Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Engels Invade ROC

Laura:
As summer wound to a close, my family came to visit me in Ra-cha-cha one more time before school started. With a pretty intense second year of medical looming on the horizon, it was really nice to spend some more quality with my family before things get crazy busy.

Of course we did all the "typical Rochester" activities:
1) Sightseeing at Rochester's Famous Bodies of Water:

Lake Ontario

High Falls

And then a Riverboat cruise along the Genesee River and Erie Canal - the ride was about an hour or so and actually picked us up right from the Staybridge Suites hotel where my family was staying (which is right on the river, really nice hotel!). There was a tour guide providing interesting stories about Rochester and fun historical facts all along the way. The weather was a little warm, but it was fun to see the city from the river and learn more about its history.

2) Breakfast at James Brown's Place (BEST EVER!!!)...you'll just have to come to Rochester and try it yourself. It's not worth trying to describe. I wouldn't do it justice. ;0)

3) Dinner at Dinosaur BBQ - one of two awesome BBQ restaurants in Rochester. The weather cooled off a bit by the time we got to dinner, and was just perfect for sitting out on the patio enjoying quality dinner time with the family.

4) Once again we attended a Rochester Red Wings baseball game. Mom almost got hi by a foul ball and there was an epicly long fireworks display synchronized to various Def Lepard songs at the end of the game. It just kept going!!! Here are some fun pics of us at the game and the crazy fireworks.


5) We also spent an afternoon wandering around looking at art and eating tasty treats at Park Ave Fest!!! Park Ave Fest is an annual festival that takes place on a street right by our house. Basically they shut down a huge stretch of the street and local art and food vendors set up tents to sell their wares. It's a great event for wandering, eating, and window shopping. While we were milling about the festival, we stopped at a stand where you could dye your own silk scarves. It was wicked cool. There is a tray filled with water and cellulose (makes the water thicker) to which you add colored dyes. The dyes have various chemical properties that allow them to not blend together and to float on top of the water (key part of the process).

So you add the colors...swirl them around a bit to make funky patterns...and then it's time for the magic! Watch this video.....



Play-by-play: The silk scarf is stretched out above the tray and then carefully lowered until it touches the dye. Then by magic osmosis/science/absorption, the dye is transferred to the silk scarf. Done and done! The vendor wadded my scarf up into a plastic bag for transport and when I got home all I had to do was hang it up to dry for ~1 week. That allows the colors to completely set. Pretty fancy, huh?! Here's the finished product ---->


That's about all I can remember doing....they did come here about 2 months ago. Sorry for the delay in reporting. Overall, everyone had a great time! Come to Rochester and you too will understand it's greatness. :0)

~THE LORAX~

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Alex's Laser Beam Vision

Alex:
It is early August, and as a sort of personal adventure worthy of a blog post, I finally went ahead and let somebody slice at and laser blast my eyeballs, and I actually paid them to do so.  I figure I'll document how things are today and then make updates over the next few days or possibly weeks...  or however long until my eyes recover and then develop the super-powered x-ray vision that I'm pretty sure they promised.

Leading up:  I've pretty much had the same glasses for 10 years.  My prescription has barely changed and I'm not huge on going to the doctor, so I've had the same specs for ages.  I've had a pretty good idea I would get Lasik at some point anyway, so another reason not to bother getting new glasses.  Laura recently heard about a free seminar through her school at a local eye surgery place (Flaum Eye Institute, associated with the U of R), so I figured I'd check it out.  The people there seemed to be pretty reputable, having done a lot of research in the field to improve the process and not just a business to churn out patients.  So I went for a free exam, slept on the idea (for about a month), and then went in today.

D-Day:  So, I just returned from the surgery.  I'm on the couch with safety goggles and sunglasses over my eyes and tissues stuffed under the underside to soak up the tears as my eyes are very watery.   I'm keeping my eyes closed and typing blind and will have to review this later.  The surgery was pretty quick, but pretty tense as I was pretty apprehensive about the eye flap business.  It really didn't hurt at all, though they feel a little raw right now (kind of like if you spend a whole day out in the sun on the beach without sunglasses they'll feel a little dry and maybe sunburnt, that's about how they feel now, just a little more so).

D+1:  It is now Wednesday morning.  I went in for a checkup this morning and things are looking okay.  I don't have to wear the goggles during the day anymore, but I now have 3 kinds of drops to use.  Currently I'm in a dimly lit room wearing sunglasses with my eyes partially open.  My vision is much sharper, slightly sharper than when I was wearing my glasses.  I'm a little weirded out by my inability to focus on close objects.  I used to be able to read up to about 2 inches from my eyeball, and now I can't make my eyes focus any closer than about 6.

D+2:
Today my eyes were doing better, but it was a little rough day.  I worked all day and I've been fully opening my eyes, so they got pretty dry.  I had to increase my moisturizing drops from hourly to whenever I felt like I needed it -- maybe 30-45 minutes.  I wore my sunglasses all day, less so for brightness problems and more so because they shield any drafts and keep my eyes from drying out as fast.  We had our last kickball game and didn't have a full team, so I played the whole time, closing my eyes as much as possible.  They're not terribly uncomfortable, I'm just really picky about my eyes and paranoid about the eye-flap.  People thought I was blind walking down Park Avenue with Laura at night with my sunglasses on.  That was probably for the best though, since I was keeping my eyes closed half the time. Still, I put up with a lot of "I wear my suuunglasses at night..."


D+3:
By Friday I'd pretty well stopped with the sunglasses.  I put them on a little at work to keep my eyes shielded from draft, but that was about it.  I noticed some halos or starbursts last night around bright light sources.  If the image to the left shows, I'd say that before I was between a 1 and 2 before without glasses (due to blurriness), maybe a 2 with glasses because of the funkiness of the glass, and now I'm between a 2 and 3.  I think it will get better as they heal, and as I stop using the horrible steroid drops.

 

Here is a shot of my eye gear.  The surgical office gave me the black bag with most of this stuff in it.  My old glasses are on the far right.  It's disorienting to look through them now.  The brown cap bottle is antibiotics, and the white cap bottle with the red X is the awful steroids to keep my eyes from healing too fast.  They're like putting drops of whole milk in my eye -- they're very cloudy white, and leave a horrid salty bitterness as they run down my tear duct into the back of my throat that I can't gargle away.  I'll be glad in a couple more days when I'm not using those 4 times a day.  The big goggles are still worn at night to keep from pressing or rubbing, and are taped to my face using the roll in the top left.  That is some crazy tape that sticks to skin like nothing I've ever seen.  The first night we used a bunch, worried it would come off.  After ripping off the tape along with some hair and skin I realized I only need to touch a half inch of tape to my face on either side.  The wipes at the top are a soapy alcohol mix designed to help remove the strips of glue the tape leaves on your face.  They work okay, but it takes a few passes with rinsing in between, and then maybe a little rubbing alcohol when you find a few glue gob stragglers hours later.  The little vials are artificial tears without preservatives, to be used hourly or as needed.  They gave me 15, and I bought 60 more on Thursday.  Currently going through a little over 2 per day, that should last me a while.  Lastly, they gave me a DVD of my eye surgery.  I want to watch it, but I'm going to wait for my eyes to heal a little more before doing so.  If I see that flap being cut and lifted, I might think that every little tickle is it coming loose.

The one thing missing from this package is possible some kind of shower goggles.  I'm careful not to get soap in my eyes, but just regular water is obnoxious if you can't effectively wipe it away.


D+4:
I did some driving today.  It felt pretty natural.  On the way out it was sunny and I wore sunglasses, so it felt pretty normal since my face was all wrapped up.  The way back it was dimmer so I drove without some form of glasses intentionally (not forgetting them somewhere) for pretty much the first time ever.  Whoa!  The few times in the past that I drove without glasses it was weird and would cause my eyes to water.  I was worried that without them could be rough, but it was no trouble at all.

I still have a little redness from the surgery.  Some capillaries get busted when the suction cup attaches itself to your eyeball so it can start slicing the flap.  Now you see why I don't want to watch the DVD just yet?  At least I got the laser cut flap, so there was no blade involved.

Laura pointed out the white in the corner of my eye here.  Yeah, that's the steroid drop again.  It leaves a film on my eye that slowly collects, so I'm always wiping it away.




D+5:
I realize that some of you jerks have natural perfect vision and probably can't understand all this fuss.  It's probably similar to how I can't imagine being deaf, colorblind, or having no sense of smell.  Here's a couple of pics I just took as an example.  The first is clear, the second is blurry -- nothing fancy, just an unsteady hand in low light.  The second is a little worse than my overall vision before, but is actually probably pretty close to what my left eye was (the worse of the two).








D+6:
Pretty okay today.  I have noticed that it takes a little effort to focus sometimes, and my eyes will feel tired.  What's really weird is that I can't seem to relax them.  It's like they have a new resting focal state and I don't know what it is, so I can't quite stop them from working.  It's pretty mild, and I only really notice when I'm sitting around and nothing else is going on.  I'll ask about it tomorrow at the one week checkup.  I figure I'll keep adding to this post for the first week, so most likely it will be published tomorrow.  See you then!

D+7:
Had my one week checkup and no biggie.  They said my eyes appear to be a little dry so I need to use more drops (I've been missing the hourly drops a little with work and all) and give them a some rest periodically.  The focus and tiredness issue was very scientifically referred to as "the wah-wahs".  It's apparently my brain trying to adjust to the new image, and will go away with time.  I'm showing 20/15 in both eyes as of today, and things should get better as they heal more.

Now I'm going to see how long it takes for the glasses imprint on the side of my head to disappear...  I'll let you know if anything else interesting comes up.

-The Lorax

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Walex's Birthday Weekend

Alex:
In May of this year, I tacked on another decade.  Laura was wonderful enough to organize a surprise visit to Rochester from a number of my friends who live all across the country.  She hilariously spilled the beans about it, but it was just as well because it would have been impossible to coordinate it all in secret and without me taking off work or picking people up from the airport.

On Thursday afternoon I picked up people in Buffalo while Laura picked up and had lunch at Aladdin's (tasty Mediterranean place with great falafel) with people who flew into ROC. We grabbed some treats from Dogtown and the former Hollywood video down the street, and went to Magnolia's on Park Ave for pizza and some local brew.


















We had some tasty beverages, talked about old times, reminisced about James' various injuries, and looked at some pics and goofed off well into the night.

The next day we had some delicious James Brown's breakfast and set out for Niagara Falls.





Most of us hadn't done the Maid of the Mist before, so we decided to try it out.  We threw on our blue ponchos and sailed up close to the falls.  It was crazy to see the water on all sides, and was incredibly loud and bumpy.




If you look really closely you can see us standing on the rocks under the falls



On Sunday we made some breakfast casserole and then took a stroll through Highland park at the tail end of the Lilac Festival.  The flowers were mostly gone and it was a little hot, so we didn't stay long.  Had we known what the rest of the summer was going to be like we would have stayed out much longer!

Thanks everyone for the birthday wishes!  Thanks to my friends who were able to come visit!  And thanks Laura for setting up this weekend!

Laura:
Thanks everyone for coming to visit! I am glad we were able to pull off this fun birthday "surprise" for Alex's birthday.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Letchworth State Park

Laura:
Before moving to Rochester, we were completely unaware of the amazing natural scenery in Upstate New York. Our first taste came during our excursion to Chimney Bluffs State Park back in September, and now that we have time to kill this summer we're exploring our immediate surroundings even more.


One of the surprising aspects of the landscape up here (at least to me) is the number of waterfalls. They're everywhere! Of course you know about Niagara Falls, but there are a number of smaller waterfalls all within a 50 mile radius of Rochester. Here's a link to a map showing all the falls, big and small, surrounding our new home town. Who knew?!?

Of course, now that we know there are so many falls we've gotta find them all! First on the list: the falls in Letchworth State Park. There are three main waterfalls (Upper, Middle, and Lower falls) plus some smaller ones sprinkled throughout the park. The park itself runs along a portion of the Genesee River (the same river that runs up through Rochester and dumps into Lake Ontario) about 50 miles southeast of Rochester.


We drove down to the park and entered at the northern end, which if you want to see the falls right away is a bad idea since they're located at the southern-most end of the park. No worries though! Since we'd never been to the park we just took our time driving through and stopping at a number of vistas along the main park road. Our first stop was at the Mt. Morris Dam. The dam was built in 1948 by the Army Corps of Engineers to prevent yearly flooding from destroying lands further downstream. Wikipedia pic of flooded valley behind the dam. This is not a constant state though for the river. When we visited, the valley upstream of the dam was very dry.


Next to the dam viewing area there was this giant chair...



Here are some more pictures from another vista along the river valley...



The next place we stopped had a few small waterfalls, so we stopped to take some fancy "water-smoothing" pictures (click to enlarge!) and relax next to the stream.





After another short drive, we finally arrived at the Lower Falls - the first of the three waterfalls along the Genesee River. We walked along the trail and found a bridge a little downstream that was great for a photo shoot. There were also some really interesting rock walls along the river that we think are made of shale.



Then we walked a little further up the trail to get some closer shots of the waterfall...



Next we pulled off at another vista to look at the Middle and Upper falls together...


Finally we reached the pull-off for the Upper Falls! We spent a lot of time taking pictures and even hiked to the top of the ridge to check out the old railroad bridge spanning the river just above the Upper Falls. 
 


All of this hiking, driving, and picture-taking took 3-4 hours, so when dinner time rolled around we were starving! We left the park and started heading north back towards Rochester. On the way we stumbled across a small town, Nunda, NY, where they were having a parade and fair. It was really neat to see all the local people lining the streets while the high school band, sports teams, and a number of fire trucks rolled along. We tried to take a picture, but not sure you can really tell what is going on.



We maneuvered our way through the town, going pretty far out of our way driving-wise since the parade was running along the main highway, and finally ended up in Mt. Morris, NY where we spotted this cute little Italian restaurant along their picture-perfect Main Street. Being lovers of lasagna, we just had to stop! The lasagna was very tasty and so were the chicken/red pepper ravioli and garlic bread. Never would have expected such a lovely little restaurant in this tiny town.

All in all we had a really great day! Got some good exercise hiking through the woods, snapped some nice pictures of all the waterfalls, and enjoyed a delicious meal at a local restaurant. First summer excursion into the villages and state parks of  Upstate New York was a great success!!



Alex:
Laura really liked the camera on a stick.  I snapped this picture of her holding the camera aimed in my direction.


The "stick" is a gift from Hugh (Laura's dad, but that's not his real name...  That's George...  It's like how Laura is aka Foof...  anywho) it's for taking self pics without the funny arm angle.  Laura was carrying the camera around everywhere on the stick, so I thought this was a funny shot.  Little did I know she was actually shooting a video, and she wouldn't stop anytime soon... [Laura: Best video ever!]




Lorax portraits using "The Stick"


 -The Lorax-