Jesus suffered and died because sin spread like a Pandemic across His world, leaving it in need of a cure – a Savior!
The Corona COVID-19 Virus has become a Pandemic spreading across our world leaving it once again scrambling for a cure, a vaccine, a definitive end as people are sick and some are dying. Jesus is still that cure. He will provide healing. Has His world turned to Him fervently in prayer? I haven’t seen it yet, not really, not like they ought to be doing.
When Jesus was arrested, the disciples hid, isolating themselves from the crowds in fear. Though they loved Jesus they lived in fear that they too would suffer his fate, just for being identified as having been close to Him. They prayed and worried.
We are isolating ourselves from each other, family, and friends in fear of catching the virus or spreading it to others unknowingly. We are worrying, but are we praying? Really praying?
Currently our faces are covered to help prevent the spread of the virus from us to others, even if we don’t seem to have it. Unfortunately these coverings do not prevent us from receiving the virus from the uncovered mouths or places where it lingers or floats.
The spreading of God’s word by us should be the same. Our faces may be covered, but it should not prevent the spreading of the Word or sharing of prayer. We have phones, computers, tablets, I pads and countless apps and abilities for texting, videoing, talking and sharing the Good News! It is Easter! We should be spreading the story faster than the virus is spreading. Cover the virus not the Word of God. The world needs it now and always.
What have you done to spread the word and share hope during these trying times?
The disciples and many of Jesus’ followers stayed in isolation after Jesus’ crucifixion, still fearing for their safety as well as feeling lost and confused about what to do without Jesus. But Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went out to Jesus’ tomb to do what was necessary and customary because these things were essential for a proper burial. They risked everything to do what was right and needed to be done.
Because they buried their fear and continued to do what was necessary and essential, they were the first to receive the Good News that Christ had risen. Along their way, they were the first to see Jesus the risen Lord!
Today as many follow instructions, staying home in isolation and practicing social distancing in order to quell the spread, many, called “Essential Services Workers” are required to work on the front lines to help the sick and to keep all necessary and essential things operating the best they can for the good of all. They are the first to see all the bad as well as the good that happens.
When the storm quells, they will be the first to know that it is real and feel the joy and relief as they spread the news! They will be the first to show true hope for others. They are called upon to put themselves out there for all of us. They need our support and prayer.
Jesus observed the Passover meal and dined with His disciples before His time of trial began, knowing full well what was happening. He took the time and sat around the table with those that had become his students and family.
Our lives had become a crazy, fast paced ordeal before this virus struck. Most families did not even see each other enough to spend an evening once a week at the dinner table together. Granted it may go back to that again when this ends. For now, though, you are isolated at home with your families. You are teaching them, playing with them, watching TV and movies with them, and sharing activities that you may not have done together for a long time. Hopefully, you are sitting with them to eat around the dinner table.
How many times did Jesus tell his disciples and followers, that he would suffer, die, be laid in a tomb, rise again in three days and then go to be seated to rule his kingdom? They never really got it until it was over.
Time with family no matter the circumstances is precious. They will remember this time spent. The question is how will they remember it? That is for you to decide.
Be a witness of God’s love to your families in this time, whether parent or child After all, it is the faith of children and its doubtless strength and belief that Jesus tells us all to aspire to have.
Now is the time! This Easter may not be the big event with your larger groups of family and friends that you had originally planned. Do something to make your family’s Easter special. Next make a video of your Easter fun. Share that video online and tag all your missing family and friends in it so they can see how your family celebrated Easter and the Risen Lord. Then encourage your friends and family to do something and post their fun. Then as this goes on you could turn this exercise into a family fun time weekly.
This is not the worst of times, but only a difficult and different time. Christ is still with us and He will lead us through this. The events that created these circumstances are not good but that does not mean we cannot make good out of the bad.
We will remember this Pandemic and that there was illness and death and fear. We will also remember that there was family, community, new opportunities, and new ways of worship that may have reached even more people. We will remember that for every bad aspect of this, there was also good. Remember those things and work to make more good come out of it.
After all, Christ has Died, Christ has Risen, and Christ will come again! That is what Easter is really all about! And we are Easter people!
Category: family
“Happy Birthday! Happy Un-Birthday! Happy Day!”–Back into Blogging!
Happy Birthday! No, today is not my birthday; my birthday was actually back on Christmas Day! But I have this great friend that was at my surprise party for my birthday. He told me happy birthday numerous times that evening and vowed to tell me every time he saw me or thought of me from then on. Just because he can. That was back on December 21st and I hadn’t seen or heard from him since then.
Then out of nowhere, I get this singe text. “Happy Birthday!” It made me laugh and smile, and made my day, as I saw who it was from and remembered what he had said.
I have been after myself for some time, but really seriously since New Year’s to reinvent my blog and start writing again. My problem is inspiration and ideas just seem to elude me. At least when I am seriously trying to find then anyway.
When I can’t allocate time to them then there they are. I t is like they know I cannot address them due to the current situation. Usually by the time I can pursue them they have disappeared. Happily hiding in some corner of my brain laughing at me I am sure.
Write it down right away is the common advice. Well it’s hard to write in the shower. Or while you are driving or doing other activities that do not allow for writing at that particular moment. Chanting it until I can write it down can work in some situations, but usually not at work or public. People tend tilt their heads and look at you sideways a lot like your dog does when he is unsure. The difference is then these head tilting people call other people to come take you away.
As it has been for a while now, it seems I only have inspiration to write during rocket season. If it is not high flying, explosive projectiles, the teenagers that develop them, and the thrill of the hunt, I lose interest quickly and cannot find ideas.
I do find fascination and some inspiration in nature. I post pictures almost double daily on Facebook of things I see. It is just when I want to write something of interest it does not always come. Some days the picture inspiration does not come either. Hence why there are so many of the same windmill. By the way I love windmills!
I was pondering this as I listened to John Maxwell‘s Maxwell Minute for the day, entitled, “Fresh”. He was talking about surrounding yourself with people that encourage you to stay fresh. People that encourage your new ideas and do not allow you to grow stale. There in was my problem, I was growing stale. I have known this for a while. I even feared losing my craft all together.
Although, rockets are my most favorite thing to write about these days. They cannot support my writing needs all the time. And many of my ideas I was dismissing because I did not think other folks would have interest or they did not support my ideas. I was allowing myself to throw out every option and grow stale.
So as I thought about this. I was determined to find something to write about and begin finding fun in my favorite talent and craft again. Writing and pictures have always been who I am. The problem was I still did not have a writing prompt or idea to get me started.
Then the text arrived. “Happy Birthday!”
My first thought was who saw my pictures on Facebook and is sending late congratulations? My second at seeing the name only at a glance at first was what is my son up to with this? Then I realized I had not read the whole name and it was not my son. The light went on and I started laughing and responded in kind.
Another John Maxwell tidbit is to find value in others by just being nice to them. Say hello, hold the door, smile, compliment them and through these things both of you find value and feel better. My friend had just helped me find value in myself and what I was trying to do, whether he had intended to or not. As for him, my whole family has found much value in him and his friendship for years. He is a blessing and an inspiration. That being said, I now had an idea.
This day was not my birthday, but suddenly it was a Happy Day! Either way it was still my Un-Birthday as the Mad Hatter from Alice and Wonderland says. And guess what, I have 364 of those so why not enjoy and celebrate them!
Then I thought about Frosty the Snowman, and every time someone puts the magician’s hat back on his head and he comes back to life he says, “Happy Birthday!” After all every time you wake up, it is a “birth” into a new day. So now, I am back to having 364 new “birth days!” Thank the Lord you only have to count 1 day for each of those, and no I am not counting them in total. Years are enough, if you want to feel old, which I do not, then count days of life in total! Yikes!
The point is each day is new! A new day! A new opportunity! And yes, chances for new ideas, new actions, new freedom, new inspirations, new experiences, new attitudes, new friends, new fun with old friends and family, and new life!
So, no, today is not my birthday! It is my Un-Birthday, a “birth” to a new day, and a Happy Day if I so choose to believe it and continue to follow my dreams, no matter how large or small. Because it doesn’t have to be big million dollar ideas, but all of those started somewhere, probably with a small idea.
So who knows what ridiculousness I might put out here for you to read, Ii will just have to run with whatever ideas come my way. I am a little bit silly, goofy, crazy and impulsive at times so just go with it if you will.
Remember that you probably have a gift or talent you may not be fostering at the moment. Don’t you think it might be time to start? Do not let your dreams die! Follow them even if you have to start them much smaller than you think they deserve. Something is better than nothing, and something can grow! Nothing just becomes stale.
I have come full circle in this little thought game. This is how I am starting fresh! What will you do?
“Happy Birthday!”
P.S. This is actually the second writing of this article. The first one was eaten in its entirety by technology! I told it to SAVE and it said, “Cannot perform this task at this time please refresh page!” And it made all my work go away.
The first piece was off the cuff and perfect (at least to my thinking). Recreations are never as perfect as the originals. Sometimes they are better, sometimes they fall way short. If you are lucky, then they are different but just as good. I think this one turned out well. I just wish it could have been the first one. Who knows, by the time I would have edited it, maybe it would be this one.
Biggest lesson is never trust technology and always have either a second version on another platform, or my old trusted, never disappears unless you personally destroy it, paper copy!
Thursday Rockets 2019 Headed to White Sands-Day 1 Set up-Report and Friday Early Information
The SystemsGo team left Fredericksburg at 5:30 this morning headed to White Sands Missile Range (WSMR) in New Mexico. They arrived in Alamogordo at about 1:30 and headed straight to West Center 50 to set up the range. It was a successful day for the team as they were able to set up the rail and test equipment, leaving only minor things to be finished Friday morning.
They left the range around 6:40 and headed in to supper at Si Senor Mexican Restaurant. Afterwards the team split sending some to gather supplies for tomorrow while others went to meet schools still needing to complete their FRR checks.
The current schedule has launches beginning by 10:00 tomorrow morning.
Here is a quick recap from Rebekah Hyatt’s Friday emails:
- Friday:
- Union Grove High School
- Alamo Heights High School
- Booker T Washington High School (Rocket 1)
- Anahuac High School (if the time allows for a fourth launch)
- Brazoswood High School (1st to move up in the event Anahuac is not ready)
- Saturday: If only 3 are tested on Friday
- Anahuac High School
- Marble Falls High School (will launch Saturday no matter how the schedule moves.)
- Brazoswood High School
- Fredericksburg High School
- Booker T Washington (Rocket 2)
Event details will continue to be available here. I will provide more information each day as to how the schedule and other event details will progress for that day and how launches went for the schools testing the previous day. Pictures are not allowed on the range, but some pictures of teams getting ready to leave for the range with their vehicles might be available. If anything is available, I will post it for your viewing pleasure.
www.systemsgo.org as always is the place for more information on this program. You may also email them at info@systemsgo.org . Take the time to get your school involved. The future of your students will be greatly benefited.
Goddard Level Rockets Ride The Skies in 17 Days Redbird #20 Among Them
The Goddard level rockets, which are the capstones of the SystemsGo program and the culmination of all the skills the students have learned throughout their years in the STEM program are set to launch June 21-23. This marks the final senior project for the schools that participate in this level of the SystemsGo program.
Redbird #20 is scheduled for testing at White Sands Missile Range (WSMR) Sunday, June 23. This marks the last big event for Rockets 2019 and the Fredericksburg Engineering/Rocket Program.
As of today, May 31, when I was able to get a report on the rocket’s status, from team member, Dawsen Harkins, was in good standing. He reported that as of May 30, the nosecone had been assembled and covered with its first layer of fiberglass.
In this photo the nose cone ring is being secured in place, and centered by skewers for fiberglassing.
Although, the tank required 2 trips to SRM to have leaks rewelded, it has now completed its pressure testing successfully.
It will be returning to SRM again to have the hatches and holes cut in.
New for this year is a piston valve system. This has also performed well when tested.
This year’s rocket is supporting three payloads. The first came from Harvard University, courtesy of former FHS student, Joseph Sanchez, who attends school there. It is a CubeSat with a pneumatically deployed solar panel.
They second one was created by Keith Jenkins, the FHS IT guy. It is a small electronics bay.
The third the team provided. It is a GoPro camera. It will be positioned behind an acrylic window in the hatch, so that it can look out and video the vehicle’s flight.
According to Harkins, “All components bays have been made and 3D printed and fit perfectly in the rocket.”
The fuel grain is also on the task list. They have assembled the mold for pouring it. One part of the mixture for the fuel grain is still not in but they will be mixing and pouring it as soon as this arrives.
As of this report, supplied last Friday, the following list of things is left and then they are FRR complete.
- Complete the fiberglassing of the nose cone.
- Make the fuel grain and assemble the motor system.
- Assemble the recovery system.
- Weld fins to body.
- Cut hatches and have holes drilled in the body tube.
- Fix minor little things for flight.
The current list of students from this team attending the WSMR launch is as follows:
Rodolfo Avila, Cody Blohm, Gloria Burns, Alexander Casteneda, Lucio Castro Vazquez, Clayton Ellebracht, Jose Escalante, Jabin Gipson, Dawsen Harkins, Cooper McDonald, Eduardo Memije, Bradley Plaza, Joshua Reese-Hadley, Nicholas Rodriguez, Robert Sanchez, Deja Turkett, Gabriel Voorhees, Carl Wilger, and Robert Zowie.
Currently there is not a team picture available, but here is Nick Rodriguez, Deja Turkett and Dawsen Harkins taking a work break on the stairs at FHS. 
Launches are scheduled for June 21st and June 23rd. The team will travel out to WSMR on Wednesday, June 20th, and back home again on the 24th.
There are 7 schools scheduled to launch 8 rockets. These schools include:
- Alamo Heights
- Anahuac
- Booker T. Washington
- Brazoswood
- Fredericksburg
- Marble Falls
- Union Grove
The current launch schedule is as follows:
- Thursday, June 2oth
- Travel Day
- Friday, June 21st
- Mrorning-T-1/Site Set up WC-50; Afternoon-Launch Union Grove & Alamo Heights ( or whichever rockets are ready)
- Saturday, June 22rd
- Launch Day Two (Four Rockets-Booker T., Anahuac, Marble Falls, & Brazoswood)
- Sunday, June 23rd
- Launch Day Two (Two Rockets-Fredericksburg & Booker T Washington)
- Monday, June 24th
- Travel Day (Could travel home on the 23rd if operations are complete in time.)
This article is for the 2018/2019 school year to update the Fredericksburg Engineering/Rocket program. This school is a participant of the SystemsGo STEM program. This series of articles is intended to support and encourage students in the program as they share their working status and accomplishments throughout the year in the program. These publications will be available for tags and re-posting.
www.systemsgo.org as always is the place for more information on this program. You may also email them at info@systemsgo.org .Take the time to get your school involved, the future of your students will be greatly benefited.
#Rockets2018 #SystemsGo #FredricksburgSTEMAcademy #Launcher01 #RideTheSky #Texasrockettrail
History, Haunts, and Heart Beats
A new form of entertainment has manifested in Fredericksburg, Texas. It is the Fredericksburg Ghost Tours. This new venue is a walking tour of Fredericksburg starting and ending at the Nimitz Museum (National Museum of the Pacific War). It is filled with interesting, little known stories and histories of many places along Main Street and it’s alleyways.
Your host/tour guide is dressed in 1800’s attire as he leads you around town, regaling your with stories, not found in the normal Fredericksburg history books. Each account given is tied to a place along the tour and the residing ghosts of that area.
The tour itself is not scary, but rather entertaining and informational. Though the stories are a historical basis for ghosts, there is much humor in them as well. Derrick Spence coordinates the guides and tours. He has also done the research and compiled the stories shared on the tour. The guides are cheerful, and they do their best to see you learn a little and have a good time. Daniel was our guide this particular evening, and he was knowledgeable, entertaining and fun.
Be sure to bring your phones, or other cameras and take pictures. It is highly encouraged and if you find you have visitors in your photos you can send them in to their website at fbgghosttours@gmail.com and they may feature them on their website.
The stops currently on the tour, are just a handful of the many haunted places in town. Your guide will mention a few not on the tour at this time and encourage you to go investigate them on your own.
Tours run Thursday through Sunday evenings with tours at 8:00, 8:30, or 9:30 p.m. It is encouraged to meet at the Admiral Chester W. Nimitz statue at least 10 minutes before the start of your tour, with your previously purchased ticket in hand.
You may purchase tickets online at https://www.fredericksburgghosts.com/ , or call 830-383-3122 and speak to founder Rick Koch or one of his employees, they will be happy to help you reserve your tickets and then pick them up at the Vintage Vault at 406 West Main Street, next to the Amish Market.
My friends and I embarked on the tour at 8:00 this past Sunday evening, October 7th. We had a wonderful time and are ready to do it again with other friends and family who have not gone yet. We were encouraged to take pictures along the route. During the tour we really didn’t see much more than Fredericksburg sites and allies in the dark, but as the guide explained, what you do not see with your eyes, may be watching you, and may not be camera-shy.
They do encourage you to share photos to their page if you think you have caught a ghostly image, or just a really interesting photo from the tour. They may feature it on their site. That being said, I will share some here and will probably send them in after this post.
After reviewing mine the next day, I definitely think I caught some images to share. I hope you can see what I see, but you may have to enlarge the photos, that is how I confirmed my sightings.
My best possible sightings were the ones from the Nimitz, Keidel Hospital, and one of the back alley stops.
Here are a few of mine. In all of them, my friends and I see something. Do you? Share your thoughts in the comments. I would love to hear what you think.
Here is the Nimitz. Pay close attention to the dark window on the middle section, just below the window that is lit up, in the first and third photos.

How about a creepy back alley to look down? Look closely, there is more than meets the eye.
And last, here is the old Keidel Hospital building (home to Der Kuchen Laden and Rathskellar Restaurant). Pay close attention to the large window at the top, above the door. A ghostly pair looks back at you. Then look at the window to the left of the large window, in its bottom left pane, and also the column to the right of the door, there are ghosts in all of these. Two frames are provided so that you can compare. Most of the visitors appear in the right frame.
Honestly we did not see these things as we looked at the places that evening, but then there they were in the pictures. That definitely gets you thinking and your heart beating a little faster.
Let me know if you see them. Maybe this is a coincidence, but also in the Keidel photos, there is a very strange water mark in between the two bottom windows. It is quite a creepy creature looking back from the rocks.
There are many other stops along the tour, I just wanted to give you a glimpse.
I hope I have peaked your interest and you and your friends will come take the tour. The ghosts are waiting to greet you!
Wednesday Rockets Headed to White Sands-Day 1-Report and Tuesday Early Information
The SystemsGo team left Fredericksburg at 10:43 a.m. this morning headed to White Sands Missile Range (WSMR) in New Mexico. They traveled with the Fredericksburg High School rocket group. After supper in El Paso, they arrived in Alamogordo, NM, for lodging at 7:33 p.m. this evening. All participating schools also arrived safely.
Tomorrow is an informational and set up day. SystemsGo personnel and all students, teachers, and parents from the schools will have an early morning. We will be leaving the hotel at 5:45 a.m. to meet up at the gravel lot out side the Main Gate (Las Cruces) at 6:45 a.m.
The convoy will be led to Missile Park to view a live Missile Test at 8:00 a.m. Next, they will proceed to the Post Theater for the T-1 briefing and a short presentation by each school on their vehicle and it’s expectations. Afterwards SystemsGo, students and necessary personnel go to West Center 50 launch site to set up and prep vehicles.
Parents will be dismissed at that time to find their own entertainment for the day. Only SystemsGo personnel, teachers, student teams and essential personnel will go to WC50.
Friday is the first launch day and at this point, it is slated to be an early morning. Fredericksburg High School is first up to launch for the day and the current schedule has them testing at 8:00 a.m. The hope is to test 4 vehicles by 2:00 p.m, including Brazoswood, Booker T. Washington, and Anahuac.
Event details will continue to be available here. I will provide more information each day as to how the schedule and other event details will progress for that day and how launches went for the schools testing the previous day. Pictures are not allowed on the range, but some pictures of teams getting ready to leave for the range with their vehicles might be available. If anything is available, I will post it for your viewing pleasure.
www.systemsgo.org as always is the place for more information on this program. You may also email them at info@systemsgo.org . Take the time to get your school involved. The future of your students will be greatly benefited.
June 18-2 More Days Until Goddard Level Rocket Launches- Here’s What’s Happening for WSMR
The SystemsGo team leaves in shifts starting today for New Mexico to launch rockets at White Sands Missile Range (WSMR). Rebekah Hyatt and Scott Netherland head out this morning. They have some business meetings in New Mexico ahead of the launch days. Then the rest of the team and schools leave on Wednesday, June 20. That is two days from today. The list and schedules have been finalized and packing is underway.
The schedule will proceed as follows:
Wednesday will be a travel day to Alamogordo, NM to the hotel.
Thursday morning will be T-1 briefing preceded by a live viewing of a missile test at the range.
Thursday afternoon they will travel to West Center 50 Range and do site set up and rocket prep-Fredericksburg rocket will be left on the launch rail ready for first launch on Friday morning.
Friday launch order: Fredericksburg, Brazoswood, Booker T., and Anahuac
Saturday launch order: Union Grove, Alamo Heights
Sunday launch order: Contingency day with four available launch times if needed, or travel home if all vehicles have tested.
Monday will be travel back home day for the group if they are unable to leave on Sunday.
The final list of schools participating in this year’s WSMR tests is:
- Alamo Heights High School
- Anahuac High School
- Brazoswood High School
- Booker T. Washington High School
- Fredericksburg High School
- Union Grove High School
Parents and students already on the approved list with SystemsGo, and attending, be sure you have your proper identification with you. State driver’s license, federal pass port, or state id card are required for access to the base. Also be sure they have medical insurance information with them in case of an emergency.
Please be advised that WSMR is an Army base and does not allow spectators in to view these launches. Only the students, personnel, and parents who have been previously approved through SystemsGo and added to the list may enter the base with the group. Please do not drive to White Sands and attempt to enter on your own, or expect to do so with the group, because you will be turned away.
Event details will continue to be available here. I will provide information as made available to me from team members on site as to how launches have gone for those schools testing on that particular day. Pictures are not allowed on the range, but some pictures of teams getting ready to leave for the range with their vehicles might be available. If anything is available and passed on, I will post it for your viewing pleasure.
www.systemsgo.org as always is the place for more information on this program. You may also email them at info@systemsgo.org .Take the time to get your school involved, the future of your students will be greatly benefited.
Fredericksburg’s Engineering Rocket Program-Pre-Launch Week Red Bird #19 Update
Red Bird #19 is scheduled for testing at White Sands Missile Range(WSMR) next Friday, June 22. This marks the last big event for Rockets 2018 and the Fredericksburg STEM Academy for this season.
These are the Goddard level rockets, which are the culmination of all the skills the students have learned throughout their years in the STEM program. This marks the final senior project for those schools that participate in this level of the SystemsGo program.
As of today, June 15, the Fredericksburg Engineering Red Bird #19 rocket team is due to pick up the vehicle from SRM tomorrow, now that the welding is completed. The team still has to complete the assembly of the motor and then integrate it, as well as the, injector valve, payload, and parachutes. They will be attempting to finish the FRR tonight. In spite of the remaining tasks they are on schedule to make their launch at WSMR.
Red Bird #19 has an 8 inch diameter and is 25 feet long. The team outsourced the payload to the district IT employee and former FMS science teacher, Keith Jenkins. He created a sensor for the vehicle that will measure methane levels at the time of nose cone deployment.
When asked about the rocket’s expectations, Harrison Spisak stated, “My expectations are about 65,00 feet, but after NASA evaluated it they estimated 102,000.” Therefore that is the hopeful estimate if all goes perfectly.
Today, team members, Joey Leal and Harrison Spisak were working on the FRR, and T-1 briefing as seen in the photos below.

Here the nose cone and injection system also await integration.
Here Joey Leal checks on the rockets progress at SRM machine shop.


Harrison Spisak’s father will be hauling the rocket on his trailer to White Sands for the team.
Pictured here is this year’s Red Bird #19 Team: Back Row: Harrison Spisak, Jacob Wienecke, Evan Knapp, Bryce Erwin, Sergio Walle. Front Row: Corbin Smajstrla, Rebecca Sechrist, Pierce Vasquez, Joey Leal. Not pictured in the seniors picture was Chris Calzada.

Launches are scheduled for June 22nd and June 23rd, with a contingency day on the 24th if needed. The team will travel out to WSMR on Wednesday, June 20th, and back home again on the 23rd.
There are 5 schools scheduled to launch 6 rockets. These schools include:
- Alamo Heights
- Anahuac
- Booker T. Washington
- Brazoswood
- Fredericksburg
- Union Grove
The current launch schedule is as follows:
- Wednesday, June 2oth Travel Day
- Thursday, June 21st T-1 and Site Set up/Rocket Prep at WC- 50
- Friday, June 22rd Launch Day One (Four Rockets-Fredericksburg, Brazoswood, Booker T., Anahuac)
- Saturday, June 23rd Launch Day Two (Two Rockets–Union Grove, Alamo Heights)
- Sunday, June 24th Contingency Day/ Travel Day
- Monday, June 25th Travel Day if needed
This article is the eighth for the 2017/2018 school year in a series of periodic updates that has followed the Fredericksburg Engineering/Rocket program. This school is a participant of the SystemsGo STEM program. This series of articles is intended to support and encourage students in the program as they share their working status and accomplishments throughout the year in the program. These publications will be available for tags and re-posting.
www.systemsgo.org as always is the place for more information on this program. You may also email them at info@systemsgo.org .Take the time to get your school involved, the future of your students will be greatly benefited.
#Rockets2018 #SystemsGo #FredricksburgSTEMAcademy #Launcher01 #RideTheSky
Rockets 2018-Houston-Pictures by Sean Hannon From the Weekend
Houston Rockets 2018 had many talented photographers on site this year. This makes for a gallery of great pictures, and this new album definitely falls into that category.
Sean Hannon’s photographs surely do not disappoint their audience. He regularly contributes his photographs from the launches to SystemsGo. He did a great job of capturing not only the people and rockets, but also the action. Here are just a few from his album.

The full album can be found at the two following locations:
and the SystemsGo website at:
http://www.systemsgo.org/media-gallery/
The SystemsGo website also has a host of other media from this year’s events as well as past years.
If you would like to watch this year’s launches again or maybe you missed them, the Livestream link to the videos will be available for about a month. You can find them here:
https://livestream.com/systemsgo
Thank you Sean Hannon for your photography works and the opportunity to share them with my readers and rocket followers.
If you follow this program Rockets 2018 will continue with the senior/graduate groups which are scheduled to launch their Goddard level rockets at White Sands Missile Range (WSMR) in New Mexico June 22-24. These are not available for public viewing or Livestream due to being tested on a military facility, but blog and SystemsGo updates will be posted online as available during that week.
More event details will be available here as the event gets closer. Daily reports featuring schedules, school names, results, pictures and some editorial content will be posted during the event.
www.systemsgo.org as always is the place for more information on this program. You may also email them at info@systemsgo.org . Take the time to get your school involved, the future of your students will be greatly benefited.
#RideTheSky! #Launcher01 #ItISrocketScience #Rockets2018
Fredericksburg’s Engineering Rocket Program-(April 13-June 1) Final Classroom Update for Freshmen, Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors
Today is May 31, 2018 and we are catching up on the FHS Engineering program and what they have done since April 13th. This article will also bring the a fabulous year to an end for the Freshmen, Sophomores, and Juniors, since the school year is ending this Friday, June 1st, with graduation. They will all resume studies in the program next school year. After graduation, we will resume Redbird #19 updates with the graduates through June until they have launched at White Sands Missile Range (WSMR).
It has been seven weeks since our last update on the Freshmen, Sophomores, and Seniors and quite a bit has been happening on all levels.
On Tuesday, May 15, the Freshmen embarked on a field trip to three locations. They began here in Fredericksburg, at Fischer and Wieser. Next they went on to the University of Texas at Austin to the JJ Pickle Research Center-Ferguson Structural Engineering Lab, and then a main campus tour including the Engineering Education and Research Building.
Ashley Seelig, Dietz Fischer and Nicole Whorton began the day at Fischer and Wieser giving the students a historical background on the company. Afterwards they took them on a walk through of the plant during which they described all aspects of their process, beginning with material acquisition through the shipment of products. Students found this familiar as it closely related to their orange juice production project completed earlier this year.

It was noted that the staff at Fischer and Wieser all work well with each other. They provide a comfortable working environment with a sense of family and pride in what they do. They were all happy to host the students and show them around.
At the JJ Pickle Research Center-Ferguson Structural Engineering Lab at UT, Dr. Tricia Clayton hosted the students. She began by discussing structural engineering and the scope of the work they do at the lab. The facility is nearly 50,000 square feet, and one of the largest labs in the country for testing and research of structures. This includes material types, fabrication process integrity, testing on pieces taken out of operation (like cracked bridge structures), train track safety and much more.
Next Dr. Clayton enlightened students on how she progressed from a high school student, to a PhD recipient, as well as a researcher and college professor. Mr. Matthes commented that, “Her enthusiasm was contagious as her passion for her field of study and teaching bubbled to the surface.”
FHS Alumnus Matthew Dulaney, and Sterling Weatherford took the group to lunch at the Market Place located below Dobie Dormitory. Matthew is studying Chemical Engineering at UT and Sterling who was visiting, is studying Aerospace Engineering at Arizona State University. The two shared their own individual perspectives of their college experiences as they gave the students a walking tour of the main campus.

The students’ last stop was at the Engineering Education and Research Center Building. Here they found the building’s structural supports interesting, as well as a 3 story, 10 foot radius spiral staircase with only a center support structure. The main attraction was on the bottom floor. There they admired the very extensive 3D printing lab. The air conditioning was also a major hit with the students after their campus tour in the heat.

As far as class work, they have done quite a lot since the mid-April program report. They have completed their Orange Juice Production Plant project as well as a project to calculate aerodynamic drag on a rocket. They are currently trying to research and calculate the characteristics of a hybrid rocket motor. This is the aerospace component of the project. This has helped the students reach new heights and has left them a bit overwhelmed according to Mr. Matthes. They presented their findings in the classroom on Tuesday.
The sophomores were allowed to work through the curriculum at their own pace this year, due to that the group is spread out in their studies. While there are those that have completed the curriculum others are still working hard to get all the materials done. Those that have completed ahead, have moved forward into 3D modelling and printing of their material findings.
Next year, a new class called Intermediate Computer Aided Drafting and Design (ICADD) will be added, allowing new students the opportunity to delve deeper into 3D modeling with AutoDesk’s program, Inventor. This is a good thing, according to Mr. Matthes because, “The class should provide students all the fundamentals of 3D modelling and having those skills down will have them ready to take on other equivalent programs such as SolidWorks (A Common 3D Modelling Software For Mechanical Type of Drawings). This will have them ready for any higher education drafting classes as colleges and technical schools tend to stick with those two software suites for modelling mechanical drafting.”
There have been two updates on the Juniors as they launched their rockets at the Fredericksburg Rockets 2018 in Willow City on late April 26th. If you missed those launches, you can still view them on the Livestream videos from the weekend. They can be found at the following link:
https://livestream.com/systemsgo
Here are some pictures from Mr. Matthes of the Junior teams on their launch day. I have also included a synopsis of their rocket’s accomplishments that day.

Team 1’s rocket, labeled as rocket #34 had a beautiful lift off from the rail, but before reaching its full height went into a cork screw spin, nosed over and began a ballistic decent. It landed hard on its side in a field to the left of the Pad and charges didn’t deploy until hitting the ground. It was fully recovered which enabled them to get data from the rocket. Their vehicle reached 588 mph, 0.78 Mach.

Team 2 had an awesome flight with full deployment and recovery. The rocket flew to a height of 11,232 feet at a speed of 763.6 miles per hour. The vehicle broke the first sound barrier at 1.027 Mach. Unfortunately their camera did not turn on properly so no flight video, and their payload which was a bag of Cheezits which was supposed to burst open due to pressure drop, was still intact, the bag did not open. Congratulations on breaking the sound barrier.

And here are some additional students that helped at the pad during the Fredericksburg launches.

Currently the Juniors have been completing things in order to present their Post Mission Analysis this week. Team 1, was on Tuesday at 1:40 p.m. and Team 2 on Thursday at 12:30 p.m. at FISD’s Central Office board room. All are welcome to attend. Come learn about the program. Asking questions of the presenting students is encouraged.
This will conclude this year’s reports on the Juniors. We will pick up with them next year as seniors when they begin their Goddard level project and attempt to launch at White Sands Missile Range.
The Seniors have approximately 23 days until Redbird 19 is scheduled for testing at White Sands Missile Range, on June 22. This date is fairly permanent but still at the mercy of the Army until closer to that time. Mr. Matthes will announce if there are any changes to that date.
Progress on the Redbird #19 rocket is ongoing. Students are in a waiting and coordinating process with SRM, a local machine shop with which that they have the larger metal work contracted out. A helping advantage they have this year, is that FHS Alumni, Joseph Sanchez, hired on for the summer with Luke Morin at SRM. Joseph has been instrumental as a liaison between the team and the machine shop. Mr. Matthes states, that “this will surely help organizationally with the completion of the project.” He also says, “Kudos” to Joseph for his ability to acquire a summer job at SRM.
The Redbird #19 team is currently slated to depart for White Sands on June 20th with the test-minus-one(T-1) briefing on the morning of the 21st, and final rocket preparations occurring that afternoon. Students are expected to give an overview of their rocket, payload and flight expectations for WSMR officials at the T-1 briefing.
Fredericksburg will be first to fly on the 22nd, therefore their rocket will be loaded onto the rail and left over night the 21st. This allows things to move faster the next morning as loading the payload, attaching the nose cone, loading oxidizer, and testing the rocket are all that will need to be done.
According to Mr. Matthes, “As always, there is a chance the rocket won’t fly due to some technical failure occurring in the process of filling or ignition. This sort of failure occurs regularly at White Sands as a testing grounds. The difference between what the students do and industry does is cycling the process: conducting a post mission analysis, correcting sources of problems and then having another go. The lack of the opportunity to try again makes the individual testing of as many components as possible all the more important. As of yet, the only testing performed has been on the altimeter which has proved positive for expected operation. Time will tell what else the students have time to test.”
The team is running late on their completion schedule due to their own delays and some things beyond their control and this will likely mean no preliminary testing of components, but they are expected to complete the rocket in time for launch.
Mr. Matthes had this to say about the senior class, “The class of 10 students together has accumulated over a 1000 hours of overtime (out of class engineering time) and has a few hundred to go before the project is done. They have worked hard and will see the fruits of their labor continue over the summer. The students graduate Friday night and after 3 years, and 4 years for many of them, it is always bittersweet to send my students off. The projects always delay the farewells until post launch but it is a significant leap for these young men and Miss Secrhist. I am proud of all of them and look forward to all the great things ahead in their lives. It is a diverse group of students with extensive interests and pathways. I’m sure their paths will twist and turn as they move on but their trajectory looks promising and exciting.”
Congratulations to Harrison Spisak on s job well done! He was awarded the Engineering Academic Excellence Award, on May 7, at the FHS Academic Excellence Awards Banquet.
This article is the seventh for the 2017/2018 school year in a series of periodic updates that has followed the Fredericksburg Engineering/Rocket program. This school is a participant of the SystemsGo STEM program. This series of articles is intended to support and encourage students in the program as they share their working status and accomplishments throughout the year in the program. These publications will be available for tags and re-posting.
www.systemsgo.org as always is the place for more information on this program. You may also email them at info@systemsgo.org . Take the time to get your school involved, the future of your students will be greatly benefited.
