Gig’em Horns!!!

or something like that…

Blogging will be light this afternoon and evening (I know… I know, why should today be any different) as the family ventures to Blogospeer Central for a get-together-geek-out-bbq-feast-football extravaganza.

I’m slowly being surrounded by Aggies, last night we ate hot-wings and played board games with our new pals, Michael and Natalie and their sweet young boys. Food was delicious and we had a good time playing balderdash and compatibility. We are trying the ‘power of the pack‘ with toddlers, since their boys seem to act nice and peaceful when they are around our large brood. We sent one of our pack leaders, Brenna, to a friends house for the night, so the rehabilitation may have been limited. Here at Casa de Stueve, we rehabilitate toddlers and train parents. *guffaw*
Another reason for light blogging, I’m teaching Sunday School in the morning, so I need to finish prepping for that, and get organized so we can get out the door early in the morning. We are also on tap to bring breakfast so I need to get prepped for that.

But looking forward to an afternoon geek-out, BBQ and Aggie Football!!!! (though I still love Oregon State – No one licks our Beavers!!!!)

Great Christian News site on the interweb…

Okay, its parody, and a lot of its content is several months (if not years) old, but it still makes me chuckle.

Articles like this one, for example:

DUTTON, Ohio รขโ‚ฌโ€ Parishioners of Shady Tree Lutheran Church say they’re tired of their pastor, Charles Trigleford, 64, mangling internet-related words.
The chief complaint is the way Trigleford says “w-dot” when giving the church’s web site, rather than the technically correct “w-w-w-dot”.

“It’s as if he doesn’t know the other w’s are there,” said Sher Wanstler, 37, a self-described “very annoyed” church-goer. “If you type in ‘w-dot’ and then our web address, you get nothing.”

Parishioner Bob Fairlane says the mistakes rankle some more than others.

“I cringe a little, but at least he’s trying,” Fairlane says.

Others say Trigleford has a history of messing up web terms. He used to call it the “world wide internet” before switching to “the interweb,” they say.

“There was a few weeks when he kept calling them ‘hot links’ instead of just ‘links,'” says Stacy, 13. “It’s embarrassing. Nobody says hot links anymore. That’s a sausage or something.”