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04 April 2007

Step on a crack...

Walking bores me. Needing diversion last night as I walked home, I adjusted the length of my stride so that I stepped on nearly every crack in the sidewalk. Yeah, I know the old saying…sorry Mom, nothing personal!

22 February 2007

Grin & Bear it!

On February 10th a worker at a local landfill was scraping some mud out of the tracks of a piece of earthmoving equipment. In the mud he found what appeared to be a severed human left foot. Subsequent examination showed that it was not a human foot but appeared to be a foot from some branch of the ape family.  We even had people who believe that Big Foot or Sasquatch lives in Virginia and that this might have been from such a critter.  Google search on "foot landfill Virginia" and you can find a multitude of stories about our big adventure here. What follows is my twisted take on the whole fiasco:

It's a bear's foot...thank heavens they have identified it! The mystery has been solved before those dweebs on Mythbusters zeroed in on our big doins here.

If you're traveling in the next few days or weeks and you live in Spotsylvania County , you might want to avoid mentioning where you are from. Now that the great foot mystery has been solved one might expect things to calm down a bit but a check on Google this AM yielded nearly 100 hits on sites mentioning "landfill, foot and Virginia" from places as far away as California and Washington State. There are even some people in Arkansas and Utah who know about it. I can't for the life of me imagine why anyone would go to Arkansas unless they were being extradited there from Virginia but there may be some skiers headed out towards Salt Lake City.

After the "human/not human", "ape/not ape", "Bigfoot/what have you been smoking" controversies have been discussed in so many towns which never get to enjoy events this exciting we must have a pretty high profile in our search for fame. OK, maybe not so much but we at least have our foot in the door. (Yeah, yeah, yeah...I know that sucked...so sue me...it will be tossed out of court...you won't have a leg to stand on.) As you bask in the glory of notoriety in your travels remember that this kind of glory can be a two edged sword. This means that we are also associated with a group  the wing nuts who believe that Big Foot lives in Virginia. Nobody I know has ever publicly claimed to have seen Sasquatch waiting in a slug line or in a line at Carl's but I have seen a couple of guys on Redskins broadcasts that might have been related.

My first thought after seeing that lovely picture run here and in the paper was that it might be that hairy caveman guy from that insurance commercial.

My favorite comment on this whole fiasco was from Laura Moyer last week during the snow/ice/wintery mix event. I won't quote her here but you can see that on her blog. Scroll down a bit, it's there under the title "Snow and Sleet".

I'm still trying to track down a rumor about the National Park Service trying to acquire the landfill site and a 5,000 yard visual buffer because of its historical significance. Maybe Fredericksburg area soccer fans will support that effort.

Do you think there is any chance that City Council will decide that next year's First Night observance should be the dropping of a bear's foot. Guess it's better than bear droppings....that would be a tough headline to write. "COUNCIL DECIDES ON BEAR DROPPINGS FOR NEW YEARS!"

25 July 2006

ESPN is not...

a Myers-Briggs personality type or is it? I used to say that in a joking way, sort of a reactionary, Larry the Cable Guy type line. When guys sit around in the morning over coffee and discuss, even argue about some pro golfer's club selection on the sudden death holes in last weekend's "You Gotta Wear Depends Under Your Knickers" Open at the  Ancient & Royal Golf Club in Bumsmash England I have to wonder if the world hasn't changed in some fundamental and tragic way.  How does this stuff get on TV to begin with?

If you can stand it, watch a few minutes of golf on TV. You'll quickly see that it doesn't even need a live TV camera to depict the drama. They could do it with still photographs. If I could stand it I would get a stop watch  and graph the action time of a golf tournament. I'll bet I would find that total to be almost nothing compared to the time the camera spends trying to show a nearly invisible egg size white sphere allegedly flying through the air.

If the fact that television covers it isn't sufficiently bizarre for you, consider the people who actually want to see this live and I use the word live cautiously. They pay pretty big bucks for a tournament ticket then shuffle along with rest of the golf herd out to the something-teenth fairway to take up their positions, maybe 100 yards from the tee. There they stand 10 people deep in an undulating mob, perhaps holding a cardboard periscope, to see over the anxious heads between them and the grass where Tiger Woods will walk by in hopes of getting a 15 second glimpse of His Tigerness on his way out to his ball which is probably another 100 yards down the fairway. Be still my heart, this is even better than watching Jello set up. Suddenly we have a context for understanding those people who find curling to be high drama.

The topic is rife with opportunities for more comments but I Tivo'd the World Series of  Darts last night and I want to go and watch it to see how the Guiness Stout team captain did in the last round. It's just his second year on the tour but the word is that he is a shoo in to be named to darts Hall of Fame.

19 May 2006

I am a no-fly zone!

Every time I look in the mirror and see that there’s still no propeller on my nose and only two landing gear, my belief that God did not intend us to fly is re-enforced.  Although I can’t recall when I decided riding in airplanes was a gratuitous flirtation with a fiery demise, I can recall at least one image from my first trip by air. When I was in elementary school I flew from Roanoke, Virginia to Allentown,Pennsylvania to visit my aunt. The aircraft was a two engine propeller job of some sort and I actually climbed a rolling set of steps to board it. With two main landing gear, no nose wheel and the little training wheel at the back it sat at a definite nose up angle which I suppose ought to be looked at as a positive thing.

My negative outlook on air travel may have started in college. Our Air Force ROTC unit took a weekend trip to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton,Ohio. The trip was on a DC-1 or some such primitive plane. Shortly before we landed in Ohio, a crew member walked back to my seat and asked me to look out the window and tell him whether or not the landing gear was down. I’m pretty sure that was when it began.

Last year I went out to California to visit a friend I had not seen in 20 years. It was, I think, a measure of the value I placed on this friendship that I paid so much money to experience a 6 hour sphincter seizure.

On a cloudy morning in June, at an absolutely heathen hour, I somehow found my way to the long term parking lot at BWI Airport After standing in the rain for about twenty minutes a shuttle bus came by and carried me off to what I considered to be the gates of Hell itself.  Check in was deceptively easy but I think that was just the airplane gods trying to lull me into a false sense of security. I’m an air travel wimp but a wimp with attitude. Only in the last couple of years have I begun to accept that God, while not intending for us to fly really doesn’t mind if we do.  Because of this reactionary point of view I find myself assuming a peculiar mindset when traveling by air. I think it is equal parts fear, humor and anticipation against a background of deeply ingrained annoyance, all hopefully hidden behind a façade of being an experienced traveler.

I do not fly well. It's not just 360 minutes of forced immobility inside a germ laden flying Petri dish with 90 of my closest friends, traveling six miles above the earth at barely sub-sonic speeds in air cold enough to cryogenically preserve Ted Williams head. It's not even the prospect of surviving for 6 hours on a small bag of dime sized pretzels left over from the Cretaceous era and a sawed off plastic cup of diet Coke. It's all the rest of the dumb stuff that goes with the experience. We don't even have to be in the air for me to get pissed off.

It starts with the boarding experience. Everyone gathers around at the gate, poised in their starting blocks for the mad dash to the boarding ramp. Up front, of course, are the people in Boarding Group 5, oblivious to the order and discipline imposed by their boarding passes. Behind them are the lame, the halt and the blind along with those "boarding with small children." I saw one family on this trip with 3 small children; they should have just given them the plane for crying out loud.

Now, I assume that all this regimentation of the boarding process is intended to either speed things up or at least define the pecking order that will prevail once we are airborne and our miserable destiny is in the hands of Carol, Tiffany, Gina and Captain Somebody. If speeding up the boarding is the intent, what happens is quite the opposite. Once on the plane I find a line of people looking first at their boarding passes and then up at every bloody row number while struggling with the concept that rows are numbered in rational sequence, not at random. If you are at row five and your assigned row is seventeen, move the hell on! You are perfectly safe not looking at the numbers again for at least a few rows. You’ll get a hint when you're in the area; it's called row sixteen.

There is also a mysterious process that goes on during boarding. The person in the window seat always gets to their seat after the aisle and middle seats are occupied. If anyone knows why this happens please let me know.

Finally on the subject of boarding, to the folks at Southwest Airlines, God invented seat rows for a reason! Lose the colored cards and use row numbers. An airplane with a center aisle the width of Lance Armstrong’s bicycle seat is not the place to use "general admission" seating.

Airlines have rules about carry on luggage that supposedly limit us to one personal style item and a small bag which will fit in the overhead. They even have a little box thing at the boarding gate as a kind of a template for carry-on bags, the airline equivalent of the "you must be this tall" bar at an amusement park. The bar at the "Tilt-N-Hurl" ride seems to work because you almost never get puked on by a toddler there. The baggage box is a totally different story; it's there for no apparent reason other than perhaps intimidation.

Look at the bags people drag down that aisle; I've seen smaller apartments. The bigger the bag the smaller the person dragging it. Instead of that luggage box at the gate, they should have a person who makes sure that  passengers can bench press at least twice the weight of their bag. That would put a stop to anorexic waifs dragging bags so heavy they come equipped with dual rear axles and radial tires and then wait helplessly for some chivalrous soul to hoist all their earthly possessions into the already overstuffed overhead.

By the way, when you land the flight attendant always warns you to be careful when opening the overhead compartment doors because "stored items can shift during the flight." Yeah, right! By the time everyone is aboard any plane I have ever ridden, those compartments are so full, sand couldn't shift up there. They will also remind you that anything not stored above must fit underneath the seat in front of you. Dust was the only thing that would have fit under the seat in front of me.

With such bad air travel attitude, you might think I would be somewhat of a rebel once on board the plane. Quite to the contrary, I become peculiarly submissive; I grovel in fact. The flight attendants are the "alpha wolves" and I am but a mewling, freshly whelped cub. My theory on this compliant attitude is that somewhere up there, behind the clouds there are airplane spirits and I do not want to annoy them. If I’m a good airplane citizen, my good manners will somehow magically insure that my particular plane will have an equal number of take-offs and landings and I think we'll all agree that is a good thing.

Furthermore I wouldn't think of leaving my seatback in anything other than its full upright position when landing and taking off. It's unclear to me why that's required but if the flight attendant says do it then consider it done. Likewise with my table, it's fully in the up position and locked just the way they tell me. Seat belts? Forget about me because I have that puppy cinched down so tight my knees turn blue. I can drink two venti coffees from Starbucks and still cross the continent without needing to use the bathroom. Without the seat belt of course, Mother Nature would have her way and the phrase “holding  pattern” would take on a whole new meaning. I really hate it when my coffee finishes its trip before I do.

Moreover, that seat belt stays cinched down not just until the plane comes to a stop at the gate but until the ground crew has washed out the holding tanks and all the empty toasted almond bags have been dug out of the nooks and crannies underneath the seats. Then and only then will I arise from the seat, drag my belongings (ever so carefully of course) from the overhead compartments and lurch up the passenger way  into the terminal, chanting my post-flight mantra, "Aaaah, cheated death again!!!"

The flight itself was comfortable but the view from my window seat was pretty tedious. Two hours in the air had put us over one of those really flat states; the ones this Easterner can never seem to keep sorted out….Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas…somewhere with corn, cows and presumably combines. It was a delightfully clear day and I could see all the way to the ground where presumably my plunge would stop if I opened the wrong door when trying to go to the can.

After a while even my wide-eyed wonderment began to fade. They showed a movie but I passed on America West's kind offer of a headset for the paltry sum of $5 so I could hear the sound on a movie I had already seen. They wanted to sell me something they called a 'SkyBox' as well, a little cardboard treasure chest intended to fend off starvation. This time I saved $2.00 and so between the head set and the 'SkyBox', the unspent $7.00 offset the cost of the “Sandwich From Hell” which I had bought in the terminal to bring with me. Aren't I clever…that's a rhetorical question, OK?

I had to change planes in Phoenix where America West would hand me off to something called Mesa West for the one hour final leg to Long Beach Municipal Airport.  According to the schedule I would have about 90 minutes between planes to get a drink and enjoy the sandwich I had bought in Washington. I was wrong on so many levels.

Traffic at the Phoenix airport seemed gridlocked as we waited to cross a runway until what seemed like several dozen planes landed. Not waiting would have resulted in our being the lead story on the eleven o'clock news (10:00 PM Pacific Time) and that didn't seem like a particularly good thing especially since I knew I wouldn't get to see it. So, I was content to wait…and wait…and wait…  Finally, a break in the flow and we 'darted' across the main drag onto a taxiway where we again came to a stop that consumed another 15 minutes of my sandwich time. Since this delay was due to no available gates, I couldn’t help but zone on this as the airport equivalent of a mall parking lot at Christmas…parking buzzards, cruising the lanes of the parking lot, watching for signs of an imminent opening, going into hover mode when one appears.

Once inside the terminal I had only about 20 minutes until my flight began boarding. That left just enough time to grab a fifty cent drink for which I was charged three times that. By the time I got to the gate the flight was already boarding and I had just enough time to discover that I would have been better off checking my sandwich through so maybe the airline would have had the opportunity to lose it for me.

Other than the 30 yard stroll through the pizza oven they called a passenger walkway to the commuter plane and the fact that the seats on the commuter plane were padded with a single layer of 'Charmin' the next to last leg of my trip was uneventful. We landed at Long Beach more or less on time and the luggage appeared on the carousel so quickly nobody even had a chance to gripe about how long it was taking. In fact, the Long Beach airport terminal was small enough that I could peek around the edge of the outdoor carousel and see the luggage actually coming off the plane.  I almost expected to see  a very very small man in a white suit  crying out, "De plane, de plane!"

A short luggage lug across the street to the Enterprise Car Rental office where my reservation was actually in their computer at the correct price and I was on my way. The final leg would be my introduction to driving in California, an hour and a half of trying to survive on a series of roads, all of which were referred to as "The" as in "The 15" and "The 415" and so on.

A note here about California highways and driving: apparently since Erik Estrada hung up his mirrored sunglasses and knee-high CHIPS boots anything goes out there speed-wise. At one point as my foster car was rocked in the backwash of yet another barely sub-orbital SUV I thought I must have been crawling along at way below the speed limit. I looked down at my speedometer to find I was doing 85 mile per hour. I haven't driven that fast since I reached voting age. Although I was the three legged coyote in my traffic wolf pack, at least there weren’t all that many people telling me I was Number One so I must not have been doing that badly. It is nevertheless highly intimidating to be a freshly whelped highway cub in a pack of 3000 pound automotive alpha wolves.  Each of the cars that passed me must have had a steering wheel and a driver with at least one finger on that wheel but there was something subtly different about the way they moved down the highway, a sort of ballistic quality to their guidance, like a SCUD missile.

I had been given many ominous predictions about California traffic. To the contrary, I was happy to find myself actually moving on the highway. Every comment I had heard up to that point was that the difference between rush hour and non-rush traffic was that non-rush traffic actually has movement even though it may be like riding the leading edge of a glacier. In contrast the cars emerging from the morning and evening Cal-Lock have on occasion been reported to be covered with something looking oddly lichen or moss like.

So as I rocketed down "The 15" or "The Whatever" I found myself beginning to relax a bit. I had made it through a couple of fairly risky multi-lane changes without becoming a statistic and the miles were ticking off on "The whatever-the-hell-road-number" I was on. I was seeing the same town and exit names on succeeding signs with shorter and shorter distances to the points they marked. That was a good thing it seemed and so I let my mind wander a bit and began to ponder why Californians refer to the state and interstate highways as "The ###"…The 15 or The 415.

Back East we refer to Interstates 95 and 64 as "95" and "64". Adding that extra word, "The" changes it somehow, elevating the status of highways to a sort of imperial level akin in a way to the royal "we". We don't revere them here like they do on the Left Coast. Since Californians' fondness for the cult of the car is well known; perhaps this little colloquialism is consistent with that.

By the time I headed back to Virginia I was prefacing every highway number with “the” but I got over that as soon as I pulled on to Interstate 95 on my way home from the airport. I also left behind my speed demon alter-ego and became once again, a good citizen of the highways. I drove home at a reasonable enough rate that a couple of passing cars even gestured to me that they thought I was the #1 citizen of the highways…that is what they meant, right

After 90 minutes in my very small cobalt blue rented Mitsubishi Something LE (AKA 'my foster car')on California highways, I finally pulled into Alain's driveway, convinced that perhaps there was something worse than flying. At last I was out of the plane and off the road…”laissez les bon temps roullez!” I had cheated death yet again.

 

22 April 2006

Lisa of...

... That's Renarded fame has a new posting this morning that had me snorting coffee all over my keyboard. While you are there enjoying her writing, please note that she has moved her blog so you will need to set a new bookmark. It's easy to do, just get a Sharpie pen and circle the address on your screen. Then when you want to go back to it, just double click on the circle.

(Dear God, please tell that no one who reads blogs is Renarded enough to actually do that!)

17 April 2006

M&M's?

This woman just left our office who was wearing a bright yello jacket that advertised M & M's...you know, like melting in your mouth, not in your hand. Nikki told me that there was an M & M sponsored car on the NASCAR circuit but it looked an awful lot like a straight ad to me. Is there no product that people will not wear ad apparel for?

So far there's nothing out there that I have seen that touts the wonders of any particular brands of condoms, feminine hygiene products or personal pleasure devices but I have a feeling that a line of t-shirts or ball caps may may not be too far in the future.

Jeans companies seem to have been in the forefront on the adver-parel...Jordache, that Klein guy and so forth but Old Navy has a death grip on the gold medal. The whole bloody store is little more than a poster factory for itself...everytime someone walks out of there with a t-shirt or sweatshirt they proclaim where it was purchased and that they were dumb enough to pay ON for the privilege of advertising for them.

We're not even going to talk about the clothing items that have the label sewn on the outside. Do you think it happened because Label Sewer # 39 came in hung over one morning and accidentally started sewing labels in clothes that were right side out? She probably got canned for bad performance and is now sitting around in a trailer somewhere trying to figure out how to get a cut of the profits from companies who decided her mistake was a good promotional idea.

My personal idea would have been a set of t-shirts with velcro attachable displays that announce what brand of cereal the wearer had for breakfast but then no one would walk around with a sign across their back proclaiming that had started their day by consuming a bowl of something called "mueslix"...would they?

This is really a weird time we live in I think....

07 April 2006

If good ideas...

...come to those who deserve them then Nikki, who I nudged into blogging, must be the most deserving person in the blogosphere. Why, oh why don't I get to see things like what she wrote about today at Blind Wanderings . I'm not at all sure that my style would have done it justice but what a great description she gives of a very funny scene.

You almost have to know her to imagine the full spectrum of that snorting laugh she describes and when I told her I had just read the posting she immediately went into snort mode.... Go there and have a chuckle.

That's my story and I'm stickin' to it....

27 February 2006

Cezanne

OK, it's a given that I know zip about art but just to annoy all of you readers who do, I'll add that I know what I like. Saturday morning found me shuffling through several rooms at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, trying earnestly to be impressed with the Cezanne exhibit there. I failed...miserably. I feel so inadequate. All those DC folk sitting in rapt attention, worshipfully looking at 5 paintings, side by side, all apparently of the same rocks or trees or some other feature of the French countryside. I'm looking too but I'm just not seeing the charm of all those repetitive images...a total of over a hundred paintings in the show and for me, four or five would have given the same impressions and I could have been out of that part of the gallery and seeing some variety in other parts of the museum.

There is good news though...the water colors were really nice, the exhibit was free and closer examination showed that he stayed pretty much inside the lines and had covered all the numbers as he filled in the pictures....

15 February 2006

More Winter Olympic coverage you won't see on NBC

Kudos to MSNBC for pre-empting Imus In The Morning yet again today. Yesterday was only a snooze of a re-hash of Olympic backgrounders but they hit the programming jackpot today...live coverage of an epic ice hockey battle between Sweden and Kazakhstan...I'm sure you were all on the edges of your respective seats watching this 7-2 battle.

This thriller displaced the coverage of the second of three demostration sports this year...bungee luge. That's where bungee cords are attached to the sled and the scoring is based on the total time from the start to the time the luger is dragged back up through the starting gate by the stretched bungee cords. The major moment of excitement in this event of course is usually watching the atheletes trying to actually stay on the sled through the reversal of direction at the bottom when the cords have reached S-2 (Insider's lingo for "those suckers have stretched about as far as they are going to). Rumor has it that the American team should medal in bungee luge since we are the first country to use duct tape as a sled retention device.

13 February 2006

Winter Olympics news you probably won’t see on NBC…

…include the developing scandal around the IOC’s decision in the Ice Scrabble event.

Ice Scrabble ( a derivative of curling ) being one of the new demonstration sports has also become the focus of a heated debate. In Ice Scrabble, letters of the alphabet are painted on curling stones and the teams try to form words inside that circle. They get double points if they can bump their opponents stones into new positions that spell out a profanity of some sort.

This event has been fraught with controversy from the beginning. First, the Canadian team, the early favorites, almost pulled out when the IOC rules committee ruled the “eh” was not a legal word. Then Target Department Stores filed a trademark infringement suit, claiming that the concentric circles that define the scoring area are their intellectual property.

Just as it appeared those controversies had been resolved, a joint protest has been lodged by the Japanese, Chinese, Korean and Russian teams claimed that the stones should be multilingual. IOC officials have rejected the appeal, ruling that including all those characters on a stone would require an increase in the size and consequently the weight of the stones that would make them all but unmanageable to anyone except perhaps the Russian women’s team.

Vice-President Mistakes 78 year old lawyer for a quail...

...it could happen....

OK, OK, so the VP shot one Republican lawyer…it’s a start…

Other GOP politicians are writing so many Abramoff inspired refund checks they are getting carpal tunnel syndrome, Bush gives back a whopping six grand from his “Why Should I Worry About Re-election” fund but Cheney, takes no chances. He shoots contributors.

Could have been worse I suppose...he could have spilled his Bloody Mary as he climbed out of his SUV to take the shot. Nevertheless it might be wise to review your donations before you accept that hunting trip invitation. Could be this guy just didn't give enough...

Mr. Vice-President, you should know this will go in your permanent record…it will be right after the section documenting your five deferments.

03 February 2006

State of The Union Part 2

This was forwarded to me this morning:

This year, both Groundhog Day and the State of the Union Address fell in the same week.
As Air America Radio pointed out, "It is an ironic juxtaposition:
One involves a meaningless ritual in which we look to a creature of little intelligence for prognostication, and the other involves a
groundhog."

07 December 2005

Grinchily speaking...

This time of year is always a bit difficult for me. I always seem to find that “spirit of the season a  to be bit elusive but thanks to a local radio station there is hope on my holiday horizon. They have assumed that repetition of a message will do the trick and consequently have been playing the same selection of Christmas songs as encouragement all day, every day since the Monday morning after Thanksgiving. It’s a reasonable assumption that this all began during the tryptophan induced vegetative state we all found ourselves in right after Thanksgiving dinner.

Their messages of holiday cheer go something like this: 
Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree – A true inspiration this year since so many of the trees are being hung upside down, thus leaving room for several more pole dancers at the “Christmas party hop”

Jingle Bells – Especially uplifting given that it suggests the ever nostalgic thought of riding on a sleigh (who sells sleighs today, anyway?) with a close up view of some bells tied to a horse’s butt while singing a sleighing song. Can you name one sleighing song? 

"Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas” – Look at the grand total cost of your Christmas shopping list and tell me if anyone but a hermit or cloistered monk can have a “merry little Christmas”.

Most Wonderful Time of The Year- So it’s really not when the kids go back to school after all? Does that mean that Staples lied to us with their commercials?

The Christmas Song – “Chestnuts roasting on an open fire” Yeah, that does it for me for sure. A virtually extinct nut that doesn’t taste all that bloody good anyway and Jack Frost can go and nip someone else’s nose cause I’ll put his lights out if he gets up mine.

Hurry Down The Chimney- Some sultry voiced tramp trying to come on to an old guy…heck that’s the
California state song isn’t?

I’ll Be Home For Christmas – Probably not so much because gas is over $2.00 per gallon and after shopping, who has money left to travel?

A Chipmunk Christmas – Alvin, Theodore et al being cute with cheeks full of the seed you bought to feed the birds.

Santa Claus Is Coming To Town – Be good kids! If you’re bad, you’ll only be able to play with your friends’ toys because  you won’t get squat. They do actually have a list and it’s strictly adhered to under powers granted by The Patriot Act.

Grandma Got Run Over By A Reindeer – Super! Granny with Blitzen prints up her back…no cookies this year kids because Grandma’s in a full body cast and drinking her Ensure through a straw.

I’ll Have A Blue Christmas – Yessir, now that’s a cheery little holiday ditty.

That’s the bad news. The good news is that all those bloody dogs that barked out the song “Jingle Bells” last year have apparently been picked up by the Animal Control officer and we won’t have that one to suffer through this year.

Barumpabump-bum...just for fun.

Adeste fideles, y’all.

07 November 2005

Grande mocha skim latte frappe to go!!

As of this morning we have 4 Starbucks outlets here in Fredericksburg. It seems as if it was just a month or so ago that there were only 2 and a few hours ago there were just 3. Could there be some process going on here that we do not fully comprehend?

Are Starbucks stores mating with mushrooms or 7-11s under cover of darkness?

Are there strange cloning experiments going on in some lab in the Pacific Northwest? 

Has some computer hacker discovered a method to propagate these stores in the same way they do computer viruses?

Or is it the worst possible scenario; has the number of stores reached critical mass and are the stores able to now spontaneously recreate themselves on any unoccupied piece of real estate without human intervention?

26 September 2005

Jet Blue

Now that the oooh’s and aaah’s over that spectacular emergency landing pulled of by the Jet Blue crew at LAX last week have settled down I’ll make this observation. If my flight experience on Jet Blue the previous week didn’t convince me they are the best then that landing did. Fly Jet Blue…they rock!

What a great travel experience I had with them and all without the added attraction of a flaming tire  or two. You, who waded through the saga of the Little Frog and Duck Boy here over the last month or two, know that when it comes to flying, I do not ‘play well with others.” Jet Blue, though, almost made me like air travel. They even have ESPN Classic as one of their direct TV channels so you can relive the excitement of old golf matches played 20 years ago and B.S. (Before Steroids) baseball games. 

My advice is if you are flying, fly Jet Blue and if they don’t go where you want to go, change your plans and go where they will go.

That’s my story and I’m stickin’ to it….

14 July 2005

Didn't it rain brother, didn't it rain?

Not to turn this into the Weather Channel or anything but we had rain yesterday…serious rain….a lot of rain. We needed it…but not all at one time…over 4 inches in a couple of hours…at a fall rate at one point of 4.36 inches per hour. Cars stalled, trees down, and the ever present power outages of course. There was a good thing about the power outages though. When the stoplights go out cars slow down so rooster tails from speeding SUV’s are much smaller and they don’t hydroplane nearly as long before they hit a tree or another car. This gives the innocent Mini Coopers a fighting chance to escape being washed into the Chesapeake Bay and becoming a winter homes for a families of blue crabs. I hate when the power goes out. Books I have been dying to read lose their charm and aimless wandering around my apartment is all I can think of to do. The good news though is that it happened right at dinner time so I headed for my Evening Meal Emergency Room…Fuddrucker’s. The Everything Burger (aka The Gut Bomb), french fries swimming in jalapeno cheese sauce, and enough green Tabasco sauce doused pico de gallo food-product to qualify as a side dish did wonders for my spirits. I wandered over to Borders afterwards and poked around for a bit. When I paid for the book that was fated to follow me home, it turned out I had won a 15% discount coupon if I would only call an 800 number and respond to a short survey. I was thrilled beyond measure, well not really beyond measure, more like 15% thrilled I guess. My mom is going to be so proud of my achievement. I think we can work a deal here. You all send me your book orders and a check or money order for 90% of the price. I’ll get the books all at once and keep the extra 5% discount for my trouble. By the way, include $19.95 per order for the well known “shipping and handling” in your check or money order. Leaving Borders I saw a rainbow…not such a surprise really except that this one went from horizon to horizon. The full arc is something I’ve only seen once or twice. My mind works in odd ways though and I immediately pictured this sight as what the 'reveal' would look like if an interior designer from “While You Were Out” got involved with re-decorating the Saint Louis riverfront. Then greed took over as I considered the issue of whether or not a full arc rainbow came complete with two pots of gold. On my way home I drove by a short stretch of the Rappahannock River. The water had been low, slow and green the day before and yesterday it looked as if someone had spilled a giant 2% Starbucks latte. Now if there had just been something that looked like a 2 ton biscotti the image would have been complete. That’s my story and I’m stickin’ to it….

01 February 2005

Do drop in and I do mean 'doo' !

Can't believe I said that, given what is to follow:

OK, you’ve heard it before but it bears repeating. Some stories you just can’t make up and the account of what happened to Nina Gambone as reported on MSNBC sure is one of them.

It seems that someone or some system picked an inopportune time, at least from Nina’s point of view, to flush lavatory waste from an airplane. A frozen glob, chunk, lump or whatever aggregation term one might choose, fell on Nina’s car last week. It crushed her roof and smashed the windshield and now there seems to be nobody to blame it on. The FAA can’t do anything since the offending aircraft is unidentified. She got no help from the fire department either. They refused to help out with removing the “space invader” because, they said, Nina’s little package from the heavens was hazardous waste.

There is good news though; since Nina and her son were not in the car at the time there were no injuries.

I suppose the other good news would have to be that she lives in Massachusetts. Imagine having that happen in Key West where the temperatures are higher.

And from an insurance point of view, how about having to report THAT claim, maybe even having your premiums increase because of it. Seems unfair somehow for Nina to have the airline and the insurance company dump on her……

That's my story and I'm sticking to it....

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