Sunday, October 21, 2007

Check out scenes from our 2007 high school retreat


We started the perfect autumn afternoon at Klackel's Orchard near Greenville.


The petting zoo was pretty neat, with llamas, goats, turtles and bunnies.


Some of us have milked cows before -- but this is as close as the rest of us are ever going to get!




Picking apples was our next task. Some of the guys were experts at picking them, others were better at eating them.

Some of the ladies tried a new kind of make-up.


The Pumpkin Jump is for kids -- big kids!

The corn maze wasn't too difficult. The guys made it through in record time.



Everybody had fun climbing -- and jumping from -- the massive hay pyramid.

Apple trowing was off-limits. But apple launching was OK.

After the outdoors fun we headed to Boston's for pizza then went to see the latest Harry Potter movie. Thank you Sarah or planning a great day!

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Important info from Sarah about upcoming events

  • If you haven’t gotten emails this Fall from Sarah-she doesn't have your correct email address! Be sure to email Sarah YOUR email address so you know what is happening!

  • -- Our next event is the High School Ultra-Secret Day Long Retreat! We have learned our lesson-we are telling NO ONE.

    • We will gather at the church at 2 PM.
    • Dress for the weather-don’t wear clothes that can’t get dirty. Wear comfortable shoes!
    • We will return to the church by 10 PM.
    • Some expense money, say 5-10 dollars, may come in handy…
    • RSVP to Sarah NO LATER than Friday, Oct. 12th.

  • We will not have High School Youth Group on the 21st, due to the day long event on the 20th!

  • Our Mission Trip Information Meeting will be Sunday, Nov. 11th at 1 PM-there will not be a meal. We will meet for 1 hour to learn all about the next trip. Parents are to come to hear all of the details! Our trip will be July 12-19th. Mark your calendar now!

  • You asked for it-we delivered! We will be going to a concert on Sunday, Nov. 18th. The concert is the Newsboys and Kutless-two great bands! It will be at 6 PM. You MUST RSVP to Sarah Stobie by Oct. 12th-yes, the 12th! These concerts have been selling out, and if you want a ticket, want to sit all together, and want to pay only HALF of the ticket’s cost-9.00-you MUST RSVP by Friday, Oct. 12th.

  • Kent County is having a Food Drive. Trinity and Mayflower are teaming up to organize our two churches to have the BEST drive ever! They need help from the youth to make this successful. If you can help out with passing out flyers the week of Oct. 5-12th, please let Sarah know. Also, they need people to pick up the items on Oct. 13th! You can make a difference this Fall for a family in Kent County!

Wiffle Balls and blind faith

I told this story at the high school youth group meeting on Sunday and thought folks who weren't there might like to hear it.



Rich delivers a pitch in the Valley Bureau while Pierce conducts an interview.

Visitors to the Bridgeport Post’s Valley Bureau probably thought the "Romeo and Juliet" poster looked like it was hanging a little too low on the back wall.

But the guys in the office knew the poster had a more important purpose than advertising some community playhouse production. It was our strike zone.

Yes, we played Wiffle Ball in the office when the coast was clear.

As you probably know, Wiffle balls are plastic baseballs with eight oblong holes on one side that allow even a Little Leaguer to break off curve balls like Bert Blyleven.

It was our civic duty to play. We were supporting a local business. On one of my first days heading to work in the bureau, I nearly pulled off the road when I saw the small factory on Bridgeport Ave. with the Wiffle Ball sign in front. The epicenter of all things Wiffle was right there in Shelton, Conn. And just down the street from our office.

And it existed in relative secrecy, too. I could never understand why signs at the city limits didn’t read, "Welcome to Shelton, home of the Wiffle Ball." That area of Connecticut is home to Sikorsky helicopters — in Stratford — and Bic pens and razors and even Subway sandwich shops — both in Milford — all of which have a higher profile, and all of which pale in importance to the Wiffle ball.

The plastic spheres were an essential part of my youth. There aren’t too many places to do more than play catch with a real baseball in suburban New York. But we could take full hacks at a Wiffle ball anywhere in our small yards without fear of injury to person or property. We played Wiffle Ball everywhere.

Since I covered Shelton planning and zoning, I immediately started plotting for any excuse to write about the factory. I eventually came up with something flimsy, placed the call and secured my invitation.

I was greeted by David Mullany, grandson of the inventor, who gave me a quick tour of the machines that pump white plastic into molds. The yellow bats and cardboard packaging were made somewhere else and shipped to Shelton.

I then dropped the burning question: What makes the balls curve?

And I couldn’t believe the answer: "We have no idea."

It was time for the creation story. Every culture has one.

David told me how his father, also named David, and his brother would play baseball with plastic practice golf balls and broomsticks in their backyard. The boys were trying to break off deuces all day, and the grandfather — he, too, was named David — was once a semi-pro pitcher and worried the boys would hurt their young arms.

So he bought a bunch of the plastic golf balls, sat down at the kitchen table with a steak knife and started cutting patterns into the balls.

For some reason, and the family doesn’t know why, the version with the eight ovals on one side easily curved. Hold a ball so the ovals are on the right, ball curves right. Ovals on the left, and you can guess what happens.

The company made a baseball-sized Wiffle ball, and if you look hard you can find softball and mini-sized balls, too.

Then it was time for some inside information. We took our office Wiffle Ball games seriously, especially when the weather warmed up and we took our competitions to the driveway across the street. I needed a strikeout pitch, and I had an audience with a master.

At that point, he bestowed upon me a private lesson on the Wiffle knuckler. And gentle reader, I pass this knowledge on to you. Hold the ball so the ovals face your palm instead of right or left. Place two of your fingertips at the base of the holes, and push off with those fingers as you release the ball. The ball should float in without spinning, and the batter will either be mesmerized by the beauty of the whole thing or flail hopelessly when he realizes too late that no curve is coming.

We got a little out of hand when our lunch-hour games started stretching well into the afternoon, and then when we started challenging the Stratford Bureau.

I think about the story of the Wiffle Ball when I ponder some of life’s big mysteries. We can’t explain why some things happen. They just do. We must remember that God is in control, not us. Accept that curves in life are coming for reasons we can’t — or aren’t meant to — understand.

And once in a while, expect a knuckleball.