Monday, April 9, 2018

Tulips Revisited

Schuh Farm is an eclectic mix of produce, flowers, collectibles, and ice cream
We decided that after I finished work on Monday, we'd head back over to RoozenGaarde to see how far the blooms had advanced in three days.  The weather cooperated and greeted us with sunshine.  Our first stop was Schuh Farms.  They specialize in rhubarb, strawberries, raspberries, loganberries, tayberries, asparagus, peas, lettuce, corn, lettuce, green beans, pickling cukes, winter squash, cabbage, pumpkins, and much more.

Laura happy to be out.
I might be throwing too much away.  In the future, I'm screwing it to the fence.
A few of the critters to remind folks it is a farm.
The gardens are less formal when compared to other places.😉
The ice cream was very good
Everyone should have a combination wheelbarrow, trash can, and water pump.

A Tulips Redo

An extended stay, we had three weeks, provides one the opportunity to observe both change and patterns.  While only three days had passed since our previous visit, it was amazing to see how much more of the gardens at Roozengaarde had come into bloom.  Getting to see it in the bright sunshine was an added bonus because the colors really popped.

Tulips.com
Traditional and non-traditional tulips
Laura and Dale Mack at RoozenGaarde
An interesting combination that works
All for the love of flowers
Angelique tulips
The school bus is a decorative fixture
Queen's Day daffodils
Laura amongst the daffodils and tulips

Crown of Dynasty with red Kung Fu

Kung Fu and pink Crown of Dynasty
Killing those boots
Yellow Golden Apeldoorn and Inra Zalm
One of the many borders planted in the gardens
Yellow Monte Carlo and Muscari Latifolium
When you visit the gardens, you will see lots of picture taking
Swaths of color are one of the features the gardens are known for
There are a lot of children at the gardens
Amazing variety
In quest of the perfect shot
Vibrant is the word I'd use to describe the colors
As a gardener, I love to incorporate objects into the garden.  The weathered stump below is perfectly nestled amongst the flowers, lending a sense of age to the garden.
 
A palette to choose from
Laura at RoozenGaarde
Laura and I had a wonderful time.  It was well worth the second trip to the gardens to see all the changes.  Ah, the advantages of an extended stay in the motorhome.


Live well, Laugh often, Love much

Friday, April 6, 2018

Tulips at Sunset

RoosenGaarde Flowers & Blubs
There are no carnival rides, or actors entertaining the public, and yet the annual Tulip Festival in the Skagit Valley attracts both young and old.  This year our visit had us walking the fields and gardens just as the blooms were beginning.  Contributing to the delay, were the cooler temperatures, as evidenced by the snow in the mountains around the valley.

Tulips about to bloom, while others have well underway
I love the fact that people just come for the flowers.  There are lots of young families with smiling faces, enjoying the sheer spectacle of the event.  From fields neatly organized into rows of tulips and daffodils, to display gardens that highlight the skills of master gardens, the festival inspires one to dream about what is possible.

The home of Tulips.com
A stump plays host to a rainbow
Dragonflies out of glass insulators and steel rebar
While I love the classic tulip shape, RoozenGaarde introduces the visitor to a multitude of shapes and colors.  Here are some close-up of just some of the variety.

Crown of Dynasty tulips
Magic Price tulip
Queen's Day daffodil
Plaisir Greigii tulip
Stunning are some of the color combinations created by RoosznGaarde.  The gardens are famous for the living works of art, mostly executed in flowers.  Even though we were early for the peak bloom, there was still lots to see.

Praestans Fusilier tulips mixed with King of the Blues Hyacinth
Tulips and daffodils
Just starting to bloom
New Design tulips
One of the many designs sprinkled throughout the gardens
Swathes of color
Laura Mack and Debbi DeMaris
Debbi & Jim DeMaris.  The parents of one of our son's (Sean) high school classmates.
Laura & Dale Mack
Tulips growing in a tree

La Conner

After walking around the gardens, we headed over to the nearby town of La Conner for lunch at Nell Thorne with the Demaris'.  The gray morning had given way to sunshine by the time we sat down for lunch.

Dale & Laura Mack on the Channel Passage walkway in La Conner, WA
Channel Passage overlooking Swinomish Channel
Back at Fidalgo Bay RV Resort.  Cap Sante in the driver's windshield.
A typical afternoon in paradise
Kayaking off the gravel beach is popular
One of the things that changed about Fidalgo Bay RV Resort when compared with 2016 is the berm that separates the campsites from the beach.  Lots of gravel had been brought in to raise the height, and broaden the width of the top.  My understanding is that some past winter storms had pushed water into the sites at high tide.

Waterfront sites in 2018
Waterfront sites in 2016
During our three week stay this year, we had a lot of rain.  In anticipation of the conditions, I parked the motorhome on the leftmost edge of the pad in order to maximize the width of the gravel walkway leading to the car.

In site #13

Sunset

We ended our day of tulips, daffodils, and friends with a visit to Washington Park for the sunset.  With a dozen parking spots nearby off the park's loop road, this is one of our favorite sunset viewing spots.  And just like occurred in the movie "Notting Hill" Laura invited me to sit with her on the bench inscribed with the memory of another couple who loved this spot.

Green Point at Washington Park, Anacortes overlooking Rosario Strait
Green Point looking south
It had been a wonderful day.  While every place we visited was familiar, we saw new things and appreciated old things with new eyes.

Sunset
As the sun dropped behind the peaks of the San Juan Islands, we reflected on our good fortune to be able to visit such a magical place.  Unlike our current city which always has a background of white noise, Anacortes goes very quiet at night.  I mean eerily quiet.  Combine that with the low light pollution, and being outdoors in Anacortes can be quite an experience.


Live well, Laugh often, Love much

Sunday, April 1, 2018

Working from the Road and Afternoon Adventures

Mobile Office
I'm employed by a major US computer technology company, and I have worked from home for the past eight years.  Prior to my current role, I managed R&D teams developing products, where I was accustom to lots of face to face meetings.  With working from home, everything became virtual.  While the loss of body language cues required placing more emphasis on listening skills, I quickly found that as an introvert, my productivity shot up.  Gone were the non-work related hallway conversations, and other interruptions.  Oddly, concerns about staying connected and being available never materialized.  While email continues to be an important communications medium, instant messaging applications like Microsoft Skype have created the illusion that anyone is just a few keystrokes away.

Today my team isn't co-located at a single company site, so connecting virtually is a requirement.  Furthermore, the R&D and Marketing groups my team supports are located around the globe.  A very busy day for me can start with a team in Israel, and follow the sun, until I finish with a team in Bangalore, India.  Such a schedule would have been tough in the past, but today, because I work from home, I can take a couple of hours off to accomplish non-work related activities, and then get back online and finish my day will a team just starting their workday.  My job doesn't demand this type of crazy schedule every day, but it's handy when needed.

So what does this have to do with RVing?  When your only work dependencies are a laptop and Internet access, working from anywhere becomes a win-win for both the company and the employee.  I gain the freedom to combine vacations and work, while my company leverages my thirty-seven years of engineering and management experience at the company, across multiple teams around the world.  That type of reach and impact just wouldn't be possible in a traditional straight eight type of work schedule.  And to those that think employees will just goof off if they work from home, that's not what the data shows.  At the end of the day, you still have deliverables that are promised to someone (your manager, colleagues, other teams you support, etc.), so someone is going to notice if the work isn't getting done.  

Maintaining focus while working at home isn't a problem.  In fact, the person who underwent the biggest adjustment wasn't me, it was my wife.  She was accustomed to me being gone during the day.  It took her a few weeks to stop coming into my home office and wanting to start a discussion when I was in the middle of a phone or video conference.  Today if she sees me walking around the house or the motorhome with a headset on, she assumes I'm on a call.

Beats a cubicle any day.


Our 1996 Safari Sahara is a model 3530 with the center bathroom and mid-door entry.  The two pocket doors that close off the bathroom create a nice sound buffer when Laura is in the bedroom and I'm in the main cabin on a phone conference.  Because I'm in so many calls during the day, Laura purchased and wears a Bluetooth over-the-ears headset with noise cancellation technology so she can share the main cabin with me during the day.

1996 Safari Sahara Floorplan
I'm a morning person, so when we are at home that translates into me getting up at 4 am, in the pool at 5 am for 2500 meters of laps, and then at my desk by 6:30 am.  By the time lunch occurs, I've already been working 5.5 hours.  When we travel, the lack of a swim just pushes my work start time ahead a couple of hours.  This results in me getting off of work at 1 pm if I'm looking to only put eight hours in.  The benefit for Laura and me is that we have the whole afternoon to explore, which suits Laura fine because she isn't a morning person.

RVing versus the To-Do List

My first attempt to combine RVing and work occurred in July 2006 during a trip to Fort Worden State Park (parks.state.wa.us/511/Fort-Worden), in Port Townsend, WA (ptguide.com).  There was no Internet in the campsites, so I'd walk to the Commons building, which was equipped with free Wi-Fi, to download my email.  Phone conferences in the confines of the tent trailer, not to mention the thinness of the walls, wasn't practical, so that meant that our Honda Odyssey became my "cone of silence" for calls.

Working on the Road 2006
Despite the rudimentary tools for working remotely, they worked.  I gained the advantage of returning to the office and not facing a pile of email, and most of it was accomplished in the wee hours of the morning when I was going to be up anyway, and Laura would still be sleeping.

The biggest revelation about working remotely has been how much more "living" gets crammed into a day when compared to being at home.  Unlike being at home, where once the workday ends my thoughts change to my To-Do list of home projects, when we are RVing, my thoughts change to adventure.  Where do we want to go?  What do we want to explore?  While one could behave similarly at home, there's just something about RVing that encourages a philosophy of carpe diem, "seize the day".

Carpe Diem

A windy day after work is not typically the conditions that motivate me to leave the house, but combine it with RVing and scenery that just invites one to explore, and I'm out the door.  I headed over to the Ferry Terminal, and then onto Washington Park to check out what the wind was doing to Rosario Strait.

West side of Anacortes
Washington State Ferry Terminal, Anacortes



Looking across Rosario Strait.
Green Point, Washington Park


Burrows Channel Viewpoint.  Skyline Marina in the background.


On this day, RVing prevented me from working on my To-Do list of home projects, so the weeds got a little taller, and the lawn a little shaggier, but I definitely fit more living into my twenty-four hours.


Live well, Laugh often, Love much