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About momdude

Space cadet | Family dude | Photographer | Music lover | Traveler | Science fiction fan | Hugo Award nominee | Writer | 5x NASA Social participant | KC Chiefs fan | LA Kings fan | Senior Director of Finance & Administration for ALS Network | Member & former staff Finance Officer at the Commemorative Air Force SoCal Wing | Hard core left-wing liberal | Looking for whatever other shenanigans I can get into

Mexico

It’s Cinco de Mayo. I understand that “holiday” is just for Americans to get drunk and eat tacos (like we really need an excuse!) and is rarely if ever celebrated in Mexico, and it’s NOT “Mexican Independence Day.”

But it did give me an idea for a place to go look back through a ton of amazing pictures.

Cabo San Lucas from just outside the harbor – our ship is on the right.

Can you see the “hidden” pelican flying by?

Cabo was fun to visit as a tourist for a day. I could see spending maybe a week there and doing nothing but sitting on my ass on a beach or by the pool. After that…

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Filed under Birds, Photography, Travel

Wildflowers Along The Trail

While yesterday’s hike was an ordeal (and I’m still practically crippled from the DOMS – Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness, but it will go away in a day or two), the spring wildflowers all along the trail were spectacular.

My phone battery died before the first of six-plus miles was done, but before that happened, I grabbed images of these to share:

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Filed under Flowers, Photography

Conejo Mountain Via Powerline Trail

We had a work event today, a fundraiser with lots of volunteers, public awareness, education, collaboration, networking, and so on. There were 25-mile and 40-mile bike routes (I haven’t been on a bike in decades), a hike, and a walk.

In retrospect, I probably thought that, in addition to helping and participating as an employee, I would participate in the Walk (1.5 miles, flat, around the park) when I in fact took off with the group doing the Hike (6 miles, 1,000+ feet elevation gain, up into the mountains).

I finished and they didn’t have to bring in a helicopter to rescue me or recover my corpse. I kicked that mountain’s ass!

I’ve reached the point in the aftermath where every muscle in my body right down to my eyebrows is cramping, twitching, and incredibly sore. That mountain kicked my ass!

Image: Strava app

It was enough of an ordeal that both my phone and my Apple Watch ran out of power. It was weird finishing the route without any way of contacting anyone if there had been an emergency, or of checking my location on the GPS or trail map, or even taking pictures. It shows to go you how dependant I am on my electronic assistants. I AM BORG, RESISTANCE IS FUTILE!

We climbed up into the hills at the far end of the park. You can see the white tents from our event way off in the distance on the left.

There were a ton of wildflowers everywhere and at the beginning we climbing up along the hills overlooking some very nice neighborhoods.

It was cool and drizzly and foggy. In the AllTrails app you can see tons of beautiful pictures of the view from up higher – we didn’t see any of that. Totally socked in, we climbed up into the low-hanging cloud deck and pretty much saw nothing but grey off the trail. Cool, damp, wet, slippery – yeah, fun times!

And look! Over on the other side of the road you can see others of our group who weren’t horribly out of shape climbing up the first really good set of switchbacks. The clouds hide the multiple peaks stretching out to the north with high-tension powerlines swinging from peak to peak to peak.

In the end, I think the peak is looking down over the 101 Freeway where it dives down from Canejo Valley and Thousand Oaks down to the coastal plain of Camarillo. I’m sure it’s a spectacular view. Maybe some day I’ll be able to go back and see.

Or not.

Image: Alltrails.com

After I go home and was describing the ordeal experience to my family, the Second Daughter (who, along with her husband, is a hiker, runner, and camper, and very active) sent this link. YEAH! That’s it. “Moderately challenging.” Not quite the words I was using, but okay. Po-TAY-toe, Po-TAH-toe.

Lessons learned?

One, make sure the electronics I’m so dependant on are charged, or carry a battery backup if I’m going into an unusual situation like this.

Two, while I’m seeing a trainer and going to the gym, training for strength is not training for endurance. Similar yes, related for sure, but not the same.

Three, while my head still thinks that I’m 29 or 39 and I can just rip off a hike like this with little or no notice, reality says I’m 69 and things really, REALLY are starting to change.

Four, I need a better source of pain killers or horse tranquilizers. (Just kidding. I think.)

 

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Filed under ALS Network, Health, Paul, Photography

Three In-Focus Squirrels

They were back. I think it’s the cookies. The plastic container with the last of the cookies is covered with tiny bite marks where something’s been trying (unsuccessfully) to get in.

And today I used the iPhone instead of the Canon so that the autofocus was in charge, not me.

Gonna be a long weekend, I think.

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Filed under Critters, Photography

Living On The Edge

As our back yard drops off down the hill to the back yard of the house below us, there are a couple of retaining walls made with railroad ties. By mid-morning these are all exposed to the sun, and they get toasty. They make an ideal place for the lizards to bask, soaking up photons with a quick escape route just over the edge and down into the cracks between the ties.

This dude was living the good life, obsessed with something down the hill. It wasn’t the one that’s missing its tail that I saw a couple days ago – it was there with this dude, about five feet to the right.

Whatever this one was looking at, it had its full attention since he was ignoring me, just four or five feet away. Now, **I** know that I’m not a threat, but generally the lizards don’t and they’re bugging out as soon as I get within about ten feet.

I finally cleared my throat and shuffled my feet a little, and got this nasty side eye look that said, “I know you’re there, don’t you see me ignoring you?!” About that time the shadow of a raven passed over and Lizard Attitude Dude was over the side and gone in a flash.

Maybe he did somehow know that I wasn’t interested in eating him whole, where that raven probably had a different opinion. Life on the edge, with the quick and the snack.

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Filed under Critters, Photography

Three Fuzzy Squirrels

We always have a squirrel around. There are lots of trees on the hill in back of our yard, a big one in our yard itself, many in the neighbors’ yards. We put out a fair amount of food every day for the birds. Trees + food = a squirrel.

Sometimes we see two squirrels. Especially in the spring, chasing each other all over… (insert that deep bass “French-sounding” “uh-Huhn-HUUUHN!” sound here that means “You know that we’re talking about sex now, right?” – is there a word for that sound/phrase/thing?)

Earlier this week there were THREE squirrels out there. It might be the cookies that we’ve been throwing out for them in addition to the bird seed.

They’re all fat and fuzzy, no doubt about it! I grabbed my camera and started shooting…

Only to find out just now that, as fuzzy as the squirrels were, my pictures were even more fuzzy. As in, “badly out of focus.”

This is not an artistic choice, but rather a reminder that, no matter how many tens or even hundreds of thousands of pictures I’ve taken with that camera over the last 20+ years, I still need to make sure I check that the autofocus is engaged if I’ve been shooting pictures of the moon the previous night and had it on manual focus.

The problem is obvious. User error.

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Filed under Critters, Photography

Happy 12th Birthday, WLTSTF!

On April 29th, 2013, this madness started.

12 years.

4,384 days.

4,481 posts.

10,681 images. (90%+ are taken by me, maybe 95%+ The rest are images from the news, from cell phone screen captures, and so on.)

79 videos.

12 audio clips.

3983+ total comments. (Please keep them coming!)

Who knows at this point how many total views, total visitors to the site, or total likes. I’m sure that the data is buried off in JetPack somewhere, but I don’t routinely go check that sort of thing, so I can’t find it right now.

A ton of  followers including the fact that we just crossed the 775 line (now at 777) on WordPress, folks who get my  blatherationinings in their email every day! My undying thanks to all of you for your support!

God alone knows how many words.

The last time I either was too busy or, more likely, simply forgot to post anything was August 14, 2024. That broke a really, really long streak of  1,586 days in a row where I posted. Since they I’ve started a new streak and I’ve now posted 258 days in a row.

In total there have only been fifteen days of those 4,384 days when I didn’t post anything at all.

I hope that at least a few of the thousands of  folks who get notified every day that I’ve posted something take a minute to look and/or read and get a moment of zen or pleasure from it. I enjoy creating it.

One of the reasons that I started this site was to keep busy, keep being creative, keep sharing, keep in contact at a low time in my life, while I was between jobs for the first time in over thiry years. That situation got resolved with two great jobs at two great non-profit organizations since then. And at this last weekend’s LA Times Festival Of Books, I got the opportunity to talk to Chuck Wendig for a moment and thank him for his weekly writing prompts back in the day on his website. That also helped me get through that time.

I’m not sure what will be there to help get through this current time, but I’m sure something will come along. Or we’ll have to create it.

I hope that in the next year there are many more occasions to share a pretty picture, a goofy story, or something clever. Maybe there will be adventures, like finding that Forever Home and moving there.

I hope that in the next year there will be many fewer occasions to descend into a venting rant about something stupid, annoying, or depressing. If we can avoid any tragedies, that would be great. If we can still have a functioning country and society in that year, that would be even better.

I already have pictures of squirrels, lizards, and the Moon lined up for later this week… OH, BOY!!!

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Filed under Paul, Writing

Universal City

As long as I was there on Saturday afternoon after getting off the subway and back to my car, and the clouds looked spectacular after the morning’s rain, why not take a couple of pictures? As one does…

Universal Theme Park is off to the left from this view, along with CityWalk. The center, white building, the Universal Sheraton, is the one I’ve rapelled down the side of a couple times back when I worked for Homes For Families and we did that as a fundraiser.

The “black tower” is legendary in Hollywood, the corporate headquarters of what is now Universal Studios and now NBC and god knows how many other corporate subentities.

It’s a nice area, if you can afford it. (I can’t.)

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Metro

When I needed to get to the USC campus south of downtown Los Angeles yesterday for the LA Times Festival of Books, I expected traffic to be nightmarish, parking to be limited and expensive, and the entire experience of getting there and then getting home by car to be an ordeal. I also knew that I could take the LA Metro system of subways and light rail to get right to the door for about $5 with many fewer hassles. It was a no brainer.

Most people, even those here in LA, even MANY of those who have lived in LA for decades, don’t know how easy or extensive Metro is. Here’s to hoping that work being done preparing for the upcoming Summer Olympics in three years (if they don’t pull them for another foreign city due to our current government) will educate folks and spread the word.

Metro here consists of subways, light rail, dedicated bus routes, and regular street buses. It’s not perfect (getting to LAX is tough, for example, but they’re working on that) and it’s usually slower than taking your own car (although there are days…) but it’s worth having a TAP card with $20 or so loaded on it in your wallet, just in case.

In theory, I could have picked up any one of about three different bus lines within a mile or so of my house. From there I would have transferred to the Orange Line dedicated bus lane which goes to the North Hollywood transit center. There I could have gotten on the Red (B) line subway, transferred to the Expo (E) line light rail, and gotten off right at the front gate to the USC campus. Depending on the timing of the transfers, it would have taken maybe 2:30. (Driving there myself with no traffic would be about 0:40 with zero traffic, and about 1:30 yesterday morning.)

Instead, I drove to the Universal Studios station (one stop down the line from North Hollywood, but there’s a big parking lot there and it’s fast & easy to get to), and got on the Red (B) line there. Total time from my door to meeting my daughter near the Tommy Trojan statue was 2:05.

Descending into the Earth from the parking lot at the Universal Studios station.

Making sure I had funds on the TAP card I carry around.

Going down to the train tracks. On the right, headed north one more stop to the North Hollywood transit center, on the left, headed south to Hollywood and then to Union Station, where in theory I could catch an Amtrak train to go as far as I wanted.

Artwork everywhere. I’ve been on the subway in London, New York, Washington, Prague, Kyoto, Seoul, and Shanghai – the LA subways are as good or better than any in terms of functionality, safety, and cleanliness.

Transferring to the Expo line at 7th/Metro Center station. From here, it’s four stops to USC. Easy peasy.

If you’re coming to visit LA and you’re going to be going all over doing sightseeing and visiting friends and folks, sure, maybe a rental car is easier, as long as you’re comfortable driving the LA freeways. (Which, while legendary for the stress levels and traffic, aren’t REALLY any worse than Chicago, New York, Boston, Dallas, or any other large American city.) But if you’re staying in LA (and not, say, down in Orange County by Disneyland, where the LA Metro system doesn’t connect well) and just want to get to a few popular places (downtown, Hollywood, Santa Monica, the beach) you might just want to check out if Metro will work for you.

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Filed under Los Angeles, Photography, Travel

2025 LA Times Festival Of Books

After a long, stressful week, what I want more than anything is to sleep in late and then do nothing except sit on my butt, with maybe a nap or two thrown in for good measure. Which is why I got up at 7:00 AM this morning, got dressed warmly (it was cold and rainy) and headed out for a day of “adventure.”

A couple of subway rides later (NO WAY I was going to try to mess with traffic and parking at a huge event in a crowded part of town when the Metro dropped me off at the front gates!) I was at the entrance to the USC campus for the first time in my 50+ years here. I’ve been across the street to the Coliseum a few times, and to the Science Museum down the street, but never actually on campus.

Nice place I guess, big bucks and an attitude to match at every turn, but at least the rain had stopped by the time our first event was over.

The occasion was the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, which I’ve wanted to attend for years. The crowds and size are a bit daunting, easily 100,000+ per day there, maybe as many as twice that or more, but the USC campus is a big place, so it never got too awful. Lots of food trucks and a ton of booths and vendors – I didn’t get any books, knick knacks, shirts, or anything else, but next time I might not be so lucky. Next time I might come with a wish list of books that I need to pick up, but then I’ll have to carry them around and lug them on the subway…

The first panel we saw was moderated by Wil Wheaton, with favorite author John Scalzi, and new-to-me author TJ Klune. Talking about how to write speculative fiction in our bizarre political and social era. Excellent discussion. Baseline assumption as stated by Scalzi, “FASCISM FUCKING SUCKS!” No argument here!

Our second panel was the main reason that I got off my ass and made it to the event this year. Writer Chuck Wendig was there, the first time I’ve ever been able to see him live.

This panel was moderated by Ivy Pochoda, with Danielle Trussoni and Nikki Erlick also participating. It was about “magical objects” being used in their speculative fiction or horror novels. Another excellent panel, and I’ll need to be picking up some of the books from Ms. Trussoni and Mrs. Erlick to see what they were talking about, their novels sound fascinating.

(Photo: Michi Willett)

So, a good day of adventuring! Off my ass, out of my comfort zone, out doing interesting and stimulating things, and meeting up with Wonderful Daughter Two for the day. And I got all of my steps in for the day, and then some. Even my watch is happy!

Tomorrow I’ll sleep in late and then do nothing except sit on my butt, with maybe a nap or two thrown in for good measure. Maybe.

 

 

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Filed under Entertainment, Family, Los Angeles, Paul, Photography, Writing