We lost one of our family friends last night and it brought a tear to my eye. It happened in just a few seconds and had been coming for years, yet it was sad when it happened. And we will be re-living it for a long time because he won't be going away soon, instead just laying there in the river, rotting and waiting for a big flood to carry him away.
Our friend was a big cottonwood tree right at the edge of the river that runs by our house. For the last ten days we have been having rain, a lot of it, and flooding. Even though we had protected the tree with rip-rap (large rocks) several years ago, there just was not enough root structure there to support it in the super saturated soil. Last night my wife and I were sitting in our "River Room" when we heard a large "crack" which sounded like thunder, but was instead our tree falling into the river.
It was a major highway for squirrels as they made their way along the river bank up in the trees. It has been home to squirrels, racoons, other animals and a variety of birds, including baltimore orioles. We've had bald eagles in the high branches every fall and winter and ducks in the lower branches every spring. It has given us shade and was a large visual anchor to our view of the river
But no more. We will miss you old friend. You will be stuck in the river for a long time to come, maybe even years, before a big flood comes to take you away. You will be a sad reminder of your former grand presence.
Our loss is minor, compared to that of many. We have had no floods or tornadoes to tear our lives apart. (Our house sets on a high riverbank and and only a flood much greater than the epic record breaker of 2008 would cause us problems)
We have not lost possessions or family (or friends) lives due to this "natural disaster" We spent a few minutes putting our loss in perspective compared to that of many others. A loss? Yes. But significant on the larger scale? No.
Still, Goodbye Old Friend.
Richway Industries Snapshot
Richway Industries makes a variety of products, ranging from cellular concrete equipment to foam markers for agricultural and turf spraying. Learn more at the Richway website: http://www.richway.com
Normally published every Friday
Normally published every Friday
Friday, May 31, 2013
Monday, May 27, 2013
The value of "seasoned" staff members
Long before I became "older" myself, I liked to have few older people on our workforce. They could draw on their work experience to help mentor some of our younger staff members in learning "how to work". Of course there was always the danger that they would teach or encourage some bad work habits too. But generally they added some stability to our workforce. By the time they came to Richway, these "mentors" had long ago learned he importance of coming to work every day ---on time, and of how to work at a steady pace----though sometimes slower than I wanted.
We did try to screen out the ones who would not be a positive influence.
Sometimes things did not work out real well. Some 35 years ago we had a retired worker who had the capability and experience, but things were just not going well on the job. I suspected that alcohol was involved, but I was not prepared for what I learned one morning. I was behind a parts cabinet when his wife came in and said to him, not three feet from me (though of course neither of them knew I was behind then cabinet) "Glenn, you forgot your bottle this morning. I put it in your truck for you." Within just a few days we had more evidence and brought in a counselor for a meeting with him. We gave him a choice, get treatment or lose his job. He quit. Even that probably taught some of our younger employees a lesson.
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Friday, May 17, 2013
Space Center Update
During a recent trip to Cocoa Beach, I came to believe that momentum is building for something big to happen at the Kennedy Space Center. Refurbishment-repurposing is going on at the VAB (vehicle assembly building). A major aerospace company is bringing several hundred jobs to the "Space Coast" (for "manned aircraft design") and there are public announcements of other new activities.
Learn about "mobile launcher" modification here
Click to learn about Grumman expansion in Melbourne FL (just south of Cocoa Beach)
Of course there continues to be launching of satellite rockets from the adjoining Canaveral Air Force Station.
Elon Musk, the man behind Space-X, the first commercial private rocket launching company, has tweeted that he has important announcements coming. But he is also "the man" at Tesla, Solar City and co-founded PayPal, so an announcement could be about any of them.
SpaceX launch site story here
My pieces of information are all "rock solid" (only one of them is not public knowledge) and they may mean nothing even when combined, but if it happens, remember you heard it here first!
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Learn about "mobile launcher" modification here
Click to learn about Grumman expansion in Melbourne FL (just south of Cocoa Beach)
Of course there continues to be launching of satellite rockets from the adjoining Canaveral Air Force Station.
Elon Musk, the man behind Space-X, the first commercial private rocket launching company, has tweeted that he has important announcements coming. But he is also "the man" at Tesla, Solar City and co-founded PayPal, so an announcement could be about any of them.
SpaceX launch site story here
My pieces of information are all "rock solid" (only one of them is not public knowledge) and they may mean nothing even when combined, but if it happens, remember you heard it here first!
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Friday, May 10, 2013
IT IS ALL ABOUT MARKETING
We are all Marketers!
The small town in which I live has an excellent, but small, school system. So excellent in fact, that when the nearby University of Northern Iowa closed their "laboratory school" which they used to train teachers and also test innovative and new teaching methods and strategies, 70 students elected to transfer to our school, ten miles away. Why? you may ask. Marketing is my answer. The marketing leader was Steve Gray, the superintendent of our school system. As he will tell you though, it was the efforts of many people that helped make the prospective students aware of the educational opportunities at our school. The team used a number of techniques to help prospective students and parents explore Janesville Schools. And those 70 students increased the total enrollment by nearly 20%.
Supeintendent Gray is moving on after the close'of the school year. His next school is getting an excellent leader AND marketer!
You wouldn't normally think of a school as being involved in marketing, but you would be wrong. In fact the schools are constantly marketing within their own system. Marketing to students (work hard, learn, stay in school) and marketing to teachers (and prospective teachers), other staff, parents and the community.
I am an engineer by education, but I figured out long ago that without marketing, you have nothing ... no matter what you are; manufacturer, retail store, writer, parent, religious entity, school, or golf professional. That is why much more of my time has been spent on marketing than engineering for the last 35 years.
The small town in which I live has an excellent, but small, school system. So excellent in fact, that when the nearby University of Northern Iowa closed their "laboratory school" which they used to train teachers and also test innovative and new teaching methods and strategies, 70 students elected to transfer to our school, ten miles away. Why? you may ask. Marketing is my answer. The marketing leader was Steve Gray, the superintendent of our school system. As he will tell you though, it was the efforts of many people that helped make the prospective students aware of the educational opportunities at our school. The team used a number of techniques to help prospective students and parents explore Janesville Schools. And those 70 students increased the total enrollment by nearly 20%.
Supeintendent Gray is moving on after the close'of the school year. His next school is getting an excellent leader AND marketer!
You wouldn't normally think of a school as being involved in marketing, but you would be wrong. In fact the schools are constantly marketing within their own system. Marketing to students (work hard, learn, stay in school) and marketing to teachers (and prospective teachers), other staff, parents and the community.
I am an engineer by education, but I figured out long ago that without marketing, you have nothing ... no matter what you are; manufacturer, retail store, writer, parent, religious entity, school, or golf professional. That is why much more of my time has been spent on marketing than engineering for the last 35 years.
Monday, May 6, 2013
Thanks For Asking
I have a friend, Kevin, whom I do not see very often, who had a daughter with some early childhood physical problems, a number of years ago. I knew it was a concern to Kevin and his wife. Every time I saw him, maybe twice a year, I would ask about his daughter. And every time, he would respond by saying "Thanks for asking" and then giving me an update. He genuinely appreciated my concern. Prior to that, I often would not ask people about similar matters for fear of seeming to be too intrusive.
I have had similar experiences with other people. Over the years I have come to realize that most people appreciate such concern, if it is genuine. Such an event or situation is often uppermost in their mind and they seem glad to have someone with whom they can share, even when the news is bad. But I can think of one person whom I know who regards any question about almost anything as an intrusion.
A sympathy card after a death is similar. People appreciate that you care and are concerned.
Shirlee, our Office Manager for 16 years, was once described to me as "the person who sends more 'thinking of you' type cards than anyone else in town" by the Postmaster in our town. She is still doing it, though many times it is now an email. It is the thought that counts, as "they" say.
Yes, it is nice to know that someone cares.
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