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Nate's Wedding: Sept - Oct 2004
The exterior of Miller Park from the parking lot.
Jen and I in front
Mom and Dad in front
A shot of the right field foul pole from the seats down the left field side.
Mom in the park.
From our seats.
From behind home plate towards the left field line, with the roof retracted.
During the game.
The Brewers hit a home run, so Bernie (their mascot) slid down the slide.
Bernie throws a ball to a young fan who is trying to catch it three times (I think he caught it twice). This is attempt 2
This is attempt 3.
The sausage race.
The race continues.
Jen and I at the end of the game. The Astros won 11-7 (yee-haw!)
The souvenir shop had a replica of Rusty Wallace's car, the Miller Lite 2.
On the way there. Isn't she lovely?
The rear
Me in front.
Me flippin' off the camera. I'm laughing at my brother-in-law Jerry because I got to his idol's house first.
Jen in front.

Me walking Susan's sister Sarah in (I was the best man, and she was the maid of honor).
Nate's ugly mug.
Nate and Susan's first dance (I guess, since I missed it.) P.S. Most of these wedding shots are from Jen since I was preoccupied).
More of Nate and Susan's first dance.
Mom and Son Dance 1. Blurry since there was like no light.
Mom and Son Dance 2, still pretty blurry.
Mom and Son Dance 3, less blurry.
Boogie time. And yes, that's how Dad boogies.
More boogie and more drinky.
Too much boogie.
Nate with a really, really old person, who I believe is Susan's grandma and like 95, but I could be wrong on both counts.
Again, dancin' slooooooooow.
Nate and Susan dancing. On the right is my (younger) Aunt Barbara and her boyfriend (Jim? John? It's been a week so I've forgotten. By the time I met him, I'd had 4 or 5 drinks).
Nate and Susan. I think they're dancing, but it looks more like he's dragging her body back to the car to hide the evidence.
Jen and I at the Metrodome. My dad took this shot, so don't blame me that it's blurry and Jen's eyes are closed. God only knows how someone with a $3,000 state-of-the-art 35mm camera can screw up a shot with a $300 point-and-shoot digital one.
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