TOUR AMERICA, 2019: PHOENIX, ARIZONA – THE GRAND CANYON STATE

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Places We Have Called Home In 2019

Home Is Where We Park It:   UMOM New Day Centers, Phoenix 

Nov 6, 2109

Temperature 84 Degrees

Two Projects Down, Time to Start Anew

Time to Say Till We Meet Again

This might be the last blog for about a week.  Definitely none tomorrow night.  We’re leaving very early tomorrow morning for Wellsboro, PA.  My mom has continued to grow weaker and weaker and unfortunately there is no hope for a turn around.  It’s time for us to spend what time we can with her.  I refuse to say goodbye but I can and will say until we meet again.  Please continue to keep our family in your prayers.

Our work here continues and will continue even without us.  We’ll pick right up where we left off when we return.  Today we touched up the first several units and finished painting the doors and frames.

Denise mixing the red paint for the doors and frames.

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Sandy getting a few more drops of paint out of the bucket.

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Chris cutting in around the ceiling.

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I even got in on the act – did some one say there was a screw loose?

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Clean up of the paint room continued through the morning and was finished this afternoon.

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Our one team leader, Jean, showing one and all the many empty paint cans already.

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Who did you say was in there?  Santa Claus?  The Easter Bunny?

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Nope, just Barbara gathering up the paint trays.

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Here is how it goes and what they wanted us to do.  You take, for instance, every can of paint that looks like let’s say yellow and you just dump them all in one big bucket.  Same for brown, and gray, and so on.  Trust me we’ve come up with some very interesting paint colors!

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Our next project are repairs to the outdoor shelters.  Like this one that someone put their foot through.  Through, by the way concrete backer board and a sheet of plywood.

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Our other team leader, Steve, showing us what needs to be done.  Well, sort of.  Suffice to say he is not camera shy!

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That was our day on The Road of Retirement.  We are really enjoying our time here.  Yes, with the scrape yard behind it is noisy and dusty.  We even have a train that adds additional sound effects.  Not to mention the police sirens you here all so often.  Then throw in the planes taking off from Sky Harbor Airport.  Not a place for light sleepers.  Amazingly, we have already learned to tune it all out.  Being out in the country where all is quiet is going to sound – can I say it, a bit weird!  But back to what I was saying, it is great being here.  The work is rewarding.  The team is fantastic.  Our leaders are super people.  We hope sometime in the future to serve here again.

In closing I would ask again please keep our family in your prayers.  There is not going to be a happy ever after ending for my mom.  It’s hard for all of us to accept this.  We need prayers for what is to come.  In addition, my sister and her husband have been taking care of mom and it has not been easy.  They are exhausted and in need of some down time, and time for just the two of them.  Hopefully, Barbara and I can provide that if even for just several days.  Prayers please for all of us in the days to come.  Thanks.

Time to get some sleep.  We need to be up at 4 am for our flight out of here.  Thanks for coming along with us today.  We always appreciate your company and your comments.  Catch up with you some time soon.

These are the voyages of  Graybeard and it’s two intrepid travelers.  Our continuing mission: to explore as many new states as possible, to seek out new acquaintances and make new friends, to boldly go where we have never been before

See you on down the road!

 

TOUR AMERICA, 2019: PHOENIX, ARIZONA – THE GRAND CANYON STATE

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Places We Have Called Home In 2019

Home Is Where We Park It:   UMOM New Day Centers, Phoenix 

Nov 6, 2109

Temperature 82 Degrees

We Continue To Roll On

San Xavier Mission

Just another day in paradise.  Yet, this morning was an unusual one, at least for the two of us.  Can you believe we woke up to thunder, lightening and rain.  It didn’t last long, it wasn’t a heavy rain, but in all the time we have been in Arizona this is the first time it has rained.  Ok, I know it happens, but usually during the Monsoon season.  Just saying.

Our team is down two.  We have had some emergency medical issues.  Thankfully, nothing really serious and all will recover in due time.  Thank you Lord.

The rest of us continue to roll on applying paint here and there.  The offices now Sunday School rooms have been finished.  One apartment has been refurbished.  We’re making good progress.

Time to take a tour of a fascinating and beautiful Mission Church that is located just south of Tucson.  It is the

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A National Historic Landmark, San Xavier Mission was founded as a Catholic mission by Father Eusebio Kino in 1692.

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The current church dates from the late 1700’s, when Southern Arizona was part of New Spain. In 1783, Franciscan missionary Fr. Juan Bautista Velderrain was able to begin construction on the present structure using money borrowed from a Sonoran rancher. He hired an architect, Ignacio Gaona, and a large workforce of O’odham (The Tohono Oʼodham are a Native American people of the Sonoran Desert, residing primarily in the U.S. state of Arizona and the Mexican state of Sonora) to create the present church.  Widely considered to be the finest example of Spanish Colonial architecture in the United States, the Mission hosts some 200,000 visitors each year.

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The shell, a symbol of pilgrimage after the patron saint of Spain, Santiago or James the Greater, is replicated all through the structure in window treatments, the sanctuary, the facade and other details within the interior.

Outside above the entrance doors.

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Inside in the Choir Loft

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The oldest intact European structure in Arizona, the church’s interior is filled with marvelous original statuary and mural paintings. It is a place where visitors can truly step back in time and enter an authentic 18th Century space.

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More pictures of the interior of the church.

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Pentecost.

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The Last Supper.

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A closer look, note the money bag in Judas hand and the Devil lurking off to the right side of the picture.

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Mary taking care of baby Jesus.

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The oldest statue in the church.

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A statue of the first native American to become a saint.

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Two gold lions guarding the front of the church.

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That is just a small taste of the inside of this beautiful mission church.  You simply need to see it for yourself to truly appreciate it.

An interesting note, on the entrance door, on the outside of the door, on the handle there is a replica of a snake.  Why?  Symbolizing how one is to shed the old and put on the new.

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 San Xavier is still actively run by Franciscans, and continues to serve the native community by which it was built.   If you are ever in this area make it a point to visit the mission church and you will not be disappointed.

Time now to get ready for a new day on The Road of Retirement.  I’m finishing this blog the day after, just could not keep my eyes open last night.  But now, well there is another bucket of paint calling my name.  So time to roll on!

Thanks for joining us again.  We always appreciate your company and your comments.

These are the voyages of  Graybeard and it’s two intrepid travelers.  Our continuing mission: to explore as many new states as possible, to seek out new acquaintances and make new friends, to boldly go where we have never been before

See you on down the road!

 

 

TOUR AMERICA, 2019: PHOENIX, ARIZONA – THE GRAND CANYON STATE

 

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Places We Have Called Home In 2019

Home Is Where We Park It:   UMOM New Day Centers, Phoenix 

Nov 5, 2109

Temperature 85 Degrees

The UMOM Campus

Projects – What Else, Painting!

We woke up, which day I can’t remember now, either yesterday or today and Barbara said What in the world is that weird noise?  Listen, it sounds like something clicking, moving, it’s just something I’ve never heard before.

Outside I went to investigate.  The recycling center behind us?  Nope, they were not working yet.  The transfer switch?  Nothing funny in that compartment.  I came back in, stood in the bedroom and listened, and then began to laugh like crazy.  We both had forgotten that we had put Gertrude on the roof over our bedroom.  She was going through her motions looking for a signal!

I want to share the UMOM Campus with you tonight.  This campus is huge, larger than TMM in Phoenix.  There are facilities here in this location as well as in other areas in Phoenix.  Walk with me and let me show you what is here where we are working.

This is the Camus map.  Looking at it all the rigs are parked in the top left portion of the picture.  There are eight FHU sites.

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This is the Chapel where we gather for devotions each morning.

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The front intake desk

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A place of rest in the inner courtyard.

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A garden in the inner courtyard.

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The new basketball court.

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A picnic area.

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One of the playgrounds for the children here.

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An inspiring sign in the lobby.

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One of the day care rooms in the Center.

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The children’s playground within the Center.

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This is the cafeteria, meals are served here three times a day.  It is also where we go for break.

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This is the maintenance and wood working shop.

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This is the Wishy Washy area, where I’m sitting and typing this tonight.  We have free laundry.

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Now for our projects.  Painting office space and apartments is top of the list.  Thankfully, the paint this time is top of the line and so we only have to put one coat on.  It speeds things up and allows us to get more apartments painted.

This is our paint storage room.  That’s Keith front and center.

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Left to right, Anton, Steve, and Barbara hiding in the shadows.  They were tasked with sorting through all the paint, consolidating it and labeling it.

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This former office space is being refurbished and well be use in the future for Sunday School.  Sandra on the roller, Denise cutting in the baseboard.

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Keith doing some cutting in.

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Kris wielding the brush on some trim.

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Looking good!

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Me?  I got to remove all the old caulking around the one tub and then later I re-caulked it.

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Now for most people this is an elevator.  But for us it’s the magic portal door to a floor full of rooms to be painted!

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That was our day on The Road of Retirement.  Once again we’re knee deep in paint and just rolling along.  At the end of December I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that we are going to need some R and R.  Till then we’ll push on and along with the rest of the team finish what we came here to do.  Now and always we continue to believe life is good and we give thanks each day to the good Lord for the days we’re given to live.

Thanks for joining us today.  We’re glad to have your along and we always appreciate your comments.  Catch you tomorrow.

These are the voyages of  Graybeard and it’s two intrepid travelers.  Our continuing mission: to explore as many new states as possible, to seek out new acquaintances and make new friends, to boldly go where we have never been before

See you on down the road!

 

 

 

 

 

TOUR AMERICA, 2019: PHOENIX, ARIZONA – THE GRAND CANYON STATE

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Places We Have Called Home In 2019

Home Is Where We Park It:   UMOM New Day Centers, Phoenix 

Nov 4, 2109

Temperature 88 Degrees

Let The Projects Begin!

Titan Missile Museum – Part Two

Time to move out and – start painting again!

Today was the start of our two month NOMADS stint.  We’ve got a lot to do, setting up Christmas Trees, Christmas decorating, Christmas package wrapping, putting in a bathroom, rebuilding outdoor shelters, and of course a lot of offices and apartments to paint.  Here is our crash cart

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one of the rooms we are working in

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the paint is going on

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and Barbara is learning how to spackle.

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We’ve started and we’ve got a long way to go.  More about UMOM and our projects in future blogs.

Tonight we are going to finish our visit to the Titan Missile Museum.  Yesterday, we covered the Titan II missile and the silo that housed it.  Now, we’ll view the facilities that are still intact at this complex.

The underground facilities consist of a launch control center, the eight level silo containing the missile and its related equipment, and the connecting structures of access tunnels, blast locks, and the access portal and equipment elevator. The complex was built of steel reinforced concrete with walls as much as 8-foot-thick in some areas, and a number of 3-ton blast doors sealed the various areas from the surface and each other.IMG_0019

One hour guided tours are offered of the facilities.  On this tour, we descended 35 feet into the underground missile complex. We visited the launch control center and experienced a simulated launch of the missile. Then we journeyed down the cableway to level 2 of the missile silo to get an up-close look at the Titan II missile itself in its silo.

Our guide on our tour was Murray.

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This is the way down

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I counted them, yes, there are 55 steps.

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At the bottom of the stairs you encountered the first of two 3 ton blast doors.  Everything on this side of the blast door, meaning the stairs and landings, were considered a soft area and likely to be destroyed if the complex was hit with a missile.

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You passed through this blast door, went down a hallway through a second blast door, then made a left and entered the launch room.  In theory everything on the other side of the two blast doors was considered a hardened area and could survive a direct missile attack.  That was the theory!

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This is the actual launch room.

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At launch, orders from the National Command Authority would have specified one of three pre-programmed targets which, for security reasons, were unknown to the crew. This missile base was, at the time of closure, programmed to strike Target Two. The missile’s computer could hold up to three targets, and the target selected was determined by Strategic Air Command headquarters. To change the selected target, the crew commander pressed the appropriate button on the launch console. Target 2, which is classified to this day but was assumed to be within the borders of the former Soviet Union, was designated as a ground burst, suggesting that the target was a hardened facility such as a Soviet missile base. Targets could be selected for air or ground burst, but the selection was determined by Strategic Air Command.

As part of the tour one individual did a simulated launch of the Titan II missile.

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The facility’s highest state of alert was November 22, 1963, when President John F. Kennedy was shot.  When news of the shooting broke, the keys used to launch the missile were ordered to be placed on the tables at the launch consoles to prepare for a possible launch. The Pentagon did not yet know whether the Soviet Union had committed an act of war. The keys were not, however, placed in their switches.

The keys mentioned above were typically kept in the red safe in the launch room.

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Remember in yesterday’s blog we talked about how four butterfly valves controlled the flow of propellant to the stage one engine.  And how one of those valves was controlled by an electronic lock that could only be unlocked by a secret code that had to be entered by the launch crew?  This is where that code had to be entered.  Without the code the engine could not be started.  This prevented an accidental or unauthorized launch of the missile.

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Launch crews consisted of four individuals,a Crew Commander and Deputy and two enlisted individuals.  Each crew was on duty for 24 hours and while underground the only time they were allowed to be alone was when they were in the crew quarters.  Otherwise two had to be together at all times.

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We have the crew locked in underground.  In the launch room.  How then did they communicated with the outside world?

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The antenna to the left and outside of the wire is soft and was permanently deployed.  The antenna to the right was a backup and kept in a hardened underground vault and was raised only if necessary.

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Regarding intruders

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These are two of the scoop-shaped units that projected a motion-sensing Doppler radar beam

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Had an intruder been detected – which never happened – the crew did not investigate rather they called the adjacent Air Force Base to send Security Police

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Leaving the launch room, this is the cableway that led to the silo and the Titan II missile.

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Regarding the silo that contained the Titan II missile

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This is a picture of the missile in the silo showing the retractable platforms around the missile that allowed access to the missile for maintenance.  Note the fuel handler standing on one of those platforms.

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During the history of the Titan II missile there were five fatal accidents.  The most spectacular occurred on September 18, 1980 when a maintenance worker standing on one of these platforms accidentally dropped an eight pound socket which bounced down the silo eventually hitting stage one of the missile and creating a massive fuel leak

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which led to an explosion that killed one man and injured twenty-one others.  The 760 ton silo door came to rest 700 feet away.  The warhead was found several hundred feet away, damaged but intact.

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These are pictures of a test launch of the Titan II missile.  What appears to be smoke in the beginning is actually water vapor.  As the stage one ignited streams of water were directed at the base of the missile and then the resulting steam was vented outside.

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This silo became operational in 1963 and was deactivated in 1984 as part of President Reagan’s policy of decommissioning the Titan II missiles as part of a weapon systems modernization program. All operational Titan II silos throughout the country were demolished, except this one.

 Work to turn the missile site into a museum began in February of 1983.  By September of 1985 all the pieces were in place and all the necessary parties were in agreement. The Air Force would retain ownership of missile site 571-7, but lease it to Pima County.  Pima County, in turn, would sublease the site to the Arizona Aerospace Foundation for the purpose of operating the Titan Missile Museum.

The site was designated a National Historic Landmark in April of 1994, in recognition of the important role that the Titan II played in American history.   There are fewer than 3,000 historic places in the United States that bear this national distinction, and this status is rarely conferred on sites that are less than 50 years old.  Launch complex 571-7 was just 31 years old when it achieved its landmark status.

Since opening its doors, the museum has hosted more than 1.5 million visitors from around the world. Parts of the Star Trek ® movie First Contact  were filmed at the museum.  Additionally, the Titan Missile Museum was featured on the History Channel in two separate series in August of 2007:  Lost Worlds: Secret A-Bomb Factories; and Mega Movers: Army Mega Moves In 2012 it was featured in the reality TV show The Great Escape on TNT.  The museum was also featured in a short documentary on nuclear tourism by National Geographic.  Finally, the museum was featured twice on the Travel Channel’s Mysteries at the Museum series.

This brings to a close our visit to this unique piece of American History.  It was definitely a worthwhile visit for us and one we are so glad we were fortunate to visit.  Once again we learned yet another valuable lesson about our country’s history.

Almost forgot, yup, bought a new T-Shirt

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Time now to call it a day on The Road of Retirement.  Morning will come soon enough and with it yet another bucket of paint. Knowing that, good night to all, and to all a good night.

Thanks again for coming along with us.  We always appreciate your company and your comments.  Catch you again tomorrow.

These are the voyages of  Graybeard and it’s two intrepid travelers.  Our continuing mission: to explore as many new states as possible, to seek out new acquaintances and make new friends, to boldly go where we have never been before

See you on down the road!