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

Not Much . . .

The swelling in my shoulder is mostly gone today, but I’ve still got some stiffness in my left arm.

But I’m getting better every day, so it’s back to work tomorrow.


Thought For The Day:

When You’re Told You’re Not Supposed To Kiss A Woman Without Her Consent.


 

Your Retro-Preview Highlights –

2010 – Family Fun And Watermelon

2011 – ‘Going to the Sun’ Highway

2013 – Vegas on the Dells

2016 – Merlins and MECO

2017 – More Unintended Consequences

2018 – More Bacon Numbers

2021 – Yakov Smirnoff

And Now On To today’s Retro-Blogs.™


July 18, 2009

They’re Heeeeerrreeee !!!!

Brandi and Piper arrived safely for their visit with us in New York City.


July 18, 2010

Lazy, Hazy Days of Summer…

Today started off with coffee and a relaxing morning enjoying the RV life. Then about 2:15 pm we left for my Uncle Theo and Aunt Virginia’s house to go to lunch about 20 miles away in Huntsville, AL at Macaroni Grill. We had a good meal and a great time getting together with them.

Getting back to their house, we said our goodbyes and left with some of Virginia’s delicious banana bread, and a fresh-made peach cream pie.

Theo and Virginia Calvin

Theo And Virginia

Getting back to the rig, we left the pie in the fridge and drove next door to Ed and Jan’s to get together for some watermelon in the gazebo.

Calvin Gazebo 1

Calvin Gazebo 2

These two cuties are my 2nd cousins, Stahlie and Darby. They’re home-schooled and speak 3 languages, including Russian. Their father Wes manages the RV park here.

Stahlie And Darby

This young man is Luke, Stahlie and Darby’s younger brother. Behind him is his mother, Helen.

Luke

And this little ball of fire is Harlan.

Harlan

About 7 pm we said good night and goodbye to everyone and headed back to the coach.

We had a great time here in Athens, catching up with the family. We definitely look forward to seeing everyone again next year.

Tomorrow we head north to Louisville, KY about 250 miles away. We’ll be there for 8 days which includes attending The Rally, the largest RV rally in the country.


July 18, 2011

Another Wild Moose Chase . . .

Today is our last full day in Columbia Falls, and today’s the day we’re doing Glacier National Park. And if you’re not into hiking, biking, or rowing, the main thing to do in Glacier is to make the 50 mile ‘Going to the Sun’ Highway drive.

So after coffee at 9:30 we headed out about noon, first for some errands and then out into the Park.

And after getting gas and dropping off some mail at the Post Office, our first stop was at The Huckleberry Patch in Hungry Horse.

Huckleberry Patch Sign

Around since 1949, it’s supposed to be the best place in the area to get Huckleberry Pie. And after really good sandwiches, we decided ‘they’ were right. The pie was delicious . . .  ala mode, of course.

After lunch, we drove the 10 miles to the entrance to the park at West Glacier.

GNP Sign

And after getting our National Park Passports stamped at the Visitors Center, we started our drive.

Most of the trip was along the shores of one of the several large lakes in the area.

This is the boat launch area on Lake McDonald at Apgar Village.

Apgar Village Boat Launch

More Lake McDonald.

Lake McDonald 1

These next shots are of the rapids along McDonald Creek.

GNP 1

GNP Rapids

GNP Rapids 2

GNP Rapids 3

What about bears?

GNP Rapids Sign

More beautiful scenery.

GNP 2

These next two shots are of Heaven’s Peak at almost 8900 feet.

GNP Heaven's Peak

GNP Heaven's Peak 2

Needless to say, there are glaciers everywhere you look.

GNP 3

GNP 4

GNP 5

We saw a number of these neat old tour buses around the park. Note the ‘natural’ air conditioning.  Also fun when passing by the many waterfalls along the side of the road.

GNP Tour Bus

GNP Tour Bus 2

More glaciers.

GNP 6

GNP 7

GNP 8

GNP 9

GNP 10

GNP 11

Coming over the top of Logan Pass, at 6664 feet, the high point of our drive, we came across our first wildlife, these two mountain goats, and

GNP Mountain Goat

GNP Mountain Goat 2

this Big Horn Sheep.

GNP Big Horn Sheep

And then, of course, more glaciers.

GNP 12

GNP 13

Nearing the end of our 50 mile journey, we passed St. Mary Lake. Very blue.

GNP Lake St Mary

Leaving the park, and rather than just turn around and come back the same way, we decided to take the long way home by taking US-89 south to MT 49 to US-2. And although it’s the long way back at 100 miles, it’s also a little faster because it’s not bumper-to-bumper through mountain passes like the Sun Highway.

And we got to see new scenery, like these high rolling plains at almost 5500 feet.

GNP High Plains

And Lower Two Medicine Lake.

GNP Lower Two Medicine Lake

About 45 miles from home, we saw this sign and had to stop. I mean, do they lick us, or do we lick them, like toad licking? Enquiring minds, and all that.

Goat Lick Sign

Turns out there was no licking, but we did see a lot of goats.

Goat Lick Goats 1

This guy’s losing his coat. Wonder if he’s cashmere?

Goat Lick Goats 2

Among a lot of others, saw this mother with two kids.

Goat Lick Goats 3

Getting back into Columbia Falls about 8 pm we decided to try The Nite Owl once more, since they should have their Broasted Chicken this time of night. And they did. And it was really good.

Tomorrow we head out for Garrison, MT for one night, and then on to Billings for one night, and then to Cody for 5 nights or more.

And once again, Jan has gone mooseless.


July 18, 2013

Vegas on the Dells . . .

Today is our last day here in the Wisconsin Dells and we pretty much did nothing all day, just taking it easy.

I did redo the ground connection on the charge wire that keeps the toad battery charged while we’re towing it behind the rig. Everything was working fine until I had my Blue Ox Aventa Tow Bar rebuilt at the recent Escapade in Gillette, WY. I noticed when the tech was working on it, he added new Teflon washers in the ball joint and I’m thinking that was enough insulation to keep the tow bar from acting as the ground connection between the toad and the rig. So now I’ve done a separate wire to fix the problem.

I hope.

About 7 pm Jan and I headed into the Dells to have our last dinner here at Famous Dave’s BBQ. We’ve only got a few more weeks in Famous Dave’s territory and want to get in a few more meals.

As usual we had a great meal and got a bread pudding dessert to go. Free this time due to taking an online survey. Neat.

The Dells kind of reminds me of Vegas with all the out-sized attractions around town.

This is “Top Secret”, an overgrown version of those roadside ‘Mystery Houses” that you see in some areas.

Dells at Night 1

Dells at Night 2

Then there’s another large area with a Greco-Roman theme, complete with a Trojan Horse,

Dells at Night 3

and a Roman Coliseum.

Dells at Night 4

And here’s one of the smaller of the many waterparks in the area. They even have a number of very large indoor waterparks.

Dells at Night 5

Leaving Famous Dave’s, the sun had gone down so we spent some time driving around checking out all the lights on the attractions. Again, like a Vegas, Jr.

Tomorrow, after getting diesel, we’ll head north about 230 miles to the Island Casino in Wilson, MI. Then on Saturday, we’ll be in Sault Sainte Marie for a week, an area we’ve never visited and are really looking forward to seeing.


July 18, 2014

Making New Friends . . .

We all headed out about 11:30 this morning to have lunch with C. A. Newsome, an author-friend who also happens to be one of Jan’s favorite mystery writers.

After a stop at Chase Bank, we met Carol Ann and her friend Marianne Shelton, at Ruth’s Parkside Café, an upscale restaurant located in the old American Can Company building.

Originally built in 1921, it was abandoned in 1978, and stayed vacant until bought up in 2005 to be developed into loft apartments. It reopened in 2011, with apartments ranging in size from a 615 sq.ft. 1 bedroom to a 1513 sq.ft. 3 bedroom, and from $610 to $1480. And it must be very popular, because at this time, no units are available tor rent.
Ruth's Parkside Cafe 0b

The food was good, with Jan having this Orange Szechwan Stir Fry,

Ruth's Parkside Cafe 1

while I had the Half BLT with a bowl of their delicious Savory White Bean Soup. Very good. Finishing up, Jan and I shared a piece of really good Chocolate Gooey Cake.

Jan had a great time getting to know Carol Ann, who as I said, is one of Jan’s favorite authors.

Carol Anne has written three books in her Dog Park Mystery series, with a fourth on the way. Jan has all three in Kindle format, and has read them several times. She really enjoys Carol Ann’s well-written characters, especially the female serial killer in the first two books.

And right now, A Shot in the Bark, Book 1 in the series, is FREE, and the other 2 are only $3.99. You can get all 3 below.

And they’re also available in paperback. Check’em out.

Finally saying our goodbyes to Carol Ann and Marianne after a great lunch and get-together, we drove around for a while checking out the many neat old buildings in the area, before heading a little further north to make a stop at Half-Price Books, pretty much our favorite used book store.

After wandering through their stacks for almost an hour, we headed next door to the Kroger’s for a few things before starting back to the park. By the time we were passing through Harrison, OH, right on the Ohio/Indiana border, we decided it was a good time for a Dairy Queen visit, to get our ice cream fix.

After our DQ stop, we took a back road out through this really beautiful countryside before our return to the park.

Tomorrow looks to be a rainy stay-at-rig day.


July 18, 2015

I Miss Arizona . . .

Today turned out to be kind of a comedy of errors as we traveled to West Memphis, AR and Tom Sawyer RV Park. We had planned to leave about 9:00 but things started going wrong pretty early.

As I was setting up, I found the fuse had blown that powers the 12V sockets on the dashboard. So this meant that my Brake Buddy Alert Receiver and the small inverter that runs my computer weren’t working. So I went to the drawer where my 20amp fuses are supposed to be, and NO fuses at all, much less 20’s. So I can plug my laptop into the house power since we’ll be running the genset to keep things cool, but I’ll have to do without my Brake Buddy Alert.

By now it was about 10 after 9am, not too late, so I cranked up and started bringing the levelers up. While Jan was running the slide in, I turned the A/C’s off and started up the genset, and since we were still on shore power, the transfer switch did its thing and we were now gen power. Then after the genset had warmed up a bit, I turned the A/C’s back on.

By now the levelers should have been up, but when I checked the panel, it showed them still down. So it was outside to see what the problem was.

And boy, was it a problem.

When I backed into our site, there was one of those concrete parking lot barriers at the back of the site to keep you from going back too far. So to be sure that we had room in front of the rig to park the truck, I put my rear wheels right against the barrier and let my levelers come down right behind the barriers, clearing the barrier by over an inch.

But somehow there was enough movement in the rig during the two nights we were there that one of the leveler pads ended up under the edge of the barrier. So when I brought up the levelers, it actually picked up the concrete barrier on one side.

I didn’t know they had that much power. Down, yes. But not up.

This was what was keeping the levelers from coming all the way up. So now I had to let the levelers back down, and then crawl under the rear of the rig and maneuver that honking big piece of concrete off the pad. Getting that done, I was happy to see that my levelers now came up just fine. So after all that, by the time I got us hooked up to the truck, it was now 9:40. But at least we were on the way.

But at this point, I decided I miss Arizona. Even though it was only about 85 degrees outside, with the humidity, my shirt was now soaking wet. 10% humidity would be nice.

The trip was pretty smooth until we were about 50 miles outside West Memphis and then the road went to crap. And that included the rest areas. As we were pulling out of one, there was about a 6 inch drop in the pavement just as we got on the entrance ramp back onto I-40, that shook us down to our fillings.

And as I found a few minutes later, it also popped open one of our bay doors, as I was quickly informed by passersby.  So I had to pull over on the shoulder to close the bay door. Luckily nothing had fallen out.

Then about 5 more miles down the road, there was another big pothole that I couldn’t dodge. And this one caused the genset to shut off. It started right back up, but with our transfer switch problem, and no shore power, it wouldn’t switch over.

So again I had to pull over, go back and lift the bed, and manually switch the transfer switch over to the genset. I’ll be glad when we’re in one place long enough to get this replaced.

We finally pulled into the Tom Sawyer RV Park a little after 3pm. I’m really glad we had reservations, because 2/3’s of the park is under water due to all the rain. In fact there was a cardboard sign taped to the big sign out on the highway that said. “No Vacancy. If you don’t have a reservation, don’t bother.”

I’ll finish up tomorrow with our great visit to Charles Vergos’ Rendezvous, one of the best BBQ places in Memphis.


July 18, 2016

Merlin and MECO . . .

It turns out that there are a lot of ‘closet’ Murdoch Mysteries fans out there. I’m just disappointed that it took Jan and I so long to discover it.

It’s a really fun show and we’re happy to see that we’re only watching Season 4 right now, while they’re presently filming Season 10. So we’ve got a while to go.

I’ve penciled in tomorrow evening around 7:30 to do the initial prep work for my AC evaporator coil cleaning on the roof unit. I’m going to remove the 4 bolts that hold down the shroud, and the 4 remaining screws holding the evaporator sheet metal on. Only 4 here because didn’t put all the rest back in before.

I’ll also pull the hose and spray nozzle up there so all I have to do Wednesday morning is uncover the AC, mask off the air return opening and then start spraying and cleaning the coil. Then I’ll use the spray hose to rinse it all off.

I plan to do all this Wednesday morning before it gets too hot, as it still should be in the high 70’s – low 80’s then so not too bad.

I hope.

We had originally planned to go to the Fayette County Country Music Opry up in La Grange, after eating at the nearby Whataburger. But Jan was a little under the weather this afternoon, so we didn’t do the Opry. But just because she was a little sickish, didn’t mean she didn’t still want Whataburger.

So around 4:30 I drove into Columbus to pick up dinner at that one. And this time they actually got the order correct. Delicious as usual.

But as I was leaving the park, I discovered I have another AC problem, this time in the truck. The AC blower is dead.

Hopefully it’s just a fuse, since I replaced both the control resistor pack and the blower motor last year. I guess it could possibly be the control knob itself, but if that were the case, probably only one speed would be affected, not all.

So I’ll check it out tomorrow.

Wrapping up for today, I thought I’d post this amazing long-exposure shot of the recent SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launch to the International Space Station.

Falcon 9 Launch

The straight line on the left is the rocket launch itself, disappearing through the clouds. I haven’t been able to find out what the bright spot near the top is.

The Falcon 9 doesn’t do a post Max-Q throttle up like the Shuttle did, and I think it’s too early for the MECO (Main Engine Cut Off) and 2nd stage ignition. So I don’t know and Google hasn’t helped.

At the very top, to the right of the main track, you will see a couple of small streaks. That is the Re-entry Burn of the 1st stage as it moves out of the way of the 2nd stage engines and sets up its return as it now heads back to Earth for landing.

The 1st stage free-falls for 6 to 8 minutes, depending on launch angle,  and then the landing burn initiates, which is where the burn restarts in the photo, all the way down to a soft landing.

Previously I’ve posted a video of the Falcon 9 1st stage soft landing on a barge out in the Atlantic. The barge landings will be necessary depending on the launch angle needed to reach the correct orbit. Under some conditions, the 1st stage won’t have enough fuel to reach the land-based touchdown point. So then they’ll use the barge.

One other neat thing about the 1st stage is that it uses 9 (Yes, 9! ) Merlin 1D engines. And these are powerful enough so that even if two engines fail along the way, the rocket can still make orbit and complete its mission. You gotta love redundancy.


July 18, 2017

Unintended Consequences . . .

Well, we did finally leave the rig today for dinner and a little shopping.

We headed out about 4:15 to first eat at the Golden Corral down on I-45. Jan had been ‘jonsing’ for some fried chicken, and GC has some of the best.

Golden Corral Plate

I like the fact that I can get a little of everything.

Afterwards we looped back around to the Home Depot so I could pick up some Plexiglass sheets to construct the air deflector for our rig’s A/C cover. Hopefully it will redirect the airflow over the A/C so it cools better while we’re on the road.

Then it was a quick stopover at the Kroger’s for a few things and then home.

Recently I’ve been thinking about unintended consequences and their effect on our lives. And what happens when they backfire.

You know, like in British Colonial India when the government started offering a bounty for dead cobras, hoping to reduce the deadly population. For a while it worked . . . until people started breeding cobras so they could turn them in for the reward.

Then when the government scrapped the program, all of the now-worthless cobras were released, resulting in more cobras in the wild than they were to start with.

Oops!

Or when in 1859 an Australian imported 24 wild rabbits from England and released them into the countryside so he could hunt them. But apparently they could make new bunnies faster than he could shoot them, because by the 1920’s, less than 70 years later the population was estimated to be over 10 billion. That’s BILLION, with a B.

By the 1890’s they had devastated over 2.5 million acres of Australia. Today, due to heavy eradication efforts, the rabbit population numbers around 200 million.

What’s up, doc?

Another example, as I mentioned in my Trinity Site blog post the other day, are the Oryx antelope that were imported to the White Sand area of New Mexico in the late 70’s.

oryxsign

The original 93 have grown to over 5000, more than there in the Kalahari desert where they came from. And since they have no natural predators (lions) here, they too are turning into real pests.

Going back in history, those of you close to my age probably remember ‘freak’ shows at the traveling carnivals that came to town. Every carnival had one, or sometimes two. That way they could charge you twice.

Modern freak shows really originated with P.T. Barnum in the 1840’s when he introduced Gen. Tom Thumb to the public.

PT Barnum and Tom

Tom, aka Charles Stratton, who ironically was a distant cousin of Barnum’s, became very wealthy over the years, making as much as $4000 a week in today’s dollars.

Or how about The Dog-Faced Boy, who during the 1880’s was making the equivalent of $13,000 a week.

Dog Boy

In more modern times they even had their own town in Florida. Gibsonton, about 20 minutes south of Tampa was home to hundreds of freak show performers who lived there when they weren’t traveling. They lived in very nice houses, drove Cadillac’s, and had a nice life.

At least until the 50’s – 70’s when do-gooder’s took it all away. Citing ‘discrimination’ and ‘exploitation of the disabled’, they got laws passed restricting the shows, and then shutting them down, apparently to save them from themselves.

And as a result, many ‘freaks’, who previously had nice lives and incomes, died in destitution, in some cases, while living on the streets.

Or how about Lady Bird Johnson’s Highway Beautification Act?

Sounds great, right?

Take down all the billboards and other forms of outdoor advertising along our Interstates, giving us pristine views of green, rolling hills and landscapes. What could be wrong with that?

Well, nothing, unless you were a billboard company that went out of business and had to lay off all your employees, or a landowner whose main income was from the billboards erected on their land.

But the big hit was to all the mom and pop businesses off the Interstates. The many restaurants, motels, gas stations, and even roadside attractions started withering away when no one knew they were out there. Thousands went out of business across the country,

And it wasn’t much better for the travelers.

Was there a gas station at this exit, or a motel? Or maybe at the next one?

This is why we now have those signs at the exits listing food, lodging, and gas available at each exit. So we went from a billboard or two 50 yards right off the highway, to one or more right in our face at the exit.

Not exactly a big improvement.

I’ll continue this topic tomorrow, with more current examples. Stay tuned.


July 18, 2018

Everything’s Better With Bluetooth!

My Bacon Number post got a lot of responses, including from readers with connections to Patsy Cline, John Wayne, and Willie Nelson, among others. But we have one BIG winner.

Now I thought I was doing pretty good with my list:

Eleanor Roosevelt
Margaret Mead

(Met them at lectures at Peabody College in Nashville with my mother when I was 10-11)

Werner Von Braun
(Met with my father when he worked at Boeing in Huntsville during the late 60’s on the Apollo project.)

Deke Slayton
(Was my late best friend’s brother-in-law)

Deng Chao Peng (Chinese Chairman)
Barbie Benton (Playboy Playmate)
Richard Feynman
Jim Oberg

(Met while they were visiting NASA-JSC when I worked there from 1978-1987.)

John Glenn
John Young
Bob Crippen
Walt Cunningham
Neil Armstrong
Ed Aldrin
Scott Carpenter
Gordo Cooper
Sally Ride
Anna Fisher
Bill Fisher
Story Musgrave
(Met at NASA-JSC when I worked there from 1978-1987.)

*** Challenger 7 ***
Dick Scobee
Mike Smith
Judy Resnik
Ellison Onizuka
Ron McNair
Greg Jarvis
Christa McAuliffe

(Met at NASA-JSC when I worked there from 1978-1987.)

Col. Sanders
(Met while working at a new KFC while in college in 1967. This was when he still visited every new store.)

Willie Mays
Jesse Owens

(Met while working as a Broadcast Engineer at a black radio station in Birmingham.)

Fanny Flagg
(She was my babysitter when I was a kid. Her real name is Patricia Neal. Her family and mine were close friends.)

Sean Connery
Katherine Ross
John Saxon
Leslie Nielson
Robert Conrad
(Met them while I was at White Sands for the STS-3 Shuttle landing. We were all staying at the same hotel in Alamogordo while they were filming “Wrong is Right”.)

The Mamas and Papas
Gene Watson
Chet Atkins
Floyd Cramer
Boots Randolph
Al Hirt

(Met while playing in bands in Nashville in the mid 60’s)

Kenny ‘Snake’ Stabler  – Super Bowl-Winning Quarterback
(Played High School football with him at Foley High School, Foley, AL, and my mother was his tutor in some subjects after school.)

Jimmy Buffet
Almost certainly met him as a kid when he used to surf at Gulf Shores, AL while I grew up there. In his books, he talks about surfing at Alabama Point. My friends and I surfed there too, and talked to the kids from Mobile. He’s about two years older than me.


But I think friend and blog reader Boots Gibson has me beat. Here’s hers.


I met and/or cared for quite a few well-known people in my 50 years in the medical field.  A few are:

Gabby Hayes,
Barbara Stanwyck,
Red Foxx,
Ralph Bellamy,
Elizabeth Taylor’s mother,
David and Ricky Nelson’s parents (Ozzie and Harriet) and grandmother,
David Soul,
Ryan O’Neal,
Baryshnikov,
Evel Knievel,
Richard Burton,
Gary Busey,
Peggy Lee,
Jimmy Durante,
Casey Kasem,
Euell Gibbons
,

and she just missed Elvis!

Elvis visited someone in the afternoon when I wasn’t working yet, but when I got in for the evening shift the place was still all a buzz.  Those are a few I remember off the top of my head, but there were many others.

Celebs get sick just like us mere mortals!


Someone asked why, the other day, I mentioned picking up our prescriptions from both Sam’s Club and WalMart. Why two different places?

My answer – Because it’s cheaper. Of course.

WalMart has their $4 – $10 list, so we start with that. Whenever our doctor wants to prescribe something new, we check the list and coordinate with her on it, trying to pick the cheapest one.

But our fallback is Sam’s Extra Value List, their own version of the $4 – $10 list, but with different, in some cases, more expensive drugs. Now, of course, you have to be a Sam’s Club member, which runs about $70 per year. But to be able to buy under the Extra Value List, you have to upgrade to a Plus membership for an additional $30 per year. But we usually save the $30 upgrade fee on one month’s prescriptions.

Right now, all of our prescriptions are on one or the other lists, saving us a lot of money every month.

Nice.

As Sheldon says, “Everything’s better with Bluetooth!”  And the Jacuzzi people apparently took that to heart.

Bluetooth Showerhead

So let me get this straight. Do you have to plug in and recharge your shower?


July 18, 2019

Just As Funny Now . . .

We’re caught with all the orders except for ones waiting on product to come in. We were supposed to have a big shipment of electrolysis needles this morning but they didn’t show up. Hopefully tomorrow.

Next Prime Day I guess I need to look through the ads a little more closely. Apparently there were some pricing ‘errors’ listing a bunch of very expensive cameras and accessories.

amazoncrazydealfeattt

Like a $13,000 lens for $94.48. You can see how it’s back at $13,000 on Amazon – Canon Telephoto Lens

You can read more about all the deals here on the PetaPixel website. It seems like some people were just stuffing their cart full as fast as they could until the deals were shut down.

For my part, I’m not exactly sure that these are mistakes, especially since they seemed to only occur in the Camera area. Seems like they would be randomly scattered around the product lines.

No, I suspect this is a marketing ploy by Amazon to hype Prime Day sales, getting people to scramble through the site looking for other ‘mistakes’, and of course, coming across other ‘deals’ they just have to have.

A couple of days ago we came across the very first episode of the Beverly Hillbillies on BEST, channel 268 on DirecTV. And it’s just as funny now as it was in 1962. You just couldn’t help laughing.

Beverly Hillbillies

When the Clampett’s drove into our living rooms in their 1921 Oldsmobile, they were pretty much hated by the critics, who said it was “strained and unfunny.” and “painful to sit through.” But the public went head over heels for it.

By the sixth episode, it was the number-one TV show in the country and mostly stayed that way for the next 10 years. And two episodes from 1964 are listed as the 2nd and 4th most-watched episodes of the entire decade. And the 2nd one, “The Giant Jackrabbit”, about an escaped kangaroo of course, is ranked as one most watched half-hour episodes ever on TV.

Even the theme song ended up as a No. 1 hit.

But the show, still in the top five, was canceled when “The Great Rural Purge” swept through CBS in 1971, ending shows such as “Green Acres, Mayberry R.F.D., Lassie, Hogan’s Heroes and The Jim Nabors Hour.” as well as Beverly Hillbillies.

Many of which were still in the top ten show list.

The reason given was that advertisers wanted more hip, sophisticated shows like MASH and Mary Tyler Moore. Of course you would think that if that were true, the public wouldn’t have been watching them.

But the inside scoop in the industry was a little different. As the story goes, the wife of the president of CBS hated the fact that her elitist friends teased her about her husband’s ‘Countrified’ network. So she demanded that he get rid of all of those ‘hick’ shows and put on something more ‘cultured and refined’.

Ahhh. What somebody will do for true love? Or at least to get his wife to stop nagging him.

And the cancellation of the Hillbillies didn’t seem to slow Buddy Ebsen down at all, since he was right back on the air in 1972, starring as Barnaby Jones.


July 18, 2020

A Daytrip To The Island . . .

Jan’s been wanting to do a Galveston Daytrip and today seemed like a good day for it. So we headed out about 1pm with our first stop the Sunflower Bakery and & Café on 14th St, our go-to brunch place on the island.

We have eaten here a number of times over the years, usually with our kids, but also with friends. It’s always good and it’s always busy, with a wait on weekends.

But not today, which I assume was WuFlu-related. They were busy, with most of the tables full, but rather than cordon off every other table, it looks like they just removed half the tables to meet the rules.

Since this was a special trip we started out with Mimosas, with Jan showing off her new Viking dragon shirt.

Sunflower Cafe Mimosas

Jan got the Small Breakfast with Fruit instead of the Fried Breakfast Potatoes,

Sunflower Cafe Small Breakfast 2

while I got the Migas, with Three Eggs Scrambled With Tortilla Strips, Onion, Tomato, Jalapeño, And Cheddar Cheese With Fruit, Beans And Flour Tortillas.

Very, very good. Especially the Mimosas, which we both agreed had more than their normal share of Champagne in them. Really strong. But good.

And before we left we had to pick up a couple of their fantastic Wedding Cookies for each of us. It is a bakery after all.

After that delicious meal, we drove up and down a number of streets looking at all the old homes, some completely redone, some in-work, and some badly in need of help. But all interesting.

One thing we did notice was that Galveston now has their own animal mascot. Over the years as we traveled we’ve seen porpoises, bears, pelicans, mermaids, moose, pronghorn antelopes, and a javelina mother and baby.

And so we’ve got Galveston’s Sea Turtles.

Galveston Turtle 1

Galveston Turtle 2

Galveston Turtle 3

Really neat.

After Jan finished critiquing all the home color schemes she didn’t like, (and she was right. Some of them are down-right hideous.) we drove down along the seawall a good ways until we finally lucked on parking space on the ocean, and just sat and enjoyed the views.

Galveston Beach 1

Galveston Beach 2

Finally about 4:30 we started home after a really nice, fun day.


July 18, 2021

Astor or Astro?

Jan and I were on the road up to Katy about 10:45 to meet Brandi, Lowell, and Landon at the new location of Astor Farm To Table.

Astor Farm To Table Dining Room

This is a big upgrade from their former location, believe me.

Jan got their Fresh Strawberry Salad with Grilled Chicken.

Astor FTT Jan's Strawberry Chicken Salad

I got the Cowboy Omelet with pretty much everything in it except the African Goat Curry.

Astor FTT Greg's Cowboy Omelet

Lowell got the Croissant Eggs Benedict with Roasted Potatoes.

Astor FTT Lowell's Egg Benedict

One thing that was kind of funny was the name of the restaurant that showed up on my PayPal debit card usage email,.

“You paid ASTRO FARM TO TABLE using your debit card.”

So it looks like when the restaurant owner switched the ‘O’ and the ‘R’ when he was entering the name into the credit card system, so ASTOR became ASTRO. I guess it was a Freudian slip to the Houston Astros.

Getting down to Galveston we were lucky enough to find a parking spot in a lot right across the street from the 1894 Grand Opera, and as I said yesterday, we were required to wear a mask both in the lobby and in the theater itself.

But even with the masks being worn, the theater was still ‘social distancing’; Or at least that’s what it looked like.

1894 Grand Opera

All the seats were socially distanced, with the red covers dividing up the blue, usual seats. In fact it looked like less than half the total seats were actually available.

Jan and I really enjoyed seeing Yakov Smirnoff yesterday afternoon. Not only is his stuff really funny, but it makes you think.

Yakov Smirnoff

He started by saying that he grew up in the communist, socialist Soviet Union where the government was so restrictive and controlling that they told you where you could live, who you could live with, where you could work, where you could travel, where you could eat, who you could eat with, and what you had to wear.

And then he said, “Oh, wait”

That got the biggest laugh and applause of the show.

The performance lasted about 90 minutes with no intermission, and afterward, Yakov came out to the lobby and signed autographs and posed for pictures. Though with everyone wearing a mask, you could have been having your photo taken with just about anyone, and just said it was with Yakov, I guess.

Being on the far side of the theater exit, by the time Jan and I got to the lobby, there was a very long line waiting to see him, so we left for our Saltgrass dinner reservation.

And to paraphrase Jerry Seinfeld, it seems that when the Galveston Saltgrass Steakhouse takes a reservation, they keep the reservation. This is the 3rd time that we’ve had a reservation down there during a very busy time, and we’ve also been seated within a couple of minutes of our arrival. And I always ask for a window table, if possible, and we’ve always gotten one.]

Since I’ve posted photos of our steaks previously, I won’t do it again. But everything was as delicious as always.


July 18, 2022

To A ‘T’ . . .

Work today was pretty quiet for a change, so I was able to catch up on a bunch of little things that had been stacking up. And after today, I don’t go back to work until Thursday, since my client will be out of town Thursday and Friday, and he doesn’t want Jennifer there alone all day.

How did I not know this?

A new keyboard shortcut has been showing up online, and I wonder how I never heard of it.

Ever close a tab in your browser and then wish you hadn’t. Just use Ctrl-Shift-T and it will pop back up. And every time you do it again, the next last one will pop up. And so on, and so on. Check it out.

I’m still discovering things about my new BeHear NOW Hearing Assistants. One of the most unusual is the EasyListen mode. Though I haven’t had a chance to try it out, it allows you to slow down the speech you hear on a phone call. It has four settings: Normal, Slow, Slower, and Slowest. It will be interesting to hear what it sounds like in action.

They also have 4 microphones, one on each of the two earpieces, and one on each of the two control stalks. This apparently makes it easier to filter out background noise.

And it seems that several of our readers have taken advantage of the $75 discount code ‘blowou80’ to order them a set.

BTW the reason these are called Hearing Assistants and not Hearing Aids is that ‘hearing aids’ are regulated and licensed by the FDA. Which is why they cost a lot more.

Tomorrow is my 2nd Physical Therapy session, from 1 to 2 pm.  Don’t know if I’ll get any new exercises, or just keep doing the original 4 that I started with.

Finishing up, I came across this stunning photo of San Francisco . . . in 1885!

San Francisco 1885

I guess the giveaway on the date is . . . no cars.


July 18, 2023

And Darby Too . . .

In yesterday’s blog I talked about niece Stahlie, the world-traveling archaeologist, who just got back from her Israeli dig this past Saturday.

But today it’s more about her sister Darby, who’s a Paralegal in Athens, and they’re actually both world travelers.

She was also in China with Stahlie when they visited the Great Wall.

That’s Darby on the left.

They were over there in 2014 volunteering at an American-run Special Needs Orphanage outside of Bejing for the summer before spending some time touring the country.

These two beautiful young ladies were home-schooled and speak 3 languages, including Russian.

Their mother Helen has done a great job with them, as well as their two brothers Luke and Harland.

And of course, their pet fawn.


A guy up the road a few miles from us had an Urban Wildlife encounter recently.

Here’s his story.

I had an unusual visit today from a BobCat. I was sitting in my boat in the backyard when I see this bobcat sauntering along the top of my fence about 12 feet away.

It jumped into my yard and walked toward the front fence.

I whistled at it, it looked at me like saying Ok ! Jumped over the 6 ft. gate and continued its journey.

It looked about a year or two old, in good health, maybe a little thirsty. It did not appear to be in distress, aggressive or rabid. By time I got to the front yard, it was gone ??? Pretty cool encounter !!!

And this is not out in the country, but a large, high-end subdivision right off I-45.


Not sure what’s going on with DHL, but it seems they’re going around in circles.

Here’s the tracking for something that Jan ordered.

So it started out in Melrose Park, IL on Saturday, the 15th.

Arrived Shipping Partner Facility, USPS Awaiting Item

MELROSE PARK, IL 60160

July 15, 2023, 9:01 am
Shipping Partner: DHL ECOMMERCE

And then 2 days later, it was here in Houston.

Arrived Shipping Partner Facility, USPS Awaiting Item

HOUSTON, TX 77073

July 17, 2023, 9:31 am
Shipping Partner: DHL ECOMMERCE

And then the next day it’s back in IL

Departed Shipping Partner Facility, USPS Awaiting Item

MELROSE PARK, IL 60160

July 18, 2023, 4:23 am
Shipping Partner: DHL ECOMMERCE

So no telling when it’ll be back here in Houston.

 

 

 

On The Mend, Mostly . . .

At least I’m not itching all over like I was yesterday. But my left shoulder is swollen up about twice normal size, hot, and a little itchy.

Because of this, I didn’t go into work today, but of course, I still had to process invoices and bill PayPal orders. But this stay-at-home day gave me time to concentrate on my HD failure on my computer at work. Or rather my SSD failure, since it’s a Solid State Drive.

I have been assuming that the problem was with the drive itself, since I was having so much trouble getting a new drive installed and the system image file moved over to the new drive, I decided to check things out at home.

So Monday I brought the ‘defective’ SSD home to try it on my machine using one of these SATA to USB adapters.

And it turns out that the drive is just fine. All my data is intact.

So I went on Amazon this afternoon and ordered a new (to me, or Renewed as Amazon calls them). Should be here Friday. Unfortunately, it wasn’t on a Prime Day sale.

Finally, I want to thank everyone for the many get-well wishes comments and emails.


Thought For The Day:

“What you allow, will continue.”


Your Retro-Preview Highlights –

2009 – The Hudson River Valley

2010 – Family Fun And BBQ

2012 – Landon-Skyping And A Chrome Buffalo

2013 – All Trains, All the Time

2014 – Fort Smith And Rudy & Caroline

2017 – More Landon On Ice

2018 – What’s Your Bacon Number

2023 – Tel Burna Excavations

And Now On To today’s Retro-Blogs.™


July 17, 2009

Peekskill and the Hudson River Valley…

Today Jan and I drove the 30 miles over to Peekskill, NY to get to a larger town nearer to New York City.  We wanted to go by a motel or someplace that had a brochure rack that had a lot of stuff for New York City.  The places around here had more things for this area and not a lot for New York.

And we hit the jackpot.  So now we have plenty of stuff to look over to help plan for Brandi and Piper’s arrival tomorrow.

Heading back we came across the Cortlandt Colonial Restaurant, and liking the look of the place, decided to stop for lunch.  And it was a good choice.  Beautiful restaurant, excellent food, and good service.  What more can you ask for?

Coming home we stopped at a scenic pullout and took pictures of the Hudson River Valley below us.

Hudson River Valley 1

Hudson River Valley 2

Bridge View

This is the place the Americans stretched a 600 yard, 65 ton chain across the river to prevent the British from sailing up the river during the Revolutionary War.  It was a great idea, but the British never tried to break the chain.  They just captured the forts on either side and removed the chain.  Although I guess it really didn’t do them any good in the long run.

Later this afternoon, I set out all of our menagerie of flamingos, pelicans, moose, cats, and other assorted items in preparation for tomorrow’s arrival.


July 17, 2010

Family Values…

We’re staying here at the Northgate RV Travel Park here in Athens, AL.  The park is owned by my uncle Dr. Ed Calvin, and managed by his son, Wes.

It’s a nice little park, mainly for transients, although he does have a few long-termers.

NorthgateRV

One of the real pluses is the fact the park is in the middle of a working farm, with about 50 sheep,

NorthgateSheep

goats that are kept for their milk,

NorthgateGoat

and, of course, what’s a farm without horses and cows, too.

NorthgateHorses

About 12:15 pm we picked up my Uncle Ed and Aunt Jan at their house near the RV park and drove about 20 miles south to Decatur, AL to meet my Uncle Tom and Aunt Lenette Calvin at Big Bob Gibson’s BBQ. Their pulled pork is second to none, but their hot sauce could be a lot hotter. And the homemade coconut cream pie that Jan and I split for dessert was great!

From left to right below: my beautiful wife Jan, my uncle Dr. Ed Calvin, his wife Jan, my aunt Lenette Calvin, and my uncle Tom Calvin. My uncle Tom played pro ball for the Pittsburgh Steelers from 1952 – 1955 as a halfback and kicker. He then coached Alabama high school football for 45 years, and is acknowledged as the “Winningest Coach in Alabama High School History”

Lenette Calvin is well-known in local and national gymnastics and has worked with Béla Károlyi at his training camp in Houston, TX.  She presently owns a gymnastics training facility called Calvin Twisters in nearby Decatur, AL.

AthensFamily

We had a great time and spent about 2 hours talking about old times, family and friends.

We got home a little before 4 pm and it was time for a nap.

About 5:45 pm we headed out for supper. I wanted to check out another local BBQ chain, Lawler’s BBQ.

On our way to supper, Jan shows off her new “Nana” shirt in anticipation of Baby Landon’s approaching arrival.

NanaShirt

Lawler’s turned out to be kind of a disappointment. I had a rib and pulled pork combo plate. The thing I really didn’t like was that the ribs had been parboiled before grilling. This is done because it allows the meat to be cooked faster. You can always tell because the meat just falls off the bone and has no real texture, it’s kind of mushy. I could pick up a rib bone and shake it, and all the meat slides off. The other BBQ places I’ve had ribs recently, like Sonny’s BBQ, Famous Dave’s BBQ, Country’s BBQ,, or Jim and Nick’s BBQ all are slow-cooked from scratch on the grill, and taste much better.

Leaving Lawler’s and heading home, we stopped by Walmart for some things, and then got home a little after 7.  All in all, a very nice day.


July 17, 2011

Sunday with Landon, But No Chicken . . .

About getting up this morning about 10:15, and having our coffee and bagels, about 11:30 we Landon-Skyped with Lowell, Brandi, and of course, Landon.

And as usual, Landon was a ball of fire, never still for a minute. In fact Lowell sometimes had problems keeping him in the camera frame.

Video call snapshot 186

Video call snapshot 189

Video call snapshot 226

Video call snapshot 211

Video call snapshot 207

Video call snapshot 205

Lucky for us, we’ll be seeing them in about 3 weeks when we all meet for a family reunion at my sister-in-law Debbie’s in southern Illinois.

We can’t wait!

About 2:30 Jan and I drove over to the Midway Swap Meet that we had passed on the way into Columbia Falls. They didn’t have a lot of booths but it only cost $1 each to get in, so we weren’t disappointed. We did buy some Hot Pepper and Jalapeno Jelly, and some Huckleberry Jelly after trying some samples.

Midway Swap Meet

Coming back into town we stopped to get a closer look at a chrome buffalo we had passed before. Turns out it really is chrome. It’s made from pieces of car bumpers and other chrome parts. Some are cut to shape, and some are just pounded into place.

Chrome Buffalo

It even has a Chevy emblem on its forehead.

Chrome Buffalo Head

A really neat piece of artwork.

We decided to have a late lunch at The Nite Owl again, after supper there last night.

We both wanted some more of their delicious Broasted Chicken, but as it turns out, we were out of luck. They don’t start serving the chicken until 4 pm. Bummer!

But we did make up for it with some really good sandwiches. Jan had her favorite Rueben, and I had a delicious Club Sandwich, both with fries.

After a great meal, and leaving the restaurant, I saw this neat old Chevy parked on the side of the parking lot.

Nite Owl Car

But I really got a start when I looked in the car. For some reason, this guy rides around with a large stuffed gorilla in the backseat.

Nite Owl Car Gorilla

Maybe he uses it to drive in the HOV lanes?

Getting back to the rig, it seemed to be a good time for a nap. And it was.

Our son Chris called about 7 pm to check in and bring us up to date on things with his family.

Then about 8 pm Jan fixed us a light supper of a slice of leftover pizza, and Wheat Thins with cream cheese, and some of the Hot Pepper and Jalapeno Jelly that we bought at the Swap Meet today.

Tomorrow we’re going to make the 100 mile round trip on the “Going To The Sun” road through Glacier National Park about 16 miles away.


July 17, 2013

All Trains, All the Time . . .

First off, if you don’t like trains, this blog is probably not for you.

You’ve been warned.

About 11:30 this morning Jan and I headed about 30 miles south of here to the small town of North Freedom, WI to take a train ride and visit the Mid-Continent Railroad Museum there.

We were scheduled to take the 1pm train ride so we got there about 12:30 to have a chance to check out the trains and of course the gift shop before our ride.

The gift shop had this display of famous train ad posters. Don’t think they’d be able to do these today without a lot of screams of protest. Too bad.

Mid-Continent Railroad 1

While Jan stayed in the air-conditioned station I spent some time walking about the train yard.

First I checked out our upcoming ride. I thought the engine looked kind of familiar, and after checking it out, discovered that this was a type of engine built for switcher use on military bases, so I know I saw them when I was doing DOD contract work.

Mid-Continent Railroad 2

This one was built in 1954, and rebuilt in 1986 with a new Cat engine.

Mid-Continent Railroad 3

They even have a number of unusual train buildings, including this early 1900’s crossing tower, used to control several crossing gates in an area.

Mid-Continent Railroad 4

This unique snowplow dates from 1912 and was in use as late as 1986. Although it required a locomotive to propel it, it had its own steam boiler system to power the rotary blade.

Mid-Continent Railroad 5

This is another unusual locomotive. It’s a 2-10-0 ‘Decapod’, built in 1928 by the Baldwin Locomotive Co, and was in use up until 1959. The longest and heaviest locomotive in the collection, it is scheduled for rebuilding and refurbishing to running condition.

Mid-Continent Railroad 6

Built in 1884, this Baldwin 2-6-0 locomotive was rebuilt in 1904 and remained in commercial service until 1963. Bought by the museum, it was in service here until 1991. It too is scheduled for refurbishing.

Mid-Continent Railroad 7

Another unusual loco, this Shay has an offset boiler that allows the engineer a better view of the track in front of him without hanging his head out the window in the weather. But this means the boiler is smaller and the locomotive has less range. But since this was primarily a local switcher, it wasn’t a big problem.

Mid-Continent Railroad 8

The other unusual thing about this Shay is its drive mechanism. While most steam locomotives have steam cylinders on each side and the wheels on each side are driven separately.

800px-Steam_locomotive_running_gear

But this Shay has vertical steam cylinders that drive only the wheels on one side.

Mid-Continent Railroad 9

But since these are solid-axle wheels, these worm gear drives transmit power to both sides.

Mid-Continent Railroad 10

At 1 o’clock the conductor yelled “All Aboard” and we headed out into the Wisconsin countryside on our 14 mile, 55 minute ride. Arriving at the end of the line outside the remains of La Rue, a town that used to be the home to a large mining operation, we got off the train and while we were all feeding the mosquitos, our engine was switched to a siding and moved back to the now new front of the train for our trip back to the museum.

Mid-Continent Railroad 11

Now back on the main track, our engine couples back to our caboose and we headed back to the station.

Mid-Continent Railroad 12

Getting back, I checked out the rebuilt equipment housed in a large building across the street.

This beautiful example of a Great Northern caboose was built in 1925 and was in service until 1970.

Mid-Continent Railroad 13

This is a self-propelled passenger car built to run train routes that would be uneconomical for a larger train. Nicknamed “Doodlebugs”, these combined a power unit and a passenger/baggage area into one piece of equipment, and could also pull a couple of freight cars when necessary. Built in 1925, this unit served until the 1950’s.

Mid-Continent Railroad 14

This is another version of a snowplow. Built in 1906, and being pushed by one or more locomotives, it was especially effective in removing heavy snow drifts up to 16 feet in height. This one was last used in 1959.

Mid-Continent Railroad 15

Leaving the train museum we headed back to Wisconsin Dells. Based on online reviews, we planned on having an early dinner at Colotlan Mexican Restaurant, right in the heart of downtown Dells.

A small place with only about 15 tables and some counter stools, it’s a family place with Carlos, the father, and his wife and daughter running the place. Good chips, good salsa, and delicious food really make this place a find.

Jan had her favorite Chile Rellenos, and I had Bistec y Rajas y Queso, steak chunks grilled with poblano peppers and covered in cheese. Very, very good.

Getting back home, and since we’re looking forward to the new Bruce Willis movie, RED2 coming out, we decided to watch our DVD copy of the original RED, which came out in 2010. If you haven’t seen it, check it out. It’s a great movie, really funny with a lot of action, and some really great characters.


July 17, 2014

Fixed It!

A few of our blog readers are having problems reaching the new blog. It does seem to affect mostly people who are reading the blog using readers of some sort, not directly going to the blog through their browser.

On a better note though, several blog readers say that the new blog now looks better on their iPads and other tablets, so that’s good.

One downside for me with the new blog is that I can no longer use Microsoft’s Live Writer to compose and post each day’s blog. My new blog host requires an sFTP (secure FTP) connection, and Live Writer doesn’t support that. Hopefully one of these days, Microsoft will get around to fixing that, but I’m not holding my breath.

So, in the meantime, I have to upload the blog and the photos separately. But in doing this, I was very disappointed in the quality of the photos. They looked much worse in the blog than they did on my computer.

But I finally figured out what was happening. If you use the Media Library loader within WordPress, it recompresses the already-compressed .jpg files, really messing up the photo quality. But I found an ‘Add to Server’ plugin that lets me sFTP directly to the Media Library without using the built-in loader.

Problem solved.


A little before 8pm I headed out to help our neighbors, Larry and Linda Merritt, with a water heater problem. So I grabbed my voltmeter and headed over there. Turns out they had just had a new Attwood until installed and it didn’t seem to be working on either gas or electric.

The first thing I noticed was that the water heater was hot. All the pipes, the temp/pressure relief valve, everything was hot to the touch, and hot air was coming from the exhaust vent. But no hot water was coming out of any faucet. I turned off the electric and turned the gas on, with no result. The gas part never ignited. But my thought at this point was that maybe it wasn’t starting up due to the fact that the water was already hot.

My next thought was that either the new unit wasn’t plumbed correctly, or the mixing valve on the back was misadjusted and only letting cold water through. Along the way, we noticed a valve switching between ‘Normal Operation’ and ‘Water Bypass’. It was set to ‘Normal Operation’, but so we decided to try it in ‘Bypass’ mode. And it now worked.

At first, we thought it was either labeled wrong or hooked up wrong. But when I fooled with the knob, I discovered the knob could just be pulled off and put back on pointing in any direction. Which appears to be what happened.

So that took care of the problem. And once we used some hot water and cooled down the tank, the gas part ignited with no problems.


For dinner, Jan made up a skillet of Cheesy Macaroni and Beef with Beans and Habanero Rotel. Very, very spicy and very, very good, along with garlic French bread.

Tomorrow we’re heading into the Cincinnati area to have lunch with a friend who lives in the area. Really looking forward to it.


July 17, 2015

Hot Dogs and Catfish . . .

About noon Jan and I headed out for hot dogs and shopping. We’ve both been jonsing for a good hot dog, and that usually means Sonic. We both went with our usual, Jan’s Chili Cheese Coney, and my New York Dog, with mustard, sauerkraut, and onions. Along with their fresh-squeezed limeade, it’s a really tasty meal.

Then it was on down the road to the Best Buy, where I was looking for a new 3G aircard Wi-Fi router. My Cradlepoint CTR-500 which I’ve had for about 8 years has gotten very flakey, sometimes working, but mostly not.

I can of course plug my aircard directly into my computer and it works great. But then I no longer have any Wi-Fi in the coach to connect our Galaxy Tab and Kindle Paperwhites to the Internet. That means I then have to hotspot my Galaxy S5.

The first thing I did was to check with Cradlepoint to see what they had. But as it turns out, they’re out of the small, portable Wi-Fi router business, and only sell big routers for businesses.

So next I checked with the local Verizon store and also struck out. They no longer have anything for a 3G aircard. They would however sell me a 4G MiFi. Of course, I would have to give up my 3G unlimited data aircard. Yeah, right!

Verizon referred me to Best Buy and said they would have one, but Best Buy didn’t have any idea what I was talking about. So now I’m back to square one. I found a couple on the Internet but the reviews weren’t very good, so we’ll have to see what else I can find.

Rudy Legett and his wife Carolyn showed up at the site right across from us around 4pm. After catching up for a while in their Foretravel, we all headed out for dinner at Calico County Restaurant.

With 4 stars on Yelp, and the promise of good country cooking, we thought we’d give it a try. The place turned out to be Black-Eyed Pea doppelgänger, and very good in its own right.

Jan, Carolyn, and I all had the Catfish,

Calico County Cafe

mine with the Baked Squash and Fried Corn on the Cob.

Rudy, of course, just had to be different, and went with the Smothered Steak.

Don’t know if this is a chain or not, it did have that look, but we’d certainly go back again if we come across one.

We had a great time getting to see Carolyn and Rudy again and hopefully we’ll be able to do it again soon.

Rudy and Carolyn Legett

Tomorrow we’ve got a 280 mile trip over to West Memphis, AR and the Tom Sawyer RV Park right on the Mississippi River. We’ll stay there for a couple of nights before moving on to the Cherokee Landing Thousand Trails for a couple of weeks.


July 17, 2016

Murdoch . . .

Today is the halfway point of our one-month stay here at Colorado River, so I wanted to check our electric usage so far. So right after I got up, I went outside and took another photo of the the meter like I did two weeks ago when we changed over to this plan.

Turns out that so far we’ve used 980 KWh. And at 12 cents a kWh, that comes to $109 for the two weeks, so about $220 or so for the month. About what I’d figured. So hopefully no surprises when we leave here on the 31st.

Apparently Miss Karma not only recognizes the whipped cream can, but she now knows the words “whipped cream’. Today when I asked Jan about the dessert, Karma was asleep up in the front window, behind the TV. But as soon as I said the words ‘whipped cream’, I heard a thump behind me as she hit the floor and came running, meowing along the way.

Note that I had not opened the fridge, or shown her the can, or anything else that normally attracts her attention.

We just hope she doesn’t learn the word “declawing” which is in her future. Otherwise, we could be in trouble.

Jan and I have gotten hooked on the new (to us, at least) series Murdoch Mysteries. Now in its tenth season, it’s a Canadian Broadcasting series, it’s set in 1890’s Toronto.

The series follows William Murdoch, a police detective, and Dr. Julia Ogden, one of the first female medical examiners as they solve puzzling crimes. One of the neat things is that with the show taking place at the beginning of the scientific age of police investigations, you find the foreshadowing of many of today’s technical marvels, like microwave ovens, night vision goggles, and Area 51.

A really good series, it’s syndicated and usually shown in a late night spot. In Houston it’s on a CBS affiliate, while in New York it’s on ABC. Check it out.

While we’re hunkered down trying to avoid the heat, Landon and his cross-the-street’ friend, really enjoyed Landon’s backyard water slide.

Landon And Friend on Water Slide 1

Landon And Friend on Water Slide 2

That might even get me out in this heat.


July 17, 2017

Playing Tag . . .

At 89° it was a little cooler today, with the promised rain finally showing up in the late afternoon. But it didn’t last very long, only about 45 minutes or so.

Once again we didn’t leave the rig, though I did go outside to close our gray tank so I’ll have enough gray water to flush the hose after I dump our black tank in the next few days.

I mentioned in yesterday’s blog that access to the Trinity Site was allowed twice a year, in the spring and in the fall. Specifically, it’s the 1st Saturday in April and the 1st Saturday in October.

So if you want to make it this year, it’s on October 7th, 2017.

Here’s a good link for directions and more information.

Trinity Atomic Web Site

Some of you may have noticed that some of Landon’s hockey photos were a little blurry. That’s because I was shooting through this.

Hockey Rink Glass

That’s an awful lot of impacts. Ouch!

At the very end of hockey practice, they all play Free Tag.

Landon Hockey - Tag You're It

First, all the kids line up opposite the 6 coaches. Then at the whistle, the kids scatter with the coaches chasing them. When a kid is tagged, he is out until, or if, another kid tags him. When all the kids are tagged, the coaches win.

Then after about 5 minutes, they switched and the kids chased the coaches. And the kids actually have somewhat of a strategy.  When they tag a coach, one kid stays by the coach to keep him from being tagged free,

Hockey Kid blocking tag

When I see Landon next time I’m going to suggest that rather than everyone chase the coaches willy-nilly all over the rink, that they should all swarm one coach, surround him and then tag him, again leaving a guard. And then pick another coach and go after him. I think they might win that way.


July 17, 2018

You Can Never Have Too Much Bacon . . .

Again, a day without a lot going on.

We had a great lunch at our favorite King Food, and our favorite Garlic Chicken with Jalapenos. One thing nice was that when we walked in the door, the owner saw us and, knowing we always order the Jalapeno dish and knowing he was out, told us he’d be right back and rushed out to buy some.

King Food Chicken Dish

Then it was a stop at Lowe’s and Home Depot, still looking at stuff for the house. Then after stopping off at the house and taking some more measurements, we headed back by Sam’s and WalMart before heading home for the night.

I did get the washer repaired and reinstalled tonight, and it’s running a test load right now. So we’ll see.

Yesterday I was reading an article about “Degrees of Separation” and the math used to calculate the possibilities, and it made me remember a blog I did about 18 months ago, so here we go again.


So what is your Bacon number?

A couple of days ago I was reading an article about the “Six Degrees of Separation” concept. First put forward in the late 1920’s, it says that any two people on earth can be connected by only five other people in between.

And computer simulations done in the 1970’s seem to show that you only need three degrees of separation to connect any two people in the US.

Just to clarify, a ‘degree of separation’ is one person to another. So if I know one person, that’s one degree. And if they know another person, I’m two degrees from that second person. And so on.

There’s even been a couple of games invented that use this idea, the most famous being “Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon”. Which is where your Bacon Number comes from.

The idea is to connect the actor Kevin Bacon to any other actor in as few degrees as possible, but only by using movies they were in.

For example, Kevin Bacon to Elvis Presley. This is an easy one.

Elvis Presley was in Change of Habit with Edward Asner.

Edward Asner was in JFK with Kevin Bacon.

So with Kevin Bacon always having a Bacon Number of 0, that means that Edward Asner has a BN of 1 and Elvis has a BN of 2.

And strangely enough, if you want to add in plays (the movies of their day), you can give John Wilkes Booth (yes that one!) a Bacon Number of 5, or even a 4

JWB was in an 1863 production of Macbeth with Louisa Lane Drew.

Louisa Lane Drew was in an 1896 production of “The Rivals” with her grandson Lionel Barrymore.

Lionel Barrymore was in “It’s A Wonderful Life” with Jimmy Stuart.

Jimmy Stuart was in “Airport ‘77” with Jack Lemmon.

Jack Lemmon was in “JFK” with Kevin Bacon.

But someone else brought JWB’s Bacon Number down to a 4 with this shortcut.

Lionel Barrymore was in “Right Cross” with Kenneth Tobey.

Kenneth Tobey was in “Hero At Large” with Kevin Bacon.

But another game takes this to a more personal note, with someone picking a famous person from history, and then the rest try to link themselves to that person with the smallest Bacon Number, still using that concept.

For example, Jan and our son Chris, (not sure about our daughter Brandi) met Michael Jackson in Montgomery, AL when he came to the TV station where I worked in the mid 70’s. He was appearing in town and came by the station to do a promo.

So Jan has a BN of 1 to Michael Jackson, and oddly enough, a BN of 3 to Elvis Presley through Lisa Marie Presley.

For me, I was thinking more historical, and was surprised to find that I have a BN of 3 to Winston Churchill and Josef Stalin.

When I was 9 or 10 I met, shook hands with, and talked to Eleanor Roosevelt when she was on a book tour in Nashville, TN in the late 50’s. So that gives me this.

From me to Eleanor Roosevelt to FDR to Churchill and Stalin at the Yalta Conference in 1945. So a BN of 3.

Unfortunately, Eleanor did not go to Yalta, otherwise it would have been BN of 2.

But I was astounded to find that I had a BN of 2 to Adolf Hitler from two different directions.

In the mid-60’s my father was working for Boeing on the Apollo project in Huntsville, AL. Boeing had a big party for the employees and my father took me along. When I found out that Werner Von Braun was there, I went and introduced myself in the stumbling German that I was taking at the time. (Hey, at least I didn’t call him a jelly donut like JFK called Berlin)

And since von Braun knew Hitler, that gives this.

Me to Werner von Braun to Adolf Hitler. So a BN of 2.

As for the other path, I mentioned a few days ago that I worked as a Broadcast Engineer at a black radio station (oh the stories I could tell) in Birmingham, AL in the early 70’s, and so got to meet Jesse Owens, the famous Olympic athlete who embarrassed the German athletes at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.

Contrary to popular ‘knowledge’, Hitler did shake Owen’s hand, because the Olympic Committee demanded it, but Hitler did refuse to ‘congratulate’ him.

Me to Jesse Owens to Adolf Hitler. So a BN of 2 there also.

Now that you’ve heard my Bacon Number stories, let’s throw it out to our blog readers.

What’s your shortest BN to a famous person?

Or even, what famous people have you met?


July 17, 2019

Pretty Much Caught Up . . .

We’re just about caught up with the orders at work, almost finished with the website orders that came in last night and this morning. And that includes processing the credit cards as we ship.

I’ll wrap those up tomorrow morning, plus any new ones that come in overnight. Then I’ll get on the phone and call the few people with denied cards. And strangely enough, I have two cards that when I input the charge, it says the card has expired, even though one of them has a 7/20 expiration date, and the other is 10/23. So I’ll have to call on those too.

But what I’m able to do with the new orders is debatable, since I’ll be the only one at the office tomorrow and Friday. Jennifer is still out until Monday, and Dr. Heimlich will be at a conference for the next two days.

So we’ll see how that goes.

Besides a couple of External Hard Drives for work, my big contribution to Amazon’s Prime Day profits was this TACKLIFE 7-1/2 “ circular saw.

Circular Saw

A great deal at only $19.95, since the normal price is $53.

I got this comment on the blog yesterday that didn’t get posted because I have to approve every post the first time.

LindaAssScreenshot

When I asked Jan if  I could click on the photo link, she said, “Go ahead. I dare you.”.

I’m not quite sure how she meant that.


July 17, 2020

Good News And Bad News . . .

I got a call from Mike’s Auto Repair this morning telling me what they’d found with our truck.

First off, the problem I’d been having with my rear brakes wasn’t my fault. I had replaced the rear pads, rotors, and calipers last November so I was wondering if there might have been a problem with something I did. But as it turns out the problem was caused by a bad master cylinder.

And my transmission problem was caused by a leak in one of the transmission lines rubbing up against a flange by the catalytic converter.

And that’s the good news.

The bad news is that my A/C Freon leak seems to be coming from underneath the dash around the evaporator and header cores, and not under the hood. I had kind of figured this because I saw no signs of leakage on any part of that system. Normally with a fairly heavy leak like mine, you’ll see some evidence of oily residue around the leak area. But I didn’t see anything like that.

And the reason that this is bad news is that it means the dash will have to be disassembled to get to the leak. Very time-consuming and expensive. And by ‘expensive’, probably around $1000. OUCH!

Oh, well. it’s only money . . . a lot of money!  Sob!


July 17, 2021

I Know What The ‘Carrot’ Is . . .

We’ve got a busy week coming up. Tomorrow we’re meeting Brandi, Lowell, and Landon up in Katy at Astor Farm To Table on Mason Rd., near their house. We went there once before in their old location, but now they’ve moved to a bigger place right down the road. And they have a very interesting menu.

It’s a fusion of South African and Latin American food, with a twist on everything. You can check out their menu here. Astor Farm To Table Menu

Where else can you get an order of African Lamb or Goat Curry or a salad made with Buffalo Mozzarella? But you can also get things like Steak, Pork Chops, or Breakfast. So even Landon is happy.

But what I want to know is who has to milk the Buffalo to make the Mozzarella?

Then Monday Jan’s driving me into work and then heading up to the SH Tollway and Westpark area to meet a friend for lunch. On Tuesday, we’re meeting our friends Debi and Ed Hurlburt up in Conroe for lunch. After that, on Wednesday, Jan’s having lunch with an old friend from her working days. So she’ll be driving me into work that day too.

On Thursday, Jan has a doctor’s appointment. Next up, on Saturday we’re meeting Janice and Dave Evans down here in Webster for lunch.

Whew!

So next Sunday will certainly be a needed day of rest

About 3:30 we headed down to Galveston to see Yakov Smirnoff at the 1894 Grand Opera. And as we were told, everyone had to wear a mask. It was the first time I’ve worn one in months, and I had forgotten how much I hate them.

And it seems most other people didn’t want to wear them either. So much so that before the show started a ‘mean’ lady was roaming the audience making people put their masks back on, or pull them up over their noses.

But as soon as the lights went down and the show started, the masks started disappearing again.

We didn’t get home until almost 10pm, so I’ll save talking about the show and dinner afterward for tomorrow’s blog.

When I posted the stuff about the Glass Octopus the other day, I wondered about the ‘carrot’ inside the body.

Glass Octopus 1 -500

Well, now I know what it is.

It’s the octopus’s digestive gland/organ and they can move it around in their body. But apparently they normally keep it vertical to make it harder to see them from above or below, helping to hide them from predators.

So now you know.


July 17, 2022

Coolest Day In History . . .

On this date in 1902 Willis Haviland Carrier completed his design for the modern Air-Conditioner.

Willis Carrier

Here’s a short video about that.

I can’t imagine living in Houston without AC

Thank you, Mr. Carrier.


Some of our readers ask for an update and more info on my new BeHear NOW Hearing Assistants.

Here’s the layout of the headset and the controls.

Behear NOW controls

I was concerned that the headset had to be Bluetoothed to my phone to work, but it doesn’t. You just have more control over the settings.

Pro:

Among other things, Jan will never again have to remind me that my turn signal is still on when I use these. I can hear the clicking now. I’m still amazed at all the things I can hear now that I couldn’t hear before.

And I’m still amazed at how well these mask out background noise

Con:

The only thing so far is that I wish the control stalks that hang down around your neck were a little longer. For me at least, it would be easier to access the control buttons.

The retail price of these is $249.95, but until August 1st you can use the code ‘blowout80’ and save $75


July 17, 2023

Tel Burna . . .

Our niece Stahlie (actually First Cousin, Once Removed) is a world-traveling, college-trained archaeologist.

She just finished up the 2023 season of the excavation of Tel Burna, a 9th century B.C. area, that, in fact, may be the location of Libnahin, a city mentioned several times in the Bible.

She’s also recently been doing excavations down the Miami area, excavating Native American sites before any new development is allowed.

And she’s been globe-trotting for a while now.

How many people do you know who’ve been photobombed by a Communist Chinese soldier on the Great Wall of China back in 2014?

So Proud of You!

Hope to see you soon, Stahlie.