shaved his father’s beard and combed his hair.

So goodbye, Gramp. We’ll miss you terribly. But everyone in this church is a better person for having shared life with you.

I adore woot. And wine.woot. And shirt.woot.

In the last Woot-Off I was lucky enough to get 3 “bags of crap”. This is what I got (and I think I did well):

1) JBL Reference 410 headphones
2) _50 Ways to Kill a Slug_ book
3) A Curious George bath time scrubber.
4) 2 Targus memory card cases.

Not bad for $8.

I also got a Bios Weather station- but that was a normal Woot-Off item, not a BoC.