Thursday, May 26, 2011

My ever expanding unread reading list:

- Strengths Finder 2.0
- The Art of Innovation
- Good to Great
- A Walk in the Woods
- Longitudes and Attitudes
- How We Are Hungry
- Ultramarathon Man
- Children of God
- You Shall Know our Velocity
- What is the What
- The Fountainhead
- The Lincoln Lawyer
- How to win friends and influence people
- How to start a homebased Bakery Business
- Currently Reading: Why We Buy: the Art of Shopping.

Wow it didn't seem like so many books until I wrote it all down.  Paperbackswap has been fueling this need to read.
Any books I should be reading that's not on the list? What books are you reading?

The Largest Thing You'll Look at Today

A map of the universe. well at least 95% of it.


'A team at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics has rendered a 3-D image of the cosmos out to a distance of 380 million light-years away. This is the biggest thing you're going to look at a picture of today.'
find out more here

Saturday, May 21, 2011

First Denver Race

Well if you don't know Denver is full of crazy runners, rain, sun or hail they are taking over the streets and parks.  Today was my first (of hopefully many!) races in and around Denver.  It was a great one to start of because it was for an organization I hope to work with in the future, Girls on the Run. It felt great to see these young girls, third to eight grade, accomplishing probably one of the hardest things, at least physically, they've tried to do.  Along with their coaches they train for a couple of months for this race (there's a fall race too) and it was motivating to see them smiling, chasing each other and providing encouragement to the other girls they trained without throughout the year. Here's the course and my results. Please keep in mind that this is the farthest I've run in about a month a half so I was a bit slow. (also dodging girls as they stop in the middle of the road to tie their shoes or pick something off the ground etc. but mostly me just being slow:)

Sunday, May 15, 2011

There's no such thing as a Free Lunch

Yesterday was a great experience, breaking up 'social trails' around Red Rocks and preparing them to be returned back to their natural state with native plants.  But it was TOUGH work.  All of us were out there throwing pick axes into red dirt packed down from hundreds of people walking on the same paths, then 'raking' dead grass on top of the broken up path, covering with small baseball sized rocks and finally sawing pine tree limbs apart and laying that on top.

I don't need a gym membership I just need to do more trail restoration.

Check out my roommates blog for some GREAT photos she took of the work we did.

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Free Lunch

Since moving to Denver I have been looking for new things to try, in an effort to both make friends and to just explore and enjoy Colorado.  This weekend I will be working on some trail restoration at the Red Rocks Amphitheater through Volunteers of ColoradoNot sure what to expect except a hot, bright sun and lots of hard work.  But with 125 volunteers I should be able to find some cool folks who live in the area to hopefully make the experience enjoyable.  If nothing else there will be free lunch.

Project Description:
Red Rocks Park attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. People are drawn to the world-recognized area by concerts, movies, hikes, and the iconic geographic features throughout the park. The abundance of visitors through the years has taken its toll on the natural environment. Visitors have created unsustainable trails by shortcutting from parking lots to the amphitheater and off-limits caves. These trails are unsafe due to their grade and disrupt soils which allow non-native plant species to establish themselves. Because of the lack of natural competitors in the area, these non-native plants out-compete native vegetation. Your hard work will help restore the park's natural habitat while ensuring that visitors to Red Rocks have safe and sustainable access to points of interest throughout the park.

Volunteers will be doing phase II of the Trading Post Trail restoration. The Trading Post Trail links park visitor to the trading post and the pathways leading to the amphitheatre and surrounding parking areas. This trail will offer safe and sustainable routes to points of interest in the park while preserving sensitive ecological features in the area.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Adaptu - Second Shot

About a month or so ago I heard about a site that perked my financial management ears called Adaptu.  The site is really a place to find financial information, ask questions, take polls etc. The difference between this site and most financial sites I've seen is that it's mostly other community members that help answer your questions or spark conversation.  I think I used the reference to wikipedia in my last post about the site.  It's user generated content at least from what I can see.

Pros:
- User friendly - I really like the layout of the site, it's clean and simple.
- Content is relatively fresh and new
- Each article provides you with 'next steps' some lead you to other articles while some take you to polls but it keeps your exploration ongoing

Cons:
- Points you to other sites (in some cases) instead of providing you with the service themselves (example).  Now this may be strategic if it's something they just don't do very well themselves.  It could also be based on what the community member knows about adaptu's capabilities.  Perhaps Matt doesn't know that Adaptu can provide you with retirement calculators (I don't know if it does or not)
- There aren't too many articles that catch my that are completely and totally unique. As in I've seen similiar topics and discussions on other sites.

Overall I really like Adaptu, especially now that it's not so slow.  They've really improved the speed of the site over the past month.  I'm chaning my rating from a thumbs down to a thumbs up.  Now go check it out.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Filling This New Apartment

At the risk of getting some eye rolls I'm going to say that this new apartment is by far the largest I've ever lived in.  And between my roommate and I we don't have any where near enough furniture to fill the place.  I should be able to post some photos (the POD is delivered tomorrow, finally! with my camera cable in it).  But pretty much this place echos is so empty.

I find it strangly exciting to search of cheap furniture.  Because there isn't a rush to have furniture I'm able to take some time and find things that I actually like.  so here's the running tally of merchandise so far:
- $160: 1 Queen size bed set (box spring + mattress + bed frame + head and foot boards)
- $20  : 1 bookshelf about 6 feet tall
- $0    : Bread Machine!
- $40  : Office Desk
- $0    : Sheets, Teapot and an Iron
- $10   : Free Kitchen table and 3 chairs - I put $10 because it will need to be repainted
- $16   : Two Free Large mirrors - these also I added $16 because I will need to pay someone to cut off a broken end of one of the mirrors.  I hoping to find some free frames to frame them in and hang them on the walls

Running Total = $246

NY to CO: 4 people, 3 cats, 2 cars, 1 big adventure

Thought I better update you on the actual adventure.  Highlights include:
- The Pony Express Rail Station in NE
- Kearney, NE -> where we thought the cookbook outlet was!
- D's Sewing Center & Quilt Shop in Peru, IL
- one stop for 'lost' cat (found hiding under the driver seat)


View NY to CO in a larger map