Wednesday, October 15, 2014

KANSAS CITY ROYALS INCREDIBLE POST SEASON WINS!!!!




In my home away from home hometown, Kansas City, the month of October has proved to be an incredibly exciting experience in the world of professional sports.  Besides Sporting Kansas City, the local major league soccer team, clinching a spot in the MLS playoffs, the major league baseball team, Kansas City Royals, have ended their 29 year post-season drought.
   
October for the Royals began with a game that started on a September evening that ended four hours and 45 minutes later!!  As a wildcard team, it was a one game chance to move on to the best of five divisional series games.  This beautiful mess of an American League Wild Card Game went 12 innings (for those not familiar with American baseball, a normal game is nine innings), that involved 41 players and ended with Salvador Perez’s how-did-he-pull-that single to left, a rip that scored a rookie utility man named Christian Colon from second base with the run that provided a 9-8 victory over the Oakland Athletics.

The team came back from a four-run deficit with three runs in the eighth off pitcher Jon Lester, then another in the ninth against Oakland closer Sean Doolittle, who had been scored upon once in his past 20 outings.    Pinch runner Jarrod Dyson stole third in the ninth inning to set up the tying run on a sacrifice fly, one of Kansas City’s seven stolen bases. The Royals won because a 21-year-old lefty, Brandon Finnegan, who, five months ago, was a student at Texas Christian University my friend Shayla’s university,  held the A’s scoreless in the 10th and 11th with dominant stuff and preternatural poise.

The Royals moved on to sweep the Anaheim Angels in the best of five American League Divisional Championship series games.  Currently, they lead 3 games to none in the best of seven American League Championship games.  They could clinch their place in the World Series tonight!!!


Enjoy this amazing video from last nights game:
Amazing catch


Here are the headlines from the local paper from the past couple of weeks:









Thursday, May 29, 2014

The State of Missouri, USA, has an awesome park system and conservation department.  Recently my mom and brother and friend were at the Lake of the Ozarks and did a day trip to Ha Ha Tonka State Park.  It is in the center of the state, near Camdenton. This park is known for it's Karst topography, a landscape of caves, sinkholes, and underwater streams and springs.  In the early part of the 20th century, a large stone castle was built on the bluffs.  It burned in 1942 and some of the stone walls are left.  There is a natural bridge, a beautiful spring, and lots of hiking trails.  Here are some photos and don't forget to click on the link for more information.

 Ha Ha Tonka State Park















Wednesday, May 7, 2014

New attraction in the Windy City - the Tilt!

Saw a news story about the latest attraction in Chicago at the John Hancock building - It's the Chicago Tilt. Up to eight people can fit inside the glass and steel moveable platform that slowly tilts outward on an angle, providing downward-facing views of the city from over 1,000 feet above.  Heights don't really bother me, so I think I would do it, but I know plenty of people who would be in a panic if they even thought about trying it.







Tuesday, May 6, 2014

AFRICAN DAISIES !!!

I know with spring getting underway in the midwest, and particularly in Kansas and Missouri, my mom is probably snapping up some flowers dear to her heart - osteospermum - the African Daisy.  The come in so many cool colors, and sometimes the center has a metallic look to it.  My friend back there loves the ones with the petals shaped like spoons.  The winters in the US midwest gets too cold so these amazing daisies are just grown as annuals there.

Here are some pictures to enjoy:








Sunday, May 4, 2014

The Lake of the Ozarks

Some of my friends spent a couple days at the Lake of the Ozarks in central Missouri.  It is a huge lake, sometime described as the dragon lake or magic dragon because of it's unusual shape.



It was built in the early 1930's to provide electricity and also recreation.  Here is a link to some facts about Bagnell Dam.

Bagnell Dam Facts

Here are some photos my friends provided.  Their place is around the 42 mile marker.








Thursday, May 1, 2014

My ma and my second ma did a road trip today in Missouri, USA to a botanical garden.  I understand the weather wasn't the best, but it wasn't a total bust.  Now they have memberships so besides the pictures they sent me to post of their expedition today, I am sure as the seasons progress I will have more to add.

Here's a link to the garden:http://www.powellgardens.org/

Here are a few photos:











Monday, April 28, 2014

Well, my friends and family back in the midwest USA had stormy weather yesterday.  Although there was no tornadic activity in the vicinity of where they live, many other places were not as fortunate.  In fact at least 14 people died in the storms.  Here is some information about tornadoes:

Interesting Tornado Facts

A fast moving tornado
Each year, about a thousand tornadoes touch down in the United States, far more than any other country.
Waterspouts are tornadoes that form over a body of water.
A strong tornado can pick up a house and move it down the block.
Nebraska, South Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas make up Tornado alley, where tornadoes strike regularly in the spring and early summer.
Many houses in tornado alley have strong basement shelters.
Some people have seen inside a tornado with their own eyes lived to tell about it.
Knives and forks have been found embedded in tree trunks flung from a tornado.
Usually a tornado starts off as a white or gray cloud but if it stays around for a while, the dirt and debris it sucks up eventually turns it into black one.
3 out of every 4 tornadoes in the world happen in the United States.
Thunderstorms most likely to give birth to Tornadoes are called supercells.
Tornado winds are the fastest winds on Earth.
A Tornado in Oklahoma once destroyed a whole motel. People later found the motel’s sign in Arkansas.
A Tornado can sometimes hop along its path. It can destroy one house and leave the house next door untouched.
In 1928, a tornado in Kansas plucked the feathers right off some chickens.
In 1931 a tornado in Mississippi lifted an 83 ton train and tossed it 80 feet from the track.
The United States have an average of 800 tornadoes every year.
Each year, dozens of Americans die from tornadoes.
Usually, a tornado’s color matches the color of the ground.
Some tornadoes make a considerable amount of noise while others make very little. It depends on the objects a tornado might hit or carry. A tornado moving along an open plain may make very little noise.
Some people think the crop circles in the UK are the result of weak whirlwinds. About 60 of these small tornadoes are formed every year in Britain.