Capetown, South Africa

Cancelled Flight

Delta Cancelled Our Original Flight!

We arrived at O’Hare Airport in Chicago on Thursday, February 17 only to discover that the first leg of our trip to Capetown, South Africa had been cancelled. A few hours later we had a new itinerary that took us to Detroit, through Amsterdam and Johannesburg and on Capetown. We arrived 8 hours later than we had planned and ended up with a 4×4 Nissan pickup truck instead of a compact car, but it could have been worse (no car!).

Somehow, our flight from Amsterdam to Johannesburg had been upgraded to “business class” which we thoroughly enjoyed! The hardest part of the trip was spending Friday night in Johannesburg airport at a 24-hour Max & Beans coffee shop. But, we made it through, and after a good night of sleep on Saturday night, feel rested and ready to explore Capetown!

Our greatest joy was walking out from picking up our baggage in the Capetown airport and being greeted by our only daughter Kathryn, who has been in SA since October, 2010. It’s been great to be with her and have her take us to places she has explored, and to meet her friends.

View from our Room at the Sir David

View from our room at the Sir David Guesthouse

The weather has been incredible… sunny and in the 80′s with a nice breeze from the ocean. I can see and hear the ocean from where I am sitting in the Sir David Boutique Guesthouse. This is especially nice since we left freezing weather in Chicago with a couple feet of snow still on the ground from the blizzard of 2011.

I have so far been able to navigate the SA roads driving on the wrong side, with the steering wheel on the right side, and the clutch, brake and accelerator pedals arranged left to right like the US, but with the manual shifter being on my left, but the shift patterns like the US. It does get confusing at times, but somehow I’ve been able to allow my brain make the adjustments.

Goodbye Bryant Boiler

One of the joys of owning an older home – ours was built in 1915 – is that sooner or later you get to replace everything. Since 1984 we’ve replaced:

  • The roof (twice)
  • All the paint – inside and out
  • Many interior walls and ceilings
  • Water heaters (twice)
  • Kitchen and Bathroom fixtures
  • Pipes
  • Windows
  • Locks and Hardware
  • Screens
  • Appliances
  • Carpeting
  • Floors
  • Electrical wiring and panels
  • Doors
  • and we’ve added much more… a dormer, finished attic, air conditioning, office, landscaping, and exterior lighting.

Today we embark on another adventure – replacing the main heating source – the hot water boiler in our basement. The first slide below shows what the 25+ year old system looked like at 7:30 AM this morning. The blue box is the old Bryant boiler. The white cylinder is our water heater that I replaced a few months ago.

When an old boiler “goes,” all the water in the system drains out onto the floor of your basement. Plus, the best estimates are that the Bryant boiler is at best 55% efficient, meaning that 45% of the energy in the natural gas it burns goes up the chimney. So, we decided to take advantage of the $1,500 energy tax credit and put in a high efficiency boiler (90% plus efficient) before the end of 2010.

We purchased our new energy-efficient Utica Boiler through Berwyn-Western, who is also doing the installation. Our Utica Model is a UB90-200 which is a gas-fired, direct vent, condensing, hot water boiler. From the best we can tell, Berwyn-Western probably installed the Bryant boiler over 25 years ago. We’ve enjoyed working with Ray Gaull, our salesman and job foreman. He is in his 80′s and was one of the founding partners of the company. It’s nice to have a local business and experienced sales engineer who has been around that long!

Doing some research online, I discovered that a company called ECR manufactures these boilers for: Carrier, Bryant, Dunkirk, Utica and others. They are virtually identical except for the cosmetic paint colors and brand labels.

One of the things that makes this system more energy efficient is the addition of external air pipes for intake and exhaust of the combustion chamber. The photo gallery shows Adam installing the PVC pipes for this purpose, and the two new pipes poking out of our basement though the stucco, on the North side of our house.

2010 Christmas Party

I have the great privilege of getting up each morning and looking forward to going to work. Not everyone my age can say that. I am very fortunate to have a great team of people to work with at Headstand Media (Chicago web design). We celebrated our third year together recently at our office Christmas party.

2010 Ugly Christmas Sweaters

2010 Ugly Christmas Sweaters at Headstand Media

Here’s most of the current team at Headstand, dressed in their holiday finest! By the way, you can vote on the ugliest sweater over at Headstand Media! (David and I are not included!)

I should also add that David is one of my business partners in Headtsnad Media along with Don Kane (not pictured). The two other Headstand members not pictured are Steve Wilson and Vijay Donthi.

I also want to thank Marcie, Tony, Tracy and Aaron, Ellen, Michelle, Tom C., Peter K., Tom R., Todd A., Matt V., Justin, and so many others at the DKG affiliated companies for making “work” such a great place to be and thing to do!

Finally, I’d have to say that the greatest joy for me at this year’s party was having a special guest: my first and only grandson (to date), Kellen John Birkey! (with his parents who I also like very much).

Kellen John Birkey

AND… a special shout out to Mark Streder! You still got the touch! Thanks for the ride!

Little Kellen the First

Kellen John Birkey

Kellen John Birkey

Kellen John Birkey was born in the early afternoon of November 17, 2010 to my oldest son Taylor and daughter-in-law Laura. He is their first child to go full-term through the birthing process and he is also our first grandchild. Kellen is also the first great-grandchild of my Mother, Donna Birkey. As far as I know, he is the first person in my family to bear the Gaelic name, “Kellen” which means “slender.” He makes my other three children aunts and uncles for the first time in their lives.

That’s a lot of “firsts.

Life is made up of lots of “firsts” and this little one will be cherished as one. His arrival signifies many changes that will be happening more and more in our family. More “children” through marriages. More grandchildren from those marriages. More laughter, crying, general noise and activity again in our homes and at family gatherings.

This is the “first” time I am a grandfather, but I don’t really know yet experientially how to be that or what it will look like. First things first… Kellen must grow slowly day by day, and so must I. We must become grandson and grandfather over time and each learn from the other what it means. No doubt he will teach me many things. I look forward to the learning.

I welcome little Kellen the First into our family and look with anticipation toward building a strong grandfather/grandson relationship. I am truly a very rich man to be so blessed.

Barna Report on Christianity’s Contribution to Society

The Barna Group has just added a survey report to their website entitled “Americans Say Serving the Needy is Christianity’s Biggest Contribution to Society.” Some interesting results from the survey that I found interesting:

“In response to an open-ended question… one out of every five adults (19%) mentioned how Christians in the United States have helped poor or underprivileged people to have a better life.”

“The most frequent response, however, was the inability to think of a single positive contribution made by Christians in recent years. One out of every four respondents (25%) said they could not recall anything of this nature. Skeptics (34%), unchurched adults (33%), and Independent voters (29%) were more likely than other people to fall into this response category.”

The survey also pointed out some interesting patterns and connections.

  • Although many churches are worried about offending people by sharing the gospel, less than 1% of the population complained that Christians are too aggressive in their evangelistic efforts. This corresponds with recent Barna studies that have shown that relatively few Christians discuss their faith with non-Christians in ways intended to encourage non-believers to adopt the Christian faith.
  • The people who seemed least aware of either the positive or negative contributions of Christians were the largest segment of Christians: Notionals. Along with the unchurched, Notional Christians were the segment most likely to not be able to identify either a positive or negative contribution of American Christians. Notionals currently represent about half of all Christians in the U.S.
  • Most of the non-Christian segments of the population cited serving the poor and underprivileged as the best thing that Christians have done.
  • Overall, there was a more extensive and diverse list of complaints about Christians and their churches than there was of examples of the benefits they have provided to society.
  • It is ironic that Baby Boomers – the generation famous for Woodstock, sexual liberation, the rise of recreational drug use, introducing the culture of narcissism, and the explosion in the number of divorces – was also the generation most likely to applaud the morals and values that Christians have stood for in the U.S.

I had never heard the term “Notional” Christians before. “Notional Christians” are defined as those who consider themselves to be Christian but do not meet the born again criteria: made a personal commitment to Christ that is important in their life today and believe they will go to Heaven after they die because they confessed their sins and accepted Jesus Christ as their savior.

Some Personal Thoughts

It seems to me that perhaps Evangelicals have over reacted to the very small percentage in our society who complain about evangelistic efforts (less than 1%). Perhaps we need to be more bold in our willingness and approach to share our faith with others?

Perhaps my generation (Baby Boomers) applaud the morals and values that Christians have stood for because we are now reaping the consequences of the choices we made, and are realizing what moral bankruptcy produces?

The “Notionals” who are unable to identify either a positive or negative contribution of American Christians are living out their label. They seem to have no “notion” about what it means to be a Christian (a follower or imitator of Jesus Christ). I wish they would realize this and either become a real follower, or find another term for themselves other than “Christian.” It is people who call themselves “Christian” but who do not live like a “little Christ” that confuse the meaning of the term and make it harder on those who are serious about following Christ.

14 Things You Won’t Learn in School

I find this list to be very wise and insightful. It is the work of Charles J. Sykes, author of the 1996 book Dumbing Down Our Kids: Why American Children Feel Good About Themselves But Can’t Read, Write, or Add. This list formed the meat of Sykes’ 2007 book, 50 Rules Kids Won’t Learn in School: Real-World Antidotes to Feel-Good Education.

1: Life is not fair – get used to it!

2: The world doesn’t care about your self-esteem. The world will expect you to accomplish something BEFORE you feel good about yourself.

3: You will NOT make $60,000 a year right out of high school. You won’t be a vice-president with a car phone until you earn both.

4: If you think your teacher is tough, wait till you get a boss.

5: Flipping burgers is not beneath your dignity. Your Grandparents had a different word for burger flipping: they called it opportunity.

6: If you mess up, it’s not your parents’ fault, so don’t whine about your mistakes, learn from them.

7: Before you were born, your parents weren’t as boring as they are now. They got that way from paying your bills, cleaning your clothes and listening to you talk about how cool you thought you were. So before you save the rain forest from the parasites of your parent’s generation, try delousing the closet in your own room.

8: Your school may have done away with winners and losers, but life HAS NOT. In some schools, they have abolished failing grades and they’ll give you as MANY TIMES as you want to get the right answer. This doesn’t bear the slightest resemblance to ANYTHING in real life.

9: Life is not divided into semesters. You don’t get summers off and very few employers are interested in helping you FIND YOURSELF. Do that on your own time.

10: Television is NOT real life. In real life people actually have to leave the coffee shop and go to jobs.

11: Be nice to nerds. Chances are you’ll end up working for one.

12: Smoking does not make you look cool. It makes you look moronic. Next time you’re out cruising, watch an 11-year-old with a butt in his mouth. That’s what you look like to anyone over 20. Ditto for “expressing yourself” with purple hair and/or pierced body parts.

13: You are not immortal. (See Rule No. 12.) If you are under the impression that living fast, dying young and leaving a beautiful corpse is romantic, you obviously haven’t seen one of your peers at room temperature lately.

14: Enjoy this while you can. Sure parents are a pain, school’s a bother, and life is depressing. But someday you’ll realize how wonderful it was to be a kid. Maybe you should start now. You’re welcome.

Triumph Motorcycle Gang!

The official Triumph Motorcycle Gang has begun!

Dale Craft's 2009 Triumph America

Dale Craft and his 2009 Triumph America

Saturday, May 29, 2010 my friend Dale Craft and I visited the Triumph Demo Ride day at Motor Cycle Center in Villa Park, Illinois. We signed up for the first demo ride of the day, and left the parking lot with a group at 9:30 AM, Dale riding a 2010 Triumph America, and me riding a 2010 Triumph Thunderbird.

When we returned 45 minutes later, Dale and I met with John Acton of MCC, and took a look at a 2009 Triumph America they still had in stock. Another hour later, it was Dale’s. Funny thing is, it is black, just like my 2008 Triumph Bonneville.

So, yesterday on Sunday, May 30, 2010, we took a 1.5 hour ride together, ending at the Brown Cow in Forest Park. As we sat enjoying our milk shakes, we jokingly established the Triumph Motorcycle Gang… the founding first 2 members! To join, you must ride a black Triumph! :-)

Our maiden run:

West on Chicago Ave. in Oak Park, through River Forest to 1st Ave. South on 1st to I-55 heading West. We exited at Mannheim/45 going South. We took the Archer Ave exit and followed Route 171 north through a number of towns. At Joliet Road we headed west again over to Mannheim, north through LaGrange to Cermak/22nd, then East to 1st Ave. Then we headed North to Roosevelt Rd, east to Des Plaines Ave, North into Forest Park. At Madison we headed East into the business district and parked across the street from the Brown Cow!

WebSmart TV: How to Market on the Web

How to Market on the Web

WebSmart TV video: How to Market on the Web

The web guru’s at Headstand Media have released their latest video in the WebSmart TV blog series where each video explains the basics of the web in about a minute. The latest video is titled: “How to Market on the Web.” You won’t want to miss this one because this video contains the most valuable and critical information shared by the web marketing experts at Headstand Media to date!

The video covers 5 simple principles to marketing on the web:

  1. Ideate
  2. Define Back-End Paradigms
  3. Cultivate Cross-Media Benchmarks
  4. Curb Your Infomediaries
  5. Execute Leading-Edge Initiatives

Headstand Media makes a strong case for why these principles and steps are so mission-critical and important in today’s web 2.0 world!

Go watch it, and then share it with your friends in the business world who really need to know this information!

Other WebSmart TV Videos:

What is WordPress?

The Headstand Media team has posted a new video at WebSmart TV answering the question: “What is WordPress?

I’ve been using WordPress for a couple years now as a website content management system (watch WebSmart TV for: What is a CMS?), with great success. Not only does BirkeyBlog run on WordPress, but so do many other family and friends sites including:

And many others that I have been involved with at Headstand Media such as:

Not only is it a great tool for the reasons mentioned in the WebSmart video, it is also extremely easy to learn and use on an every day basis. Everyone I have demonstrated WordPress to has been able to learn how to use it well, and have experienced growth and benefits to themselves and their business or organization as a result. So far, I have never had someone abandon it, or experience great difficulty because of using it. It’s simply a great tool, and perhaps on of the web’s best kept secrets.