Our yellow caboose car stops just arrived, strapped to a wood pallet in a big truck. One of
the formal recommendations of our Civil Engineer on how to secure WP668 from moving in an
earthquake was to use car stops. (See my blog entry of
9 Feb 2007 for two examples of the minimal effect of earthquakes on trains.)
A car stop is a fancy bolt-on steel wedge that secures the wheel to the
rail without damaging either. It is a semi-permanent wheel chock. We bought
our pair from
Aldon. This set weighs in at 248 pounds. In train museums, we have seen
simple chains and wooden wedges used to prevent rolling stock from unauthorized
excursions. What we just bought is the official version, suitable for approval
by the city building inspector.
Caboose Car Stops Arrived
Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains
Fencing in the Caboose (and Dogs)
When we
moved in our caboose recently, we had to take down parts of the back fence
and the neighbor’s gate. We had a temporary plastic orange net fence stretched
across the opening but that was not keeping the dogs in.
Last Saturday night, Romeo and Juliet jumped the fence and were off in great
excitement to explore the neighborhood,
Jessica and John and I running after them. Of course, the dogs got lost when they
ran beyond our block so they were upset and scared. Romeo and Juliet walk nicely on
their leashes but we did not have leashes with us when they jumped the fence.
Carrying 75 pound dogs several blocks home is no fun.
Romeo and Juliet were born from a local stray who crept under the garage at
our old house to have her puppies. There were 7 pups in the litter with at
least 3 fathers. Two were black, two were white, and three were brown. We
describe them as a very local breed: “Palo Alto Shorthairs”. After much begging
by Jessica and Paul, we ended up keeping a white and a brown and my daughter named
them. Romeo and Juliet are good watch dogs and very sweet but poor at
remembering their commands when not on a leash.
On Sunday, John and our neighbors Jim and Felix installed the new fence –
7 foot tall redwood boards with a lattice top. The new gate and latticework still
need to go in. It is about 5 feet from the end
of WP668’s coupler to the fence and we are discussing what kind of plantings
or walkways will go around that end. We are glad to have the caboose (and
dogs!) fenced in. The
Willow Glen Resident news story about our caboose move is due out at the
end of this week. We don’t want WP668 to become an attractive nuisance:
the tall fence will help us manage visitors.
Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains
After-Prom Party
My soon-to-be-High-School-graduate daughter Jessica went with Matt to the Harker
Senior Prom last Friday night. At midnight, after the dance, she and 14 of her
friends came over to our house for their after-prom party.
When Jessica and I first discussed this event, it was going to be just a few
teenagers coming over for a quiet evening. However, it seems our family was offering
the best alternative to some of the wilder parties being planned, so we
ended up with a crowd. The kids who asked to come to our house were those who
wanted to watch a video (and snuggle with their prom dates in the dark), play
computer games, drink sodas, eat cheetos, chips, and salsa, and hang out in the hot tub.
I talked with three worried parents who called several days in advance to find
out about this party their teen wanted to attend. By the third conversation, I knew to
answer the questions up front: adult chaperons present and taking notice, no drugs, no drinks,
boys and girls sleep on separate floors, we can provide rides to and from prom, and I
would try to get everyone into their sleeping bags by 3 a.m. (one teen to a bag, one bag
to a teen).
Our guests all arrived looking gorgeous in their formal dresses and suits. There was
much mutual assistance from the girls to get unlaced and unzipped and makeup off and
flowers unpinned. The clothes bar over our washer and dryer was full of
elegant clothes carefully hung and folded. Some of them had even brought garment
hanging bags to protect their glad rags. Many of them changed right into their
sleeping clothes.
They were well behaved and as quiet as they could manage given their high spirits and
joy in being together. I asked that they not wake up Jessica’s little brother
or he would want to join in. They enthusiastically agreed. More than a dozen
kids in our hot tub began to look like teenager soup. I sent them to bed before 4 a.m.
More than half of of our guests had forgotten to bring sleeping bags so we loaned out ours
and provided quilts for the rest.
There were some begging to be able to stay up quietly to play video games because they
were not tired and sleeping was boring but eventually everyone settled down.
The girls giggled for long enough in Jessica’s room that one of the boys came up to
tell them to be quiet!
They started to wake up again at 8 a.m. and were making cinnamon buns and pancakes when
I had to leave for a church meeting in Salinas. John got to manage the morning party
shift. When I returned home that afternoon, all
that was left was a big heap of bedding and wet towels. I am still not done washing
and drying quilts and sleeping bags. They left behind 2 swimsuits (1 girl’s, 1 boy’s),
2 sets of silver ear hoops, 1 big blue towel, and 1 Google-brand chapstick. So far,
we have found owners for everything except the towel and the chapstick. Everyone
seemed to have a very good time.
Filed under Home & Family
Caboose Restoration Started
Ever since our 91-year-old WP668 caboose was lifted by crane into our backyard
a week ago, we have been working on her. John has adjusted the doors
(which now close tight again) and replaced most of the broken window
glass. The door locks work but need some alignment because of the
shifting from WP668 resting on ties in storage to sitting on her own
proper trucks and wheels. We will probably have replacement windows made
but not for some time.
Paul and Jessica have been sweeping and
vacuuming out the cobwebs and dust, picking up nails and screws of every
size and condition in generations of designs, and pounding in nails that
wiggled up out of their holes. We have put down sheets of plywood over much of
the floor since that is in the worst condition but will be the last
thing replaced.
We have a small pile of wood trim and metal pieces that
go somewhere to be determined, plus the ladders, steps, and battery box that were
cut off for transport, and the metal ventilator (smokestack?) from the roof.
All of the trim and little bits will go into a storage box until we need them
during restoration.
The windows are high enough that we get a great view over the fence of the
garden next door so some curtains will go up soon.
The big caboose projects for this summer (before it rains again) are:
- Building new steps and a deck (meeting San Jose Building Department
requirements) - Putting the metal skin on the roof (working with our neighbor and roofer,
Felix Quintero, 408-592-4341, San Jose, CA) - Painting the exterior (working with Avi Lenchner, who has painted two
houses for us, of Avi Decorative Painting, 650-329-0770, Menlo Park, CA) - Filling the wall hole where a prior owner started installing a window,
and replacing the front of one of the two bay windows where that prior owner
started to put in a door - Getting San Jose Building Department permission to hook up the utilities
Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains
Almost 100 SEED Blogs
We have been thinking up ways to make the new external-to-Sun SEED Engineering
mentoring program web page (at
http://research.sun.com/SEED/ ) richer and more interesting. So far, we have
added a page for SEED Program Bloggers at
http://research.sun.com/SEED/seed.blogs.html. We started with a list
of about 40 blogs and asked the SEED mentors, managers, and participants if they
wanted to be included. We now have almost 100 blogs on the list! I had
no idea there were so many and I am enjoying catching up on events as I read them.
All of these bloggers work for Sun. Some of them work in the same group but many do not.
Bloggers on the list come from all parts of Sun (Software, Systems, Sun Labs, Legal,
Sales, Service, Storage, etc.) and from many countries. Some are executives, others are
managers, and still others are individual contributors. The list order is alphabetical
by URL. The name of the blog is as given on the blog itself (but some have no name).
Some bloggers have different sites for different subjects – when known, these are listed
together. I will update the SEED Program Bloggers web page from time to time. Some
blogs are updated frequently and others more rarely. Please contact the individual
blogger with questions or comments about their content.
Filed under Mentoring & Other Business
WP668 Caboose Move Videos
The 91-year-old WP668 caboose was lifted by crane on Friday into our San Jose, California, backyard. On Saturday and Sunday, we trimmed branches broken during the lift and started work to replace the back fence. Two videos of the big move have been posted on YouTube:
- “Caboose Move” by Samuel Fineberg (9 min. 24 sec.), 11 May 2007.
- “WP668 – crane lifts caboose into backyard – webcam” by John Plocher (1 min 9 sec), 14 May 2007.
If you want to receive Katysblog posts by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! button (upper right on Katysblog home).
Images Copyright 2007 by Katy Dickinson, John Plocher, and Danek Duvall
Updated 3 April 2020
Cantilena choir’s 1st unanimous superior at CMEA
We just got email from Susan Nace (Harker’s superb music
teacher and the director for
Cantilena, Harker’s Upper School Women’s Choir) that
on Saturday Cantilena won its first Unanimous Superior at the
CMEA (California Association for Music Education)
choir competition! The judges comments were:
- Stunning balance! Rich singing (you put many college choirs to shame with the high level of phrasing and expression we heard from you today.)
- Confident singing.
- Lovely, warm tone, mature sound.
- Fine understanding of the music.
- Very musical and sensitive.
- Great discipline and decorum.
- Tone production is beautiful.
My daughter Jessica said the choir worked hard for this CMEA rating, including a sight
reading test in which Ms. Nace had just two minutes to prepare and Cantilena had five minutes
to practice a new piece of choral music. Jessica has a big voice and has been very focussed
on improving her vocal range and control this year so she had extra work to stay balanced with
the other women’s voices.
Even though Jessica was not accepted into any of the college music
programs to which she applied, earning a personal CMEA Superior last year and a
CMEA Superior (with Command Performance) again this March plus being part of Cantilena when
they were awarded a Unanimous Superior by CMEA is a great way to end her High School
senior year as a member of Harker’s Conservatory. I think Jessica will very much miss being
part of this fine choir. We hope she can join an equally excellent choir and work with
another great voice teacher at
Carnegie Mellon starting in August.
Filed under News & Reviews

