Sunday, May 31, 2009

Chill'n


Chill'n, originally uploaded by Rich on the Road.

Today all the boys (Quincy, Joey, and me) hung out on the patio while mom ran errands...

Monday, May 25, 2009

The Original


The Original, originally uploaded by Rich on the Road.

I have a lot of these on facebook, but for those of you that are afraid...

Here's Quincy and I at the original Starbucks on Pike.. across from the famed Public Market in Seattle..

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Holy Crap!!!


Holy Crap!!!, originally uploaded by Rich on the Road.

It took me a min.. but the crapper in our hotel has a pee and poop button... What will they think of next?

Friday, May 22, 2009

Starbucks.... Stat....


Starbucks.... Stat...., originally uploaded by Rich on the Road.

Quincy is off to Seattle for some Starbucks... This is Quincy's second flight before 6 weeks... just like his bro...

Monday, May 18, 2009

Let Sleeping Lyons Lie


Let Sleeping Lyons Lie, originally uploaded by Rich on the Road.

Quincy has been on a big hold me kick today.... Seven hours and counting...

Thursday, May 14, 2009

MoJo or NoJo


MoJo or NoJo, originally uploaded by Rich on the Road.

They say that your mood can be dictated by the cloths you wear... I guess Quincy didn't like how I dressed him... :)

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Meeting the Mayo Bros...


Meeting the Mayo Bros..., originally uploaded by Rich on the Road.

We took Quincy and Joey out for a stroll today from our house to the clinic. It's maybe 4-5 miles...

Quincy had his pic taken here with Billy and Chuck Mayo.. and yes Jon it's only 50 degrees out...

Thursday, May 07, 2009

WWWWTD? (What Will White Trash Do)

It looks like the last sanctuary for our poor and under privileged will also go the way of the Eight-Track and Hair-Metal..... Yep, the staple of every successful communities judicial system... the Trailer Park...

First its was Yuppies moving out into the country and starting up "Hobby Farms". Then Yuppies set their sites on economically depressed urban areas, by setting up "Urban Cabins" or Lofts...

Now trailer parks.. What will the the nations poor white trash do... The jails are full... and do you want a 1979 Z28 parked out in you neighborhood because they need to move back in with family?

Can't these Yuppies just move to a reservation or Canada?

Full Story Below......




KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – From its bamboo floors to its rooftop deck, Clayton Homes' new industrial-chic "i-house" is about as far removed from a mobile home as an iPod from a record player.


Architects at the country's largest manufactured home company embraced the basic rectangular form of what began as housing on wheels and gave it a postmodern turn with a distinctive v-shaped roofline, energy efficiency and luxury appointments.


Stylistically, the "i-house" might be more at home in the pages of a cutting-edge architectural magazine like Dwell — an inspirational source — than among the Cape Cods and ranchers in the suburbs.


The layout of the long main "core" house and a separate box-shaped guestroom-office "flex room" resemble the letter "i" and its dot. Yet Clayton CEO and President Kevin Clayton said "i-house" stands for more than its footprint.


With a nod to the iPod and iPhone, Clayton said, "We love what it represents. We are fans of Apple and all that they have done. But the 'I' stands for innovation, inspiration, intelligence and integration."


Clayton's "i-house" was conceived as a moderately priced "plug and play" dwelling for environmentally conscious homebuyers. It went on sale nationwide Saturday with its presentation at the annual shareholders' meeting of investor Warren Buffett's Berkshire-Hathaway Inc. in Omaha, Neb.


"This innovative 'green' home, featuring solar panels and numerous other energy-saving products, is truly a home of the future," Buffett wrote his shareholders. "Estimated costs for electricity and heating total only about $1 per day when the home is sited in an area like Omaha."


Maryville, Tenn.-based Clayton Homes, acquired by Berkshire-Hathaway in a $1.7 billion buyout in 2003, delivered 27,499 mobile or manufactured homes last year, a third of the industry total. Kevin Clayton thinks the "i-house" very quickly could represent more than 10 percent of its business.


"I think in 12 to 18 months it is possible," he told The Associated Press. "That is a lofty goal, but it is very possible. Retailers are saying they want the home on their lots tomorrow. I know the demand is there. How fast we capture it is really just determined by how affordable we can make it."


Clayton Homes plans to price the "i-house" at $100 to $130 a square foot, depending on amenities and add-ons, such as additional bedrooms. A stick-built house with similar features could range from $200 to $300 a square foot to start, said Chris Nicely, Clayton marketing vice president.


The key cost difference is from the savings Clayton achieves by building homes in volume in green standardized factories with very little waste. Clayton has four plants in Oregon, Tennessee, California and New Mexico geared up for "i-house" production.


A 1,000-square-foot prototype unveiled at a Clayton show in Knoxville a few months ago was priced at around $140,000. It came furnished, with a master bedroom, full bath, open kitchen and living room with Ikea cabinetry, two ground-level deck areas and a separate "flex room" with a second full bath and a second-story deck covered by a sail-like canopy.


"It does not look like your typical manufactured home," said Thayer Long with the Manufactured Housing Institute, a Washington-based group representing 370 manufactured and modular home-building companies.


And shattering those mobile home stereotypes is a good thing, he said. "I think the 'i-house' is just more proof that the industry is capable of delivering homes that are highly customizable at an affordable price."


The "i-house's" metal v-shaped roof — inspired by a gas-station awning — combines design with function. The roof provides a rain water catchment system for recycling, supports flush-mounted solar panels and vaults interior ceilings at each end to 10 1/2 feet for an added feeling of openness.


The Energy Star-rated design features heavy insulation, six-inch thick exterior walls, cement board and corrugated metal siding, energy efficient appliances, a tankless water heater, dual-flush toilets and lots of "low-e" glazed windows.


The company said the prototype at roughly 52,000 pounds may be the heaviest home it's ever built.


The final product will come in different exterior colors and will allow buyers to design online, adding another bedroom to the core house, a second bedroom to the flex room or rearranging the footprint to resemble an "L" instead of an "I."


"We thought of this a little like a kit of parts, where you have all these parts that can go together in different ways," said Andy Hutsell, one of the architects. Susan Connolly, a 60-year-old accountant who works from her conventional Knoxville home, hopes to be one of the first buyers. She's seen the prototype and has been talking to the company.


"I have been interested in green construction and the environment in my own personal life," she said. "It is nice to have a group of people that have thought of everything. Where you don't have to shop around and go to different places ... to find the products you want."


"I think it is smart. It is fresh. It is kind of hip for a new generation of green-thinking homebuyers," said Stacey Epperson, president and CEO of Frontier Housing, a Morehead, Ky.-based regional nonprofit group thatsupplies site-built homes and manufactured housing, including Clayton products,
to low- and moderate-income homebuyers.


"You know a lot of people don't see themselves living in manufactured (housing), but a lot of those people would see themselves living in an 'i-house.' I could live in an 'i-house,'" she said. "Are we repositioning to go after a new market?" Nicely said. "I would think we are maintaining our value to our existing market and expanding the market to include other buyers that previously wouldn't have considered our housing product."


The company sees the "i-house" as a primary residence — three developers already have inquired about building mini-developments with them — that also could appeal to vacation home buyers.


Brian McKinley, president of Atlantis Homes of Smyrna, Del., a manufactured-home dealer that sells Clayton and other brands, said the"i-house" resembles high-end custom homes he sees along the Delaware-Maryland
shore.


It represents a "new direction and an innovative application for what our industry can do," he said.


"I think there is a market," McKinley said. "The challenge is to find that market and then will they visit this home at one of our traditional factory-built home centers. I think they (Clayton) want to find that out, too."
___
ClaytonHomes"i-house"tour: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_on_re_us/storytext/us_clayton_i_house/31916152/SIG=1161v411d/*http://www.clayton-media.com/ihouse/

Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Watch Out for Falling Salesman!!

I think this jewelery salesman has had it with the tuff economy...

Mall Day


Mall Day, originally uploaded by Rich on the Road.

We are getting a good heavy rain today so we decided to go to the mall. Little lunch, window shopping, and coffee...

Also, I took this pic so Jon could see the Phil & Teds stroller in action...

Saturday, May 02, 2009

Big Brother


Big Brother, originally uploaded by Rich on the Road.

People have been asking how Joey and Quincy are getting along..

Well, I was gets some things done while Quincy was taking a nap and I noticed I didn't have my little sidekick Joey... and yep.. Sure enough... Joe was I'm the Quincy's room taken a nap with his lil' bro..

Friday, May 01, 2009

Milk Carton


Milk Carton, originally uploaded by Rich on the Road.

Joey update...

Just in case you've been looking for Joey on a milk carton... He's doing fine... He loves his new borther.. and his new roll as protector... Joe let's us know about every little thing in and outside that is out of place... He also takes great pride in protecting Amy & Q during feedings...

However, he doesn't like the breast pump.. He tries to bite the little motor in the pump.. kinds like when a dog chases the vaccum..

Up Up & Away...


Up Up & Away..., originally uploaded by Rich on the Road.

Amy & I thought Quincy looks like he's flying on the plane... with his bib as a cape... Dunndda-Daaaa..

Ya, were odd...