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By coincidence, I was thinking of Rob last night and the double-zero Dodge Neon and the great times we had racing.  I completely forgot today was his birthday.  Even though it had been a few years since before his passing that we had last seen each other, I still miss him and those great days at ORP and PIR.  Hope you and the kids are well Michelle.  
Place looks like G▲Z▲ now!!
2023, Ginny's Beautiful Back Yard
Place looks like G▲Z▲ now!!
If You Know, You Know. Gail i…
1987, Sades
If You Know, You Know. Gail is gone. But Clint's people, GodBless and Protect — with Freebird Club
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ROBERT WAS SUCH A KIND SOUL. I RECALL GOING OVER TO HIS HOUSE ON SUNSET BLVD WHEN WE WERE IN 6TH OR 7NTH GRADE. I TRIED TO KISS HIM BUT, HE WAS NOT HAVING ANY OF IT. LOL! 

HE WAS JUST VERY SHY AND INTROSPECTIVE AT THAT AGE AND HE GREW UP TO BE A GENUINELY GOOD MAN. I MISS ROBERT AND THINK OF HIS PRECIOUS HEART OF GOLD ALL THE TIME 🫂 

WITH ALL MY LOVE AND PRAYERS TO ROBERT'S FAMILY, GOD BLESS YOU AND I PRAY YOU KNOW GOD HAS ROBERT AND HE WILL SEE YOU IN HEAVEN SOMEDAY. 

        PATTY CHERNIAK ( Pietra Thornton)

Happy Birthday Rob. Miss you but see you on the other side Brother, Be it Heaven or Valhöll!!   Love You !!
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I liked when Robert would stop by and explain the periodic elements to me.  Actually only a few that are difficult to produce or find. He really knew his stuff. My favorite was "unobtanium".  :)  I truly miss Robert in the neighborhood. Watch out for us from above my friend. 
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Patrick McDaniel
Memories of Rob ( Read July 1 at Corpus Christi)

Ginny, Michelle, Rich, Mark, Michelle, Ariel, and Brendan. You all have my deepest condolences for the loss of a wonderful, son, brother, husband, and father.

Hello everyone, my name is Patrick McDaniel. I had the honor of being Robs close friend for 41 years. This past spring, my family and I traveled to Oregon over spring break. It had been 4 1/2 years since Rob & I had seen each other in person. He had been asking me to come check out his family’s cabin on the Oregon Coast for almost that long. So, my family and I drove out to Netarts Bay on Saturday April 1st and spent a great day with Rob. He showed us around the area, we went to the beach, got lunch at a deli, he took us to his favorite viewpoint of the area. Most importantly I got a chance to introduce him to my sons Dylan & Riley. We discovered that Riley is a fan of Netarts Bay edible seaweed. Rob shared samples from a business he was helping to get started. Rob, the social butterfly he was, knew everyone in the town of Netarts Bay it seemed. I think someone referred to him as the mayor.

I learned the terrible news of his passing one week after our visit on the morning of easter Sunday.

Rob and I met in 1982 when we were 11 years old. I had just gotten my first “real” job as a paperboy for the Evening Outlook newspaper. A stack of papers for me to deliver was dropped off daily at a location here in the Palisades where Ken and Rich Waco, also paperboys, also folded their papers to deliver. As we got to know each other, they learned that I was an altar boy here at Corpus Christi Church and wondered if I knew their little brother Robert, who was my age, also an altar boy here and had a paper delivery route. Soon, Robert and I started hanging out and discovered that we shared a lot of similar interests, like hiking and going to the beach. We became very close friends.

When I was 12, my parents bought me a minibike, with a lawn mower engine that requires you to pull a rope to start. Rob and I really bonded around driving it around the Palisades. Often, we would do both of our paper routes on it. Sometimes we would do his paper route first, then he would joke that he had to leave to do something else rather than coming along on my route. “I’ve got to go” became an inside joke between us that lasted our entire friendship.

Around the age of 16, Rob and I both decided to quit our paper routes and get a job at Hughes Market (which is now the Ralphs next door to the church.) They were paying $3.15 an hour and we could get tips. With our newfound wealth, we started taking trips to Baja California, Mexico, with friends who had a car. We would buy fireworks you couldn’t get in California and shoot them off on Rosarita beach where we camped. I don’t recall exactly what happened, but Rob spent the night in a Mexican jail at one point. For decades It remained one of his favorite stories to tell.

Zeke Bean, Peter Hockman, Edwin Beckenback, and Gregg Ornstein, all of whom who are here today, were a core part of a larger group of friends Rob and I shared. We spent many memorable times together. We all joined the Palisades High hiking club. One of the common destinations was camping over three-day weekends at Anacapa island, one of the Channel Islands off the coast. On one of those trips, Rob and I decided to bring a small inflatable (which was probably designed for a pool) to go scout out around the island. On our way back in, we paddled into a sea cave and promptly got flipped over by a wave. It was a terrifying experience. As more waves continued to break in the cave, our bodies were raked against the barnacle covered walls to which we clung. With an instantaneous agreement we both jumped into a particularly strong outgoing current and managed to swim out and back to the safety of a nearby dock. That was a seminal bonding experience for us.

After a road trip to visit Humboldt State University in Arcata, CA with Ginny Waco in the late 80’s, Robert and I both landed on there and were house mates for two years. Rob was a math guy, like his father Roland, and he studied Environmental Engineering. Rob was fascinated with the chemical and industrial processes, that would later define his career. He constantly dragged me along for afternoon tours of the local lumber mills, pulp mills, cogeneration energy, sewage plants, and local breweries to learn about how they worked. It was interesting and eye opening, and I don’t think I would have ever done that if it wasn’t for being Robs buddy. The most indelible memories are the smell of those sewage plants…

He and I spent countless days hiking and backpacking on the coast and in the redwoods. We were aficionados of the budding microbrew scene of the early 90’s and we started making our own using ingredients from the local breweries.

Rob became a big fan of NASCAR racing in college, dedicating a part of his weekends to rooting for his favorite car, which was sponsored by Texaxo / Havoline. His personal cars became known as the Texaco Havoline Escort, & the Texaco Havoline Thunderbird. Then once he had established his career in Portland Oregon, he bought his own real race car & trailer, which he raced at different tracks around the west coast.

After college I often drove up to Portland see Rob. After he settled down in a house of his own, he met Michelle, with little Arielle in tow. Rob and Michelle shared a sense of humor that sold me quickly on the idea that she would become his wife. I was welcomed by her and was invited along for quite a few of their adventures: a concert camping trip in eastern Washington, ski trips, fun times around the Portland Area. I had the honor of being Rob’s best man when he and Michelle married in 2002. Brendan came along in 2004. Rob told me that Brendan’s birth was the proudest moment of his life. Right from the beginning, Rob shared his love of hiking with Brendan, taking him on day hikes and eventually backpacking trips. Rob was my best man at my wedding to Charleen in 2013. Rob and I saw each other less regularly over the last 10 years but kept in touch often. Rob and Brendan last stayed with us on their way to backpack at Sequoia NP in August of 2018 a month after my son Riley was born.

I didn’t know that my April 1st visit to see Rob would be endcap of a 41-year friendship, but I feel so fortunate to have spent that one last day with him. His unexpected and shocking death is a reminder of how quickly our reality can change.

Rob was a sentimental guy; he’d get misty eyed talking about people who had passed. Let us honor Robs memory by keeping close those people who mean the most to us in life.

REMEMBERING ROBERT WACO (from his 7/9/23 celebration of life)

This year would have marked 20 years of friendship with Robert Waco for me. I thought the priest at his memorial service in LA last week shared an important insight when he asked us not to linger on the question “Why did Robert die?” but instead to ask “Why did Robert live?” It is in that vein that I share just a few memories I had about Robert to help me answer that.

Robert fiercely loved his family. Michelle, BW, Arielle, Zack, Julien; Michelle and Sharky; his mom Ginny. He was always in touch with you and sharing updates about your lives – I’m sure I speak for many people here that feel like we know your family more deeply than you realize just because of Robert.

Robert was a talker. He was a storyteller. He had the “gift of gab.” He was constantly on the phone catching up with people. When I was asked to make some phone calls to share this horrible news, so many people said “no way, I had just talked to him.” And that was true for so many of us. And if you know Robert and hadn’t spoken with him for a time, he was the kind of guy that even after many months, you could pick right back up where you left off like no time had passed at all.

He was an intensely loyal friend. Robert was generous. He even shared his friends. I know so many of you only through Robert and I think that speaks a lot about the quality of the man and the friendships he valued.

He was an accomplished engineer and problem solver. From Humbolt Environmental Engineering roots, he was a hard worker. He was known for dispositioning lots on hold at all hours of the day and night. Most importantly to me, he made work fun. Unconventional – Playing music in the cube area – The Gypsy Kings or whatever song fit the problem you were working on. He brought levity to the work. Yields will undoubtedly be lower now that he’s gone.

Robert had a special way of turning a relatively simple task into an all day affair. One of my best memories was when we were out at Netarts and wondering what to have for lunch and decided on BLTs. Despite only having Bacon, Lettuce, and Tomato to find, it took us all day by the time we got all the sandwich ingredients, gabbed with everybody down at Happy Camp, invited a bunch of people over to share in the sandwiches, made salsa to snack on while we made the sandwiches, and encountered a few beers along the way. It is that kind of day “wasting time” with Waco that I will miss. Time with him was never wasted.

If you were ever invited to help with some project with Waco you were always well fed and well “hydrated” whether that was clearing brush on his property, hanging awnings at this house, or cleaning up at the coast house.

Robert had a love of food and preparing it: Cajun Food – perhaps his crowning achievement in Cajun Shepherds Pie (or SHEP), Pico de Gallo and Salsa, Spicy Peppers, Hunter Gatherer. He texted so many pictures of food on my phone it’s crazy. Preparing food for hundreds of racers. He loved FOTM wings (Spicy Peanut with a dollop of Jefe well done). And always hold the mayo and mustard with that guy!

He had a relentless pursuit of finding everyone’s doppleganger. The Fake Pete Carroll. Most people in this room probably have a fake them running around out there!

He had nicknames for everyone – some as simple as a two letter acronym (which he used with the utmost of affection).

He enjoyed:

Lunch walks in all conditions

Netarts and the friends and community there

Sequoia Kings Canyon

Backpacking with BW

UCLA, The Beavs, Blazers, Mariners

He became an honorary Idaho Vandal just for me

Hawaiian Shirt Friday

His little white VW Notchback

He loved a good pool and a hot tub – Hot Watty, Cold Watty (thanks to Brendan)

He loved Pressure Washing

He loved America and our military

A little Skipperky named DivaG running around the coast

Sewage Treatment Plants

Nuclear power and all manner of industrial manufacturing

Tiki Bars (including one in particular at MainBrew)

He loved “Kickin it”

We shared more IPAs than I could ever count.

He brought passion to anything that he did. There was really no “luke warm” with Waco. He was all in. Whether that was: his work, racing, or more recently Bird Watching and Seaweed. That passion couldn’t help but rub off on you. It permeated everything he did.

Perhaps what I will remember (and miss) most is the 20 years of laughter and inside jokes that I shared with Robert. He seemed to always make whatever you were doing more fun just by his presence. The world is going to be less fun without him and he will be dearly missed.

To my dear friend Robert Waco! Cheers!

We drift apart in life my friend but I always think of our childhood and the adventures we had. Mornings when I would meet you at your house, when we’d walk to school at 6 years old and watch cartoons before we had to leave. Hikes and overnights at skull rock. Sneaking into the condo construction site where y’all  set me up to scare the shit out of me when Joseph jumped out of that box. Hot dogs and beer in the pit. Smokin’ licorice weed. Lotta stupid kid shit we did,….our wonder years. I am very happy to hear you found the love of a wife and had beautiful children and good friends.Say hi to Clinton. In heaven we will all reunite. Cheers.
Hiking Mount St. Helens back …
1996, Mount St. Helens, Washington, USA
Hiking Mount St. Helens back in ~1996 — with Robert Waco and Tracy Haley
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