1,000 Foot Ore Freighter, Soo Locks, MI

1,000 Foot Ore Freighter, Soo Locks, MI

Near Peggys Cove, Nova Scotia

Near Peggys Cove, Nova Scotia

Colorful Truck Sales, Weed, CA

Colorful Truck Sales, Weed, CA

Hollywood Sign

Hollywood Sign

Mackinac Bridge, MI

Mackinac Bridge, MI

Pelicans, Grays Harbor, WA

Pelicans, Grays Harbor, WA

Grand Prismatic Spring, Yellowstone National Park

Grand Prismatic Spring, Yellowstone National Park

Shouldn’t It Be Their Decision?

Our daughter Brandi sent over a copy of Landon’s class schedule for this upcoming school year.

She said the schedule is wrong for ENG 1 listed at the top should be AP (Advanced Placement) also, like Human Geography and Computer Science. Don’t know why some are listed twice. Brandi’s checking on it.

Had to look up what Human Geography is all about.

Human geography or anthropogeography is the branch of geography which studies spatial relationships between human communities, cultures, economies, and their interactions with the environment, examples of which include urban sprawl and urban redevelopment.

OK, I guess.

Brandi said that in addition to his Freshman (9th grade) year in High School, he’s also signed up for a Robotics Club, and that he and Sophie had registered for a volunteer organization.

Sounds like he’s got a really full year coming up.

NASA is about to make its most important safety decision in nearly a generation

As soon as this week, NASA officials will make perhaps the agency’s most consequential safety decision in human spaceflight in 21 years.

NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams are nearly 10 weeks into a test flight that was originally set to last a little more than one week. The two retired US Navy test pilots were the first people to fly into orbit on Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft when it launched on June 5. Now, NASA officials aren’t sure Starliner is safe enough to bring the astronauts home.

Three of the managers at the center of the pending decision, Ken Bowersox and Steve Stich from NASA and Boeing’s LeRoy Cain, either had key roles in the ill-fated final flight of Space Shuttle Columbia in 2003 or felt the consequences of the accident.

At that time, officials misjudged the risk. Seven astronauts died, and the Space Shuttle Columbia was destroyed as it reentered the atmosphere over Texas. Bowersox, Stich, and Cain weren’t the people making the call on the health of Columbia‘s heat shield in 2003, but they had front-row seats to the consequences.

The question facing NASA’s leadership today? Should the two astronauts return to Earth from the International Space Station in Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft, with its history of thruster failures and helium leaks, or should they come home on a SpaceX Dragon capsule?

Despite the pitfalls, many people at NASA believe this is the safer choice, although Boeing says it is confident in the Starliner spacecraft’s ability to return the crew to Earth.

But ultimately, it’s NASA’s call. The lives of two government employees are in the balance, and taxpayers paid Boeing for most of the Starliner spacecraft’s development costs. So far, NASA and Boeing have committed at least $6.7 billion to the program.

Personally, I think the ultimate decision should be from the two astronauts who could possibly burn up on reentry, rather than the big-wigs at Boeing and NASA sitting in their comfy chairs behind their big desks.

Just saying.


Thought For The Day:

The probability of you drinking a glass of water that contains a molecule of water that has also passed through a dinosaur is almost 100%.

Personally I think it’s the ‘passing through’ part that bothers me.


Your Retro-Preview Highlights –

2011 – Rural King and iCarly

2012 – An Abundance of Riches

2013 – Last Day of Relative Fun

2014 – I Went 4 for 4

2016 – Theo Wesley Calvin, Jr.

2021 – Razzoo’s

And Now On To today’s Retro-Blogs.™


August 12, 2009

Au Bon Pain and no Duck…

Today was our day to do the Boston tourist thing, so we headed out about 9:30 am for the 30 mile drive to Boston.  But first, we stopped off at McDonald’s for a Chicken Biscuit for breakfast.

It was very overcast when we got there, in fact, the tallest buildings were disappearing into the low-hanging clouds.

We found a parking garage near where we were going to catch the Old Town Trolley tour.

One more city and we’ll have the complete set.  We’ve ridden the Old Town Trolley in Key West,  St. Augustine,  Savannah,  and Washington, DC,  and now Boston.

All we lack is the one in San Diego,  which we’ll do next year when we go through there again.  We were in San Diego in February 2008 and really enjoyed the city.  It’s a beautiful place and we look forward to going back..

I had already bought our Trolley tickets online so we just walked the several blocks to the #1 Trolley stop and boarded our ride.

Our 1 hour and 45 min tour took us past just about all of Boston’s famous spots.

Paul Revere’s house

Old North Church – “One if by Land,  Two if by Sea”

U.S.S. Constitution – “Old Ironsides”

Bunker Hill Monument

Boston Massacre site

Cheers – TV bar

Fenway Park – Home of the Boston Red Sox

Harvard/MIT/Cambridge

Boston Tea Party site

After completing our tour we got off near the Museum of Science because we wanted to take the Boston Duck Tour, which originated from there.

On the way there we stopped for lunch at Au Bon Pain (The Good Bread),  a soup and sandwich place that I had heard of before.  The Italian Wedding Soup that I had was delicious!

After lunch, and looking at the map, we decided to take a taxi the rest of the way to the Museum.  And it was all for naught.

We got there about 2:15 pm, and when I went to get the tickets, I found the first time we could get a duck tour was 4:30 pm.  After thinking it over we decided that after the hour and a half tour, we would be trying to leave downtown Boston during going-home traffic, and this is something we didn’t want to do.

So calling it a day, we took a taxi back to the garage.  But before we left, we walked across the street to Starbucks for a coffee, and then down the street a ways to hit some gift shops.

Leaving the parking garage, I was surprised to find that it costs $36 to park for less than 5 hours in Boston.

Ouch!

We made the drive home and then sat outside the rig watching Mister roam about.

All in all,  a nice day.


August 12, 2010

Pretty Toes and Pizza…

Today started out with Jan heading out about 10 to get a pedicure at the nearby WalMart.  I got up about 10:30 and started removing the 3 cargo bay doors that I’m going to take over to Michele at Phoenix Commercial Paint this afternoon.

The doors came unbolted with no problems, but they were still attached to the coach by the hinge area. I wiggled, pulled, and tugged on the doors and eventually got one of them off. But I was stuck on the last one. Finally though the door came right off.

Jan got back a little after 11 and fixed us sandwiches from the leftover pork loin from Lunker’s the other night.

About 2 pm I loaded up the doors and drove over to Michigan to drop them off with Michele.

The rest of the afternoon we pretty much just goofed off around the rig.  Then, about 5 pm Jan, and I headed over to Mancino’s for a great meal of pizza and garlic breadsticks. On the way we made a quick detour to drop some letters off at the Post Office, and then it was on to supper.

Getting back to the park about 7:15 we again drove around the park checking out all the new rigs that have arrived.

Tonight is the first night for the Perseid Meteor Shower sometime after midnight.  I’ll try to take a look later, but with the lights in the park, and possible clouds, don’t know what I will be able to see.


August 12, 2011

Rural King and iCarly . . .

This morning started just like yesterday, with all of us meeting at Robbi’s Restaurant in Vandalia for breakfast about 9. Part of the Day’s Inn Hotel, it’s the local’s hangout for breakfast, where everyone knows everyone, and their business.

After a good breakfast, we split up. Brandi and Lowell headed over to St. Louis to visit the Gateway Arch, and maybe get in a little gambling, while Jan and I (well, Jan, really) took care of Landon for the day.

The rest of us first stopped off at Rural King, kind of a combination of a Tractor Supply Store and Menard’s, and then headed over to, where else, Wal-Mart.

Driving back to Debbie’s, we passed the towing yard and saw the results of a tour bus/semi-trailer collision about 10 miles east of Vandalia yesterday.

The tour bus was carrying Miranda Cosgrove, actress, singer, and star of “iCarly”, and her family. “iCarly” is in its 4th season on Nickelodeon, and apparently a big hit.

The news reports say that the semi-trailer jackknifed and overturned on I-70 W. Miranda’s tour bus then plowed into the empty trailer.

Miranda ended up with a broken ankle, and luckily, no one was killed.

But the results look like this.

iCarly Wreck 1

iCarly Wreck 1a

iCarly Wreck 2

No mention of what caused the trailer to jackknife.

Getting back to Debbie’s and getting things unloaded, I headed back to the rig to take some ‘Momentum’ and lay down. I pulled a muscle in my back yesterday and it had really started to bother me.

But Jan lost no time snapping some more photos of Landon.

Debbie - Landon 10

Debbie - Landon 11

Here he’s discovered a whole basket of Beanie Babies, with his cousin Laura and her daughter Ella.

Debbie - Landon 13

And here, Landon wishes PaPa (me) would stop taking flash pictures of him.

Debbie - Landon 12

We had a great dinner of homemade tacos and burritos with all the fixin’s, courtesy of Debbie, Jan, Christina, Tana, and Laura.

Brandi and Lowell showed up about 7:30 pm, and then Jan and I headed back to the rig about 8:30 after a long day of Landon-wrangling.

And we’re going back for more tomorrow.


August 12, 2012

An Abundance of Riches . . .

I mentioned in the last blog that we heard there was another catered meal on the way, and it showed up. The very next day,

This one was a little different, but very, very good.

Catered Meal - R Const

It was really a buffet, with fried shrimp, fried chicken nuggets, fried catfish, fried mushrooms, French fries, hushpuppies, baked beans, turnip greens, mac ‘n cheese, green beans, and homemade banana pudding for dessert.

A guy could really hurt himself. And I think I did.

And once again we hear there’s another meal in the pipeline. I hope my stomach can take it.

We’ve been back in the high temps the last week or so.  It was officially 106 degrees here yesterday (Friday), but our thermometer showed 113. Today it was 102 and 110.

A cool spell.

Now up in Celina OH where we’ll be in two weeks, it’s in the low 80’s in the daytime and the mid 50’s at night. A guy could get used to that.

Luckily our water misting system is still doing its job keeping us pretty comfortable. Sometimes I’ll turn it off for a few minutes to do some paperwork, or something I don’t want to get damp, and it’s amazing how fast it gets just downright HOT and sweaty.

Our daughter Brandi passed on the latest bit of Landon-lore, about Landon, Kitty, and The War of the Toys.

Kitty (I don’t know. Don’t ask.) is their 125# Black Lab who adores Landon and is very protective of him. When Landon was just a baby, Kitty wouldn’t let anyone near Landon that she didn’t know, until Brandi or Lowell told Kitty it was OK.

Kitty

But like siblings, they sometimes fight, usually over toys.

Brandi said the other day she and Lowell heard Landon yelling “Mommy, Daddy, Mommy, Daddy”. Looking up they saw Landon and Kitty in a tug-of-war over a toy. Brandi said they told Landon he was going to have to take care of himself.

Looking around, Landon saw another toy that Kitty liked. Letting go of the contested toy, Landon picked up the other one, showed it to Kitty, and threw it across the room. Kitty dropped the toy in her mouth and took off after the new toy. Landon then scooped up his prize and headed off in the other direction. Mission accomplished.

Smart Kid!

My small computer fan that had been in orbit over Texas for the last several days (see the last blog post) finally came to earth.

Computer Fan

Although it is really a computer fan, it’s for my Black & Decker Battery Charger. The fan died a while back, and because of that, while the charger works fine in 2 amp and 10 amp modes, it shuts down due to overheating running in 25 amp mode. The charger is still under warranty, but Black & Decker has sold off their battery charger line and others to a company called Baccus Global. And their ‘warranty’ support leaves a lot to be desired. With having to pay postage both ways, along with a $15 ‘evaluation fee’, I was fast approaching the cost of a new charger.

So I decided to take the charger apart and see what was what. Turns out that the fan itself has just died, so a quick check on eBay found a replacement. I’ll get it installed and checked out in the next couple of days.


August 12, 2013

Last Day of Relative Fun . . .

Today is our last day here in Athens, and our last chance to get together with my Aunt Virginia and Uncle Theo, or Ninny and Buddy as I’ve always called them. So Jan and I headed over to their house about 11:15 to meet Ninny.

Ninny

After catching up for a while, we headed out for lunch at Rosie’s Mexican Cantina over in Huntsville before visiting Buddy at the Floyd Fann State Veteran’s Home.

We always try to eat at Rosie’s every time we visit here since it’s the best place we’ve found in the area for Mexican. So after a great lunch and more catching up, we drove over to see my Uncle Buddy.

He has been at the Veteran’s Home for the last several months getting physical therapy and rehabilitation to help his walking ability.

Buddy

My Uncle Theo (Buddy). who will be 91 next month, is here as a WW2 combat veteran. He fought in the North African Campaign, landed at Normandy on D-Day, and then as a Staff Sergeant, started out with Patton’s Third Army when it became operational in August 1944. Staying with the 3rd all the way to the end of the war, he was awarded the Bronze Star, Two Purple Hearts, and was one of a select few to receive the French Legion of Honor medal, awarded by France for conspicuous honor fighting during that campaign.

We spent about an hour catching up since last year. He’s so animated and cheerful, it’s hard to believe he’s almost 91.

Getting back to their house, we talked with Ninny a while longer before heading back to the rig about 5pm, leaving with a homemade peach pie and some of her wonderful Banana Nut Bread. You can’t beat that.

On the way home we made a couple of side trips to CVS and Wal-Mart. Coming out of Wal-Mart, it was pouring down rain and I got soaked getting back to the truck. I was afraid it would be raining when we got back to the rig since the storm was headed that way, but we got back just ahead of it.

Tomorrow, we’ve got a 230-mile trip down to Meridian, MS for the night. Then it’s Breaux Bridge, LA on Wednesday night, and into Houston on Thursday.


August 12, 2014

I Went 4 for 4 . . .

Today turned into an errand/chore day for me. We hadn’t washed the truck since we left Houston back in May, and it had gotten pretty dirty since then. But before I did that, I had a couple of returns to make.

Last week when we were up in Athens, AL, I bought a $25 bottle of R-134a Freon when I thought my truck A/C problem was low Freon. So when I found out I had an A/C compressor clutch problem instead, I didn’t need $25 of Freon. So back it went to Wal-Mart.

Next up was Home Depot. Since I hadn’t had any luck finding a replacement setscrew for our American Standard single handle lavatory faucet., at least locally, the other day I bought a generic replacement handle kit that was supposed to work with Delta, Price Pfister, and American Standard faucets.

Well, it may work with Delta and Price Pfister, but not with my American Standard. So I thought maybe the setscrew in the replacement kit would fit my original handle. But no luck. So back it goes to Home Depot.

Then it was off to the car wash to get all the road grime off. Of course, we’ll be putting it right back on when we make the two-day trip back to Houston starting this Friday.


I mentioned yesterday about the possibility of us gate guarding up near Huntsville, TX this year, instead of down in the Whitsett area. I had heard that pretty much everyone had bumped the gate guard pay up to $150 per day. But I was curious if this was so in other areas too. Friend and blog reader Lynette McHenry told me the $150 is now the standard everywhere.

Good to know. That’s an extra $700 every four weeks.


About 4pm Jan and I made our pilgrimage up to Foley and Lambert’s Throwed Rolls, one of our favorite places. There are three Lamberts around the country. The other two are both in Missouri, and during our travels, we’ve managed to eat at all three.

Of course, besides the great Southern comfort food, the other attraction is the ‘throwed rolls’. And they do throw them. In some cases, 30 or 40 feet across the dining room.

Jan and I were sitting at the far front of the restaurant and the rolls come out of the kitchen at the rear. The guys come with trays of rolls bigger than softballs, hot out of the oven, and start yelling, “Hot Rolls, Hot Rolls!”.

Immediately hands go up all over the dining room and rolls are arcing through the air.

Lambert's

Some are easy underhand tosses to a young girl or boy a few booths away, and some are full-on overhand spiral passes that almost brush the ceiling.

I went 4 for 4 on the rolls that came my way. But there was a 5th one that I don’t count.

Lambert's Ham

It was the ham’s fault, the one pictured above, hanging just behind Jan’s head. The guy throwing the roll had to pull it just as he launched it due to a lady suddenly standing up between him and me. So it ricocheted off the ham and almost hit someone at the table beside us.

At least that’s the story I’m going with.

Two things though. First, you’ve got to cushion your roll as you catch it, softening the catch as much as possible. Otherwise, the soft, hot roll just flattens in your hands.

And second, those hams hanging up there are real. I had figured they were plastic, but I noticed how the ham didn’t move at all when the high-speed roll hit it. So I felt it as we were leaving, and it was real. Who knew?


August 12, 2015

Last Day on Pleasure Island . . .

Today was a day of wrapping up our stay here. It was a week that seemed to last only a couple of days or so. Maybe we’ll try two weeks next year.

I did make a couple of phone calls this morning, one to Jamie, our Gate Guard Services supervisor for the last three years. I know things are really tight in the guard business, but I thought I’d get our name in the queue anyway.

My other call was to the O’Reilly’s Auto Parts in Friendswood, TX, near the house. Regular blog readers might remember that while we were in Las Vegas last April, the radiator in our Dodge Dakota truck developed a leak, After a couple of tries, I was finally able to patch it using JB Weld. It lasted about 5000 miles, including the 3000-mile round trip from Prescott, AZ to Vandalia, IL, and back for our family reunion.

But then it started leaking again . . . and I repaired again . . . and again. It quickly became obvious that the part plastic/part metal radiator was just plain rotting out. I can’t imagine why it didn’t last. It’s only got about 240,000 miles on it.

They just don’t make things like they used to, I guess.

Anyway, it finally started leaking on the backside where I can’t reach it without removing the radiator. And if I have to take the old one out, I might as well put a new one back in. According to my Haines and Clymer manuals, it should only take a couple of hours.

But I’ve been nursing it along until we get back to Texas. Although I could do it myself, that would leave me doing it at an RV park with no way to go back to the auto parts store for that one extra part that you didn’t think or know you’d need.

So I was checking with O’Reilly Auto Parts to be sure they had one in stock. So Jan and I will drive down to Friendswood on Sunday morning, pick up the new radiator, and Chris and I will install it.

At least that’s the plan.

About 1:30pm Jan and I headed up to the theater on the other side of the canal to see the new superhero movie, Ant-Man. The latest from the Marvel people, it stars Michael Douglas as Hank Pym, inventor of a suit that lets a man shrink to the size of an ant, or smaller, but still have his normal strength. He can also mentally control real ants as well, and use them to travel or fly.

But this story picks up years later in the present where Hank recruits a new person to wear the suit to prevent the suit’s secrets from being sold on the open market.

This all probably only makes sense to someone acquainted with the Marvel universe. As I’ve said before I really enjoy how Marvel manages to link up all their movies, as well as the Agents of SHIELD TV show.

We both liked Ant-Man and look forward to the next one. (there’s always a next one.) And lucky for me I have a beautiful wife who enjoys these movies as much (well, almost as much) as I do.

After the movie, we headed back down to Wintzell’s Oyster House for dinner. We just ate here this past Sunday, and enjoyed it so much we wanted to have our last Gulf Shores meal here. And in fact we enjoyed it so much we both ordered the exact same thing we had before.

Jan had her Cajun Seafood Pasta, with Shrimp and Scallops.

Wintzell's 3

I once again had the Low Country Boil,

Wintzell's 2

and we both started out with their really good salads.

Wintzell's 1

And this meal only cost about half as much as our meal at King Neptune’s last night, and it was much, much better. A really good last meal here in Gulf Shores.

Before heading home we made a quick stop at the new Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market in Orange Beach for a few things.

Tomorrow we’ve got a 300-mile run to Breaux Bridge, LA, before we head on into the Houston area on Friday.


August 12, 2016

Out in the west Texas town of El Paso . . .

Jan and I were disappointed in the Perseid Meteor Shower last night. We were told to expect around 3 meteors a minute, based on the forecasted 160 to 200 an hour. But as I mentioned in yesterday’s blog we saw 12 in about an hour. So one every 5 minutes or so.

When we went in at 1am, I told you Jan, “You realize that as soon as we shut the door, the sky is going to light up like fireworks.

So did anyone out there see the big show? Let me know.

About 1:15 we drove over to my Aunt Virginia’s house to pick her up for lunch. We ended up having to wait about 30 minutes for the yard guy to finish up, and then we were on our way.

We took Virginia’s Lexus since it’s easier for her to get in and out, and headed over to Huntsville to have lunch at Rosie’s Cantina, a really good Mexican restaurant here.

Rosie's Cantina 1

Jan and I both agreed that the décor here reminds us a lot of Pappasito’s in the Houston area.

And the food here is as good as pretty much any place in Houston. Jan had the Chile Relleno with spicy beef inside, while my Aunt Virginia had the Chicken Quesadillas, also Landon’s favorite.

I had the Tacos al Carbon with Beef Fajita meat. Charro Beans, and Mexican Rice which was really good, with the beef fajita meat tender and flavorful. Jan and Virginia both said theirs was really good, and both had enough to take home.

Me, I was hungry and ate all of mine.

Later, heading back to Virginia’s, we stopped by the cemetery to see my Uncle Theo’s grave and the new headstone. He died in May of 2015, and I talked about him here.

Theo Wesley Calvin, Jr.

Here’s some of that post:

As it turns out, Uncle Theo not only landed at Normandy on D-Day in June 1944, but he was also was part of the Operation Torch landings in North Africa in November 1942, and the Operation Husky landings in Sicily in July 1943. In all, he fought in 7 campaigns during the war, and received a Purple Heart with Oak Leaf Cluster, signifying that he was wounded twice, both times in France.

He also fought in the last major offensive of the war, the Battle of the Bulge during December 1944 – January 1945. Dug in near Bastogne, Belgium, he said it was so cold nobody wanted to fight. “We could see the enemy, but we didn’t shoot at them, and they didn’t shoot at us.”

Among the many medals Uncle Theo received were a Bronze Star, the Belgium Fourragere, and the French Legion of Honor.

Back at Virginia’s, we spent some time just talking over family and friends.

Aunt Virginia Calvin

Finally saying our goodbyes, we got back to the rig about 6:45. Tomorrow we’re getting together with my cousins Anna Jean Lee and Marjorie Walker.

Anna Jean and Marjorie

I say ‘my cousins’, but I’m not exactly sure where they rank. They are my grandmother’s sister’s daughters.

So I think that they are my first cousins once removed, but after that, I get a headache.

But I know we’ll have a good time together.

Finishing up, it looks like I’m going to have to double-check our route home. I saw this evening that there’s severe flooding in the Lafayette/Breaux Bridge area of Louisiana, which is one of our scheduled stop-over points on our way back to Houston on Tuesday.

So when we stop in Meridian, MS on Sunday night, I’ll decide then if we’ll continue on to Breaux Bridge, or stay on I-20 through Jackson and Shreveport and then down to Houston.

I guess we’ll see then.


August 12, 2017

A Yen For . . .

Yen.

I spent the day working on my new/old client’s problems, but at least I could do it remotely using TeamViewer, which lets me see and control the computer desktops at the client’s office from my laptop here at Brandi’s in Katy.

I’m finally starting to get a handle on things. In many cases, I’ve figured out what the other guy has done, but for the life of me, I can’t figure out why he did it.

I do know that the superfast SSD (Solid State Hard drive) and the increased Internet bandwidth (up to 400 Mbps) that he said was needed to host the website, were not needed or used for the website he was hosting on a server in the backroom. But instead was being used to slake his online game-playing addiction.

In fact the webserver that was running the company’s website to take orders was partitioned off so that it only was able to use about 15% of the bandwidth, with the rest allocated for gaming.

I also found that he’s been using the Point of Sale computer as a bootleg music server, holding thousands of albums, unfortunately mostly hip-hop and rap.

The one thing I haven’t found yet, but still expect to, is his almost certainly extensive porn collection. But I’m still looking.

Still no news about the rig. Hopefully we’ll hear something today or tomorrow.

Tonight for dinner, Brandi and Lowell took us to a new place right down the road called Yen Hibachi Steakhouse. They said it was really good, and boy, were they right. Also with us were Brandi and Lowell’s friends Eric and Chantelle Nugent, and their son.

The look is kind of Asian Modern Fusion, very nicely decorated.

Yen 1

Yen 2

And of course the Hibachi area with the grills.

Yen 3

The chef starts things off with a big fireball which really grabs the kid’s attention.

Yen Fireball

Then while the waiter brings out our soup and salad,

Yen Soup and Salad

the chef whips up the Fried Rice, in the shape of Mickey Mouse. Again a kid pleaser.

Yen Fried Rice

Now with the steaks, seafood, and veggies on the grill,

Yen Steaks and Stuff

the kids get the onion stack volcano.

Yen Volcano

Finally, the entire meal is on our plates and ready to eat.

I had the rare Rib-Eye Steak,

Yen Steak

and Jan had the Chicken

Yen Chicken

Very, very good. We certainly want to go back.

Tomorrow and Monday I’ll be traveling back down to Clear Lake again for more client stuff.


August 12, 2018

Lists of Lists . . .

With days running out on when we need to have the house cleared out, Jan and I were out the door a little after 11 this morning.

Our first stop was for lunch at our new favorite nearby Mexican place, San Lorenzo’s. We first ate here a couple of weeks ago and really liked it. And today so did a lot of other people. The place was packed.

We had about a 15-minute wait, but it was worth it. Jan once again had the Pollo Margarita with a Grilled Chicken Breast and Shrimp, Grilled Veggies, and Charro Beans.

San Lorenzo Pollo Margarita 2

The Sliced Avocado on the left actually came with my Beef Fajita Taco Salad.

San Lorenzon Beef Fajita Taco Salad

Since I don’t care for Avocado, Jan always gets my cast-offs. And I think we’ve already established that I like a lot of pepper on my salad. And of course it’s also liberally sprinkled with my Volcanic Pepper Flakes for added heat.

Since I had never had the Taco Salad here before, I was a little concerned that there was no sign of any meat. But not to worry, the bottom 2” of the taco shell was solid with fajita meat. And it was really good.

When we finally left a little before 1pm, the place was still on a wait. That’s how good it was.

Our next stop was at the storage unit to drop off yesterday’s house stuff that we still had in the truck since our access to the unit was blocked by a moving van. But today was no problem. Then it was on up to the house.

Since we don’t yet know if we’re closing this coming Thursday or next Monday, we have to assume it’s Thursday to be sure we’re out in time. So today we got everything out in the living room and divided it up for staging. Leaving the house about 3pm, we made a WalMart stop before dropping off a load at the storage unit on the way home.

As it stands right now, tomorrow after work I’ll stop by the house and load up with about six bags of trash for the dumpster. Then Tuesday, Jan and I will take a load of stuff by Salvation Army, drop off some leftover packing materials at work, and take a last load to the storeroom.

Then on Wednesday after work, I’ll again go by the house and reload all the stuff back in the truck that normally resides there. We emptied the truck when we took a bunch of furniture to Illinois on our recent trip, and since then it’s all been sitting in the garage.

And that should wrap things up. Of course, this may all change if we don’t close until next Monday. Then we won’t be in quite the same hurry. But we’ll see.

Jan has always been a list maker. She has a WalMart list, a Sam’s list, an office supply store list, and even a list for cleaning out the house we’re selling.

But now she’s gone into overdrive. She’s started so many new lists of things to take,  not take, do, not do, see, or not see on our upcoming European River Cruise, that she’s now resorted to making lists . . . of her other lists. It’s gotten that bad.

She’s got a list for what to do 8 months out (Now), 4 months out, 4 weeks out, 4 days out, and probably one for 4 minutes out. I on the other hand will pack a couple of days before and be ready to go.

I think it’s a guy thing.


August 12, 2021

Razzoo’s

We were outside for a while this morning with our coffee, admiring the 9, count’em 9, hibiscus blooms.

Hisbiscus 9 Blooms

Yes, there are 9, you just can’t see them from this side.

And this is our ‘frog pond’.

Patio Frog Pong

We have a whole family of frogs living around our patio, ranging from little ones about the size of a dime, up to the big guys the size of a silver dollar, or larger. It’s positioned so that the A/C drains off the roof into the ‘pond’, so it’s always filled. Remember a damp frog is a happy frog.

Jan and I headed up to the Spring area about 9:45, to meet up with Debi and Ed Hurlburt for our monthly get-together, this month at the Razzoo’s Cajun Café right across I-45 from the Splashtown Water Park.

We got there about 15 minutes before our 11am time, only to have Debi and Ed show up a couple of minutes later. We talked outside for a few minutes until the doors opened and we got seated immediately.

The décor was kind of interesting in a funky kind of way, with one divider wall made out of bottles,

Razzoo's Bottle Wall

and a miscellany of random objects hanging from the ceiling.

Razzo's Ceiling

Since we’d never been there, Jan and I had looked over the menu online last night, so we already had an idea of what we wanted. But we all started with an order of their Rat-Toes,

Razzon's Rat-Toes

which are their Crab and Shrimp Stuffed Jalapenos. Really good, and really Hot.

Jan got a Blackened Chicken Breast with sides, while I just got a bowl of their Seafood Gumbo.

Razzo's Seafood Gumbo

After the great start with the Rat-Toes, I had high hopes for the Gumbo. But unfortunately, it was ‘Yankee’ Gumbo, or at least northern Louisiana Gumbo, or at least that’s what I’ve always been told.

Southern LA gumbo seems to be done with a thin roux, just slightly thicker than water. But this ‘northern’-style gumbo was thick, almost like gravy. And, sorry to say, this tasted about like gravy. Or at least gravy with seafood in it.

But Razoo’s redeemed themselves with the reason I only had the gumbo as my entrée, their Peach and Pecan Bread Pudding.

Razzo's Peach and Pecan Bread Pudding

Really, really good, and I have half left to bring home.

And the other thing that was really, really good was the company. And as usual, we spent almost 3 hours talking over our many RV adventures over the years, as well as our time oil field gate guarding.

Razzon's Ed and Debi 20210812

And of course, planning our get-together for next month.

Good Friends and Great Times.

Saying our goodbyes until next month, Jan and I drove over to the other side of I-45 so she could pick up a few things to take with her down to Brandi’s.

I mentioned yesterday that Jan was going to be dog-sitting this weekend while Brandi, Lowell, Landon, and BFF Sophie are staying with some friends at their lake house. I said that it was on Lake Livingston, but I heard wrong.

It’s actually on Lake Jacksonville, south of Jacksonville, TX. This mis-identification wasn’t helped by the fact that I didn’t realize there was a Jacksonville, TX, which looks to be about 50 miles or so south of Tyler.

Getting down to the Katy area we made a quick stop at El Pollo Loco for a call-ahead order of a chicken meal for Jan, finally getting to Brandi’s about 3:30.

Then after helping Jan get all of her electronics set up, I was back on the road for home.

Just me and Karma until Sunday.


August 12, 2023

Just Passing Through . . .

Going back to yesterday, we headed out for Alvin about 4:30pm, but we only got out to Hwy 6 before we found our way blocked by this going by.

Very slowly.

In case you’re counting, that’s 24 axles.

They had a whole crew out in front of the transport raising the power lines and holding them up until it passed.

Not sure where it was going, but it looks like a big honkin’ transformer to me.

But finally it was on over to Alvin to have our usual pre-Opry dinner at Monterey’s Mexican Restaurant. Then it was on over to the American Legion Hall where the Opry is held once a month.

The doors open at 6 with the show beginning at 7, so we don’t usually get there until about 6:45. But tonight we were there right at 6, because as I said the other night, Jan’s other Heartthrob, John Mark Davis, was performing the pre-show from 6:15 to 6:50.

After Jan got her hug from John Mark, I asked her if she had almost knocked his wife over while getting her hug like last time.  She said, “No”.

Then she said, “His wife wasn’t with him.”

Well, that explains it.

When the main show started, we were happy to see an old friend, Robyn Mundy. We used to see her at the old Alvin Opry when she was a young girl. Now she’s all grown up.

A really good singer and a heck of a yodeler, too.

Next up was a young lady we’ve seen a couple of times before, Allie Rae.

She’s got a great stage presence and a voice that belies her size.

Next up was another favorite of ours, Glenda Lynn. We’ve seen her several times and she’s got a great voice and a wide range.

I told Jan that the way she belts out a song, she doesn’t really need a mic.

And besides being a great singer, she’s also the mayor of the small Houston suburb town where she lives.

Next up was the featured singer, Elle Tompkins, another outstanding performer.

This was our first time to see Elle and she did several ‘old-school’ songs from the likes of Reba McEntire and others

Really good and we hope to see her again.

Jan and I both agreed this was one of the best Opry shows in a good while.

And already looking forward to next month.


Back to today, it was lunch at Los Rameriz once again,

All delicious.

before making our weekly pilgrimage to Wal-Mart for groceries, etc.

While we were out and about this afternoon, I put in a call to Dr. Woo, the optometrist who did our recent eye exams and gave us prescriptions for new glasses. Jan is very unhappy with the correction in her right eye.

Her left eye is sharp and clear, and the bottom bifocal sections on both lenses also are fine. But her right eye is out of focus, and no better than her old ones

So on our way up to Brandi’s on Tuesday for her latest Landon gig, we’ve got an appointment to check in with Dr. Woo to see if her new lenses were done correctly.

Tomorrow looks to be Denny’s and HEB.

 

 

 

The Not So Secret Recipe . . .

Lunch today was Denny’s for our Ultimate Omelets once again, moving along to the HEB right across I-45 for our weekly HEB stuff, and then finishing up with gas from the HEB station for $2.89.

Nice easy day.

Every now and then, this recipe resurfaces and makes the news.

According to this article, it is the recipe for KFC 11 Different Herbs and Spices.

KFC’s famous top secret ’11 herbs and spices’ was leaked by Colonel Sanders’ nephew

Checking back in my files, I have another copy of this dated 12 years ago. So it’s not like it’s been a big secret for a while now.

Rather than being placed under lock and key, it was revealed that the recipe was placed in a family scrapbook, written on the back of the last will and testament of Ledington’s aunt, Claudia, who was the Colonel’s wife.

As I’ve mentioned before, I worked for the first KFC to open in north Alabama back in 1967. Even had the Colonel himself show up for our grand-opening.

Our breading mixture was mixed up in a big plastic garbage can, starting with a 50# sack of flour, two of those containers of Morton Salt, and a large container of Black Pepper.

After that was thoroughly mixed up with a fiberglass boat paddle, we then dumped in the contents of an aluminized bag about the size of a hardback book. And when you opened it, it smelled like a spice shop exploded.

Don’t know how they do it now, but back then we used whole refrigerated chickens that we cut apart with a bandsaw and then let pieces marinate in the cooler overnight.

The pieces were then rolled around in the breading mixture as they were dropped into the pressure cooker. Each cooker would hold 2 chickens (18 pieces) and took about 9 minutes to cook, plus another couple of minutes for the pressure to drop.

We had six fryers, and on Sundays they were all in use for several hours non-stop, frying up chicken as fast as we could go.

Finishing up, I’m not sure having this recipe really helps anyone trying to make KFC chicken at home. First off, if you don’t marinate it overnight, it just won’t be the same. And if you don’t pressure cook it, it also won’t be right.

At some point, it seems like it would be easier to just stop off at KFC and pick up a couple of 3 piece dinners.

Which at that time, the 3 piece dinner with mashed potatoes, Cole slaw, and a roll, was $1.25. And the 2 piece Snack Pak, with Mashed Potatoes and a Roll, was $.79.


Thought For The Day:

Heaven probably doesn’t want me and Hell is probably afraid I’ll take over.


Your Retro-Preview Highlights –

2011 – Landon’s Heerrreee!

2014 – And the Meat DOESN’T Fall Off the Bone

2015 – King Neptune’s Seafood

2016 – 2nd Cousins

2019 – Don’t Be Stupid. Be Crazy

2022 – My Beautiful, Brilliant Wife

And Now On To today’s Retro-Blogs.™


August 11, 2009

1759 and 99…

Today was a travel day.  But first I had some maintenance work to do.

The circuit breaker on our 7.5 KW onboard diesel generator broke while we were in Williamsburg a few weeks ago, so I had to order a new one.

And it was waiting for me when we got to Joan’s this week.

And what should have been a 15-minute job took about 2 hours due to the bad design of the generator case.  You should not have to disassemble the entire case of a washer-sized generator just to replace a component on the control panel.

After I got the generator back together and got cleaned up,  we headed out about noon for our 100-mile trip east to Foxboro, MA near Boston.

Our park is called Normandy Farms Campground, and, as the sign says, it’s been here since  1759.

Normandy Farms

Yes… 1759!

Well, not the campground, but the farm itself has been owned by the Daniels family since 1759.  The 7th, 8th, and 9th generations are now running the place.

The campground had been here for about 35 years

After getting everything set up, we headed out to get a bite to eat.

We had seen a new-to-us restaurant chain here in the East called 99 Restaurants and decided to give it a try.

And a good choice it was.

Jan had one of her favorites, Turkey and Dressing, and I had a Pecan-Crusted Chicken Salad.  This place is now on our favorites list.

After we got home, I got the satellite antenna set up.  Due to tall trees,  the last two parks we’ve been in have been ‘satellite-less’, so it’s good to have it back.

Tomorrow we head into Boston to see the sites.


August 11, 2010

Tooth Fairy gone bad…?

About 12:30 pm Jan and I headed out to the local Bob Evans restaurant for a lunch of Cranberry Pecan Salads before making a stop at the nearby WalMart to stock up on more stuff. We never seem to have enough stuff.

Coming back to the rig, we stopped at a CVS pharmacy so I could return the I-Zoom toll pass I bought yesterday. It turns out that the I-Zoom pass does not work like the toll passes in Texas.

I had thought that having a pass for the one month a year we are in this area would be worth it for the convenience and slight discount on each trip. However, digging into the fine print of the Terms and Conditions (page 27 of a 28-page document) I discovered that they charge you a $1.00 a month “maintenance fee” whether I use the tag or not. That means I would be paying $11.00 a year for the months we are not here, completely eliminating any savings.

Plus, you can not suspend the account, you can only cancel it by turning in your pass.

Getting back to the rig about 2:30 pm, I decided it was a good time for a nap.

And it was.

A little after 4:30 our daughter Brandi called with the latest baby Landon update. Everything is coming along fine, and he’s still on schedule for the first week in September.

About 5:30 we headed out for dinner at El Maguey Mexican restaurant. El Maguey is our favorite Mexican restaurant in this area, and it didn’t disappoint us this time, either. We’ve also gotten hooked on their white cheese queso dip.

Coming back to the rig, we took a detour past the site of an old dentist’s office. The dentist used to save all the teeth he extracted, keeping them for years. Apparently the Health Department finally told him he had to get rid of them, since they were unsanitary. To get back at them he had them cast into a concrete block, using the teeth in place of the stone aggregate.

Tooth Block 1

But a closer look shows that the concrete has started to erode leaving the many teeth very visible. Click on the photo for a closer view.

Tooth Block 2

We got back to the rig about 7:30 and were in for the night.

Tomorrow I’ll take 3 cargo bay doors over to Phoenix Commercial Paint so that Michele can start doing her usual excellent job on our coach.


August 11, 2011

Landon’s Heerrreee!

All Landon, All The Time.

Landon getting to know his 1st Cousin Once Removed, Christina, who will probably be called just Cousin Christina.

Debbie - Landon 1

Resting up, sitting in Daddy’s lap.

Debbie - Landon 2

Landon standing on his own.

Debbie - Landon 3

“Cake Face”

Debbie - Landon 4 Cake Face

It’s Mac N Cheese Time.

Debbie - Landon 5

Landon discovers he really, really likes Yoo-Hoo.

Debbie - Landon 6

Landon with 1st Cousins, Once Removed Christina and Tana, and Aunt Debbie.

Debbie - Landon 7

Landon with 2nd Cousin Gwen.

Debbie - Landon 8

Landon recharging for the next round.

Debbie - Landon 9


August 11, 2013

Sour Patch Kids . . .

Brandi sent this movie over today of Landon getting his first taste of Sour Patch Kids candy.

Looks like they grew on him after a bit, though.

About 2pm some more of my relatives, my 2nd cousins Anna Jean and Marjorie, and Marjorie’s husband Walter came to visit. They are my Grandmother’s sister’s daughters, so I think that makes them my 2nd cousins.

Anna Jean and Marjorie keep up with everything about everybody in the family so we always enjoy talking to them to catch up. In fact we spent over two hours talking and laughing. And to make it even better, they brought CAKE!  You just can’t beat guests like that.

After saying our goodbyes until next year, Jan and I headed out a little after 5pm for dinner. We both had a hamburger hankerin’, but the nearest Five Guys was about 30 minutes away. So we ended up at a nearby Wendy’s. I had seen their ad for the new Pretzel Bacon Cheeseburger and wanted to try it.

The burger itself was delicious, but I was a little disappointed in the Pretzel bun. But that could be just my over-expectations, since I’ve never had one before. The taste was really good, but I guess I was expecting the bun to have a little bite or crunch something more ‘pretzely’, I guess. But that may be just me. I’ll have to try someone else’s to see. Dunkin Donuts has them too.

Yesterday coming back from dinner I stopped off to put gas in the truck, and once again I wondered about gas prices. All along the street were stations, Shell, BP, Exxon, etc., with unleaded at $3.39, and then right in the middle of them is Wal-Mart at $3.21. That’s an .18 a gallon difference! Why go anywhere else?


August 11, 2014

And the Meat DOESN’T Fall Off the Bone . . .

After our coffee and some homemade bread for breakfast, I started making a couple of phone calls. First up was the Galveston Bay RV Park to get our reservation in for this November. We’ve spent the winter there for the last six years, and see no reason to change. Except maybe for the cost.

The waterfront sites that we like, run about $525 per month plus another $100 for electric. Expensive, yes. But then we have views like this out our windshield.

Galveston Bay Sunrise 7a

The cheaper alternative would be to orbit back and forth between the Colorado River and Lake Conroe Thousand Trails parks, moving every two weeks. This would run us $240 per month, but would be a pain in the butt, and we’d be further from the kids.

So for right now it’s Galveston Bay.

My next call was to Jamie with Gate Guard Services. Jamie was our supervisor the first two years we gate-guarded down in the Whitsett area. But now he’s over in the east Texas / north Texas area, and also Louisiana. So since we’ve been thinking about trying a different location this year, hooking up with Jamie was perfect.

I told him we would be available after the 25th of August, and he was pretty sure he would have something for us up in the Huntsville/Madisonville area north of Houston. It would be nice to be a little closer to civilization this year. We’ll see.

We headed out for Pensacola about 1pm for lunch and some shopping. Our first stop was a perennial favorite of ours, Sonny’s BBQ.

Jan and I go way back with Sonny’s. It was one of the first places we had dinner together when we started dating after we met down in Titusville, FL in 1967. And this one in Pensacola is a regular stop when we’re in the area.

Jan had her usual Big Deal Pulled Pork Sandwich with the BBQ Baked Beans and Homemade Mac N Cheese, while I went with my usual Pork Three Ways with BBQ Baked Beans, Corn on the Cob and two slices of Garlic Texas Toast.

Sonny's BBQ 1

The Pork Three Ways consists of Ribs, Pulled Pork, and Sliced Pork, all delicious. And the way it works out, I eat the Ribs and the sides, and then take the toast, pulled pork, and sliced pork home for later. Along with a to-go order of a side of the BBQ Beans, we’ve got another meal for both of us.

And Sonny’s Ribs are only slow-smoked, and are not pre-cooked or par-boiled first. This means they DON’T fall off the bone. And they shouldn’t. There should be some bite, some texture, to the meat.

Sonny's BBQ 2

Now that’s a meaty, tasty rib.

The other thing Sonny’s does right is their Iced Tea glasses. None of these dinky 16 oz. glasses, that after the ice is added, you get about a cup of actual tea.

Sonny's BBQ 3

No, these are big, honking 36 oz. glasses. (I checked the size on the bottom)

Leaving Sonny’s, our next stop was Artesana, a unique gift shop we’ve been visiting since before we moved to Texas from Alabama in 1978.

Artesana2

They have a little bit of everything, and Jan always finds something she wants. Except this time. Don’t know why, but she walked out empty-handed. Cheaper for me, though.

After a stop at Sam’s Club for some bulk stuff, we headed home via US98 through Foley, rather than the beach road like our trip over. Coming through Foley, we stopped off at Dodge’s to get gas for the truck and scope out rig access for diesel when we leave here this Friday. At $3.53 a gallon, their diesel is the cheapest around.


August 11, 2015

Fan–Tastic . . .

About 2pm there was a knock at our door and it was the UPS guy delivering our new fan. I really love parks where they deliver right to your door.

I had been looking for a better fan to circulate the cold air around the rig. Although our two roof A/C’s are ducted together, the bedroom is always cooler than the front of the rig because it’s smaller and has less window area.

In the living room, the driver’s area is always 4 or 5 degrees hotter than just a few feet back. This is especially noticeable when we’re traveling and running both A/C’s,.

So I was looking for a fan that would move the air around better, and this is what I came up with.

Stanley Fan

Stanley Pivoting Utility Fan

And boy, does it do the job. When I unpacked it and set it in the kitchen aimed for the front of the rig, it was 75 degrees at the sofa and 79 degrees at the dashboard. And 30 minutes later, it was 75 in both areas. Nice.

Surprisingly, even with all the air it moves, it’s very quiet. It measures 12” x 10” x 12”, and the output nozzle can be rotated from straight up to straight down. I think it’s going to make a big difference in keeping the rig more comfortable.

A little after 4pm Jan and I headed out to have dinner at King Neptune’s Seafood, another of our long-time favorites here in Gulf Shores. We’ve eaten here for years and always enjoyed it.

Until tonight.

Neptune’s has always been a place for good seafood, moderate prices, and great lunch specials. In fact, at lunchtime, you generally find more locals than tourists. But looking over the menu, the first thing we noticed was the big jump in prices since last year. Your first thought might be, well, prices are up everywhere. But, no.

For example, I had the Blackened Shrimp Po-Boy last night at Tacky Jack’s.

Tacky Jack's Po Boy

It was delicious, and only $11.

Tonight at Neptune’s I had the Shrimp and Oyster Po-Boy. It was not as flavorful, not as good, it was smaller, and it was $19.

Neptune's PoBoy

Well, maybe the price difference was because I had both Shrimp and Oysters tonight. But no, their basic Shrimp Po-Boy is also $19.

Note the size difference too.

Next, compare the Fried Seafood Platter we had at DeSoto’s Seafood Kitchen our first night here.

DeSoto's Seafood Platter

It was $20, came with Flounder, Shrimp, Oysters, Crab Claws, and two sides, and was really good.

Neptune’s version comes with Flounder, Shrimp, and Oysters, and just Fries. And it’s $30.

For her meal, Jan got a mini Platter with just Catfish and Shrimp. The Mac N Cheese shown was a $3 extra order.

Neptune's Platter

And it cost the same $20 as DeSoto’s for about 1/2 as much food. And Jan said it wasn’t near as good, either.

The one good part of the meal was the dozen raw oysters we ordered as an appetizer.

Neptune's Oysters

Paradoxically, at $10 a dozen, Neptune’s cost was less than any other place we’ve been.

Maybe that’s why everything is so high?

Tomorrow will be our last full day here in Gulf Shores, and the week sure went quickly. Too quickly, really. Thursday we’ll leave for Houston and the Colorado River Thousand Trails with a one-night stop in Breaux Bridge on the way.


August 11, 2016

Not Overly Impressed . . .

About 12:30 my cousins (2nd), Stahlie, Darby, Luke, and Harlan, came over to visit for a while.

Stahlie wanted to get my stories about the Calvin and Peagram families I had for a college paper she’s doing, and Darby is writing a book using the characters from the original fairy tales and myths, many of which were pretty bloody until Walt Disney got a hold of them. She wanted some information about getting her book into Amazon Kindle format and online.

Stahlie, Darby, and Jan

This is Stahlie and Darby. Luke and Harlan got bored and left.

She was kind of worried about the way her book was going. She said the characters seemed to be going off on their own. I laughed and told her not to worry, and that many authors say the same thing, and not to worry. Let the characters tell the story they want to tell.

Stahlie wanted to know what I remembered about my Grandmother and Grandfather who lived on the farm right across US-31 from here. In fact this RV park is built on part of their original farm

GrandmotherClaraAndGrandfatherTheoCalvinAndGreg

This is me with them when I was about 8 months old.

We had a great time, and spent several hours talking

Around 4:30 Jan and I headed out to have dinner at a favorite local BBQ place, 306 BBQ, out on Hwy 72 E toward Huntsville. We’ve always enjoyed this place in the past, but maybe because we had just recently eaten at Sonny’s BBQ in Pensacola, it no longer measured up.

Jan had a jumbo pulled pork sandwich with Cole Slaw.

306 BBQ Sandwich

Putting Cole Slaw on a BBQ sandwich seems to be pretty much a regional North Alabama, Tennessee, and South Carolina thing. I know if you ask for Cole slaw on your BBQ in Texas, they look at you really funny.

I had the Two Meat Combo Plate with Ribs and Pulled Pork, as well as the Brown Sugar Green Beans and Turnip Greens.

306 BBQ Combo Plate

And you know this is a southern BBQ place since they do have Turnip Greens, and the Pepper Sauce to put on them.

Although Jan liked her sandwich fine, I was disappointed with my BBQ. Both the ribs and pulled pork were bland and tasteless, and the pulled pork was dry.

If I could have slathered on some good BBQ sauce, it might have been saved. But the sauce here is vinegar-based with a lot of Tabasco in it, not my favorite. All I taste is vinegar with these type of sauces. Actually I think I enjoyed my Brown Sugar Green Beans and Turnip Greens better.

Tomorrow we’re getting together with my Aunt Virginia for lunch and a lot of catching up since last year. Really looking forward to it.

Jan and I went outside about midnight to take in the ‘magnificent’ Perseid meteor shower. But for us, it wasn’t very magnificent, more of a Comet Kohoutek.

They said we should see 160 to 200 meteors per hour, which would be about 3 a minute. Well, in 55 minutes we saw 12, so it was kind of a letdown.

Maybe we just needed some middle-age school teachers in a VW bus to give us cookies and we wouldn’t have cared.


August 11, 2017

A Warning To The Wise . . .

Our grandson Landon starts 2nd grade this coming Wednesday, the 16th of August. Here he is meeting his new teacher for the first time.

Landon in 2nd Grade

It’s amazing how early they start school now. When I was growing up it was usually the Wednesday after Labor Day, not 3 weeks earlier like now. Gave everyone time to rest up from the holiday.

Regular readers will remember the saga of Landon’s missing teeth, when he lost two to hitting Miss Kitty’s hard head, Miss Kitty being their 120# Black Lab. Then a few months later he hit his father’s knee and lost the third one.

Landon-with-less-teeth

Well, they’re coming back in.

Landon's New Teeth

Just hope he doesn’t manage to knock out these permanent ones

This past week I was called back into an old client’s office down in the Clear Lake area. The client had replaced me a couple of years ago with a new IT guy, someone who said he could do the job better, cheaper, faster, whatever. And the client fell for it.

So now the IT guy, who’s I think in his late 30’s, is dying in a nursing home. And the client has NO passwords for ANYTHING. Not for Godaddy, not for the office network, not for PayPal, not for the websites, not even for the office Wi-Fi. Nothing.

So I have spent the last 3 days ‘hacking’ into things. I have started the procedures with Godaddy and PayPal to reclaim control of those accounts, and I reset and reprogrammed the Wi-Fi router so that’s working now.

Now when he took over from me, he had no problems like this. I immediately sent him a copy of a file I keep with all the necessary codes and passwords. The client had a copy of this himself, but couldn’t find it right then.

I actually talked to the guy on Wednesday, but he was so high on drugs that when I asked him about passwords, all he kept saying was ‘69raccoon’, 69raccoon’. But I don’t have any idea what it’s the password to, or if it really is a password, and not a hallucination. It certainly hasn’t worked anywhere I’ve tried it yet.

So the moral of all this is that if someone has almost complete control of your livelihood, be sure you have an up-to-date copy of all the passwords and codes. And check a few out now and then just to be sure they’re correct.


August 11, 2018

Trying To Finish Up . . .

Jan and I spent the morning talking over our Viking River Cruise plans, trying to get a better handle on when we want to go.

Right now we’re still looking at the last two weeks of April 2019 or the first week in May. The cruises actually start in March, but if you go too early the spring snowmelt can make the rivers so high that the ships can’t fit under the bridges. So your river cruise becomes a 15-day bus trip. And there are a lot of complaints online about this happening to people.

It’s not going to be our problem, but often if you cruise in the late summer/fall, often the rivers are too low, and it’s back on the bus.

Jan has discovered a lot of info online about river cruising. Blogs talking about “What To Do On Your River Cruise., What Not To Do, What To Take, What Not To Take, etc. And in some cases, they seem to contradict each other.

We headed out a little after noon to first have lunch/breakfast at the nearby Denny’s. Then it was on up the house to start getting the last of our stuff out. We had originally planned to make at least two, or maybe three trips back down to the storage unit. But it didn’t work out that way.

We ended up spending most of the afternoon sorting through and throwing a lot of stuff away, so by the time we were done we only had time for one load. And even that didn’t quite work out.

When we got down to the storage area we found a large moving van parked in front of our entrance door with no indication that they would be moving any time soon. So we decided to drop the stuff off tomorrow before we head back up to the house again. At least we hope they’ll be done by tomorrow.

So it was on to our next stop, Pho 20 Vietnamese Cuisine, for a light dinner of a House Crunch Salad (we split it) and an order of Shrimp Spring Rolls. The perfect meal.

Tomorrow we’ll do it all over again, but with Mexican this time.


August 11, 2019

Don’t Be Stupid. Be Crazy . . .

After a nice quiet morning, I drove over to the NTB tire store (not Discount Tires) to get my rounded-off lug nut off. I got there about 12:20 for my 12:30 appointment and found them really busy. After finding a place to park, I went inside to check in.

When I said I had a 12:30 appointment to get some lug nuts off, the clerk said he couldn’t find my appointment, and since they were really busy, I’d have to come back at another time.

I told him to check using my phone number.

“Nope. Nothing here. You’ll have to come back later.”

“So you’re saying I don’t have an appointment.”

“No, there’s nothing in the system about it.”

“Then why is my name and appointment time scheduled on the monitor right over your head?”

Turning and looking up at the monitor, he grinned sheepishly and said, “Oh, here it is. Pull up to Bay 2.”

Since he had a lobby full of ‘real’ customers, I guess he didn’t want to fool with me.

About five minutes a tech came out with a special socket and a big hammer. When I pointed out the bad lug, he hammered the socket on the lug, and used his impact driver to remove the lug.

Or tried to.

It even took him several tries to break it loose with his driver, but finally it came free.

Now I don’t feel so bad.

Then I ask him to break loose the lugs on the driver’s side rear just in case. As he was doing that, he said what must have happened was the wrong impact driver was used. Some of them are set up to mount heavy truck tires and shouldn’t be used on regular vehicles.

He left the bad lug nut off and handed it to me, saying that the wheel would be OK with just five.

This reminded me of a favorite story of mine.

While driving out in the countryside, a man found himself with a flat tire. As he removed each lug nut he placed it in the hubcap for safekeeping. Mounting the new tire on the hub, he accidentally stepped on the edge of the hubcap, flipping 4 of the 5 lug nuts into the water-filled ditch next to the car.

As he was trying to figure out what to do, he hears a voice behind him. Turning, he saw a high chain-link fence topped with barbed wire. And a small sign on the fence that said, “Meadowbrook Insane Asylum”.

The voice belonged to a man standing behind the fence, who said,”You wanna know what to do?”

“Sure. What?”

“Take one lug nut off the other three wheels, and that, with the one you have left, will give you four lugs on all the wheels, fine to get you to the next town.”

“That’s brilliant, but why are you . . .?”

“Why am I in here? I’m in here because I’m crazy, not because I’m stupid.”

Moral: Don’t Be Stupid. Be Crazy.

About 4pm Jan and I headed over to the Denny’s to have our usual Sunday afternoon breakfast for dinner. Always good.


August 11, 2021

A New Toy For Work . . .

When I got to work this morning, I had a new toy waiting for me. A new (to me) Dell OptiPlex 9020 Tower Computer for the Shipping Department.

New Work Dell Desktop Computer

It’s an i7-4GHz with 16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD, and a DVD drive. Then before I started setting it up, I added another 16GB for a total of 32GB, and 1TB Hard Drive for daily internal backup of the SSD.

This computer, as well as all the other computers I’ve bought for work, and as my personal one at home, are Amazon Renewed, I.e. Refurbished with a 90 day full warranty. Then for $61 I add an additional 3-year warranty.

In pretty much every case these are computers that are surplused from business who often change out their computers every two years. Refurbishers buy these in bulk, check them out. and often upgrade them at the same time. Then they’re put up on Amazon.

Coming home I stopped off at the Verizon store at FM646 to see if they could figure out what was wrong with the text messaging on Jan’s phone. Or rather with Jan’s account.

We discovered this when we moved Jan over to my old S8+ and the text problem followed along. Then last week when the S8+ died and she moved back to the S5 the problem moved back too.

And after I finally convinced them it was not a phone problem, three techs spent about 20 minutes rummaging around in her account, using the phone, a computer, and a tablet before they finally found the weird setting that was causing the problem. And then after rebooting her phone, she finally has texting.

Tomorrow we’re heading up to the Spring area to meet up with Debi and Ed Hurlburt for our monthly get-together once again, this time at Razzoo’s Cajun Café. Then instead of coming straight home, we’ll detour back down SR99 to the Katy area where I’ll drop Jan off for a weekend of fun, frivolity, and dog-sitting while Brandi, Lowell, Landon, and Sophie head up to Lake Livingston for the weekend.

Finishing up, I thought this was a really neat shot of the Pharaoh Khufu’s intact Solar Boat being moved from the Great Pyramid, where it has rested for over 4,600 years, to its new home in Egypt’s new Grand Museum.

Solar boats were buried in pits next to royal burial chambers in the belief that they would transport the departed into the afterlife.

The boat was commissioned by Khufu, a Fourth Dynasty monarch who ruled during the Old Kingdom.

The ministry boasted that the 42-metre (138-foot) long and 20-ton solar boat is “the biggest and oldest organic artifact made of wood, in the history of humanity”.

Pharaonic Solar Boat

Amazing!


August 11, 2022

My Beautiful, Brilliant Wife . . .

Has ‘Insights’.

Well, my lost-in-transit UPS package is still lost.

The tracking still shows that the shipment was picked up by UPS on August 6th, and that’s it.

Zip, Zero, Nada, Nyet.

So still I wait.

I spent part of this afternoon trying to find and fix a leak in the bathroom lavatory. I let the water run, a mixture of both hot and cold, for about 30 minutes without a single drop showing up on the shelf underneath.

Giving up for a while, I called Jan up in Katy to check in. And that’s when my beautiful, brilliant wife gave me the solution.

She said, “What about the overflow drain?”

I hadn’t even thought of that, and didn’t even think it was a problem, since we never fill the sink up that high. Or so I thought.

Jan said that sometimes when she’s washing stuff out that water will splash into the opening. And that was it.

When I closed the drain and filled the bowl to the overflow level, water gushed out of the tube that connects the opening with the drain pipe. It looked like the tube had split along the top where I couldn’t get to it.

And in fact, it looked like I couldn’t replace or patch the tube without pulling the sink. And that would mean that the entire countertop would have to come up, since it’s all one piece.

Or I could just put a piece of Gorilla Tape over the opening so no water could splash in.

Decisions, decisions.

As I said, Jan has ‘insights’. Often when I’m stumped on a problem, I’ll talk it over with her, knowing it’s something she doesn’t really know anything about. But then she’ll say something that puts me back on the right track.

And this has happened over and over.

Like I said, Beautiful and Brilliant.

Rob, our park owner, got the pad finished for his new shop/garage the other day.

Petticoat Junction New Garage Pad

I’m not sure why he built it up so high, unless he’s worried about flooding. There is a small drainage ditch about 20 feet behind it. But the park didn’t flood even with Hurricane Harvey back in 2017 right before we moved down here. And he’s going to need a big ramp, too.

We’ll see, I guess.


August 11, 2023

Great Night At The Alvin Opry . . .

But we got home after 10pm, so I’ll catch up tomorrow night.