Mision Cristo Rey

At the end of 2007, I was touched and honored to be invited
to the annual awards service for

Mision Cristo Rey
, a Spanish-speaking congregation in Watsonville,
CA. Cristo Rey was one of the missions of the
Episcopal Diocese of El Camino Real
with which I worked
when I was Convener of the Department of Missions (2003-2007).
It was a triumph when, through the efforts of a great many
dedicated supporters, Cristo Rey was finally

welcomed into union as a diocesan Mission
at the October 2007 convention.
The plaque is “For the great effort on helping us become a mission. Thank you
– we will always remember your hard work!”

Rev. Mario Macias Hauttecoeur

at Mision Cristo Rey

Rev. Mario Macias Hauttecoeur at Mision Cristo Rey
photo: copyright 2007 John Plocher
Rev. Mary Lou McKenney, Padre Mario,

and me

Padre Mario, Rev. Mary Lou McKenney, Katy Dickinson - Mision Cristo Rey
photo: copyright 2007 John Plocher
Plaque from

Mision Cristo Rey

Plaque from Mision Cristo Rey
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2007 by John Plocher and Katy Dickinson

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Sun Heart Walk 2007 Awards

On 9 January 2008, the
American Heart Association
had a party for sponsors of its Silicon Valley Heart Walk 2007 event
(which was held on 16 September 2007 at De Anza in Cupertino, CA).

Sheri Kaneshiro
represented Sun at the party and came home with
two awards. The two plaques are now in the Sun Menlo Park Fitness
Center. Sun’s CTO

Greg Papadopoulos
sponsored our Heart Walk participation.
See my
Sun’s Heart Walk – Photos
blog entry for more. The awards are:

    • Heart Walk Silicon Valley 2007 – Top New Company – Sun Microsystems
    • Heart Walk Silicon Valley – Super Star Area Sponsor – Sun Microsystems 2007
Two Heart Walk Plaques

for Sun

Heart Walk Silicon Valley 2007 - Sun Microsystems Awards
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Sheri Kaneshiro

with Sun’s plaques

Heart Walk Silicon Valley - Super Star Area Sponsor - 2007 - Sun Microsystems
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008 by Katy Dickinson

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Filed under Mentoring & Other Business

PreSEED Mentoring Program Announced

Tanya Jankot and I have been working for many months to develop a
new version of Sun’s popular worldwide Engineering mentoring program.
Yesterday, PreSEED was announced to the 5 Software Director groups which
will be in the pilot term! Hooray! PreSEED applications will be
accepted starting 27 January 2008. The web pages will be available for
review but not submission in advance of 27 January 2008. The first fifty
complete and verified applicants will be accepted.

Software Chief Technologists

Bob Brewin
(Distinguished Engineer and Vice President) and

Tim Marsland
(Fellow and Vice President) are PreSEED’s pilot term Champions.

Greg Papadopoulos
(Chief Technology Officer and Executive Vice President of Research and Development) is the SEED
program executive sponsor.

What is PreSEED?

PreSEED is a new mentoring pilot program aimed at helping Sun
Engineering staff who have been getting almost all “Sun Standard” annual
performance ratings onto a path which may lead them to higher
engagement. One way to think of PreSEED is as a preliminary to the
successful SEED Engineering worldwide mentoring program. Since 2001,
the CTO-sponsored SEED program has a proven track record of strong
diversity, very high satisfaction, high regard by management, and high
retention. SEED participants as a group earn more promotions and higher
performance ratings than Sun overall. The first PreSEED pilot term
is March-September 2008.

PreSEED is not a rotation program, meaning that the participant
continues to report to their home manager throughout the program. During
the 6-month PreSEED term, Participants (Mentees) work with Mentors for
1 to 2 hours every two weeks (or more, they want).

Why create PreSEED?

Research indicates mentoring of “solid citizens” like Sun Standard
performers will have a greater advantage to Sun’s bottom line than
mentoring of the rising stars who are already the focus of SEED. The
SEED program staff regularly receives many suggestions for improvement
and expansion. PreSEED is being piloted to meet some of the most
common, long-standing, and energetic of these suggestions.

Selection

PreSEED’s four General Selection Criteria are:

    1. All Participants are in Engineering.
    2. Only regular Sun employees may participate.
    3. All annual performance ratings in the last 3 years must be “Sun
      Standard” (a 2) or better.
    4. Manager support is required.

More information on the SEED Engineering mentoring program is available at

http://research.sun.com/SEED/

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Filed under Mentoring & Other Business

Getting Ready for Easter

It is still January but California’s Spring is well started. My Narcissus
are already in full bloom and the Daffodils are poking their round green
noses out of the soil. Even though yesterday was only the 2nd Sunday in Epiphany
(Lent starts in 2 weeks), I am getting ready for Easter. Every year, we have a herd
of little kids over for our annual Easter Egg Hunt and it takes time to
prepare my garden. During this 3-day weekend, I have been cutting (there is a
big heap of trimmings from Mexican Sage, Nandina, Trumpet Vine, Star Jasmine,
Cannas, Rosemary, Lavender, Fountain Grass, Bougainvillea, Lantana, and Dracena
waiting for pickup on the street), planting (Easter lilies and day lilies), rearranging
border rocks, and weeding. Paul and I cut down two big Dracena limbs and threw
them down the Guadalupe River bank behind our house. I hope they will root there.
I have set up our annual date with the Arborist to re-shape some of our more exuberant
trees.

John has been working on the bay windows of WP668, our backyard caboose. He
installed the wood facing on one window and is about half done building
the housing for the window frame and facing on the other bay. It rained on and
off all weekend so we know the leak on one of the bay windows is still with us.
I picked up most of the wood that fell down into the granite ballast when
we replaced WP668’s floor. I also went over most of the ballast with a big magnet
looking for bolts and nails, then moved most of the scraps of lumber from around
WP668 to the wood pile. I hope to make our side garden around the caboose part of
the egg hunt for the first time.

On 5 February, our parish, St. Andrew’s
Episcopal Church
will be holding its Shrove Tuesday Pancake Races in Saratoga. This
is one of our family’s favorite church festivals and we are helping to manage the event.
My daughter is sad she can’t join us this year (she is at Carnegie Mellon in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania) but she wrote out her
“How to run a Shrove Tuesday Pancake supper and race”
instructions in case
anyone wants to hold their own pre-Lent celebration. Here is a photo of John in his red
apron and carrying his frying pan announcing the Pancake Races in church yesterday:

John Announcing Shrove Tuesday Pancake Races - St. Andrew's Saratoga
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Image Copyright 2008 by Katy Dickinson

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Filed under Home & Family

Old Quilts

I learned to appreciate and collect old
quilts
from my mother (
Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson
), who was born and raised in East Tennessee. She was
taught to quilt by my Great Grandmother (Ellen Bolli Van Gilder). I still have the
“Grandmother’s Flower Garden” pattern baby quilt my mother sewed as a child.

When my children outgrew asking for cartoon character bedding (we had dinosaurs,
Little Mermaid, Pokemon, and Harry Potter sets, among others), I started putting pieced
patchwork quilts on their beds. I have found eBay
an excellent source for quilts but I have also purchased quilts from antique dealers and
direct from the women who created them. Since I use the quilts on beds, I almost always
buy quilts which are in solid condition, machine pieced, and less than 100 years old.

Quilts which are “collectible” are often unused, because much of their value is based
on their being “like new”. I prefer to use old quilts, enjoying the
softness of the fabric after many washings. Quilt expert
Shelly Zegart provides the
following “Condition Listings” for the quilts she sells to banks, hospitals, airports, universities and private collectors:

    • Mint: Quilt is unwashed, like new condition. No stains, holes, color fading, or wear. No restorations or repairs. All seams and stitching intact. No batting shift noted.
    • Excellent: Quilt has never been washed. May have minimal fading or staining. No holes or tears. All stitching and seams are intact. May have some batting shift.
    • Good: Quilt may have been washed. May have some fading, staining, or discoloration. May have some age appropriate wear to fabric or binding. May have been repaired or restored. May have some loose stitching or open seams. May have a batting shift.
    • Fair: Quilt has been washed. May have fading, wear, and or staining. May have a small tear or hole. May have loose stitching or open seams. Batting may be shifted or exposed.
    • Poor: Obvious wear, staining, and or fading noted. May have tears, holes, or fraying. Loose stitching and or open seams may be present.

When I look at a quilt, the basic elements I consider are:

    • Color and design: overall pattern, consistency, quilting vs. piecing as parts of pattern
    • Quality of work: hand vs. machine, stitches per inch, pattern execution
    • Fabric and batting content: cotton, wool, synthetic fabrics and thread
    • Condition: stains, holes, fraying, patches, smell, fading, fragility
    • History and provenance of that particular quilt
    • Price

My favorite quilt patterns are log cabin (because it can be executed so many ways)
and broken star. Below are photos of some of my quilts:

Embroidered and quilted

Embroidered and quilted - first old quilt I ever bought
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Quilting and embroidery detail

Quilting detail - first old quilt I ever bought
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Bear claw pattern

Bear claw pattern quilt
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Bear claw quilting detail

Bear claw quilt - quilting detail
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Tagged border

Tagged border quilt
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Quilting detail

Tagged border quilt detail
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Flying geese pattern

Flying geese pattern quilt
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Flying geese detail

Flying geese quilt detail
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Log cabin pattern

Log cabin pattern quilt
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Log cabin detail

Log cabin quilt detail
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Log cabin pattern

Log cabin quilt pattern
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Log cabin detail

Log cabin quilt detail
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Amish log cabin pattern

Amish log cabin pattern quilt
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Log cabin detail

Log cabin quilt detail
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Windmill pattern

Windmill quilt pattern
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Pinwheel pattern

Pinwheel pattern quilt detail
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Wedding ring pattern

Wedding ring pattern quilt
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Amish broken star pattern

Amish broken star pattern quilt
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Broken star pattern

Broken star pattern quilt
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Sunbonnet Sue pattern

Sunbonnet Sue pattern quilt
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Sunbonnet Sue detail

Sunbonnet Sue quilt detail
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008 by Katy Dickinson

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Filed under News & Reviews

Railroad Equipment on eBay

From time to time, my husband John and I go hunting through the
eBay auction offerings for a
missing piece of railroad equipment for WP668, our backyard caboose.
There is something validating about the fact that there are 22,972 items
now for sale in the “Railroadiana, Trains” eBay category: we are not
alone in our interest in historic trains!

Last year, we bought a pair of original caboose marker lamps to fit into the
slots at either end of WP668 (see photos below). We are lethargically searching
for another pair for the other side. We paid $225 for our pair. I noticed another
larger pair sold recently for $1,242.50 (eBay Item number: 320198430842) and a third
pair of marker lights is now being offered for $550 starting bid (eBay Item number:
250205876513).

First, even after 9 years of regular eBay use, I am surprised that so much historical
railroad paraphernalia is for sale. Second, the prices are remarkably high. Clearly,
the market for obscure antiquities is both deep and rich.


WP668 caboose marker light 2007
photo: copyright 2007 John Plocher

WP668 caboose marker light 2007
photo: copyright 2007 John Plocher

WP668 caboose marker light 2007
photo: copyright 2007 John Plocher

Images Copyright 2007 by John Plocher

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Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains

Caboose Floor Photos

Today, we finished replacing the rotten and burned floor section of WP668, our backyard
caboose. We now have a solid and flat floor plus a big pile of 91-year-old
firewood.

Work in progress on WP668:

    • Repaint original exterior markings (started)
    • Paint new ladders yellow
    • Electrical inspection and sign off
    • Install stairway balusters and handrails (being made now)
    • Stairway inspection and sign off
    • Restore wood facing of bay window
    • Paint the inside
    • Install new bay window frames
    • Install the metal roof covering
    • Install roof walk
    • Cover the floor with linoleum
Rotten floor

coming out

WP668 caboose - rotten floor coming out 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Burn mark

on floor

WP668 caboose - burn mark on floor 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Cutting off

floor bolts

WP668 caboose - cutting off floor bolts 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Putting in new

joists

WP668 caboose - putting in new joists 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Cut edges of

remaining floor

WP668 caboose - cut edges of remaining floor 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Rotten beam

cross section

WP668 caboose - Rotten beam cross section 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Open floor –

work in progress

WP668 caboose - open floor - work in progress 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
John on

new floor

WP668 caboose - John on new floor 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Evergreen pear

blossoms with caboose

Evergreen pear blossoms with WP668 caboose 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008 by Katy Dickinson

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Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains