Halloween Costume ideas 2015

Digital archives contain as usually understood by professional archivists and historians.

August 2009
2009 accessibility Aconcagua Administration Adventure Racing Adventure Travel Adventurists Advice Afghanistan Africa Alaska Alberto Contador Aleutian Islands Alex Honnold Alps Amazon Amherst Amherst Destinations Amherst Hikes Andes Android 1.5 Android 1.6 Android 2.0 Android 2.1 Android 2.2 Android 2.3 Android 2.3.3 Android 3.0 Android 3.2 Android 4.0 Android Design Android Developer Challenge Android Developer Phone Android Market Animals Animation and Graphics Annapurna Announcements Antarctic App Components App Resources Apps Archeology Arctic Arctic Ocean Argentina Art Asia Atacama Desert Atlantic Ocean August Australia Authentication Autumn Aviation Backpacking Backyard Nature Badwater Ultra Baffin Island Baltic Sea BASE Jumping Beach Belchertown Belchertown Destinations Belchertown Hikes Berkshires Best Practices Bhutan Blogging Tips Blogs Book Review Boots Boston Botswana Brazil Broad Peak California Camping Canada Canyoneering Carstensz Pyramid Catatan Puspitasari Central America Central Massachusetts Checkpoint Tracker Children Chile China Cho Oyu Cinta Wanita Circumnavigation Clay Climate Change Climbing Clothing Code Day Colorado Colrain Congo River Connecticut Connectivity Conservation Area Contests Cool Stuff Craft Cycling Dashboard Dave Cornthwaite Death Valley Debugging Denali Developer Console Developer Days Developer Labs Developer profiles Dhaulagiri Dinosaurs Discovery Channel Dolomites Earth Day Easter Island Easthampton Ed Viesturs Educational Eiger El Capitan Endurance Sports Environmental Erving Europe Events Everest Expedition Exploration Explorers Club Fair Fairy House Farm Film Festival Finland Fireworks Fish Hatchery Fitz Roy Food Fourth of July France Free Games Gasherbrum Gaya Hidup Wanita Gear General Adventure Gestures Giro d'Italia Gobi Desert Google I/O Google Play Google Play services Goshen GPS Granby Grand Canyon Greater Boston Greenland Grossology Exhibit Guidelines Hadley Hadley 350th Half Dome Hang Gliding Hawaii Health Hikes Under One Mile Hiking Himalaya History Holyoke Honduras Horse How-to Hubungan Hunting Ice Cream IME impossible2Possible Independence Day India Indoor info Info Seminar Input methods Intents Internet Interview io2010 Italy Japan JNI John Muir Trail Jordan July June Jungfrau K2 K7 Kalahari Kangchenjunga Karakoram Kayaking Kilimanjaro Lake Michigan Lance Armstrong Layout Leadville 100 Leverett Lhotse Libraries Lintas Peristiwa Location Location and Sensors London Long Riders Ludlow Maine Makalu Manaslu Maple Massachusetts Matterhorn Media and Camera Mendon Meru Peak Mexico Mini Golf Mississippi River Missouri River Mongolia Monson Mont Blanc Motivasi Mount Elbrus Mount Everest Mount Rainier Mountain Biking Mountain View Mountaineering Movies Mt. Shasta Munich Museums Music Nameless Tower Namibia Nanga Parbat NASA National Geographic Nature Navigation NDK Nepal New Hampshire New Zealand Newburyport North America North Pole Northampton Northfield Norway Novelet Nuptse Nusantara Nutrition Ocean Okavango Delta Olympics Open source OpenGL ES Optimization Oregon Orizaba Outdoor Outdoor Retailer Outside Magazine Pacific Ocean Packs Paddling Pakistan Palmer Panduan SEO Parade Paragliding Patagonia Pelham Peru Petting Zoo Photography Playground Plum Island Poland Pool Pottery Pumpkins Quabbin Reservoir Quality Quick Search Box Rafting Rahasia Wanita Ray Zahab Reggio Emilia Research Resources Review Road Rally Rowing Roz Savage Running Sailing Sample code Sandbox School Science Scuba Diving SDK updates Sensors September Seven Summits Shelburne Falls Shisha Pangma Shutesbury Silk Road Site News Skateboarding skiing Skydiving Slacklining Sleeping Bags Snowboarding Solstice South Africa South America South Deerfield South Georgia South Hadley South Natick South Pacific South Pole Southern Ocean Space Speech Input Springfield Stand Up Paddling Storytime Strawberries Sturbridge Summer Summer Camp Summit Sunderland Survival Sutton Swimming Switzerland Tanzania Technology Tel Aviv Tents Testing Teva Mountain Games Text and Input Text-to-Speech Thrifty Tibet Torres Del Paine Touch Tour d'Afrique Tour de France Tour Divide Tower Trail Running Train Trango Towers TransRockies Travel Trekking Triathlon Turkey Turner's Falls Tutorial Ueli Steck Ultra Running Ultramarathon UMass United States USA Pro Cycling Challenge User Interface Utah Vancouver Vermont Video Wadi Rum Wakhan Wanita dan Bisnis Water Websites Western Massachusetts Westhampton Widgets Wildlife Williamstown Wingsuits Winter Wisconsin Worcester World Championship Wyoming Yemen Yosemite Zoo

Don't forget to submit your ADC2 apps by midnight PST on Monday, August 31! Remember that this is Pacific time in the US (GMT - 7) so be sure to convert the deadline into your local timezone.

Also, even if you've already submitted your apps, please double check and make sure that your app is in the "Submitted" state in the UI! If it says "Unsubmitted", it will NOT be considered as an entry.

Android Developer ChallengeThe time has come! The submission site for Android Developer Challenge 2 is now open. You can now submit applications for the Challenge at http://market.android.com/adc. Full instructions are also available on the site.

The key thing to remember is that all submissions must be entered by 11:59:59pm Pacific Time in the United States on August 31, 2009. If your applications are not submitted by that time, they won't be eligible for participation. Please carefully note what time that is in your local time zone.

It's very important that your apps only use published APIs. Some users might be judging your submissions on new phones you haven't seen or tested. If your apps depend on unpublished APIs, they might not work on some of these phones. Please note that you won't be able to submit new versions of your apps after the deadline!

Since you'll be competing against developers around the world for users' attention, it is important to focus on the fit and finish of your app. Your apps will be judged by users as a final product and not just a cool demo.

As a final note, if you've uploaded a version of your app to Android Market, you'll need to use a different Android package name for the version you submit to the Challenge.

I look forward to see all the great apps and innovations from you all.












Our initial experience at the DAR was disappointing. It was our first camping trip with kids (24 months and 6 months old). We thought that the drive-in aspect would be a boon, but it turned out to be a pain. Our fantasy of letting the toddler run free in the woods was quickly dispelled as we realized that our backyard would have afforded us more privacy, more room, and to some extent more nature, than we found here. The campsites are packed together tightly, though they are well maintained. We could see and hear all of our neighbors, and spent most of the weekend explaining to a two year old how an outdoor space needed to be treated like a room with walls. The rest of the weekend involved keeping him out of the road. Though drivers were mainly respectful and drove slowly, it doesn't really matter how slow a car is going when it hits my kid, you know? The lessons from this trip were not really what we were hoping to communicate to our youngsters about nature.
Well, we found an awesome place to camp the next year, Tully Lake. That's another post altogether.
My recent visit to the DAR was a day trip to visit my brother. We used the camper's beach and had a wonderful time. I swam on this lake during the summers when I attended Camp Howe, the 4H camp in Goshen. It's still gorgeous!
The photos above were all taken at the camper's beach - take a look at their website to find out about the day use/camper use restrictions.













I first heard about this new park because they had a big opening day festival. I was later reminded of it by an acquaintance, Julie Ross of Belchertown, who took her two children to Beachgrounds in July and was pleased with the park, though not the restrooms.
On Sunday morning we finally made it over there, and the whole family was quite impressed. It seems a feat of urban planning - the small park is eco-friendly in many ways (recycle bins, rubber tire "mulch," recycled plastic "lumber" used for benches and tables), surrounded by a variety of housing types (apartments and a neighborhood of single family homes), aesthetically pleasing, designed with varied age-groups in mind (for instance, baby swings near the toddler play area and regular swings off to the side). The playground structure itself was an unusual one, which is great. All too often I find myself trekking to a new park only to encounter pretty much the same equipment as they have in the park by my house. My 5 year old described it as an obstacle course and "completed" the play structure a number of times. Both older boys loved the spray park, in which the water is activated by a sensor which my middle son enjoyed figuring out and then using. The spray park is laid out in an organic way which seemed to encourage the kids to move & to use the entire spray pad area. The pad includes a sprayer that the kids can move around, and which is cleverly designed to shut off when sprayed toward the outside of the water pad. The water feature is significantly smaller than the one found at Look Park, but there was plenty of room on the day of our visit.
The park also offers the opportunity to head down to the riverbank by the Holyoke Dam. This was an adventure that our family undertook - it is not advertised as part of the park. The trail down to the water was steep and the rocks on the edge interspersed with broken glass and the occasional piece of trash. However, it was nice enough to teach my oldest to skip a stone.
From several articles (here's one) I've seen on this project, it seems that the funding and creating of this space was a triumph of the political process, as used by community/local organization. This sweetens the experience of watching the kids play there.



The kids had free soft serve at Cindy's last week, via the Granby Public Library and the Massachusetts Summer Reading Program.

Cindy's is on 202 in Granby, conveniently close to Dufresne Park and the library. The young woman who waited on us was SO sweet, and patient with the kids. She even made me a tiny tiny mini cone for the baby.
The outdoor seating area wasn't particularly scenic, situated on the pavement contiguous with the parking lot and next to a fence. However, the tables and seats were clean. The ground was virtually free of junk, the trash can was wiped down. I really liked all of that. There is indoor seating also, a few stools at a tall counter. The decor is very cute. And of course they are supporting reading and libraries, which is a great practice.

Caveat: NO RESTROOMS. We had to leave for that reason, though the kids were thoroughly enjoying the play area (pictured above).


















Holyoke's Heritage State Park is home to the Holyoke Carousel and Children's Museum, and the Volleyball Hall of Fame. Our recent stop at the Visitor Center revealed exhibits under construction. After speaking with Charlie Lotspeich of DCR, I learned that the renovations have been undertaken as part of a program called "Creating Holyoke." Funds from the National Endowment for the Humanities were matched by the state, via DCR. This is a wonderful enhancement to a city park, and a city that has an important place in the industrial development of the Pioneer Valley.
The renovation is nearly complete now, and the Visitor Center is open for business Tues-Sun from 12-4PM. I am looking forward to returning there to take a look at the new installments and will certainly post an update with pictures.



I have only visited this attraction in the winter, so my experience is certainly incomplete. Parking is plentiful.
The exhibits at this visitor center are interesting. The whole mountain is "sponsored" by a utility company. Thus the exhibits are focussed on the economy of the Connecticut River - ice harvesting, logging, transporting good by waterways, etc. There's a real icebox that is ok to touch, and an example of an old logging tool, which, again you can touch.
A set of stairs lead down to a ski shop/vending area/restrooms (clean, nice). You may want to pause (endlessly, if you are my child) in front of a bank of birdfeeders in the bushes outside the window on the landing.
The yurt outside is awesome and had a fire going when we were there. It was toasty and cute in there.
In the winter the trails are groomed for skiing thus you cannot hike. The scenery is beautiful.























Since we discovered this beach, we haven't been to a different one. From our home in the Pioneer Valley it takes about 2 hrs, 15 min. to get there. Many of the beaches on the refuge are closed early in the season, as this land is primarily dedicated to wildlife, not recreation. Later in the summer, once the nesting season is over, all the beaches open. On your drive down to the beach of your choice, you will almost certainly see some gorgeous birds feeding and flying in the saltwater marshes that make up the island.
For $5, you can park at any one of 7 beaches that are part of the Reserve. For FREE you can drive down past beach 7 and park at Sandy Point Beach.
Beaches 6, 7, and Sandy Point are our favorites. The water deepens so gradually that even when your child has become a speck against the horizon, he is only up to his knees. The sand is light and fine.
The nearby (as in, 5 minutes down the road) Newburyport is a great little town for pedestrian sightseeing. A large waterfront walkway lets you see boats of all kinds, and the people who hang out on them! Fisherman are happy to have an audience. Street musicians are happened upon. The downtown is filled with expensive shops and art galleries - we've mainly avoided those! It is also home to a little playground in the middle of a pedestrian mall, adjacent to an ice cream shop (even the small was $3.70 but you get as many mix-ins as you want for free). On more than one occasion, including last Sunday, there was a festival going on downtown with music and street vending. We've always been able to find free parking in town, and have enjoyed the bookstore and toystore (and restrooms!!) in the Tannery building.
Both the Parker River Refuge and Joppa Sanctuary have visitor centers, though we haven't been yet.
Parker River Refuge










Located just off Rt. 116 in Amherst, Groff Park is a great destination in good weather. A large parking lot is mostly sunny, but if you don't mind crossing the lot, there are shady spots near the baseball field. The park boasts many tall beautiful trees, picnic areas with seating, including a pavillion. At the top of the hill, a decent playground and nice set of swings are near the restrooms, newly constructed a couple of years ago. They are not disgusting, though I've rarely seen toilet paper there. A wading pool with fountain is fenced in. The pool is open for a short season - essentially July and August. The pool might be closed on any given day due to lightening, bacteria levels in the water, lack of lackadaisical teenage lifeguard, or some such. You should not psych your kids up for it unless you call to confirm that it's open. A sandbox and small climbing area at the bottom of the hill are very inviting. A shallow river (Fort River) flows by the park and is followed by a sandy path, so a nature walk is included along with the rest of the features here.


Amherst Wading Pool Schedule
A Review of the Trail at Groff Park

MKRdezign

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

Powered by Blogger.
Javascript DisablePlease Enable Javascript To See All Widget