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...
Friday, March 30, 2018
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...