Robber Fly

I am fairly certain this insect is a robber fly. I spotted it on the ground while walking in the yard today. If you click on the image to enlarge it and look carefully, you will see that it is pointy on both ends. It eats most insects including other robber flies. It will not sting or bite humans unless provoked and I am happy to report that he took little issue with being photographed at a close distance.

Birgit Caliandro 1965-2020

The gentle sound of raindrops falling upon the earth set the perfect mood for the celebration of Birgit Caliandro’s life. Family and friends gathered in an open-air pavilion to remember and honor a woman whose spirit was as generous as her smile and whose love for her children was boundless. Birgit did not surrender an inch to the cancer which took her last April. She lived life to the fullest and her impact on those who knew her was profound. Her daughter, Isabella, was a classmate of Nicolai’s growing up and the two have remained close friends to this day.

Markforged IPO

On my first day of work at Markforged in 2015 as their new EVP of Engineering, the then CEO told me that the company would be out of business in 45 days if we could not resolve a production problem with their carbon fiber printing filament (pictured below along with the printer). The original supplier of the carbon fiber had redirected their production to automotive applications and when the company switched to the only other supplier in the world, yield plummeted to near zero. Customers who had been waiting for the material for 9 months were threatening to return their printers and the sales team had lost confidence in any schedule commitments from engineering. The situation was bleak and analogous to trying to sell ink jet printers with an IOU for black ink. During my time with the company, we quickly sorted the carbon fiber problem and introduced a much more reliable second-generation printer that sold like hotcakes. Yesterday, the company started trading on the New York Stock Exchange with a market cap of nearly two billion dollars and the stock I acquired when I left the company is now quite valuable.

Relatives?

A brief tour of the yard yielded a couple of interesting mushroom profiles. These two were in close physical proximity and I am led to wonder if the one below is a younger version of the one above. I will have to keep an eye on them to see what develops.

Also featured today is a television news piece on the Amputee Golf Tournament that Nicolai played in earlier this week.

Now That’s A Foundation

As we near the start of our new home construction, I took a special interest in this massive new building foundation being built near Kendall Square. I was in the area for a meeting with a potential new client in the life science sector. I have secured three advisor/consulting engagements thus far and would like to pick up one or two more. My goal is to work no more than half-time in aggregate until I transition into full retirement. Anticipating potential traffic and parking delays, I arrived early. I used the extra time to photograph this construction site, launching my drone from the parking garage top level. Every time I see one of these huge buildings going up, I can only wonder what impact it will have on traffic.

Third Place, First Time

Nico placed third in the 2020 Gorham Savings Bank Maine Amputee Open golf tournament held at the Brunswick Golf Club in Maine. The 36 hole stroke play event was run by the Amputee Association of Maine and is Nico’s first competitive tournament. He shot a pair of 81s competing in the above-the-knee amputee category. I suspect he was the only participant who played without a prosthetic and question if that left him on equal footing, no pun intended. I have a feeling this will not be the last post about Nico’s golf exploits. Local television news coverage of the event can be found here.

Father & Daughter

While attending my soccer teammate’s birthday party yesterday, I captured this image of him with his adult daughter. Steve and I share Italian ancestry and I love that our people demonstrate a propensity for close physical contact with family and friends.

Italia Forever

I am the oldest member of my over-55 soccer team at 62 but some of my teammates are not far behind. Steve, pictured center, enjoys a surprise 60th birthday to which we were invited. The gathering included dozens of friends and family but I think Steve was most surprised to see us there. We gave him a signed soccer ball and a Team Italia soccer jersey with his name printed on the back. Later, a group of us met up at a local sports bar and grille to watch the EuroCup finals. Obviously, I was rooting for Italy based on my ancestry and represented a small fraction of the bar patrons I was surrounded by. Their victory was even sweeter as a member of the vocal minority. Even so, I do feel sorry for all of my English friends who had to endure yet another penalty kick defeat.

Bumper crop

Seemingly overnight, our backyard has erupted with a crop of mushrooms. Fortunately, our groundhog, Gary, cannot get enough of them and can be seen dining on them throughout the day. I used to think bird identification was difficult. The world of fungi is something on an entirely different level. Currently, scientists have identified some 120,000 species of fungi and recent estimates put the total number on this planet between 2.2 and 3.8 million! Identified mushrooms, however, number a mere 14,000. Suffice it to say, I gave up trying to identify this mushroom rather quickly.

Revere Stadium

Nicolai and his soccer teammate, Rafa (left), met with the Mayor of Revere, Brian Arrigo (2nd from left), and Artur Braga, a representative of Brazillian radio station Nossa Ràdio USA. They have secured the use of the Revere Stadium for a US National Amputee Soccer Team intrasquad friendly to be held August 7th. Over that weekend the American Amputee Soccer Association will be conducting an ID camp to determine which players will represent the United States in upcoming international competition.

Not So Little Dumplings

We celebrated Nico’s 27th birthday at the Dumpling House in Cambridge this evening. The dinner was great, the conversation even better, and the opportunity to enjoy each other’s company; priceless.

To date, I have been the keeper of birth certificates, social security cards, and vaccination records for the children. This evening each received an envelope containing their respective documents and are now in charge of their security and retention. They all groused. Perhaps the handoff represented the final acknowledgment of their status as bonafide adults. I, on the other hand, felt a sense of liberation from a responsibility I had grown weary of. Although he chose to pose with the meal’s leftovers, Nicolai’s package also included his Master’s Degree diploma which arrived at our house earlier in the week.

Master of Levitation

My nephew Mario, a day older than Nicolai, turned 27 today. A scholar and athlete and the nicest person you will ever meet. Among the cousins, he is the most proficient at self-levitation.

USNWST

Nico, Maya, and I drove to Hartford, CT this afternoon to watch the US National Women’s Soccer Team (USNWST) play Mexico in their final match before heading to Japan for the Olympics. The US looked very sharp in the first half, scoring 4 unanswered goals, each a masterpiece in its own right and very exciting. The scoreless second half was played with less intensity and I suspect that the priority was to ensure no one got injured ahead of the Games. It was a great outing that will be long remembered and left us with an even greater desire to follow our women’s team on their quest for gold.

Sister Susan

Jeanine took this photo of her sister Susan over the long weekend while visiting with her in Burlington, VT. The two spent a lot of time indoors playing Dominos with friend Jean Cass because of inclement weather but did manage an outing to Lake Champlain during a break in the rain.