Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Holiday Flight Delays


Happy New Year's Eve

 And the errors piled up at nearly each stage of the flight home from Baltimore last night. 
Loading Baggage after
the Passengers are on-board
Baltimore, MD
December 30, 2025

Southwest definitely did not shine in the darkness. 

As the day got later, so did our flight. When we left for the airport our flight home was 8 minutes late. The incoming flight from Detroit was delayed. I could see that on Flight Tracker, but 8 minutes is almost nothing. 

Then the delay kept getting longer as Chris and I were enjoying a glass, or two, of wine at the bar near the gate. We went from an 8:20 PM door close to an 8:51 PM door close, to a 9:03 PM door close and then later. So we went for a long walk to keep ourselves moving. We did finally get aboard the jet and settled into our seats and then, because we were on the right side of the plane I could tell the problems began. People were still boarding as 9:20 PM passed, an hour after the original scheduled departure, but then baggage carts rolled up to load baggage. I knew we were going to be a lot later. 

The pilot and crew tried to keep us apprised of what was going on, but Chris and I had a birds-eye view of the baggage being loaded long after the announced push-back time. 

Well, once the baggage was loaded and the cargo bay secured I thought that we were good to go. So did the crew as the main cabin door was finally closed. 

Nothing happened. No engine start, no motion. 

We sat. The captain finally advised us that the tug to push the jet back from the gate wouldn't start because of the cold. 

After sitting for the better part of another hour, the jet finally moved and the engines fired up. 

In the flight tracker, it says take-off was 10:18 PM, but that was really gate push back. We taxied forever, like we were in Denver or Houston and not Baltimore. Take-off was not until about 10:37 PM. 

Once airborne the flight was smooth and the night was beautiful for sightseeing. We saw the coast of the Carolinas again out the window. At night it was highlighted by the lights. Landing at PBI was a bit different as we came in from the ocean and flew over the city. We enjoyed looking at there Christmas lights, but were anxious to get off the plane and into the car headed home. 

We arrived home a few minutes after 1 AM. Ugh. A very long day. We had welcomed the arrival of New Year's Eve. 


-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, FL

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Crashing the Party

 

Blue Sky and Sun
Odenton, MD
December 29, 2025
The biggest party night of the year is tomorrow night. Sometimes I can't tell if we are partying to cast off the year behind us or for the hope of a better year ahead. No matter, there are likely more of us out there just for the chance to party. 

Chris and I expect to be awake for the New York City ball drop tomorrow night, but we will be arriving back at our home on New Year's Eve after the flight out of Baltimore later today. So tomorrow will be a long day as we celebrate both the day's arrival and the year's end. In retrospect, I'm not sure why I booked an evening flight, but I did and I guess I have to own it. Our trusty car is waiting for us in long-term parking and if we don't check bags we should be home about 40 minutes after we land at PBI. 

I took the rather uninspiring image at the top of the item because yesterday was the first time that I needed to wear my sunglasses outside in almost a week. The overcast skies had set in and I was concerned that I might not see the sun again until New Year's Eve in South Florida. Thankfully, that will not be the case as it is supposed to be a bright, partly sunny, and cold day. At least it will be sunny, but the projected high of 33 degrees is a bit too cold for me. 

It is going to be cold in Tequesta when we arrive. The projected high for the day is only 65 degrees and it will be about 50 degrees when we arrive tonight. What happened to the 80s? I guess I will need to wear a sweater on the plane.

Travel days can be a real pain! But, party on!


-- Bob Doan, Odenton, MD


Monday, December 29, 2025

Monday Musings - December 29, 2025

 

1. The final Monday of 2025 has arrived. Christmas Day has passed and we are looking forward to the New Year with some trepidation. We will party and greet the new year, but the joyous celebration may soon evaporate as the realities of the world overcome our senses. 

2. NFL Family Football Report. As weeks go, at least the family teams were 3-3, .500, which is certainly better than they have been doing. The Steelers failed to win the AFC North Division. That loss sets up a "Win and In" game next week with the Ravens for the division crown with the loser watching the playoffs from their sofas. The winner of that game will be the only family team in the playoffs. Collectively, the teams are 41-54-1, .432, for the season. 

Ravens (8-8) overcame Packers (9-6-1), 41-24 

Dolphins (7-9) swam past Buccaneers (7-9), 21-20-17

Steelers (9-7) tackled by Browns (4-12), 6-13

Commanders (4-12) were lassoed by Cowboys (7-8-1), 23-30

Chiefs (6-10) fell to Broncos (13-3), 13-20

Lilly, Arthur and Finn Watching Football
Odenton, MD
December 28, 2025

3. Watching football is a family affair. Yesterday we managed to get four adults and three dogs onto the sofa for the games. The dogs were quite comfortable and staked out some prime real estate complete with pillows to enjoy the contests. 

4. And writing of sports teams, Arsenal, of the Premier League, continues to maintain a 2-point advantage over Man City and 3-points over Aston Villa--their opponent tomorrow. This is a very important game.

5. Whack-a-mole. The US Military is being used to play Whack-a-Mole across the globe. Whether it be sinking unarmed power boats in the Caribbean Sea or Pacific Ocean, striking ISIS positions in Syria, or for some unknown reason wasting valuable munitions to do something in Nigeria, apparently our president who claims to be committed to peace is spending our national treasure willy-nilly around the planet. Yet, he won't commit our support to Ukraine where the focused application of US weapons could actually bring a terrible war to a conclusion.

6. Today in History. On December 29, 1890, in one of the final chapters of America’s long Indian wars, the U.S. Cavalry kills 146 Lakota Indians at Wounded Knee on the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota.

Throughout 1890, the U.S. government worried about the increasing influence at Pine Ridge of the Ghost Dance spiritual movement, which taught that Native Americans had been defeated and confined to reservations because they had angered the gods by abandoning their traditional customs. Many Lakota believed that if they practiced the Ghost Dance and rejected the ways of the white man, the gods would create the world anew and destroy all non-believers, including non-Indians.


On December 15, 1890, reservation police tried to arrest Sitting Bull, the famous Hunkpapa Lakota leader, who they mistakenly believed was a Ghost Dancer, at the Standing Rock reservation and killed him in the process.


On December 29, the U.S. Army’s 7th cavalry surrounded a band of Ghost Dancers under the Lakota Chief Big Foot (a.k.a. Spotted Elk) near Wounded Knee Creek and demanded they surrender their weapons. As that was happening, a fight broke out between an Indian and a U.S. soldier and a shot was fired, although it’s unclear from which side. A brutal massacre followed, in which it’s estimated almost 150 Native Americans were killed (some historians put this number at twice as high), nearly half of them women and children. The cavalry lost 25 men.



Trump-Zelenskiy talks yield no progress on Ukraine-Russia territorial issues - Reuters

China stages record drills designed to encircle Taiwan - Reuters

Syria secures mass grave revealed by Reuters and opens criminal investigation - Reuters

North Korea's Kim Jong Un oversees cruise missile launches - Reuters

The small-business owners going uninsured as premiums skyrocket  - CNN

Blizzard conditions and tornadoes disrupt travel as winter brings frigid reality check back to the US - CNN

Congress is desperately failing at its main job - MS Now

Trump’s Christmas bombing of Nigeria has little to do with protecting Christians - MS Now

Iran sends conflicting signals on its missiles as Israeli concerns rise - The Washington Post

Steelers make major money decision on DK Metcalf after 2-game suspension - FoxNews

Donald Trump in his own words – the year in racism and misogyny - The Guardian



-- Bob Doan, Odenton, MD

#MondayMusings

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Christmas Village

Overview of the Snow Village Display
Glen Burnie, MD
November 30, 2025

 While visiting with Patrick, Jen, and Beck last evening, I had the opportunity to get a last look at their Snow Village display. 

Patrick does a masterful job creating the display and I learned last evening that he prefers the village pieces to the more rural settings of farmhouses and barns. They have a game they play consisting of hiding pink flamingos in the village for keen-eyed observers to find and re-hide. 

Snow Village Detail
Glen Bunie, MD
December 27, 2025

Christmas, which was just three days ago, is far from over, despite many people’s belief that it has concluded for the year. Retailers are in the midst of the after-Christmas sales, attempting to clear out their remaining stock before the 2026 models begin arriving. I’ve been eyeing an excessively priced TV that hasn’t yet gone on sale, but since it’s the 2025 version, I’m hoping the arrival of the 2026 models will provide some price relief.

I would like to say that I am enjoying the winter weather, I am not! But, I am mindful that it could be worse. My sister who resides in western New York State reported 22 inches of snow on the ground yesterday. That is 22 good reasons not to live there. The Snow Village is fun to look at and to create every year, but, thankfully, the snow is not real and the pieces actually are warm despite the wintery appearance. 

I am looking forward to returning home to warm South Florida next week for New Years and then off on a cruise to the Bahamas for a few days. But until then, we have more people to visit and things to do despite the cold.


-- Bob Doan, Odenton. MD

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Afternoon at the Crab


 
Despite the cold 34 degree temperatures and a bit of sleet, we headed off to the Crooked Crab for lunch arriving there at noon just as they opened. We were trying to get the commemorative glasses they were giving out, but the supply ran out four people before I got to the counter. And that was after standing in the line, outside in the cold and sleet, for what seemed like 30 minutes. 


Chris and I, along with Mike and Nicole, enjoyed lunch as played Pokemon on our phones, participating in a number of raids and having fun. I am just getting back into the game after a two year hiatus and it has really upgraded. It is like learning the game all over again, but I did have fun participating in the raids.

All-in-all, it was a quiet day and we finished off the day with dinner at Frisco's and watching the movie Eden. It is a Ron Howard true-story movie about the first settlers on Floreana Island. The movie details the intrigue of there first three groups on the island and how there came to be one surviving family, who still live on the relatively remote island in the Galapagos which is not an Eco-tourist destination. 

I love quiet days, especially after the crush of the holidays. 


-- Bob Doan, Odenton, MD

Friday, December 26, 2025

The day after Christmas

 Happy Boxing Day


I learned about the day after Christmas when I was in High School while working part-time after school at a men's clothing store.  The day after Christmas was, in this store, the busiest day of the year. The store was swamped with returns and exchanges not to mention people anxious to spend their Christmas money. 

I do not recall the store conducting an after-Christmas sale on the day after Christmas. Usually that was a bit later. But on the sales floor, we were swamped. It was total anarchy from opening at 9 AM until closing at 5 PM, unless, as it is this year, the day after Christmas was a Friday and then the store was open until 9 PM.

My Dad was a manager at the store and at the end of the day we would walk, exhausted, to his car to head home. We did a lot of father-son bonding during the short couple of years that I worked at the store. It is a good memory. 

I never knew that the day after Christmas was also Boxing Day. I only learned of Boxing Day some years later. To my knowledge, American society has never given a name to the day after Christmas, unlike Black Friday which as we know is the day after Thanksgiving. 

That clothing store is long gone. It is just a shell of itself on Cayuga Street in Ithaca. I likely will never pass by it again, but I remember working on the sales floor as well as pressing clothes after the tailors had altered them, washing the windows, straightening stock, shoveling snow, breaking ice, vacuuming every night, taking out the garbage, and doing whatever the owner thought needed to be done. 

But I also remember my Dad. And the day after Christmas.


-- Bob Doan, Odenton, MD

Thursday, December 25, 2025

Happy Christmas 2025

 

Family Pajama Christmas Eve Brunch
Glen Burnie, MD
December 24, 2025
Christmas Eve was a fun-filled family day and Christmas morning has likewise been fun with family.

Marley Creek
Glen Burnie, MD
December 24, 2025

We did something different for the traditional Christmas Eve brunch by having each family arrive in pajamas. It was something fun and added a new twist to our gathering. The family posed for the annual picture still in their pajamas. After most of the others departed, Chris and I stayed for a while and enjoyed time with Baby Beck, who was fighting a cold he acquired at day care, but he was in a remarkably good mood and enjoyed a late afternoon walk down to the water.

The day was pleasantly warm and the walk to Marley Creek was very nice. The sunset was stunning.

Chris, Finn, and Me
Odenton, MD
December 25, 2025

Christmas Day dawned continuing the warmer trend. While not the 80's of the South Carolina beaches, it was still very comfortable and nice. We enjoyed a sumptuous Christmas breakfast of waffles and then descended upon the Christmas tree and the gifts. Santa was very generous. I guess I was a good boy this year, and why he doesn't know won't hurt him!

Now, it is time for games and fun as we relax and enjoy the day.

My thoughts and prayers go out to all of those in need and I am keeping our military personnel and civilian first-responders in the forefront of my mind. I know there are so many unsung heroes on the frontlines, whether the front is here in America or in some place around the world. 


May you find peace and joy wherever this Christmas Day finds you.


-- Bob Doan, Odenton, MD

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Christmas Eve 2025

 Happy Christmas Eve


For our family, the festivities begin this morning and continue through tomorrow. 

It is exciting this year with a new grandson who is experiencing his first Christmas. Actually, it was a lot of fun shopping for him. Who can possibly resist buying trucks and tractors for an almost one-year old? 

It was very easy to get pulled into the noise and hustle this season, but we resisted. Chris and I managed to get our Christmas cards addressed and mailed in a more relaxed manner and although we have had an aggressive travel schedule, we are looking forward to the next couple of days. We even have the presents wrapped. Well, I may have to wrap an additional gift we bought for Beck, the youngest grandson, yesterday. 

Now, it's time for family. 

I don't expect to listen to or watch the news until Friday. 

White Christmas? 

Thankfully, no! I am looking forwards to the projected high of 51 degrees for both today and tomorrow! Maybe snow on Friday. 

Of course, not everyone can be with their families on this holiday season. I am remembering the first responders, those working shift work, and of course our military personnel across the world and here at home and send them a special thank you for their service!


May the peace and joy of Christmas be with you today and throughout the New Year.



-- Bob Doan, Odenton, MD

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

A Great Day for Flying

Route 301 Bridge over the Potomac
Dahlgren, VA
December 22, 2025

 The trip north on a Southwest flight was, believe it or not, enjoyable. Yes, the airports were jammed with holiday travelers. There was even a line for baggage checkin at the Palm Beach International Southwest counters. I've never been in a line there before. TSA moved passengers through security screening in an expeditious manner and we enjoyed some time in the lounge before arriving at the gate about five minutes before boarding began. Actually, the pre-boarders were already being assisted down the jetway as we took our place in line. 

Our Flight Route
Southwest 2489 PBI-BWI
December 22, 2025

Our flight route took us out over the Atlantic and we went feet-dry over the Carolinas with Cape Fear in sight. It was one of the clearest flying days that I can remember and the sight of the coast from Cape Fear running to the north was stunning. The strip of sandy beach sandwiched between the spit of land and the ocean was very evident all the way to the horizon. I failed to take a picture of it for posterity, but I later took an image as we passed by Dahlgren, VA, and the Route 301 bridge crossing the Potomac River that I have had the pleasure of traversing on multiple occasions.

The jet was completely full, but the 2h 25m flight was still enjoyable. The only disturbing part was that we arrived in Baltimore 15 minutes early, but had to wait on the tarmac for the gate to open for 20 minutes. That meant we actually arrived at the gate 5 minutes late. I do not enjoy when that happens--and then, there was about another 10 minute wait until the cabin door was opened and we could begin the deplaning process. I am glad I did not have a connecting flight. 

Did I mention that there was no internet service? That was an annoyance, but fortunately, I did not have anything worthwhile to work on and so I sat back and enjoyed the flight crammed into a middle seat so that Chris could enjoy the window seat. We try to take an aisle and a window seat leaving the middle empty and hoping no one is anxious to sit between us, but with the jet being full I resigned myself to the middle seat even though I had an "A" boarding pass. I guess all of that goes away next month when Southwest begins assigning seats. 

I really cannot expect much more when traveling during the busy holiday season. I guess I am now an official traveler holiday statistic.


-- Bob Doan, Odenton, MD

Monday, December 22, 2025

Monday Musings - December 22, 2025

 

View from Jupiter Lighthouse
Jupiter, FL
November 14, 2025

1. The penultimate Monday of the year has arrived. Christmas is three days hence. 2025 is quickly becoming history and I am looking forward to a fresh start in another year. I think the country needs it.

2. NFL Family Football Report. The abysmal NFL season continues for the family teams. Collectively, they went 1-5 this week. The Ravens hopes for a playoff berth are on life-support after losing last evening to the Patriots. The teams are 38-51-1, .428. 

Ravens (7-8) lost to Patriots (12-3), 28-24 

Dolphins (6-9) drowned by Bengals (5-10), 21-45

Steelers (9-6) defeated Lions (8-7), 29-24

Commanders (4-11) owned by Eagles (10-5), 18-29

Cowboys (6-8-1) were electrocuted by Chargers (11-4), 17-34 

Chiefs (6-9) were were stomped by Titans (3-12) 9-26

3. The weather in South Florida has been awesome. Chris and I did a short bike ride yesterday. It will be the last ride of 2025 as we head north today for Christmas. I rode 1517 miles during the year. Not my best in terms of total miles, but still a solid year given the amount of travel that we did.

4. Is anyone else concerned that the president selected a special envoy to Greenland? Are we going to get into a conflict with NATO and steal Greenland? USAToday

5. Today in HistoryOn December 22, 1956, a baby gorilla named Colo enters the world at the Columbus Zoo in Ohio, becoming the first-ever gorilla born in captivity. Weighing in at approximately 4 pounds, Colo, a western lowland gorilla whose name was a combination of Columbus and Ohio, was the daughter of Millie and Mac, two gorillas captured in French Cameroon, Africa, who were brought to the Columbus Zoo in 1951. Before Colo’s birth, gorillas found at zoos were caught in the wild, often by brutal means. In order to capture a gorilla when it was young and therefore still small enough to handle, hunters frequently had to kill the gorilla’s parents and other family members.

Gorillas are peaceful, intelligent animals, native to Africa, who live in small groups led by one adult male, known as a silverback. There are three subspecies of gorilla: western lowland, eastern lowland and mountain. The subspecies are similar and the majority of gorillas in captivity are western lowland. Gorillas are vegetarians whose only natural enemy is the humans who hunt them. On average, a gorilla lives to 35 years in the wild and 50 years in captivity.



Syrians emptied Assad’s prisons. They’re filling up again, and abuse is rife - Reuters


-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, FL

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