Feeling much better today... I'm not real happy about how long it's taking me to get over this bug, but still ... getting to the end is a good thing. My fever is almost gone this morning (99.1°F, where my normal temperature is about 98.4°F), and noticeably more brain cells are functioning. :) Better yet, I made it to 4:30 pm still feeling pretty good. It sure will be good to see the back side of this bug!
This afternoon Debbie made us a spectacular meal, real brains-fall-out-onto-the-table sort of fare. The entree was fresh halibut (from our local Macey's!), the first of the Alaskan season. Debbie found a recipe she liked, then tweaked it, and produced a masterpiece. The fish was baked sans sauce first, then slathered with the sauce and broiled for a few minutes. That sauce, oh that sauce! It contains (amongst other things) mayonnaise, butter, Parmesan cheese, green onions, and Peppadew peppers. The combined flavors were just wonderful. The broiled asparagus and steamed sushi rice are standard fare for us, but a delicious accompaniment to the halibut nonetheless. It was just stunningly good...
This meal got us to pondering (once again) just how much better we're eating here than we were in San Diego. I still don't really understand why, but the fact is that our ordinary grocery store here (Macey's) has more and better fresh fish, at quite reasonable prices, than we could get in San Diego at any price (and you can pay a lot for fresh fish down there). The variety isn't quite as large, and certain things are harder to find (lobsters, for instance) – but that's more than made up for by the frequent availability of things we love but could rarely (if ever!) get in San Diego. Probably the best example of that is fresh giant sea scallops, 5 to 8 to the pound, available here two or three times a month. It's not just seafood, either – the same store routinely carries several cuts of prime beef. We're practically addicted to the prime ribeye steaks, which are every bit as good as the best we've ever had in a restaurant. The produce is abundant, fresh, and (in season) locally sourced. I can't say the tomatoes are New Jersey quality, but just about everything else (today's asparagus, for instance) is first rate. We've mentioned our milk before, but it's worth repeating: we get our milk delivered weekly, and it is the best commercial milk we've ever had. It's high butterfat (9%) whole milk, not homogenized, and low temperature pasteurized. We each had a glass with our dinner tonight. And then there's the ice cream, from Aggie's Creamery, part of Utah State University's agricultural department. I'll be having some chocolate tonight, as an ice cream soda made with plain Pelligrino sparkling water (I like my ice cream sodas unsweetened – no syrup!). It's the best ice cream I've ever had out of a store, and it's everywhere here. It's so good that the incentive to make our own ice cream is much reduced. Why is the food so much better here than it was in San Diego? I'd love to really understand that, but surely it has something to do with choosier customers. It doesn't really matter, though – it's more than enough just to be able to enjoy it...
Saturday, March 31, 2018
Friday, March 30, 2018
SpaceX...
SpaceX... Just watched the latest SpaceX launch, this time with 10 IridiumNext satellites on board, launching from Vandenburg AFB in California. Once again, a totally routine event, with everything (up through the first second stage burn, anyway) working “nominally” (space-speak for exactly as expected).
This one commercial, profit-seeking company has completely transformed space travel already, and they have many ambitious goals yet unmet. They've done what NASA called (in testimony to Congress) “impossible”. They've dramatically reduced the cost of putting things in orbit. They've increased the reliability of putting things in orbit by a large factor. Finally, they have a greater capacity to launch (more rockets, in other words) than any other institution, private or public. It's a wonderful example of the power of capitalism and its associated incentive structures.
It amuses me when I see appalled leftists and statists bleating about the supposed “taxpayer subsidies” leveraged by SpaceX, as though they were a horrible problem. NASA is 100% “subsidized” (paid for) by the U.S. taxpayer. NASA uses SpaceX because they're cheaper, more reliable, and more available to launch than any other source of launchers. They get development contracts from NASA and other government entities because they're producing more results with less money. About the only legitimate ding on SpaceX, in my opinion, is the assertion that they cost jobs at NASA – and that's a ding that I applaud them for, as NASA is a huge sinkhole for wasted taxpayer dollars. It's a boondoggle that should have been reined in a long time ago...
This one commercial, profit-seeking company has completely transformed space travel already, and they have many ambitious goals yet unmet. They've done what NASA called (in testimony to Congress) “impossible”. They've dramatically reduced the cost of putting things in orbit. They've increased the reliability of putting things in orbit by a large factor. Finally, they have a greater capacity to launch (more rockets, in other words) than any other institution, private or public. It's a wonderful example of the power of capitalism and its associated incentive structures.
It amuses me when I see appalled leftists and statists bleating about the supposed “taxpayer subsidies” leveraged by SpaceX, as though they were a horrible problem. NASA is 100% “subsidized” (paid for) by the U.S. taxpayer. NASA uses SpaceX because they're cheaper, more reliable, and more available to launch than any other source of launchers. They get development contracts from NASA and other government entities because they're producing more results with less money. About the only legitimate ding on SpaceX, in my opinion, is the assertion that they cost jobs at NASA – and that's a ding that I applaud them for, as NASA is a huge sinkhole for wasted taxpayer dollars. It's a boondoggle that should have been reined in a long time ago...
Ilex vomitoria...
Ilex vomitoria... Many years ago, when I was a young lad, my father used to regale us kids with tales of American Indians drinking tea made from holly leaves. They'd drink it, he told us with some envy in his voice, so that they'd vomit after a feast – thus allowing them to go back and enjoy another round at the feast. At the time, our farm was raising American holly (Ilex opaca), so this meant that we were raising close relatives of a tree the Indians used. That it was used for puke induction only made the story more attractive to a young boy. :)
Now to say that my dad was a teller of tall tales would be a considerable understatement of the actual facts. He reveled in telling tales that were far-fetched, yet believable to a kid – such as his assertion to us that chocolate milk came from brown cows, or that buttermilk came from cows that liked to jump around. When I was quite young, he'd tell several of these tall tales every day. We believed those tales, for a while. What made him particularly good at these tall tales was that he'd mix in a few actual facts to them, and even occasionally tell a tall tale that was actually true. And he had one promise to us: that if we asked him if one of his tales were true, he'd tell us whether it was. I did ask him, one day, if the tale of the holly tea was true – and he said that it was, though there was some disagreement amongst historians on exactly how it was used.
Fast forward to something like 35 years ago, when I decided one day to read up on this “holly tea”. I quickly found a reference to it (this is back before the Internet, so I was in a library researching this): my dad was talking about a tea called yaupon, made from the native-to-America holly Ilex vomitoria. An article I read this morning got me looking again, this time on the Internet. I found many references online, including this one from 1917 referencing the caffeine content of the plant's leaves, and this one talking about one drink (“black drink”) made with Ilex vomitoria and other herbs that was in fact an emetic (vomit-inducer).
My interest was piqued by the article I read this morning, where I learned (for the first time) that the emetic effects were not actually caused by Ilex vomitoria, but in fact by other herbs. Also interesting in that article was some speculation about how the name came about. Apparently Ilex vomitoria is relatively rich in caffeine, and is quite tasty as a tea (according to a considerable number of comments I found online). That got me to look on Amazon, and sure enough, yaupon tea is readily available! So I ordered two ounces of it to try out. I'll report back after I try it, in particular on whether it has any chance of displacing my beloved Darjeeling. One thing that occurred to me is that here is a tea that (I believe) my Mormon friends could drink without violating their health laws. A little online research tells me that is very uncertain.
I think my dad would have enjoyed this discovery, and would also have enjoyed trying out the yaupon tea. His reaction, I'm sure, would have been most entertaining...
Now to say that my dad was a teller of tall tales would be a considerable understatement of the actual facts. He reveled in telling tales that were far-fetched, yet believable to a kid – such as his assertion to us that chocolate milk came from brown cows, or that buttermilk came from cows that liked to jump around. When I was quite young, he'd tell several of these tall tales every day. We believed those tales, for a while. What made him particularly good at these tall tales was that he'd mix in a few actual facts to them, and even occasionally tell a tall tale that was actually true. And he had one promise to us: that if we asked him if one of his tales were true, he'd tell us whether it was. I did ask him, one day, if the tale of the holly tea was true – and he said that it was, though there was some disagreement amongst historians on exactly how it was used.
Fast forward to something like 35 years ago, when I decided one day to read up on this “holly tea”. I quickly found a reference to it (this is back before the Internet, so I was in a library researching this): my dad was talking about a tea called yaupon, made from the native-to-America holly Ilex vomitoria. An article I read this morning got me looking again, this time on the Internet. I found many references online, including this one from 1917 referencing the caffeine content of the plant's leaves, and this one talking about one drink (“black drink”) made with Ilex vomitoria and other herbs that was in fact an emetic (vomit-inducer).
My interest was piqued by the article I read this morning, where I learned (for the first time) that the emetic effects were not actually caused by Ilex vomitoria, but in fact by other herbs. Also interesting in that article was some speculation about how the name came about. Apparently Ilex vomitoria is relatively rich in caffeine, and is quite tasty as a tea (according to a considerable number of comments I found online). That got me to look on Amazon, and sure enough, yaupon tea is readily available! So I ordered two ounces of it to try out. I'll report back after I try it, in particular on whether it has any chance of displacing my beloved Darjeeling. One thing that occurred to me is that here is a tea that (I believe) my Mormon friends could drink without violating their health laws. A little online research tells me that is very uncertain.
I think my dad would have enjoyed this discovery, and would also have enjoyed trying out the yaupon tea. His reaction, I'm sure, would have been most entertaining...
Thursday, March 29, 2018
Still haven't quite shaken this bug...
Still haven't quite shaken this bug... My fever is gone this morning (yay!), but some of the other symptoms are still with me. The most noticeable, for me, is a near-complete absence of my ability to smell or taste. I had tea and orange rolls (from Kneaders) this morning, and just about all I could taste was the sweetness. Debbie tells me that both the scent and the taste of those rolls is very strongly orange, but I couldn't detect that at all...
In the morning our friend Lizzy H. and her 6 month old baby Lilly came over for a visit. We've seen Lilly fairly often since her birth last September, and it's been a lot of fun to watch her developing. She's now on the verge of crawling, and starting to babble and make noises in reaction to her environment. Her vision has developed to the point where she can track and watch faces, and she seems to react to your expression and vocal tonality. Yesterday, while her mom or grand mom was holding her, she was very curious about our old field spaniel Miki – who was also curious about her (unusual for him, as normally he doesn't want anything to do with kids). It was fun to watch Lilly interacting with Miki, from both perspectives.
We had a doctor's appointment for Debbie yesterday, way up in North Logan. She was there for two reasons: one was an occasional sharp pain she gets in her knee as she's recovering from her fall early this month, and the other was to see if anything could be done about the large bump on the outside of her left knee (the one most recently operated on). On the pain, her doctor wants to wait a month to see if it just goes away, as it would if it was not any particular injury but just part of the recovery process. On the bump, the doctor had not much good news. He thinks it is likely a bursa caused by irritation of the IT band (a major ligament in the knee) from the two relatively recent surgeries on that knee. It's a common side-effect of such surgery, he tells us, though it's most commonly seen on a different ligament in the knee. There are two possible ways to get rid of it. The first, which would be the one he'd recommend doing first, is a shot of cortisone straight into the bursa. He doesn't want to do this, however, until the sharp pain problem is resolved. The second way to get rid of the bursa is surgical removal, but he doesn't want to do that. He didn't flat out refuse, but I suspect he might have if pressed. I asked him why the reluctance, and got an explanation that I really liked: he doesn't do surgeries that don't have a functional goal. This surgery would not increase her knee's ability, and would not resolve any pain – it would be purely cosmetic. He doesn't believe taking the risk of a surgery for such a thing is a good idea. Clearly he is ill-suited for a career in plastic surgery! But I like that attitude in a surgeon...
After the doctor's appointment we headed to a nearby restaurant that we like: La Unica, with great Mexican food. The owner of the restaurant has been running a few Mexican food trucks in Cache Valley for years, and they also have outstanding fare. We've been visiting their trucks for three years now, and have gotten to know some of the family members in the process (the owner works with at least two daughters and two sons in the business). As usual, we had a great meal (carnitas burrito for me, fish tacos for Debbie, mango drink for both). As we were eating, the owner came over and asked if the red car in front was ours (we drove my Tesla Model X). When I said yes, out came a stream of questions. We learned that one of his sons (working there yesterday) had spotted it and was all excited about it. One thing led to another, and on our way out all the family members working there came out to look at our car. The first thing they wanted to see: the falcon wing doors, of course. :) Four of them were ooohing and aaaahing at everything they saw, from the leathery smell of the interior to the giant screen on the center console. One of the daughters, it turns out, loves her pickup truck – and when I told her of Telsla's plans for a pickup, she got real interested. A lot of fun, that was. :)
In the morning our friend Lizzy H. and her 6 month old baby Lilly came over for a visit. We've seen Lilly fairly often since her birth last September, and it's been a lot of fun to watch her developing. She's now on the verge of crawling, and starting to babble and make noises in reaction to her environment. Her vision has developed to the point where she can track and watch faces, and she seems to react to your expression and vocal tonality. Yesterday, while her mom or grand mom was holding her, she was very curious about our old field spaniel Miki – who was also curious about her (unusual for him, as normally he doesn't want anything to do with kids). It was fun to watch Lilly interacting with Miki, from both perspectives.
We had a doctor's appointment for Debbie yesterday, way up in North Logan. She was there for two reasons: one was an occasional sharp pain she gets in her knee as she's recovering from her fall early this month, and the other was to see if anything could be done about the large bump on the outside of her left knee (the one most recently operated on). On the pain, her doctor wants to wait a month to see if it just goes away, as it would if it was not any particular injury but just part of the recovery process. On the bump, the doctor had not much good news. He thinks it is likely a bursa caused by irritation of the IT band (a major ligament in the knee) from the two relatively recent surgeries on that knee. It's a common side-effect of such surgery, he tells us, though it's most commonly seen on a different ligament in the knee. There are two possible ways to get rid of it. The first, which would be the one he'd recommend doing first, is a shot of cortisone straight into the bursa. He doesn't want to do this, however, until the sharp pain problem is resolved. The second way to get rid of the bursa is surgical removal, but he doesn't want to do that. He didn't flat out refuse, but I suspect he might have if pressed. I asked him why the reluctance, and got an explanation that I really liked: he doesn't do surgeries that don't have a functional goal. This surgery would not increase her knee's ability, and would not resolve any pain – it would be purely cosmetic. He doesn't believe taking the risk of a surgery for such a thing is a good idea. Clearly he is ill-suited for a career in plastic surgery! But I like that attitude in a surgeon...
After the doctor's appointment we headed to a nearby restaurant that we like: La Unica, with great Mexican food. The owner of the restaurant has been running a few Mexican food trucks in Cache Valley for years, and they also have outstanding fare. We've been visiting their trucks for three years now, and have gotten to know some of the family members in the process (the owner works with at least two daughters and two sons in the business). As usual, we had a great meal (carnitas burrito for me, fish tacos for Debbie, mango drink for both). As we were eating, the owner came over and asked if the red car in front was ours (we drove my Tesla Model X). When I said yes, out came a stream of questions. We learned that one of his sons (working there yesterday) had spotted it and was all excited about it. One thing led to another, and on our way out all the family members working there came out to look at our car. The first thing they wanted to see: the falcon wing doors, of course. :) Four of them were ooohing and aaaahing at everything they saw, from the leathery smell of the interior to the giant screen on the center console. One of the daughters, it turns out, loves her pickup truck – and when I told her of Telsla's plans for a pickup, she got real interested. A lot of fun, that was. :)
Tuesday, March 27, 2018
A bit better this morning...
A bit better this morning... The magic infrared thermometer says my temperature is 99.8°F, and my brain feels like it's at least firing on all cylinders, though at an idle. I'm beginning to cough up foul things, always a sign that the end is near. I may survive this after all!
Yesterday afternoon we watched a movie we first saw something like 30 years ago: Karate Kid. We both had fond memories of it, but really didn't remember very much. We quite enjoyed it this second time around...
After the movie, it was just before dark and I let the dogs out to play. As I stood on our deck in the deep twilight, I heard an owl hooting nearby – and when I turned toward the sound, I saw the owl sitting in our leafless weeping willow tree. Debbie and I watched the owl silhouette for several minutes. Would have been a great view had there been even the tiniest hint of daylight! It was pretty good even with the silhouette, though...
My brother Scott told me yesterday of a plant sale nearby, where bare-root trees and shrubs were being offered at fantastically low prices. The form at right (with my personal information whited out) shows what we're ordering: 140 trees and shrubs for $330. That works out to $2.36 per tree or shrub – quite a bargain, that! I wouldn't have to have many of these survive for me to be happy with the deal. Better yet, my brother – crazy guy that he is – volunteered to plant all of these for me. Woo hoo! In a few weeks we're going to have a lot of new starts around here! It will be interesting to see which ones thrive...
This morning it's wall-to-wall blue sky, with no precipitation in the forecast. Yay! I took the photos below from our yard, just before dawn. The first photo is looking westward, toward the Wellsville Mountains. The other is looking eastward, towards the Wasatch Mountains...
Yesterday afternoon we watched a movie we first saw something like 30 years ago: Karate Kid. We both had fond memories of it, but really didn't remember very much. We quite enjoyed it this second time around...
After the movie, it was just before dark and I let the dogs out to play. As I stood on our deck in the deep twilight, I heard an owl hooting nearby – and when I turned toward the sound, I saw the owl sitting in our leafless weeping willow tree. Debbie and I watched the owl silhouette for several minutes. Would have been a great view had there been even the tiniest hint of daylight! It was pretty good even with the silhouette, though...
My brother Scott told me yesterday of a plant sale nearby, where bare-root trees and shrubs were being offered at fantastically low prices. The form at right (with my personal information whited out) shows what we're ordering: 140 trees and shrubs for $330. That works out to $2.36 per tree or shrub – quite a bargain, that! I wouldn't have to have many of these survive for me to be happy with the deal. Better yet, my brother – crazy guy that he is – volunteered to plant all of these for me. Woo hoo! In a few weeks we're going to have a lot of new starts around here! It will be interesting to see which ones thrive...
This morning it's wall-to-wall blue sky, with no precipitation in the forecast. Yay! I took the photos below from our yard, just before dawn. The first photo is looking westward, toward the Wellsville Mountains. The other is looking eastward, towards the Wasatch Mountains...
Monday, March 26, 2018
When you're sick...
When you're sick ... you want Debbie to make your meals. Trust me on this! At right is the soup she whipped up for me yesterday: a creamy chicken soup, not salty at all, stuffed with yummy roast chicken and vegetables. Jealous, y'all should be...
She made this by modifying a cheesy sausage soup recipe she's used for years. Substituted chicken for the sausage, and queso quesadilla cheese for the cheddar. If you love to cook and you don't know about queso quesadilla, it's well worth learning about. It's a very mild cheese, lower in salt than almost any other, with a soft texture and very meltable. It adds a nice cheese note to just about anything. Our grocery stores here all have a Mexican cheese section (because there are several really good Mexican cheeses!), and that's where we find it...
I've still got a fever this morning. And it wasn't helped a bit by the inch of fresh snow that fell and stuck last night. I've decided not to plow the driveway, as the layer is thin enough to drive over and I don't much like the idea of 90 minutes outside while I have a 100.5°F fever...
She made this by modifying a cheesy sausage soup recipe she's used for years. Substituted chicken for the sausage, and queso quesadilla cheese for the cheddar. If you love to cook and you don't know about queso quesadilla, it's well worth learning about. It's a very mild cheese, lower in salt than almost any other, with a soft texture and very meltable. It adds a nice cheese note to just about anything. Our grocery stores here all have a Mexican cheese section (because there are several really good Mexican cheeses!), and that's where we find it...
I've still got a fever this morning. And it wasn't helped a bit by the inch of fresh snow that fell and stuck last night. I've decided not to plow the driveway, as the layer is thin enough to drive over and I don't much like the idea of 90 minutes outside while I have a 100.5°F fever...
Sunday, March 25, 2018
A problem we have...
A problem we have... Debbie and I have different tastes in movies, mostly overlapping. In music our tastes are nearly two disjoint sets. :) That's just background for the problem we have, though: we can't rely on reviews to help us choose a movie to watch.
The latest case in point is Pan's Labyrinth. On Rotten Tomatoes, we saw that both viewers and critics loved it. We watched the trailer and thought it had possibilities. So a couple of nights ago, we streamed it from Amazon, and ... we were disgusted with it. One big surprise for us: it was full of gratuitous, cartoonish violence. There were many scenes that we just couldn't stand to watch, and several violent scenes that happened by surprise, so we had no chance to turn away. We thought the characters, even the main characters, were very poorly developed. The plot was full of things that just made no sense to us as we were watching, though some we managed to puzzle out afterwards. It was definitely surreal, but not in any way that we found interesting, intriguing, or entertaining. I had a similar reaction to it that I have to much modern art: I just don't get it. I don't understand what could possess anyone to say “I like this!”
And that, in short, is our problem. This one you could summarize as “lots of false positives” on movie reviews, meaning that many movies that are positively reviewed – either by critics or viewers – we think are awful. It is quite possibly over half of positive reviews are “false” from our perspective. Even worse: we also get a lot of “false negatives” – many movies are are negatively reviewed we think are great. The rate of false negatives isn't quite as high as the false positives, but it's far from zero. So the end result is that we basically can't use reviews as guidance for movies we've never seen.
What we need is “movie reviews for weirdos like us.” Rotten Loonies, maybe? Anybody know of such a thing?
The latest case in point is Pan's Labyrinth. On Rotten Tomatoes, we saw that both viewers and critics loved it. We watched the trailer and thought it had possibilities. So a couple of nights ago, we streamed it from Amazon, and ... we were disgusted with it. One big surprise for us: it was full of gratuitous, cartoonish violence. There were many scenes that we just couldn't stand to watch, and several violent scenes that happened by surprise, so we had no chance to turn away. We thought the characters, even the main characters, were very poorly developed. The plot was full of things that just made no sense to us as we were watching, though some we managed to puzzle out afterwards. It was definitely surreal, but not in any way that we found interesting, intriguing, or entertaining. I had a similar reaction to it that I have to much modern art: I just don't get it. I don't understand what could possess anyone to say “I like this!”
And that, in short, is our problem. This one you could summarize as “lots of false positives” on movie reviews, meaning that many movies that are positively reviewed – either by critics or viewers – we think are awful. It is quite possibly over half of positive reviews are “false” from our perspective. Even worse: we also get a lot of “false negatives” – many movies are are negatively reviewed we think are great. The rate of false negatives isn't quite as high as the false positives, but it's far from zero. So the end result is that we basically can't use reviews as guidance for movies we've never seen.
What we need is “movie reviews for weirdos like us.” Rotten Loonies, maybe? Anybody know of such a thing?
Felt like hell yesterday...
Felt like hell yesterday ... and about the same this morning. Whatever damned virus has got a hold on me is really annoying. Because of the fever associated with the virus, my brain feels like it's running at a tiny fraction of its normal power, and that's the part I hate the most. Yesterday I was playing my usual Scrabble games over the Internet (with my sister and her friend, and with a friend in Poland), and it was really, really hard for me – trying to think of words to fit my letters felt like I was wading through mental quicksand, where normally it's a breezy sprint for me.
I didn't do much of anything yesterday (see previously mentioned virus), but a few things did stick out.
First, I ran to our little local grocery store (Ridley's) in Hyrum to get some hamburger. Debbie was making her patented chili comfort food, figuring (correctly!) that I would like it when I was feeling awful. On the way into the store I was confronted (very politely, and with humor) by an adult woman dressed in a cookie costume and waving a sign around. I soon figured out that she was guiding victims customers to the table in front of the store where several cute Girl Scouts and an adult woman were selling Girl Scout cookies. On my way out of the store, I bought two boxes of them. The Girl Scout who helped me choose the cookies, when we were done, asked me “What happened to your hair?” My hair is pretty short at the moment, and it's getting sparser by the day. This was not long after my morning shower, and my hair was all frizzy and pointing in every which way. I don't blame her at all for being curious about it! :) The adult woman behind her, though, sucked in her breath and called out the girl's name admonishingly. I laughed and told her it was fine, and told the little girl that my hair is what happens to men who are older than dirt. She just looked confused, but the mom behind her got a laugh.
When I went to pay for my cookies, I had an experience of quite the different kind. I was directed to another Girl Scout, a little older, to take my money. She told me the cookies were $4 a box. I didn't have correct change, so I handed her a $20 bill. She looked up at me, apologetically, and said “I’m really bad at math, and I’m in high school. I don’t know how much change you’re supposed to get.” I found out, through a bit more conversation, that she was in 10th grade. If we were still in California, where the poor Girl Scouts (where and when we lived) had to compute a 8.67% sales tax, I could forgive the inability to compute the correct change in her head. But here in Utah there is no sales tax on Girl Scout cookies, and the price ($4 a box) is about as easy to compute as you can get. I talked it out with the girl, mom behind her watching closely, and determined that she could figure the price for the two boxes (though only after great mental labor), but figuring the change I was due was completely beyond her. Even in my mentally incapacitated (see fever mentioned earlier), this was a trivial exercise for me. In the end I had to tell this high school girl that $20 - (2 x $4) = $12. With relief evident in her face, she handed me the change.
In most countries I've traveled in (and that's quite a few), such an encounter would be unthinkable unless that little girl actually had a mental deficiency. Here, even in Utah, it is all too common an occurrence. It's this sort of thing that makes me feel the doom coming on – and makes me confident that there will be a successor to the U.S. hegemony in the world. I'm not sure which country it will be. China and India are the two likeliest looking ones to me at the moment...
Last night we watched an old (1963) movie: The Three Lives of Thomasina. I had never seen it before, but it was a favorite of Debbie's childhood. I had read the book (Thomasina by Paul Gallico); it was a Christmas present from my parents in the late '50s, one of the first books my parents bought for me (as opposed to the books my dad inherited, and the many books they bought for themselves). I remember getting it not long before they surprised me with a complete encyclopedia (that one purchased from a yard sale). Both are vivid memories for me, along with three or four other books that were early and special to me. Anyway, the movie's plot at least resembles the book, enough that I could easily follow along. I quite enjoyed it. Debbie did too, through her sobbing and sniffling (she gets quite emotional about stories involving animals).
It's snowing this morning. Dang it! I thought we were likely done with this white stuff, but apparently not quite yet...
I didn't do much of anything yesterday (see previously mentioned virus), but a few things did stick out.
First, I ran to our little local grocery store (Ridley's) in Hyrum to get some hamburger. Debbie was making her patented chili comfort food, figuring (correctly!) that I would like it when I was feeling awful. On the way into the store I was confronted (very politely, and with humor) by an adult woman dressed in a cookie costume and waving a sign around. I soon figured out that she was guiding victims customers to the table in front of the store where several cute Girl Scouts and an adult woman were selling Girl Scout cookies. On my way out of the store, I bought two boxes of them. The Girl Scout who helped me choose the cookies, when we were done, asked me “What happened to your hair?” My hair is pretty short at the moment, and it's getting sparser by the day. This was not long after my morning shower, and my hair was all frizzy and pointing in every which way. I don't blame her at all for being curious about it! :) The adult woman behind her, though, sucked in her breath and called out the girl's name admonishingly. I laughed and told her it was fine, and told the little girl that my hair is what happens to men who are older than dirt. She just looked confused, but the mom behind her got a laugh.
When I went to pay for my cookies, I had an experience of quite the different kind. I was directed to another Girl Scout, a little older, to take my money. She told me the cookies were $4 a box. I didn't have correct change, so I handed her a $20 bill. She looked up at me, apologetically, and said “I’m really bad at math, and I’m in high school. I don’t know how much change you’re supposed to get.” I found out, through a bit more conversation, that she was in 10th grade. If we were still in California, where the poor Girl Scouts (where and when we lived) had to compute a 8.67% sales tax, I could forgive the inability to compute the correct change in her head. But here in Utah there is no sales tax on Girl Scout cookies, and the price ($4 a box) is about as easy to compute as you can get. I talked it out with the girl, mom behind her watching closely, and determined that she could figure the price for the two boxes (though only after great mental labor), but figuring the change I was due was completely beyond her. Even in my mentally incapacitated (see fever mentioned earlier), this was a trivial exercise for me. In the end I had to tell this high school girl that $20 - (2 x $4) = $12. With relief evident in her face, she handed me the change.
In most countries I've traveled in (and that's quite a few), such an encounter would be unthinkable unless that little girl actually had a mental deficiency. Here, even in Utah, it is all too common an occurrence. It's this sort of thing that makes me feel the doom coming on – and makes me confident that there will be a successor to the U.S. hegemony in the world. I'm not sure which country it will be. China and India are the two likeliest looking ones to me at the moment...
Last night we watched an old (1963) movie: The Three Lives of Thomasina. I had never seen it before, but it was a favorite of Debbie's childhood. I had read the book (Thomasina by Paul Gallico); it was a Christmas present from my parents in the late '50s, one of the first books my parents bought for me (as opposed to the books my dad inherited, and the many books they bought for themselves). I remember getting it not long before they surprised me with a complete encyclopedia (that one purchased from a yard sale). Both are vivid memories for me, along with three or four other books that were early and special to me. Anyway, the movie's plot at least resembles the book, enough that I could easily follow along. I quite enjoyed it. Debbie did too, through her sobbing and sniffling (she gets quite emotional about stories involving animals).
It's snowing this morning. Dang it! I thought we were likely done with this white stuff, but apparently not quite yet...
Friday, March 23, 2018
Some random things...
Some random things... I felt lousy most of yesterday, and I woke up feeling about the same this morning – some kind of virus that's giving me a low-grade fever and a general feeling of unperkiness. The part I hate the most about these sorts of illnesses is what the fever does to the working of my brain: it feels like all my thinking is proceeding through some thick fluid that makes everything happen soooooo slowly. Mental activity that's normally effortless for me (say, adding a couple of numbers in my head) is so hard I can just barely force myself to do it.
Despite that, some nice things happened yesterday and this morning.
For starters, we got some rain last night – something like a half inch, maybe a little more. Apparently it got cold enough so that we also got a little snow, but I'm sure that will be gone in short order. The rain cleared most of the snow piles that had been remaining, and it also woke up some of the plants around our place. At right is some sedum my brother Scott gave me a couple of years ago, planted in a big piece of driftwood. Sometime overnight it turned from a dull brown into this red gloriousness. Gorgeous, it is! If you look carefully, you'll see that there is still a bit of snow stuck in it. I'm pretty sure that's old, unmelted snow, as this is sheltered under a willow that otherwise has no snow under it.
A few days ago I saw an old friend's posting in Facebook after I logged in for the first time in five or six years (I hate Facebook): Vera S., whom I met at work in FutureTrade in 2002. I messaged her, and yesterday she messaged back to invite me to call. Last evening we (she, Debbie, and I) had a wonderful conversation, just reconnecting after our last conversation back in 2011. Now we have her new email address and her phone number, so we can stay in touch. We also have her commitment for a visit up here (she and her husband Konstantin live in Huntington Beach, California). We're so looking forward to that!
After talking with Vera, Debbie and I finished a game of Mexican Train. Debbie loves this game, at least partially because she beats me about 99% of the time. Somehow yesterday, despite my mental fogginess, I eked out a win (score sheet at right, low score wins). That was startling enough that I had to take a picture of that score sheet to preserve it for posterity! :)
This morning Debbie shocked me to my core. After I took my shower and wandered out into the kitchen, I discovered a bowl of creamy chicken noodle soup on the table for me, and shortly after I sat down she delivered two pieces of buttered toast and a cup of heavenly Darjeeling tea. This sort of thing is quite rare these days! :) To be fair, this is largely because for most of the past four years she's been limited in her ability to move around due to her multiple knee and back injuries. I cannot even remember the last time she made breakfast like this. Her explanation: I'm feeling yucky, so she wanted to take care of me. Maybe feeling yucky isn't so bad after all!
Despite that, some nice things happened yesterday and this morning.
For starters, we got some rain last night – something like a half inch, maybe a little more. Apparently it got cold enough so that we also got a little snow, but I'm sure that will be gone in short order. The rain cleared most of the snow piles that had been remaining, and it also woke up some of the plants around our place. At right is some sedum my brother Scott gave me a couple of years ago, planted in a big piece of driftwood. Sometime overnight it turned from a dull brown into this red gloriousness. Gorgeous, it is! If you look carefully, you'll see that there is still a bit of snow stuck in it. I'm pretty sure that's old, unmelted snow, as this is sheltered under a willow that otherwise has no snow under it.
A few days ago I saw an old friend's posting in Facebook after I logged in for the first time in five or six years (I hate Facebook): Vera S., whom I met at work in FutureTrade in 2002. I messaged her, and yesterday she messaged back to invite me to call. Last evening we (she, Debbie, and I) had a wonderful conversation, just reconnecting after our last conversation back in 2011. Now we have her new email address and her phone number, so we can stay in touch. We also have her commitment for a visit up here (she and her husband Konstantin live in Huntington Beach, California). We're so looking forward to that!
After talking with Vera, Debbie and I finished a game of Mexican Train. Debbie loves this game, at least partially because she beats me about 99% of the time. Somehow yesterday, despite my mental fogginess, I eked out a win (score sheet at right, low score wins). That was startling enough that I had to take a picture of that score sheet to preserve it for posterity! :)
This morning Debbie shocked me to my core. After I took my shower and wandered out into the kitchen, I discovered a bowl of creamy chicken noodle soup on the table for me, and shortly after I sat down she delivered two pieces of buttered toast and a cup of heavenly Darjeeling tea. This sort of thing is quite rare these days! :) To be fair, this is largely because for most of the past four years she's been limited in her ability to move around due to her multiple knee and back injuries. I cannot even remember the last time she made breakfast like this. Her explanation: I'm feeling yucky, so she wanted to take care of me. Maybe feeling yucky isn't so bad after all!
Thursday, March 22, 2018
Wednesday, March 21, 2018
A nice afternoon drive...
A nice afternoon drive... We went up to Hardware Ranch again, and saw a lot more wildlife than we've been seeing recently. Hundreds of elk were wandering around within view from the visitor center parking lot. Dozens of deer were also there, and we saw lots of deer both on the way in and on the way out. Debbie spotted a couple of Sandhill Cranes out in the ranch's pastures, mingling with the elk. We've been seeing them in Cache Valley for the past four or five days as well. I don't know whether these are migratory cranes just passing through on the way south, or if they're amongst those who summer here. It could easily be the former, because our recently uncovered pastures are full of things for them to eat (perhaps most especially voles, whose under-snow passages are now fully exposed).
The first photo below shows a group of three deer who stopped about 100' away from us as we drove by. Deer seem to be quite unafraid of our Tesla Model X, we presume because it's so quiet. That was taken with my iPhone, on the 2X optical telephoto, handheld. The second photo we took right near Hardware Ranch. That's a flock of turkeys – enough meat to feed half of Cache Valley right there! :)
The first photo below shows a group of three deer who stopped about 100' away from us as we drove by. Deer seem to be quite unafraid of our Tesla Model X, we presume because it's so quiet. That was taken with my iPhone, on the 2X optical telephoto, handheld. The second photo we took right near Hardware Ranch. That's a flock of turkeys – enough meat to feed half of Cache Valley right there! :)
Tuesday, March 20, 2018
More morning bananas...
Sunday, March 18, 2018
The last photo...
The last photo... I'm still working my way through my mom's belongings. This afternoon I came across the little point-and-shoot digital camera she had for the last couple of years she was alive. I'll be giving that camera away, but inside it I found the memory card, with about 400 photos on it. I'm pretty sure those are all the photos she took during those few years; I don't think she ever figured out how to copy them to her computer. Every time I visited her, helping her send photos to her friends was high on her list of things for me to do. :)
My mom was a remarkably bad photographer, which given her artistic sense was a bit of a surprise to me. It's the mechanics of the camera she never seemed to understand, from the zoom lens to the focus. I'd guess that of the 400 or so photos, less than a dozen of them are properly exposed and in focus. Probably 90% of the photos are of flowers; the remainder are split between people, bugs, and dead bats.
There was a surprise for me near the end of the photos, though. Unbeknownst to me, she had taken a dozen or so photos after she arrived here in Utah. Most of these were of people: some friends of ours who visited her to welcome her to Utah, the staff at the assisted care facility (she loved those folks), and so on. One, however, was the photo above. From it's placement in the camera's sequence, I'm pretty sure one of our friends took that photo, almost certainly at mom's request. What you see there is how she looked during her happiest time here, just after she arrived. It gave me a real start to see that. In a good way, though.
Miss you every day, mom...
My mom was a remarkably bad photographer, which given her artistic sense was a bit of a surprise to me. It's the mechanics of the camera she never seemed to understand, from the zoom lens to the focus. I'd guess that of the 400 or so photos, less than a dozen of them are properly exposed and in focus. Probably 90% of the photos are of flowers; the remainder are split between people, bugs, and dead bats.
There was a surprise for me near the end of the photos, though. Unbeknownst to me, she had taken a dozen or so photos after she arrived here in Utah. Most of these were of people: some friends of ours who visited her to welcome her to Utah, the staff at the assisted care facility (she loved those folks), and so on. One, however, was the photo above. From it's placement in the camera's sequence, I'm pretty sure one of our friends took that photo, almost certainly at mom's request. What you see there is how she looked during her happiest time here, just after she arrived. It gave me a real start to see that. In a good way, though.
Miss you every day, mom...
Do I still use...
Do I still use ... DEVONthink and my Fujitsu ScanSnap IX500 for scanning receipts and other documents? So asks Ron L., by email.
The answer: hell, yes!
At this point I've been using this for over three years, and I've got just over 4,000 documents scanned. The process of scanning and transferring numbers to my bookkeeping (for which I use Moneydance) has long since been burned into my “muscle memory” – I no longer have to think about it at all. All those 4,000 documents are just electrons, and not occupying file cabinets and boxes like they used to. Since I got my iMac Pro in December, the OCR time has dropped to something insignificant – a second or two unless I scan something like a 20 page legal document in fine print.
Best of all, finding a document is now just a matter of a Google-style search, with effectively instantaneous results. This took a couple of years to become a reflexive habit, much like it took me a while to think of the camera on my smartphone as a way to remember or record things. Just recently I've started yet another use of DEVONthink: I create .pdf files containing notes (and optionally drawings or photos) and import them. DEVONthink is happy to accept .pdf files from anywhere, and indexes them just like it does scanned documents. Being able to do Google-style searches on these is very useful, and basically infinitely faster than the file search built into OSX.
At this point I consider all this part of my minimally-acceptable computing environment. If one of them dies, I will have to find a replacement...
The answer: hell, yes!
At this point I've been using this for over three years, and I've got just over 4,000 documents scanned. The process of scanning and transferring numbers to my bookkeeping (for which I use Moneydance) has long since been burned into my “muscle memory” – I no longer have to think about it at all. All those 4,000 documents are just electrons, and not occupying file cabinets and boxes like they used to. Since I got my iMac Pro in December, the OCR time has dropped to something insignificant – a second or two unless I scan something like a 20 page legal document in fine print.
Best of all, finding a document is now just a matter of a Google-style search, with effectively instantaneous results. This took a couple of years to become a reflexive habit, much like it took me a while to think of the camera on my smartphone as a way to remember or record things. Just recently I've started yet another use of DEVONthink: I create .pdf files containing notes (and optionally drawings or photos) and import them. DEVONthink is happy to accept .pdf files from anywhere, and indexes them just like it does scanned documents. Being able to do Google-style searches on these is very useful, and basically infinitely faster than the file search built into OSX.
At this point I consider all this part of my minimally-acceptable computing environment. If one of them dies, I will have to find a replacement...
A feverish Saturday...
A feverish Saturday... Yesterday I was operating on intellectual fumes for most of the day, the victim of a fever that reached 102.7°F at its peak, just before I went to bed. Most of the day I spent playing simple games with Debbie (and losing!) and reading; anything more mentally challenging would have been impossible. At around 4 am I woke shivering, and realized that my fever was breaking. By 4:30 am my brain was operating on all cylinders again, and now this morning I feel fine. I can't remember ever having such a short, intense illness before. But it's gone now – yay!
The two videos below are of our dogs. The first one shows all five dogs enjoying their morning bananas. I'm going to try re-shooting this one with a wider field of view, as this attempt doesn't show them actually catching the banana slices, except for Ipo. The second video is showing off a skill that Ipo has acquired. All three of our young field spaniels have thoroughly learned that when they come in from outside, they're to run directly to their crates and wait for a treat. We trained this behavior in the possibly forlorn hope that when they come into the house during mud season (just started) we won't have pounds of mud to clean up in the kitchen – it will all be contained in their crates. This all works great unless the crate doors are pushed to the closed position. Even unlatched, this stops the dogs cold – except Ipo. All on her own she learned how to grab the wire of the door with a front claw and whip the door open, so she can run in and make preparations for Milk Bone consumption. In this video it happens so quickly you really can't see how she's doing it...
The two videos below are of our dogs. The first one shows all five dogs enjoying their morning bananas. I'm going to try re-shooting this one with a wider field of view, as this attempt doesn't show them actually catching the banana slices, except for Ipo. The second video is showing off a skill that Ipo has acquired. All three of our young field spaniels have thoroughly learned that when they come in from outside, they're to run directly to their crates and wait for a treat. We trained this behavior in the possibly forlorn hope that when they come into the house during mud season (just started) we won't have pounds of mud to clean up in the kitchen – it will all be contained in their crates. This all works great unless the crate doors are pushed to the closed position. Even unlatched, this stops the dogs cold – except Ipo. All on her own she learned how to grab the wire of the door with a front claw and whip the door open, so she can run in and make preparations for Milk Bone consumption. In this video it happens so quickly you really can't see how she's doing it...
Friday, March 16, 2018
Do we still like our iPhone Model Xs?
Do we still like our iPhone Model Xs? A question I received this morning from reader (and all around crazy person) Dick M. Answer: why, yes, we do. The large screen in a small form factor is great for our ancient eyes. The brandy-new biometric feature (face ID) works amazingly well, and it's been integrated with nearly all of the apps I use on the iPhone that require identification. I love the resulting ease of use. There's a security tradeoff there, obviously: someone who wanted something on my phone badly enough could tie me down and hold the phone up to my face to get access. On the other hand, someone who wants access to my phone that badly is probably going to get access anyway. :) The one situation I can imagine where there's a risk I don't like is border crossings, and if I ever take my phone across a border I will be disabling face ID for the crossing. It's not the foreign countries I worry about, it's the U.S. border agents with their freedom to examine (and even confiscate!) my electronics.
And I left the best for last. The iPhone X's camera is superb. My videos are notably less shaky, and I find myself using the 2X optical telephoto very frequently. The camera is enough better that I'd be happy with the iPhone X even if the camera was the only new feature. But it's not!
And I left the best for last. The iPhone X's camera is superb. My videos are notably less shaky, and I find myself using the 2X optical telephoto very frequently. The camera is enough better that I'd be happy with the iPhone X even if the camera was the only new feature. But it's not!
A few mornings out of the year ...
A few mornings out of the year ... several things line up just right such that the morning sun angles into one of my office windows and strikes the “Tuscan yellow” wall. The result is a bright, cheerful glow that lasts just a few minutes until the sun climbs high enough that the lit spot is on the floor. This morning was such a morning...
So what has to line up, and why does it happen only rarely? For starters, to our east are the Wasatch Mountains. Generally by the time the sun climbs over the mountains in the morning, the angle is already high enough that my wall won't be lit up. The point where the sun comes up varies over the course of the year, as the seasons change. Within the range of sunrise points there are two “notches” from the perspective of our property. This morning the sun rose in the bottom (lowest point) of one of those notches. The other notch (which the sun comes up through in the summer) is so far north that the patches lit up in my office on those mornings don't strike any walls. The sun rises through the other notch in late November and mid March. Then there's another bit that needs lining up: the patch of sun has to strike the wall where nothing is hanging. That's about half the possible time. Finally, it has to be a nicely clear day – even haze will diminish the brightness enough to ruin the effect.
A good start to my morning!
So what has to line up, and why does it happen only rarely? For starters, to our east are the Wasatch Mountains. Generally by the time the sun climbs over the mountains in the morning, the angle is already high enough that my wall won't be lit up. The point where the sun comes up varies over the course of the year, as the seasons change. Within the range of sunrise points there are two “notches” from the perspective of our property. This morning the sun rose in the bottom (lowest point) of one of those notches. The other notch (which the sun comes up through in the summer) is so far north that the patches lit up in my office on those mornings don't strike any walls. The sun rises through the other notch in late November and mid March. Then there's another bit that needs lining up: the patch of sun has to strike the wall where nothing is hanging. That's about half the possible time. Finally, it has to be a nicely clear day – even haze will diminish the brightness enough to ruin the effect.
A good start to my morning!
A reader asks...
A reader asks... Mary L. wrote to ask me if I use an ad blocker for my web browser, and if so, which one? The answer is “Hell, yes!” I use an ad blocker! I hate seeing those ads, and even more I hate the delayed visual “pop” when they populate after the text I want to read renders. I have to say, though, that because I read so much on an iPad (with no ad blockers, dang it) I am getting to the point where tuning out the ads is nearly automatic. I consciously (almost) never click on an ad, though, as I know that information will be collected and used to target more ads to me. As things are right now, the ads I see are almost entirely comprised of three categories: things that I've looked at on Amazon, things that Debbie has looked at on Amazon (we share an account), and things related to electronics. The latter, I presume, is because some vendor I've dealt with has sold my name to a list (I'm betting it's Newark, where I bought my 'scope).
As for which ad blocker: at the moment I'm using Ublock. I'm happy with its performance, it eliminates virtually all ads, and it's available for both Chrome and Firefox (I still use both browsers about equally). It's also available for Safari, but I can't speak to its performance there as I almost never use Safari (because of compatibility issues on several sites I visit daily).
As for which ad blocker: at the moment I'm using Ublock. I'm happy with its performance, it eliminates virtually all ads, and it's available for both Chrome and Firefox (I still use both browsers about equally). It's also available for Safari, but I can't speak to its performance there as I almost never use Safari (because of compatibility issues on several sites I visit daily).
Thursday, March 15, 2018
A slightly weird snowfall...
A slightly weird snowfall... I spotted this pattern on our front door walkway when I was about to carry some groceries in. Nearly all the areas of rock have melted, but the areas of sand/rock fines have not. I'm going to guess, from this, that the larger thermal mass of the rock takes longer to drop below freezing (once warmed up) than the sand/rock fines areas – and so there was enough heat in stored up in the rock to melt the snowfall, but not so in the sand/rock fines.
What bothers me about my theory is that I haven't seen this before!
The groceries I was carrying in were a bit different than our normal fare. Our local Boy Scout troop is having a food drive this week, specifically asking for canned goods. When I took some cardboard up to Hyrum to be recycled this morning, I noticed that our local grocer was having a “case lot” sale on canned goods. I'm sure it's not a coincidence that the sale is during the same week as the food drive. It's easy to imagine here that the Boy Scouts were clever enough to hold their drive on the same week as the sale – but it's equally easy to imagine that the store manager decided to contribute to the food drive by holding the sale on the week of the drive. However the coincidence happened, as I picked the canned fruit, vegetables, and meat I noted that all of the items on sale were of the right type for the food drive – and that all three of the other shoppers choosing with me were buying for the food drive as well...
We love living here!
What bothers me about my theory is that I haven't seen this before!
The groceries I was carrying in were a bit different than our normal fare. Our local Boy Scout troop is having a food drive this week, specifically asking for canned goods. When I took some cardboard up to Hyrum to be recycled this morning, I noticed that our local grocer was having a “case lot” sale on canned goods. I'm sure it's not a coincidence that the sale is during the same week as the food drive. It's easy to imagine here that the Boy Scouts were clever enough to hold their drive on the same week as the sale – but it's equally easy to imagine that the store manager decided to contribute to the food drive by holding the sale on the week of the drive. However the coincidence happened, as I picked the canned fruit, vegetables, and meat I noted that all of the items on sale were of the right type for the food drive – and that all three of the other shoppers choosing with me were buying for the food drive as well...
We love living here!
That pesky white stuff again...
That pesky white stuff again... By yesterday afternoon our spell of warm, sunny weather had cleared nearly all the snow from the Cache Valley floor. Then, last night, despite slightly-above-freezing temperatures, it started snowing again. I got up around 1 am to let our dogs out, and there was three inches on the ground. When we got up at 7 am this morning, there was just an inch of a mix of snow and slush, and the temperature was well above freezing. We have rain and warmer temperatures forecast for today and tomorrow. So it's all white outside (and it's still snowing), but none of this is going to stick. I hope! Our driveway had warmed up nicely, so there's no snow accumulating on it. Snow plowing bullet dodged!
Wednesday, March 14, 2018
Happy Birthday!
Happy Birthday! It's the second birthday for our youngest field spaniels, brother Mako and sister Cabo. To look at them, you'd never guess they were related. Cabo is small for a field spaniel, with an unusually short muzzle and a unique, perpetually startled expression on her face. Mako is big – nearly as big as our second field spaniel, Mo'i – and shares much of his appearance, with lots of muscles, 50% more weight than Cabo, and a massive, lunky head. Their personalities are also very different: Cabo is curious, mischievous, and very active. Mako is calmer, clumsier, very strong, and a lunkhead of the first order. We love 'em both!
Tuesday, March 13, 2018
A day in Salt Lake City...
A day in Salt Lake City... We ended up spending most of our day down there. The main purpose of the trip was a routine visit to Debbie's endocrinologist, but of course we stopped at the Red Iguana on the way home. :) This time Debbie and I both ordered the same entree (that doesn't happen very often): one of their specials. This one was three tacos filled with shrimp, queso quesadilla, avocado, poblano pepper strips, and shredded lettuce. They were, quite possibly, the best tacos I have ever had. We did enough reverse-engineering of the recipe to convince ourselves that we could make these at home – and we're gonna give it a try!
Along the way on this trip we passed the 25,000 mile mark on my Tesla Model X. The last time I was in for a routine service the technicians there told me they don't see very many Teslas with that kind of mileage. That surprises me, as in our household the gas-powered car (a Lexus SUV) gets driving about 1% of the total miles we drive. Basically it only gets used if Debbie wants to go somewhere on her own. If I'm driving, we go in the Tesla. Now it may be true (I have no idea, actually) that we drive more miles than the average retired couple, and that might be contributing as well. It's still true that I have had no major problems with the Tesla; just a few almost trivial issues that were all quickly resolved by the Tesla service folks. At 25,000 miles that's also true of the last four or five Toyota products we owned, too...
Along the way on this trip we passed the 25,000 mile mark on my Tesla Model X. The last time I was in for a routine service the technicians there told me they don't see very many Teslas with that kind of mileage. That surprises me, as in our household the gas-powered car (a Lexus SUV) gets driving about 1% of the total miles we drive. Basically it only gets used if Debbie wants to go somewhere on her own. If I'm driving, we go in the Tesla. Now it may be true (I have no idea, actually) that we drive more miles than the average retired couple, and that might be contributing as well. It's still true that I have had no major problems with the Tesla; just a few almost trivial issues that were all quickly resolved by the Tesla service folks. At 25,000 miles that's also true of the last four or five Toyota products we owned, too...
Sunday, March 11, 2018
The magic of topology...
A little winter trip...
A little winter trip... Debbie and I drove up to Hardware Ranch yesterday afternoon, through Blacksmith Fork Canyon. It was particularly beautiful, with clear blue skies and less snow than we've seen for a while. The red osier dogwood were especially brightly colored, as you can see in the three photos below. When I took these photos we were about 4 miles west of Hardware Ranch, along the right fork of the Blacksmith River. The last photo is focused on a teasel seed pod, one of my mom's favorite craft materials. We have bears, Santas, and reindeer that she made from those seed pods. She even made a set for our friend and neighbor Tim D., and they are prominently displayed in their house at Christmas time – her gift really meant a lot to Tim and his wife Jeannie...
On the way in we saw just one small group of deer, about six animals. We parked in the visitor center parking lot and scanned the hills, and found a herd of several dozen elk, and a group of about 25 deer. Then on the way home we were seeing deer around darned every bend! We probably saw over a hundred deer in all. We didn't see any birds, unless you count turkeys and magpies (they're a constant here)...
On the way in we saw just one small group of deer, about six animals. We parked in the visitor center parking lot and scanned the hills, and found a herd of several dozen elk, and a group of about 25 deer. Then on the way home we were seeing deer around darned every bend! We probably saw over a hundred deer in all. We didn't see any birds, unless you count turkeys and magpies (they're a constant here)...
An unusual snow artifact...
An unusual snow artifact... The photos below were taken from our deck a few days ago. This was a couple of days after the snow you see actually fell, and the day was relatively warm: slightly above freezing. Somehow that made the conditions right for the snow to slide off our roof in those sheets you see, while staying strong enough to stay in one piece up to five feet long. When I examined them closely, I could see that the side toward me (as I took those photos) was a sheet of crystal-clear ice about a quarter inch thick, while the rest was wet snow. For a sense of the scale, those beams you see are 10x12s (with the 12 inch side vertical on the top beam).
Dog drawings...
Dog drawings... I've posted before about Sema Hussein, a young woman from England who makes colored pencil drawings of animals from photographs, for a very reasonable fee. She's making enough money to put herself through college and pursue the training necessary to become a French astronaut. Seriously! This young lady is very talented, and she's made a half-dozen drawings of our cats for us. The most recent drawing she made for us is of our first two field spaniels. They passed away a few years ago, and we wanted something to remember them by. Their portrait is now on our “dog wall” – a wall full of dog art in our dining room, mostly not of our own dogs. Check it out!
Saturday, March 10, 2018
Well, this was totally predictable!
Well, this was totally predictable! California bullet train: now 5 years later and $13 billion more expensive. California continues circling the drain, and we continue to be overjoyed that we've escaped...
A minor miracle...
A minor miracle... But one that looms quite large for me.
I have suffered from insomnia for my entire adult life – almost 50 years now. Over the years I've tried just about everything one could imagine to address it, including two overnight “sleep studies” at clinics, both over-the-counter and prescription medications, meditation, and probably 30 other things. Nothing worked. Nothing.
Something like 30 years ago I got into a rough pattern of having 3 or 4 nights of little-to-no sleep (probably averaging 4 hours) followed by one glorious night of 7 or 8 hours of wonderful sleep, repeated ad nauseum. A few things could predictably cause variations in this. If I drank some alcohol a few hours before going to bed, I'd go to sleep easily – and then wake up 3 or 4 hours later with no possibility of further sleep. A big meal too close to bedtime would keep me awake. Watching an exciting movie before I went to bed ensured a sleepless night. Working hard, physically, for a few hours would ensure a good night's sleep. Other than those things, though, that pattern was what I could expect.
The first sleep study I participated in (about 25 years ago) identified one thing unusual with me: I responded to opioids backwards from most people. Instead of making me drowsy, it's more like I drank 5 cups of coffee. If I took even a small dose of any opioid after about noon, there was zero chance of me sleeping that night. From what I've read more recently, this backwards reaction is true of 5% to 10% of adults (the proportion depends on what study you read).
The second sleep study I did just two years ago. This time they had me wired up with about a bazillion sensors, and I didn't sleep at all – not one wink. The technician who monitored me wrote of my sleeplessness in her report. The doctor who reviewed the results diagnosed me with sleep apnea – something that, by definition, you can't exhibit the symptoms of if you're not asleep! My GP tried her best to persuade me that I should try a CPAP machine, but I refused on the basis that the diagnosis couldn't possibly be right. I wonder, actually, if there's some incentive for the sleep center to make sleep apnea diagnoses...
About six months ago I was feeling achy, as I had been working hard that day (shoveling, as it happens). I did something rare for me: I took a couple pills of a “nighttime” pain medication that we had lying around for some reason. It was concoction of acetaminophen and diphenhydramine. To my knowledge I'd never had diphenhydramine before in my life. It's most commonly used as an anti-allergy medication; it's an antihistamine and the active ingredient in Benadryl. I slept like someone who had been knocked out, for ten hours. Further, I woke up groggy as hell – it took a couple hours, a hot shower, and two giant mugs of tea for me to be even barely functional. I don't know how unusual that sounds to you, but for me that was a stunning result – I hadn't slept for ten hours straight for at least a couple of decades.
That, as you might imagine, got my attention. I started experimenting to see how often I could take that drug and have it still work. I quickly figured out that if I used it three nights in a row, the third night it hardly worked at all. That was repeatable, too. More experimentation and I figured out that I could take it one or two nights in a row with good effect, and then I had to lay off it for a couple days. That means I could get 3 or 4 nights of good sleep in one week. This was the first miracle for me – the best sleep, overall, of my adult life. But it gets better!
About a month ago, I started worrying about the effects of regular use of diphenhydramine, so I started researching it on the Internet. If you've ever tried to research a common medication on the Internet, you can probably already guess what I ran into. I'm sure I could have found a paper whose conclusion was anything between “essential for life” to “potent poison”. However, in general the papers were very reassuring: there don't seem to be any generally recognized horrible outcomes of regular diphenhydramine. Great!
But in the course of that reading, I ran across one paper (and I can't find it now, dang it!) that noted something that resonated with me: a significant percentage of people with “backwards” opioid reactions (like me!) were unusually sensitive to the sleep-inducing effects of diphenhydramine. Furthermore, these people often could reduce the bedtime dose of diphenhydramine to as little as 5 mg (I was taking 60 mg). At the lower doses the quality of their sleep was actually better, and most of them could adjust the dose to eliminate the early-morning grogginess.
I suspect you would have to be a long-term insomnia sufferer to understand why that was so exciting to me. :) I immediately started experimenting with lower doses, and within a few nights I had positive results. I'm still experimenting, but I have a relatively narrow window to refine: my optimal dose is somewhere above 7.5 mg and at or below 15 mg. I've tried as many as four nights in a row at 15 mg, and it still works just fine. My morning grogginess is very mild at 15 mg. Next up are some tests at 10 mg.
But the bottom line is that for an entire month now, I've been able to sleep well most nights. Quite literally, I cannot remember another month like that in my life. I've completely stopped my old pattern of waking up at 2 or 3 am. This morning I slept like the proverbial log until 7:30 am – something that until this past month was something I only rarely experienced. It's probably to much to say that I'm sleeping “normally”, but this is by far the closest approximation I've ever made to that!
I can still scarcely believe that this common, cheap, over-the-counter drug could have such a profound effect on my life. It's undeniable, though. Now I have a new fear – that this miraculous change in my life will somehow disappear or become ineffective. I'm being stingy with its use because of that, and if I see that starting to happen I'll back off even more. But in the meantime ... not suffering from the effects of insomnia sure feels good!
One word of caution for any fellow insomniac reading this: from my research, it appears that my reaction to diphenhydramine isn't the most common one. It's also, apparently, not exceptionally weird. If you decide to try this, your results might be anywhere from the opposite of mine to merely wildly different. In other words, your mileage may vary. But for me (so far, at least) it is well into miraculous territory...
I have suffered from insomnia for my entire adult life – almost 50 years now. Over the years I've tried just about everything one could imagine to address it, including two overnight “sleep studies” at clinics, both over-the-counter and prescription medications, meditation, and probably 30 other things. Nothing worked. Nothing.
Something like 30 years ago I got into a rough pattern of having 3 or 4 nights of little-to-no sleep (probably averaging 4 hours) followed by one glorious night of 7 or 8 hours of wonderful sleep, repeated ad nauseum. A few things could predictably cause variations in this. If I drank some alcohol a few hours before going to bed, I'd go to sleep easily – and then wake up 3 or 4 hours later with no possibility of further sleep. A big meal too close to bedtime would keep me awake. Watching an exciting movie before I went to bed ensured a sleepless night. Working hard, physically, for a few hours would ensure a good night's sleep. Other than those things, though, that pattern was what I could expect.
The first sleep study I participated in (about 25 years ago) identified one thing unusual with me: I responded to opioids backwards from most people. Instead of making me drowsy, it's more like I drank 5 cups of coffee. If I took even a small dose of any opioid after about noon, there was zero chance of me sleeping that night. From what I've read more recently, this backwards reaction is true of 5% to 10% of adults (the proportion depends on what study you read).
The second sleep study I did just two years ago. This time they had me wired up with about a bazillion sensors, and I didn't sleep at all – not one wink. The technician who monitored me wrote of my sleeplessness in her report. The doctor who reviewed the results diagnosed me with sleep apnea – something that, by definition, you can't exhibit the symptoms of if you're not asleep! My GP tried her best to persuade me that I should try a CPAP machine, but I refused on the basis that the diagnosis couldn't possibly be right. I wonder, actually, if there's some incentive for the sleep center to make sleep apnea diagnoses...
About six months ago I was feeling achy, as I had been working hard that day (shoveling, as it happens). I did something rare for me: I took a couple pills of a “nighttime” pain medication that we had lying around for some reason. It was concoction of acetaminophen and diphenhydramine. To my knowledge I'd never had diphenhydramine before in my life. It's most commonly used as an anti-allergy medication; it's an antihistamine and the active ingredient in Benadryl. I slept like someone who had been knocked out, for ten hours. Further, I woke up groggy as hell – it took a couple hours, a hot shower, and two giant mugs of tea for me to be even barely functional. I don't know how unusual that sounds to you, but for me that was a stunning result – I hadn't slept for ten hours straight for at least a couple of decades.
That, as you might imagine, got my attention. I started experimenting to see how often I could take that drug and have it still work. I quickly figured out that if I used it three nights in a row, the third night it hardly worked at all. That was repeatable, too. More experimentation and I figured out that I could take it one or two nights in a row with good effect, and then I had to lay off it for a couple days. That means I could get 3 or 4 nights of good sleep in one week. This was the first miracle for me – the best sleep, overall, of my adult life. But it gets better!
About a month ago, I started worrying about the effects of regular use of diphenhydramine, so I started researching it on the Internet. If you've ever tried to research a common medication on the Internet, you can probably already guess what I ran into. I'm sure I could have found a paper whose conclusion was anything between “essential for life” to “potent poison”. However, in general the papers were very reassuring: there don't seem to be any generally recognized horrible outcomes of regular diphenhydramine. Great!
But in the course of that reading, I ran across one paper (and I can't find it now, dang it!) that noted something that resonated with me: a significant percentage of people with “backwards” opioid reactions (like me!) were unusually sensitive to the sleep-inducing effects of diphenhydramine. Furthermore, these people often could reduce the bedtime dose of diphenhydramine to as little as 5 mg (I was taking 60 mg). At the lower doses the quality of their sleep was actually better, and most of them could adjust the dose to eliminate the early-morning grogginess.
I suspect you would have to be a long-term insomnia sufferer to understand why that was so exciting to me. :) I immediately started experimenting with lower doses, and within a few nights I had positive results. I'm still experimenting, but I have a relatively narrow window to refine: my optimal dose is somewhere above 7.5 mg and at or below 15 mg. I've tried as many as four nights in a row at 15 mg, and it still works just fine. My morning grogginess is very mild at 15 mg. Next up are some tests at 10 mg.
But the bottom line is that for an entire month now, I've been able to sleep well most nights. Quite literally, I cannot remember another month like that in my life. I've completely stopped my old pattern of waking up at 2 or 3 am. This morning I slept like the proverbial log until 7:30 am – something that until this past month was something I only rarely experienced. It's probably to much to say that I'm sleeping “normally”, but this is by far the closest approximation I've ever made to that!
I can still scarcely believe that this common, cheap, over-the-counter drug could have such a profound effect on my life. It's undeniable, though. Now I have a new fear – that this miraculous change in my life will somehow disappear or become ineffective. I'm being stingy with its use because of that, and if I see that starting to happen I'll back off even more. But in the meantime ... not suffering from the effects of insomnia sure feels good!
One word of caution for any fellow insomniac reading this: from my research, it appears that my reaction to diphenhydramine isn't the most common one. It's also, apparently, not exceptionally weird. If you decide to try this, your results might be anywhere from the opposite of mine to merely wildly different. In other words, your mileage may vary. But for me (so far, at least) it is well into miraculous territory...
Thursday, March 8, 2018
Quote of the day!
Quote of the day! This explains a lot of politics. It also explains why I like Megan McArdle's writing so much: it's the opposite of this.
“Basically, if everyone has a vested interest in believing that they understand everything, or even that people are capable in principle of understanding it (either because believing this dampens their insecurities about the unpredictable world, or makes them feel more intelligent than others, or both) then you have an environment in which dopey, reductionist, simple-minded, pat, glib thinking can circulate, like wheelbarrows filled with inflated currency in the marketplaces of Jakarta.”I'm re-reading Cryptonomicon for the third time, and (as usual with Stephenson's writings) discovering things I never noticed before...
Stephenson, Neal. Cryptonomicon (p. 629). Harper Collins, Inc.. Kindle Edition.
Ipo is doing great!
Ipo is doing great! A couple of readers wrote to prod me because I didn't tell the results of her latest surgery. In short, it's all good. The vet found the proximate cause of the irritation, fluid accumulation, and bleeding: a tangle of suture about the size of a pea. Somehow it had come loose and twisted up into a mess. He took out all the old sutures in her skin and redid them much more tightly with smaller suture (not the normal procedure for a dog Ipo's size, but experience seemed to suggest it). Within an hour of taking her home, she was acting like nothing at all had happened. Now, close to 48 hours after the surgery, there's zero fluid accumulation and she can't understand why we're treating her specially.
There was one telling event, though. When she first came out to see us after the surgery was done, she was trembling and oh-so-incredibly affectionate. That continued for a couple of hours after we got her home. It was as if she was asking us “If I’m really, really, good will you NOT take me back to that place?” Hopefully we won't have to, at least not for anything related to her spaying.
This morning she was her usually bubbly, spinny (she likes to spin at the door at approximately 4,800 RPM before we let her out), spanielly (if you own a spaniel, you'll know what I mean) self...
There was one telling event, though. When she first came out to see us after the surgery was done, she was trembling and oh-so-incredibly affectionate. That continued for a couple of hours after we got her home. It was as if she was asking us “If I’m really, really, good will you NOT take me back to that place?” Hopefully we won't have to, at least not for anything related to her spaying.
This morning she was her usually bubbly, spinny (she likes to spin at the door at approximately 4,800 RPM before we let her out), spanielly (if you own a spaniel, you'll know what I mean) self...
Humans are very weird critters, part 1,978,638...
Humans are very weird critters, part 1,978,638... Megan McArdle, writing from her new perch on the Washington Post, has an excellent piece on the unexpected result of a new study: the availability of naloxone may actually increase opioid mortality – not because it's ineffective, but because its effectiveness appears to change human behavior...
Tuesday, March 6, 2018
“Rocket Man” and the North Korean government...
“Rocket Man” and the North Korean government ... are so loony-tunes in general that today's news of a possible move toward denuclearization is really hard to get excited about. Their sincerity seems so unlikely. But if it were for real, it sure would be a wonderful thing.
And, interestingly, a vindication of Trump's approach to the NoKos...
And, interestingly, a vindication of Trump's approach to the NoKos...
The Ipo saga continues...
The Ipo saga continues... Ipo was spayed about 10 days ago, but her incision is not healing well. We've been back to the vet with her three times since the initial spaying. This morning I took her in for a second surgery. The vet's going to go through the skin on her belly to expose the sutures in from the spaying in the muscle layer, to make certain there are no issues there (he's not expecting any). Then he'll remove all the old sutures from her skin, on the theory that she's been having a reaction to those sutures – then he'll close the new incision with staples, because the stainless steel in the staples doesn't provoke any bad reactions. Poor girl!
She was all excited when I took her in this morning, though. First, she loves the staff there (all of whom came over to pet her). Second, another dog was waiting with us: Bailey, a six month old female German shepherd. The two of them got along famously. There was much puppy-bowing and gentle play, entertaining all of us waiting. She's a happy girl, especially as she has no idea what's about to happen...
She was all excited when I took her in this morning, though. First, she loves the staff there (all of whom came over to pet her). Second, another dog was waiting with us: Bailey, a six month old female German shepherd. The two of them got along famously. There was much puppy-bowing and gentle play, entertaining all of us waiting. She's a happy girl, especially as she has no idea what's about to happen...
Monday, March 5, 2018
It's so hard...
It's so hard ... for me to go through my mom's things. I don't know exactly why that is, as most of the things I'm going through have no personal meaning for me. For instance, this morning I sorted through a box full of memorabilia from her grandchildren (my nieces and nephews), letters, and photographs. The photos are almost entirely of people, only a few of whom I know. The letters were all from people I don't know. I'm saving them because almost all of them are thanking my parents for some kindness they bestowed; I'll scan them one of these days so my whole family can see them. I wouldn't have guessed I'd find this activity so emotionally intense, but ... I do.
A (possibly) cheerful thought...
A (possibly) cheerful thought ... occurred to me this morning. Maybe Trump's announcement of steel and aluminum tariffs was just a negotiating tactic, trying to win concessions on NAFTA. Maybe he really doesn't have any intention of implementing them.
Maybe...
Maybe...
Saturday, March 3, 2018
Debbie's down again...
Debbie's down again ... but nothing serious this time. On Thursday afternoon she was in our kitchen with the dogs, let her guard down for just a second, and then took a tumble when two dogs jumped on her from behind. It was scary for her, though, because it was painful and she was afraid she'd rebroken her left knee (the one that she broke in May 2016). So off to the emergency room we went...
After living her for four years, I'm not sure why we're still surprised at this ... but we were. We walked into the ER, Debbie on crutches. We were checked in immediately by a very friendly (of course) clerk. We waited for three and a half minutes, and then an ER nurse called us in. In under five minutes, the ER doctor – cheerful and confident – carefully questioned us about what happened, checked Debbie over, verified that no pain meds were needed, and ordered a set of X-rays. A bubbly, friendly radiology intern came over to get Debbie less than five minutes later. The X-ray equipment is state-of-the-art, with all electronic imaging – we were out of there in three minutes. Back to the ER, where a couple of minutes later the ER doc was back and showing us Debbie's X-rays. There was no visible bone break; at the very worst she has a hairline crack invisible on the X-ray, and he thought that was unlikely. The main symptom he had to go on was some very localized pain, which was consistent with an injury to either one particular ligament or (less likely) the meniscus (the cartilage “washer” inside the knee joint). He asked again about pain meds, we declined, and then we were off with a “If it’s not better in a couple of weeks, see your GP.” Huge relief for both of us (but especially for Debbie) that there was no bone breakage.
The overall experience at that ER was so different than the (unfortunately many) visits we've made to California ERs. Friendly, competent, cheerful people. No long waits. No giant waiting rooms filled with people who should have gone to a clinic or their GP. No triage (with no queue, it's not needed!). Spotless, organized ER rooms. Top-notch, modern, working equipment in every room. No feeling that you're actually a resident of an impoverished third-world country.
I've been busy the past couple of days taking care of Debbie and the animals (with some help on the latter from our friend Michelle H.). She already looks better to me, getting around the house pretty easily on the crutches, and able to put some weight on her left leg without pain. Hopefully this incident will be behind us very soon...
After living her for four years, I'm not sure why we're still surprised at this ... but we were. We walked into the ER, Debbie on crutches. We were checked in immediately by a very friendly (of course) clerk. We waited for three and a half minutes, and then an ER nurse called us in. In under five minutes, the ER doctor – cheerful and confident – carefully questioned us about what happened, checked Debbie over, verified that no pain meds were needed, and ordered a set of X-rays. A bubbly, friendly radiology intern came over to get Debbie less than five minutes later. The X-ray equipment is state-of-the-art, with all electronic imaging – we were out of there in three minutes. Back to the ER, where a couple of minutes later the ER doc was back and showing us Debbie's X-rays. There was no visible bone break; at the very worst she has a hairline crack invisible on the X-ray, and he thought that was unlikely. The main symptom he had to go on was some very localized pain, which was consistent with an injury to either one particular ligament or (less likely) the meniscus (the cartilage “washer” inside the knee joint). He asked again about pain meds, we declined, and then we were off with a “If it’s not better in a couple of weeks, see your GP.” Huge relief for both of us (but especially for Debbie) that there was no bone breakage.
The overall experience at that ER was so different than the (unfortunately many) visits we've made to California ERs. Friendly, competent, cheerful people. No long waits. No giant waiting rooms filled with people who should have gone to a clinic or their GP. No triage (with no queue, it's not needed!). Spotless, organized ER rooms. Top-notch, modern, working equipment in every room. No feeling that you're actually a resident of an impoverished third-world country.
I've been busy the past couple of days taking care of Debbie and the animals (with some help on the latter from our friend Michelle H.). She already looks better to me, getting around the house pretty easily on the crutches, and able to put some weight on her left leg without pain. Hopefully this incident will be behind us very soon...
Friday, March 2, 2018
The hopeless feeling when...
The hopeless feeling when ... your president demonstrates, unambiguously, that he is an idiot.
I can't believe he really decided impose tariffs on imported steel and aluminum. It's probably the simplest way he could torpedo the economy unilaterally. Doing so just as his other policy initiatives were bearing positive economic fruit is so stupid I have trouble wrapping my brain around it. The stock market, I see, is interpreting this the same way I would – the Dow is down over 700 points since yesterday morning.
Sheesh.
The unions are crowing about “their” victory. That's a sure sign that you've messed up, Donald.
I see that some (possibly unreasonably) hopeful pundits are noting that Trump still has a week or so to change his mind. Try as I might, I can't feel hopeful about that...
I can't believe he really decided impose tariffs on imported steel and aluminum. It's probably the simplest way he could torpedo the economy unilaterally. Doing so just as his other policy initiatives were bearing positive economic fruit is so stupid I have trouble wrapping my brain around it. The stock market, I see, is interpreting this the same way I would – the Dow is down over 700 points since yesterday morning.
Sheesh.
The unions are crowing about “their” victory. That's a sure sign that you've messed up, Donald.
I see that some (possibly unreasonably) hopeful pundits are noting that Trump still has a week or so to change his mind. Try as I might, I can't feel hopeful about that...
Thursday, March 1, 2018
Over the edge...
Over the edge... Reading the news yesterday about the latest irrational howls for gun control sent me over the edge. If you want to know how that makes me feel, read this post by Eric Raymond – he says it far better than I ever could.
If you know me, then you most likely know I'm not a “joiner” – meaning that I rarely even think about joining an organization. Part of that is a result of being an introvert, but a bigger part is that I just plain don't like most organizations – in the sense that I don't want my membership to represent an endorsement. Last year I joined AARP, but only with great reluctance, as there are many things about AARP that I don't like at all. But ... they have the best Medicare supplement plans, according to my trusted health insurance agent, so I set my qualms aside and did it. Their sticker is not on my car. :)
Yesterday, though, I joined another organization: the NRA. I'm now a life member. The NRA does some things, and has some stands, that I think are borderline crazy. But ... nobody does a better job at defending the second amendment, and that's something I care deeply about. They're also extremely good with their firearms safety training and range training; very commendable activities that should be supported if you're supporting free access to firearms.
So I joined, hoping my financial support will help the fight in some small way.
I'm now pondering a couple additional steps.
First: for both Debbie and I to get concealed carry permits, and to get a suitable carry weapon for both of us (most likely one of the Glocks).
Second: to acquire an AR-15 and learn how to use it.
I want us to be ready if someone comes for our guns. If that day arrives, it will likely be another “joining” moment for me.
If you know me, then you most likely know I'm not a “joiner” – meaning that I rarely even think about joining an organization. Part of that is a result of being an introvert, but a bigger part is that I just plain don't like most organizations – in the sense that I don't want my membership to represent an endorsement. Last year I joined AARP, but only with great reluctance, as there are many things about AARP that I don't like at all. But ... they have the best Medicare supplement plans, according to my trusted health insurance agent, so I set my qualms aside and did it. Their sticker is not on my car. :)
Yesterday, though, I joined another organization: the NRA. I'm now a life member. The NRA does some things, and has some stands, that I think are borderline crazy. But ... nobody does a better job at defending the second amendment, and that's something I care deeply about. They're also extremely good with their firearms safety training and range training; very commendable activities that should be supported if you're supporting free access to firearms.
So I joined, hoping my financial support will help the fight in some small way.
I'm now pondering a couple additional steps.
First: for both Debbie and I to get concealed carry permits, and to get a suitable carry weapon for both of us (most likely one of the Glocks).
Second: to acquire an AR-15 and learn how to use it.
I want us to be ready if someone comes for our guns. If that day arrives, it will likely be another “joining” moment for me.
Bloody Wednesday...
Bloody Wednesday... That's what it was for us, starting at around 3 pm yesterday afternoon. We took delivery of a rug for a friend, and the delivery man carried it into the house for us. Our three puppies (Mako, Cabo, and Ipo) were in their crates in the kitchen, and they went stark raving mad. It's very exciting for them when a stranger comes into the house. Ordinarily that sort of commotion just means a bunch of noise and a chaotic feeling. This time was different, because Ipo had just been spayed a week ago. She managed to split open her incision, about a half inch of it at the end toward her head. A week after the surgery you wouldn't expect that to bleed a lot – but this time it did. Blood wasn't gushing out, but it was flowing steadily and stopped only when I applied pressure through a paper towel.
So Debbie called our vet's office (more on those wonderful people below) while I kept pressure on the wound. There was blood everywhere – in her crate, on her bedding, and (especially) all over the kitchen floor. The paper towel I was using to apply pressure was soaked in it, and my hand looked like it was made of blood. Ipo looked totally unconcerned, other than being curious why her papa was holding her on her back and pressing on her stomach. She obviously wasn't in any pain The vet tech who answered the phone at the vet's office got just enough of a description from Debbie to ascertain that this really was something that needed urgent attention, and then gave us the go-ahead to bring her in immediately. Debbie had the brilliant idea of putting an old washcloth on her belly and holding it in place with an elastic male incontinence strap that we had for Mo'i a few years ago; this worked very well (and impressed the vet a little later :)...
One of the things we love about living here is that our wonderful vets are just 3 minutes (and I mean that literally) up the highway from us. Their clinic is on the same road we live on, less than three miles north of us. So about eight minutes after we first noticed the bleeding, we were in the vet's office. By this time we know most of the people there, both vets and vet techs, on a personal level. I take them flowers once in a while (just did last week, actually) when we think they need cheering up. So when we walked in with Ipo in my arms, it was a bit like walking into a friend's house. At this point the bleeding had slowed down to a seep. The vet techs got everyone notified right away. Dr. Clark happened to see us in the lobby, and came over to check Ipo out. He was obviously unworried (a relief to us) and said he'd see us as soon as he'd finished with the patient he was working on. A few minutes later, we were in with Dr. Clark and he gave her a quick check before telling us what was going on – and to assure us that there was nothing to worry about.
It seems that when they do the spay, they actually make two incisions. The first is through the outer skin layer, the second through the muscle layer that's just inside the skin. When they're done with the surgery, they make two sets of stitches: one to close the muscle incision the other to close the skin. Sometimes the dog will accumulate blood and plasma in the area between the muscle and the skin. That's what happened to Ipo: there was some fluid (probably on the order of a cup's worth) buildup there, and when the skin incision split open, that accumulated fluid started flowing out. None of this is harmful to the dog. He made sure she didn't have any sort of infection, then put one staple in the place where the incision had split and sent us home. That's it!
Phew!!!
The competence and proximity of our vets is a great source of comfort to us. For many years, when we lived in Jamul, California, we were a 45 minute drive from our vet. We always worried about what would happen if we needed a vet urgently. Fortunately for us, that need was never tested, though we did have a few incidents that were rather too close for comfort. The fact that we like all the staff there is just some very nice icing on the cake...
So Debbie called our vet's office (more on those wonderful people below) while I kept pressure on the wound. There was blood everywhere – in her crate, on her bedding, and (especially) all over the kitchen floor. The paper towel I was using to apply pressure was soaked in it, and my hand looked like it was made of blood. Ipo looked totally unconcerned, other than being curious why her papa was holding her on her back and pressing on her stomach. She obviously wasn't in any pain The vet tech who answered the phone at the vet's office got just enough of a description from Debbie to ascertain that this really was something that needed urgent attention, and then gave us the go-ahead to bring her in immediately. Debbie had the brilliant idea of putting an old washcloth on her belly and holding it in place with an elastic male incontinence strap that we had for Mo'i a few years ago; this worked very well (and impressed the vet a little later :)...
One of the things we love about living here is that our wonderful vets are just 3 minutes (and I mean that literally) up the highway from us. Their clinic is on the same road we live on, less than three miles north of us. So about eight minutes after we first noticed the bleeding, we were in the vet's office. By this time we know most of the people there, both vets and vet techs, on a personal level. I take them flowers once in a while (just did last week, actually) when we think they need cheering up. So when we walked in with Ipo in my arms, it was a bit like walking into a friend's house. At this point the bleeding had slowed down to a seep. The vet techs got everyone notified right away. Dr. Clark happened to see us in the lobby, and came over to check Ipo out. He was obviously unworried (a relief to us) and said he'd see us as soon as he'd finished with the patient he was working on. A few minutes later, we were in with Dr. Clark and he gave her a quick check before telling us what was going on – and to assure us that there was nothing to worry about.
It seems that when they do the spay, they actually make two incisions. The first is through the outer skin layer, the second through the muscle layer that's just inside the skin. When they're done with the surgery, they make two sets of stitches: one to close the muscle incision the other to close the skin. Sometimes the dog will accumulate blood and plasma in the area between the muscle and the skin. That's what happened to Ipo: there was some fluid (probably on the order of a cup's worth) buildup there, and when the skin incision split open, that accumulated fluid started flowing out. None of this is harmful to the dog. He made sure she didn't have any sort of infection, then put one staple in the place where the incision had split and sent us home. That's it!
Phew!!!
The competence and proximity of our vets is a great source of comfort to us. For many years, when we lived in Jamul, California, we were a 45 minute drive from our vet. We always worried about what would happen if we needed a vet urgently. Fortunately for us, that need was never tested, though we did have a few incidents that were rather too close for comfort. The fact that we like all the staff there is just some very nice icing on the cake...