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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

Eclipse Minus Five Days

Ready or not…

Tomorrow, the road to Texas awaits. Get to the I-10 and turn left – if you hit Houston you’ve gone too far.

The good news is that the five-day forecast for clouds is improving a bit for Central Texas. It’s not good, mind you, but it’s better. I don’t necessarily need “clear and a million” (although I would of course take it) but I would certainly like something better than what I had seven years ago. Like, a lot better.

We will see. It will be what it will be.

Am I ready? Probably more ready than I was afraid I would be, but never as ready as I would like. It’s like that line about novels or other projects, they’re never “done,” they just get to the point where they’re “abandoned.”

It’s gonna be an adventure! It’s gonna be spectacular!

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Filed under Photography, Travel

Welcome April

And the sprint is on!

Okay, it started days ago, but we’re now less than seven days out from the eclipse and las than thirty-six hours from when I’m supposed to hit the road, so I guess it’s more accurate to say, “The panic is on!”

Which is not to say that a few minutes couldn’t be spared to watch tonight’s sunset launch out of Vandenberg of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.

Look closely and you can see a bright dot that’s Jupiter, just to the left of the palm tree tops. This exhaust plume was drifting in the high altitude, sunset skies as I was waiting to hear the sonic boom about nine minutes after launch, a couple minutes after the second stage had disappeared over the southern horizon. That sonic boom was very noticeable – not like it was going to shatter windows, but it was a pretty good “thump.

You might be able to hear it just a few seconds before the end of this video, just before I said, “There it is!”

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Filed under Photography, Space, Sunsets

Eclipse Minus Seven Days

Doomscrolling through the weather sites…

Too many of the predictions are pointing toward something that looks a lot like our front yard in SoCal this evening. For example,

(Plot by Tomer Burg, arctic.som.ou.edu)

This is the “GEFS Downward Shortwave Radiation” prediction. I won’t pretend to really understand what all of that means, except grey means bad and blue means good, and where I’m headed is the second darkest shade of grey. And there are dozens and dozens of different models, different agencies, different colors, different data sets – they’re all pointing the same way.

This prediction was generated ten days out from the event, so it’s going to change, possibly by a significant amount, but likely not by a ton. The details will get more refined for all of those exact locations, but in broad strokes, it’s looking a lot like there are going to be significant clouds along 90% of the eclipse path, all the way from Mexico to the Great Lakes.

We knew this was a possibility. I am very surprised to see so much of the eclipse path covered in clouds. Normally I would expect a couple of storms possible, which means maybe driving toward the Mexican border or up toward Arkansas. But needing to drive all the way to eastern Ohio???!!!

It will be what it will be. You’ll hear me saying that a lot in the next ten days. Barring some disaster I’ll be in Texas next Friday, spend the weekend there watching the forecast and going over options, then taking our best shot on Monday. I have no control over the weather.

Say goodbye to March, friends! It could have been worse, but it sure could have been better as well. Let’s hope that April finally cuts us some slack, especially with the cloud cover on the afternoon of April 8th!

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Filed under Astronomy, Photography, Weather

Red Tip Photinia

At our offices (where I actually don’t have an office because I work from home but where I go in once a week or as needed because it’s only ten minutes away and it’s a long story for another day) they have these decorative shrubs all along the back of the parking lot.

I hadn’t really paid any attention to them – to the best of my recollection they’ve always just been your generic office parking lot landscaping green hedge shrub.

But now that spring is springing and everything’s doing their new growth dance, I see that all of the new growth here is this bright red, where all of the old leaves are still dark green.

There are also these flower or see buds scattered amongst the leaves.

The app tells me this is “Red Tip Photinia.” Okay. I’m not sure I see the “red tip” part, it looks like the whole leaves are either green wth no red or red with no green. But that’s probably why I’m not a botanist!

Whatever, I can see why it’s used for decorative landscaping. It’s wonderful!

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Filed under Flowers, Photography

Ripples

The forefront of yet another weekend storm. Yet again we’re expected to get 3″ or more of rain (which is a LOT for SoCal if you’re not up in the mountains) and we’re under flash flood and high wind warnings through the weekend.

I haven’t really been keeping track, but now that I’ve noticed it, haven’t we had rain on the weekends like four or five weekends in a row, or five of the last six, or something like that? I like the rain and we need it to get rid of a several-year-long drought, but what happened to “sunny SoCal”?

That’s it! I’m leaving! I’M GOING TO GO TO TEXAS! (Well, later this week at least. I need to check into my hotel for the eclipse on Friday.)

 

 

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Filed under Photography, Weather

Random Old Photos – March 28th

Time to call an audible and scramble – I had something I was going to post and as I was cleaning up the photos my brain suddenly said, “Nope! Bad idea!” Now, mind you, my stupid brain didn’t bother to say WHY it was hollering “Hold! Hold! Hold!” like a panicked launch director with a fire breaking out on the launch pad, but there was no denying the fairly intense sensation. The subject matter wasn’t particularly different from stuff I’ve posted here dozens of times.

Very odd. Again.

So, let’s pull something else out of the hat quickly.

It’s Opening Day for MLB! YES! Time for celebration! Unless, of course, you’re an Angels fan.

Hope springs eternal on Opening Day. Anything’s possible.

I wish I believed that any more in regards to my favorite baseball team.

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Filed under LA Angels, Photography

Make Yourself At Home! Have A Rat!

The juvenile red-shouldered hawk that I saw up close and personal three weeks ago has apparently made itself at home in the small grove of a half dozen pine trees that cover the hill below our yard.

Usually it’s either flying around or it goes up into the canopy higher up in these trees, but sometimes it will come down into the open on the lower branches. Whether sitting or flying, it’s become quite vocal and loud, leaving no doubt of its species.

While it was sitting up there a trio of ducks flew by. I could hear them quite a ways off – and so could the hawk. I saw them coming up from the canyon off on the left and doing a big “bananna pass” (an airshow term, but it applies here) right over our heads. I noticed that the hawk was watching them intently…like, you know…a hawk! I could see the little thought bubble over its head. “I’m small now, but give me a year or so! Thems are good eatin’!”

In the meantime, if it wants to keep well fed and grow up big and strong, this is a good area. (No doubt the reason we have other red-shouldered hawks, Coopers hawks, night hawks, and red-tailed hawks in abundance.) There are plenty of squirrels, rabbits, skunks, raccoons, and other small critters to feast on, not to mention the mourning doves and twenty or thirty other types of birds. And lizards.

I don’t mind most of those critters, but we get the odd rat in the yard from the ivy that the neighbors love to have growing all over their fences. If our hawk pal wants to feast on rats, he’ll have my undying support.

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Filed under Birds, Critters, Photography

Eclipse Minus Twelve Days

Celestial mechanics. It truly is like clockwork.

Take a moon a quarter the size of it’s primary planet, put it out a quarter million miles, let angular momentum and four and a half billion years roll by, and it ends up right there tonight, headed for right THERE in twelve days and thirteen hours. Mix in an atmosphere, some haze and fog, diffraction, refraction, Reyleigh scattering, and you end up with a weird looking arc of bright orange peeking over the horizon.

Whip out that cell phone, hold really, REALLY still, and maybe you see this.

Wonders abound, all around us.

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Filed under Astronomy, Photography, Space

Sixty-Eight & Six

I have rarely gotten too agitated about birthdays, but there was definitely something going on with this one. For the last month I’ve just had this growing “itch” at the back of my brain whenever I thought about last week’s birthday coming up, but for the life of me I couldn’t figure it out. Until last weekend, just before my birthday.

In short, last Tuesday I turned sixty-eight years old. Today it’s six days after that birthday. But last weekend, I realized that my father had died of a massive heart attack five days after his sixty-eighth birthday.


I’ve always thought that the human brain and consciousness is pretty amazing and there are depths there that we haven’t begun to plumb. But having my subconscious brain apparently be aware of that connection (which is what I firmly believe was going on) while my conscious brain was clueless is just bizarre. And how my subconscious finally got the message across to my conscious side is even more bizarre.

Let me state for the record that I’m not a believer at all in ghosts, the afterlife, spectral messengers, and the like. The Long-Suffering Wife is a believer and she has her own opinion on what happened. We’re going to have to agree to disagree on that. But still…

Two days before my birthday, I woke up in the middle of the night with an extremely vivid dream. In the dream I was doing my upcoming drive to Texas for the eclipse and I had stopped after dark in a remote, almost empty diner. The only other patron in the diner was a sad, lonely woman who wanted to talk to me while I ate, then wanted to come with me to see the eclipse. Her name was Connie Navarro.

Her name was important in the context of the dream, important enough so that I wrote it down when I woke up from the dream, then went and Googled it when I got up. I did not recognize the name at all, don’t know anyone by that name, and to the best of my knowledge I have never heard it before.

Surprise! “Connie Navarro” brings up a LOT of hits online, almost all about one woman. She and a friend, Susan Jory, were both murdered in 1983 in Bel Air by a jealous boyfriend when she broke up with him. He was convicted and given the death sentence, later commuted to life without possibility of parole. Connie’s notable also because of her son, Dave Navarro, who was a guitarist with Jane’s Addiction and the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

One of the websites I found near the top of the search results was highlighted. You know how the link is purple instead of blue when you’ve been to that site before? The website was for the FindAGrave.com and it had a memorial page for Connie Navarro. I went to it and then I was curious where I had ever gone to this site before. I didn’t remember that. But there was a “login” button and it found an account for my email address. When I connected, it took me to information about my father’s gravesite in Orange County. Which had his birthdate and date of death. And his age at death – 68.

Um… yeah.

That will leave you sitting there thinking for a few. On the one hand, it’s good to finally understand what’s been tickling your subconscious. And the sense of relief that swept over me left little doubt that I had indeed found the answer to the puzzle that I didn’t even know I was solving. On the other hand…

Twilight Zone | Twilight zone, Twilight, Twilight zone episodes

You can’t make this shit up. Okay, yeah, you can, but I didn’t.

So.

Today it’s the sixth day after my 68th birthday. I’ve officially lived longer than my father did. And I’ve had either an extremely fascinating experience or an extremely spooky one. Probably both.

One thing I remember my dad always mentioning, usually with a bit of humor mixed in, was to be cautious and pay attention whenever I feel “an impending sense of doom.” (You need to hear that phrase in the kidding-around-with-a-five-year-old-son “dad voice,” which I’m sure most of you did already.) I learned what he meant and I’ve often had experiences where something’s “off” that I can’t quite put my finger on. Usually that’s something relatively minor, like messing up a report or attaching the wrong file to an email. I’ve gotten good at hitting the brakes, listening to my subconscious, and doing a last double check to catch those kinds of errors. It has paid off.

This was bigger. More doom. Better quality doom. Nothing but the finest doom for my sixty-eighth birthday!

I’m listening. I just wish my subconscious would take a more simple, more direct route to tell me what’s up.

On the other hand, did I mention that for my birthday I found a truly excellent stick? I didn’t see that coming either.

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Filed under Curiosities, Deep Thoughts, Family, Paul, Photography

A Storm In Five Pictures

When I went out to get the Sunday morning groceries and pick up breakfast it was clear as a bell. I didn’t even take a picture (imagine that!) because it was just…blue. Lots and lots of blue.

15:54 – I was squirreled away in my office for several hours after that until all of a sudden the cable signal on all channel got interrupted with one of those emergency weather alerts for a dangerous thunderstorm with potential hail, wind, lightning, and local flooding. It was off in the San Gabriel Valley, sixty miles to our east, but a quick check of the radar showed that the one sparking the alert was just the worst of four or five thunderstorm cells drifting about, and one of them was close to us.

16:59 – One of the cells was very close to Dodger Stadium and Downtown LA, with the Angels playing the Dodgers in the first of the Freeway Series spring training games. Here I could hear occasional thunder and there were a couple of quick, moderate showers, but no real rain – yet.

17:37 – Now it’s raining, and raining pretty good. More thunder, but out in the front yard, looking west, there’s the sun shining through the broken edge of the the thunderstorm cell. It’s quite the spectacle with the heavy rain being backlit by the bright Sun. I ran out to the back yard to see if we might get a spectacular rainbow, but we struck out on that. A couple of miles away there were reports of medium-sized hail and heavier showers, but we just got grazed by the edge of the cell.

19:11 – We get more alerts about “our” thunderstorm cell being a danger to mariners out over Santa Monica Bay to our south where it’s drifted, but off to the north we’ve just got a lot of broken clouds and a highly unstable atmosphere. This however is great for getting a spectacular sunset. With more rain directly west of us, the normal view we have of the pink and golden clouds behind the grove of silhouetted palm trees is grey and gloomy and dark, but looking to the side from the back yard it’s bright and colorful.

19:14 – Behind us to the east, peeking in and out of all of the broken clouds and scattered thunderstorm cells, the 99.9% full moon is rising. Fourteen days to the eclipse. Ready or not…

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Filed under Photography, Sunsets, Weather