12.31.2008
Happy New Year!
I have a lot of goals for 2009. So far there are about 17 and the list is growing. I'm not going to throw them all out on the table now, but they might show up through out the year.
I'm a planner. I love to-do lists, but more importantly I love crossing things off my to-do list. My work life is no different. There I'm driven by the objective (big picture goal) which is supported by strategy (specific details). The strategy is broken down into individual tactics that make it all happen.
So for my top three goals of 2009 I'm making a plan. You know, once I decide what they are. I've never done this before. Never actually written them down. But hey, might as well give it a try. It just might work.
After all, here I am - not even half way through my "project" for 2008. And nothing bothers me more than not crossing something off my list!
12.29.2008
Progress
It all started in June when we had this....
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Twice. Ahhh, that was fun. The water was followed by mold... which of course had to be taken out.

After which came painting. Ryan opted to match the current paint in the family room. I was afraid it wouldn't match since the old paint has probably faded. So Saturday we went to Home Depot. We walked out with a can of "Garden Wall" and it appears to match perfectly!
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Some four hours later the floor was in place. They (Ryan and Tom) were even able to close a few of the gaps that existed previously.
12.27.2008
Our Christmas

Michele introduced us to a new game. Everyone rolls a die (dice? whatever...) and the first to land on five gets to open a gift... using oven mitts. Our nephew Carter was the first to roll a five. It took him a bit to figure out how to use the thumb of his mitt to work the corner of the wrapping paper. He tore open the cardboard box to find yet another wrapped gift.
So everyone rolled again, and Ryan took his turn. The oven mitts were required. The bow was completely optional. And he wonders why there aren't any "normal" photos of him. :-)

Even Grandma Evelyn participated in the fun. She knew how to work those oven mitts and had the third gift opened in no time.

Next up was Joe. Since the presents got smaller and smaller the last ones were even harder to open. But it was worth it. He found a $10 bill in his box.

After the chaos of Christmas Eve, Ryan and I spent the night at his parent's house. The celebration on Christmas Day was in Carroll.
There were lots of laughs, exciting news and plenty of fun for the kids.
Tracy Anne Photography
12.26.2008

Little baby Luke with the quilt made by great-grandma Korwes.

As the afternoon went on we started to hear about freezing rain. A few left early to try to beat the weather. They called no more than a half an hour later to say they decided to turn around. The roads were extremely slippery.
Ryan and I weren't planning on leaving until Friday anyway. But his two sisters and their families had intended to go home. Plans changed and everyone ended up at Ryan's parents for a big slumber party. The kids had a great time playing with their new toys. And the bigger kids played a few rousing games of left-right-center and a couple hands of poker.

Calvin read to Aunt Michele for a little while before bed.

We had a great Christmas. It was great to see all of the extended family. We're fortunate enough to see many of them throughout the year, but it's always nice to the whole crew together.
12.22.2008
Our tradition

The following year we decided to get another ornament. I really liked this set of three. They represent everything one can hope for in a year. These are 2006.
After that, buying an ornament every year became our tradition. We brought this star home in 2007. It was the year we bought our house. Hallmark came out with a "first home" ornament but I couldn't sell Ryan on a $20 ornament.

I'm not sure what we'll end up with this year. We're trying to find a fire truck as this was the year Ryan finished building his wildland fire engine. But so far we've come up empty handed.
12.18.2008
Holiday Party
12.17.2008
What is it?
12.16.2008
A whole lotta giving going on...
As I’ve bounced around the blogosphere lately I’ve been inspired. The outcry of compassion this holiday season has been tremendous. There are people donating a canned good to their local food bank for every comment they receive. Photographers are holding contests to give away sessions to a well-deserving family who couldn’t otherwise afford it. Some are choosing to forego traditional holiday giving after learning the amount we spend on Christmas could provide clean water for several hundred villages. Instead they give handmade gifts or donate what they would have spent to charity.
Hmmm... anyone else see a problem with this given our current economy?
Since I'm so deeply rooted in the financial services industry (my 9 to 5) I know that if everyone gives handmade gifts this holiday season we'll be in a world of hurt. Spending oils the market machine. When the money flow slows down, the market comes to a grinding halt. Whew, economy lesson over.
I’m not hating here… anything we can do to help others is phenomenal. If you can - you certainly should! After all there are a lot more people in need this year than there are people who are fortunate enough to be able to give. I’m just asking you to consider giving a little differently.
A few ideas to get you started:
1. Donate canned goods to the local food bank; you’re buying the groceries that someone else can’t afford
2. Buy locally; your purchase could help pay the rent/mortgage for a small business owner
3. Adopt a family/child; buy necessities for those in need rather than "things" for each other
4. Provide heat; many utility companies set up a fund to help low-income people pay their heating bills. (I hate to exclude any potential readers from warmer climates – but it’s impossible for my mind to register “air conditioning” when it’s 20 below and snowing)
It's possible to help others while helping to keep the wheels on the economy bus, which in the long run helps everyone! So go forth and spread a little holiday cheer.
12.14.2008
The way it should be
Those in attendance: Ryan's parents, grandma, two sisters, four step-sisters, numerous nieces and nephews and a stray aunt and uncle. We were missing a brother-in-law, a step-brother and his wife plus a nephew and his family.
It just wouldn't be the holidays without being surrounded by family. As a kid we always raced to my grandma's after Christmas Eve mass. Literally raced because the first kid there got to put baby Jesus in the manger of her Nativity set. Even after 26 years I have yet to be the first to Grandma's and get the honor of putting baby Jesus in his bed.
The entire house was filled with laughter and food. Oy the food! Soon after everyone had their fill the kids made the rounds begging someone to announce that it was time to open presents. After a flurry of wrapping paper erupted, the men moved to the upstairs table to play cards. The women fluttered around the kitchen while the young kids played with their new toys in the living room. The older kids took over the pool table.
The celebration continued. For hours. As the younger kids started giving in to sleep, the cars were started and the goodbyes said.
It was loud. It was crazy. It's the way Christmas should be.
**I wish I had pictures to share, but amid making apple dumplings and chocolate covered pretzels - my camera still sits next to the door where I forgot it this morning.
12.10.2008
Things I've done
Everything bolded is something I have done in my lifetime. After going through this I think I need to add a few things to my list! Thanks for the idea Em!
1. Started your own blog (obviously)
2. Slept under the stars
3. Played in a band
4. Visited
5. Watched a meteor shower
6. Given more than you can afford to charity
7. Been to
8. Climbed a mountain
9. Held a praying mantis
10. Sang a solo (I forgot the words – yep that’s right. So I sang the first verse three times)
11. Bungee jumped
12. Visited
13. Watched a lightning storm at sea
14. Taught yourself an art from scratch (still teaching!)
15. Adopted a child
16. Had food poisoning
17. Walked to the top of the Statue of Liberty
18. Grown your own vegetables
19. Seen the Mona Lisa in
20. Slept on an overnight train
21. Had a pillow fight
22. Hitch hiked (scary, no thank you)
23. Taken a sick day when you’re not ill (uh… wait, I mean at my old job of course)
24. Built a snow fort
25. Held a lamb (held, fed, clipped, docked; did I mention my parents used to raise sheep?)
26. Gone skinny dipping (no but it’s on the list)
27. Run a
28. Ridden in a gondola in
29. Seen an eclipse
30. Watched a sunrise or sunset
31. Hit a home run
32. Been on a cruise
33. Seen
34. Visited the birthplace of your ancestors
35. Seen an Amish community (I’ll never forget the look on Eli Yoder’s two little boys when he said I could give them a can of pop to share. You would have thought I gave them the world.)
36. Taught yourself a new language
37. Had enough money to be satisfied
38. Seen the Leaning Tower of Pisa in person
39. Gone rock climbing (does it have to be on real actual rocks – or does a rock wall count?)
40. Seen Michelangelo’s David
41. Sung karaoke (you can bet this one’s on the list!)
42. Seen Old Faithful geyser erupt
43. Bought a stranger a meal at a restaurant (what a cool thing to do… might have to add that one)
44. Visited
45. Walked on a beach by moonlight
46. Been transported in an ambulance (not me – I rode along with my mom for surgery #2)
47. Had your portrait painted
48. Gone deep sea fishing
49. Seen the Sistine Chapel in person
50. Been to the top of the
51. Gone scuba diving or snorkeling
52. Kissed in the rain
53. Played in the mud (just last week…)
54. Gone to a drive-in theater
55. Been in a movie
56. Visited the
57. Started a business (three months and counting…)
58. Taken a martial arts class (you’re lookin… uh, reading the ramblings of a yellow belt in Tae Kwon Do. Hae YA!)
59. Visited
60. Served at a soup kitchen
61. Sold Girl Scout Cookies (mmm… thin mints. Where can a girl get some thin mints in December?)
62. Gone whale watching
63. Got flowers for no reason
64. Donated blood, platelets or plasma (note, I have not gone back after a nurse got the needle in behind a valve and had to dig around to get through it…)
65. Gone sky diving
66. Visited a Nazi Concentration Camp
67. Bounced a check (just keeping it real… I was a poor college kid once)
68. Flown in a helicopter
69. Saved a favorite childhood toy
70. Visited the
71. Eaten Caviar (hated it. Will never attempt again.)
72. Pieced a quilt
73. Stood in
74. Toured the
75. Been fired from a job
76. Seen the Changing of the Guards in
77. Broken a bone
78. Been on a speeding motorcycle (apparently you have not met my brother…)
79. Seen the
80. Published a book (oooh, this one is bolded, stared and no.1 on the list)
81. Visited the
82. Bought a brand new car
83. Walked in
84. Had your picture in the newspaper (every week for two years)
85. Read the entire Bible (okay so maybe this one is bolded, stared and no.1 on the list)
86. Visited the White House
87. Killed and prepared an animal for eating
88. Had chickenpox
89. Saved someone’s life
90. Sat on a jury
91. Met someone famous (Byron Velvick the bass fishing Bachelor)
92. Joined a book club
93. Lost a loved one
94. Had a baby (this might be #3)
95. Seen the
96. Swam in the
97. Been involved in a law suit
98. Owned a cell phone
99. Been stung by a bee
12.08.2008
Little Emily: Baby Moments
The day this little girl was born I knew she was going to love the camera. After all, she stole the show from her mom’s maternity pictures by making her grand entrance.
Her parents, Holly and Jeff, are two of my very best friends. And I was honored to document their family for the first time. Little Emily did not disappoint. She made it through four outfit changes, numerous poses, several hand offs and two hours worth of flashes with relative ease.
I could have focused my camera on her all afternoon. But by the last outfit Emily was getting tired. And a tired baby that’s not allowed to sleep amid all the propping and posing is not a happy baby. So we changed her back into comfy clothes, and she fell asleep watching football with daddy.
Holly, Jeff and little Em – thanks for putting up with me for the afternoon. I had so much fun! Enjoy.
12.05.2008
The empty box
It’s the strangest thing. Yesterday while I was pondering what to make for dinner, I happened to look at the calendar. I don’t know why the calendar of all things. I obviously wasn’t going to get any inspiration there. But as I scanned the dates I came across this weekend. And there it was…
An empty box! Saturday, December 6th was completely void of any things to do, places to go or people to see. Refusing to believe it, I poked my head past the refrigerator to Ryan who was standing slaving over a hot stove making food for his potluck today. “What do you have going on this weekend?” He paused for a moment, spatula in hand… “Nothing I can think of.”
What?! Could it really be true? Was there really a possibility that we had a whole entire Saturday to ourselves? As I relished at the thought I started to wonder. What on earth are we going to do all day? Then my heart started pounding, my breath quickened. I felt… lost.
Empty boxes on our calendar don’t happen very often. I wasn’t sure how to handle it. Not to worry. Within a few minutes my to-do list kicked in. I thought of the two dozen Christmas cookies in the freezer waiting to be frosted and the numerous other Christmas goodies I want to make. There’s always the basement of course. And laundry. And cleaning the fish tank (Twizzler has been more than a little lethargic lately.) And picking up the house. And playing with the dog. And hanging the Christmas lights I swore would get done before it got this cold. And… well, you get the idea.
I almost wrote “catch-up day” on the calendar, but I like the freedom of the empty box.
Side note:
Check out Danielle Fox. She was featured on the channel 13 news last night for her work with Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep. It’s an organization of photographers who donate their time to take pictures of newborns that are so special God has bigger plans for them. Oh, how I would love to be a part of this cause, but I’m not sure my heart could take it.
12.02.2008
Ready or not... it's coming
For a half an hour I was transformed into a little kid, sitting on my parents gold and brown couch watching the evil Grinch tip toe into Whoville and carry away the Who’s stockings and presents. I was horrified as the Grinch stuffed the Christmas tree up the chimney after telling little Cindy Lou Who he was going to fix a light bulb. I wanted to yell at the TV. What a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad thing to do!
But I got my redemption when the Grinch still heard singing on Christmas morning despite his evil ways. I may have even hummed along, but you have no proof of that.
Ever since I was a kid I’ve always watched the Grinch – the cartoon version of course. And I’ll watch Rudolph run away with Hermey the elf to the Isle of Misfit Toys only to become heroes for taming the abominable snowman and leading Santa’s sleigh. I always liked Hermey. Maybe because we have a kinship. When I was in high school everyone tried convincing me to become everything but a writer. But I'm not bitter. Wait. What’s that…a little middle child syndrome you say?
Anywho. Moving on.
Without a doubt “A Charlie Brown Christmas” is by far my favorite Christmas movie. Of the three it’s always the one they show closest to the holiday... Even the TV programming people know you always save the best for last.
It’s amazing that I still cling to moments that happened so many years ago. I’d call them traditions but there was no grand hurrah, no big announcement. Honestly, it was probably the only thing to watch considering we only had five channels. But even now, it’s never really Christmas until I know the Who’s get to eat their roast beast and Charlie Brown’s tree is decorated.
With every Christmas movie I watch I get infused with a little more holiday cheer. So far we've watched National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation, It's a Wonderful Life (a classic that soars above cartoon territory), and of course The Grinch.
Tomorrow Rudolph. Next week Charlie Brown. Christmas here I come!
11.30.2008
White morning
The tree formerly known as our neighbors, until it fell into our backyard.
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Our privacy fence.
The tree in our front yard. See what I mean by pristine...
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Since it snowed all night, I worked on a couple of projects that I thought of yesterday at Memory Bound, a scrapbooking store in Ankeny. I always come up with (or "borrow") the coolest ideas after a visit to Memory Bound.
And now I'm off to make Christmas cookies... Happy Sunday!
11.25.2008
Family moments: The Wolbers
This past weekend we went downtown to take their annual family photos. The first year we went to the Botanical Center. Followed by their house. This year I suggested the skywalks. Lots of metal, glass and brick. Very urban.
It was a little tough for a couple reasons. Calvin was in no mood to get his picture taken. Not a bad mood mind you. Just not in the mood to stand still very long.
This would be him trying to run away...
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He'd smile anywhere... except at the camera!
Many, many thanks for letting me follow you around toting my camera. You've been such great models all these years!
*Side note - I recently installed some tracking on my blog. Welcome to those of you checking in from Wisconsin, Illinois, Missouri, Washington and even Alaska! Thanks for stopping by.
11.22.2008
A little publicity
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11.20.2008
Birthday wishes
11.18.2008
The Governor's hunt
A majority of the wetlands that used to make up the Iowa horizon have been drained, tiled and turned into crop land. However, more and more people are realizing the benefit of native prairie and wetlands. They plow their corn and soybeans under in exchange for big blue stem and switch grass.
For the past 20 years Iowa's Governor has celebrated conservation and restoration of the native Iowa landscape by spending a day in its glory. The annual Governor's Pheasant Hunt is a tradition started by Terry Brandstad, who hunted on Ryan's grandma's farm.
This year Iowa Governor Chet Culver came back to Carroll County to hunt. While he didn't hunt at the farm, Ryan and his dad were joined by a terrific crew.
Cody from the Iowa Pork Producers Association, Scott and Michael from Templeton Rye Whiskey, Liz Garst from the Whiterock Conservancy, Mark and Mark from the Iowa Farm Bureau. (Thanks to Ryan for stepping in as photographer for this one.)
These guys *ah hem* and girl brought back 23 birds - just one short of their limit and the most of all ten hunting groups.

After a morning of hunting Governor Culver released a female bald eagle rehabilitated by Kay Newman of Save Our Avian Resources (SOAR).