Category Archives: CAF

NASA Social Group Pictures

Orion launched, it was spectacular, I’m so short on sleep it’s really not funny any more, and our CAF Wing Christmas party is tonight.

So let me be brief…

Here are the group photos we shot at the two NASA Socials I’ve been privileged to attend in the last month:

2014-11-17 Armstrong 'FlyNasa' NASA Social

Photo credit: NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center

2014-12-04 JPL-Armstrong 'Orion' NASA Social

Photo credit: NASA / Jet Propulsion Laboratory

(I’m a little harder to see in this one, but I’m there.)

I haven’t forgotten that I’ve still got a whole stack of pictures to get through from the “good” cameras. Patience, grasshopper, patience.

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NaNoWriMo 2014, Day Twenty-Two

It’s now officially a rout. If this were a football game, it would be Reality 143, NaNoWriMo 17 going into the fourth quarter with no time outs left.

While I feel bad about this, it’s comforting to know that it’s happening in large part due to a bunch of really good things taking priority. Today I was at the CAF hanger all day (monthly staff meeting) and tonight we’re going to see Amanda Palmer in concert.

While I normally put in a lot of  internal links to previous, related posts here, I won’t be doing that for what I hope will be this year’s thirty NaNoWriMo posts. If you have jumped into or stumbled onto this story in mid-adventure, there are plenty of other ways to navigate around the site to find previous installments. Actually doing so is left as an exercise to the student.

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CHAPTER EIGHT

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Filed under Art, CAF, Music, Science Fiction, Writing

Proof Of Tugginess

First of all, is “tugginess” even close to being a word? (As The Long-Suffering Wife would say, “Yeah, THAT’S what’s wrong with all of this!”)

I mentioned the other day that I had been taking a break from my normal gig at the SoCal CAF hangers to learn how to drive a tug or forklift so that I could help out on a few more tasks when needed. I didn’t have a picture of me getting driving lessons on the tug from my young (17 years old? 18?) instructor, Nicole, one of our outstanding Cadets. But there were plenty of other people who had cameras and thought it was hilarious to see her teaching me (note, it didn’t bother me in the slightest, and Nicole was a great teacher) and now I’ve snagged one.

Thanks to Dan Newcomb, here’s a picture of me driving the “lowboy” backwards through the obstacle course.

Paul Learning To Drive Lowboy Tug

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Tugs & Forklifts

Today, thanks to some of the other SoCal CAF members who are more involved with the mechanical and greasy side of the operation, I got to get some first-step cross-training on some of the heavier equipment that’s used around the hangers.

My gig is “finance officer,” which means that I keep track of the money. It’s what I’ve done as a paying job for decades, and it makes sense for us to do what we do best in order to help out the most. On the other hand, accounting, finance, and computer tech support are just…well, accounting, finance, and computer tech support. They’re not always (and by “not always” I mean “NEVER”) a lot of fun, they’re just necessary and I do them reasonably well.

But, having gotten my pilot’s license, I know my way around a plane, at least a bit, and would like to do more “hands on” activities. It’s the old “one man’s work is another man’s play” thing, or something like that. Anyway, I’ve let it be known that, time & schedule permitting, I would be open to learning a bit about getting things done outside of the office.

Today some of the guys who run the hanger and maintenance side of things were giving lessons to some of the new cadets on driving the forklift, the tugs, and using the tugs with a tow bar. I was asked if I wanted to participate, and despite being up to my ass in alligators right now with some other things there, I said, “Sure!”

I’ve driven some heavy equipment in the past – my dad grew up on a farm with tractors and such, and when I was a teenager we had a small bulldozer for a couple of years that we used to put in a road on some land we owned in Vermont. I can drive a stick shift (not actually needed for today, surprisingly) and I’ve got something like 1,000,000 miles behind the wheel (literally) in over forty-four years of driving. I was being taught with a couple of cadets who didn’t have their driver’s license yet.

Forklifts are cool and at least today seemed pretty straightforward. Tilt, lift, back, forward, steers from the back, keep an eye on your CG so you don’t flip over, always watch out for things around you… One of the guys who’s been doing this for decades gave a demonstration where he was lifting and turning and tilting and backing and driving and lowering like it was a symphony, doing in about 30 seconds what it had taken me closer to five minutes to do – but that’s just practice, practice, practice. I went through the obstacle course three or four times both forward and backwards and never touched a cone, so that one I felt good about.

On the tugs, we have several of different sizes, some really big, some mid-sized. I drove two of them today being taught by one of our cadets, a smart-as-a-whip, 17 or 18 year old young lady who can drive tugs with the best of them. Driving the tugs alone was pretty straightforward, just a need to get used to how they steer differently and need significantly different amounts of force on the brake and gas pedals.

Then we hooked up a tow bar.

It’s a lot like towing a trailer, except you’re usually not towing, you’re pushing. Which is like towing a trailer backwards while looking in a mirror, or something. Your instincts are all wrong, your turning radius (at least, my turning radius) has gone from about five feet to about thirty feet (Nicole was doing it in about ten) and it’s surprisingly easy to jackknife the tow bar.

The guys who have been doing this forever were having a good time watching me weave all over the place (I still never hit a cone!), going from here to there via there, there, there, there, and there. Pictures were taken, videos will no doubt be popping up on our website soon (I’ll post links if/when that happens), and a good time was had by all. (I believe that some of the cadets were having a good time at my expense because I was being taught by a girl, and a girl a third my age to boot. Let ’em laugh, I got over that particular insecurity in the Nixon administration.)

So there may be more practice necessary before I’m ready to actually hook a planes to the other end of the tow bar. But it will happen, and one of these days when we’ve got five tugs and only two drivers and we’ve got to shuffle planes all over the ramp, I’ll be able to jump in and help.

It will be fun! Until I get asked to come in at 0500 to pull planes out and get them ready to launch or stay until 2350 to put planes away. But on those days I think I might have some bank reconciliation reports to do or some gift shop inventory figures to process…

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Partial Solar Eclipse Of October 23rd

(Note, I know today’s normally “Flash Fiction Thursday.” If I can get something written quickly tomorrow, I’ll try to get it posted by the 1200EDT/0900PDT “deadline.” If not, I’ll post it tomorrow after the “deadline,” because the Flash Fiction structure is sort of like Drew Carey’s “Whose Line Is It Anyway,” where “everything’s made up and the points don’t matter.”)

As predicted, celestial mechanics carried our planet, our moon, and our primary star into alignment today. As advertised, I was there with a camera rig cobbled together with duct tape and baling wire. If it was good enough for the moon fifteen days ago, it’s good enough for the sun.

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14:10 PDT, two minutes before the start of the eclipse. As you can see, my fooling around with the $2 solar film card duct taped in front of the lens didn’t improve the resolution a ton, but maybe a bit from yesterday. The huge sunspot is clearly visible even with this simple rig.

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14:12 PDT, first contact.

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14:28 PDT. I was at the CAF hanger trying to get some work finished up, and running out to the car every fifteen minutes or so to pull the tripod and camera out of the car, line it up, take a quick set of pictures, put it all away, and then running back in to get some more work done. In other words, a normal day.

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14:40 PDT. Even shooting thorough a sheet of silvered mylar, most of these pictures are taken at 1/2000 second. The sun is really freakin’ bright! (Thank you, Captain Obvious!)

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15:00 PDT, as I was packing up to leave the CAF and head to another meeting.

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15:26 PDT, maximum coverage as seen here in Southern California. I was only halfway to that next meeting, but pulled off the freeway, found the first parking lot I could, and set up again with about a minute to spare before shooting this.

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15:33 PDT, still in some random parking lot off of the 101 Freeway. Time to get moving again, they’re starting to look at me funny from the windows of the office building where I pulled in. In other words, a normal day.

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15:58, in the parking lot outside of where my meeting is.

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16:04 PDT, what I figured would be my last pictures of the day due to that 16:00 meeting.

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16:15 PDT, people at my meeting wanted to see too, so it’s quickly back to out to the parking lot, set up the rig, let others take a look, shoot off a last set of pictures, tear down and stow the rig in the car, and back to the meeting.

The eclipse would last for another twenty-four minutes from this point, but that was it for me. I hope you got to see it (SAFELY!) wherever you were at, or at least got a chance to watch the feed from Griffith Observatory that NASA-TV was showing.

If you got pictures, feel free to share them in the comments!

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Filed under Astronomy, CAF, Photography, Space

Pictures Not Taken At An Airshow

“Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana.” Attributed often to Groucho Marx, but actually comes from an early AI computer experiment in the 1960’s. As with so many things, the urban myth is so much better than the truth.

Regardless, today time has flown like an arrow. I got wrapped up in surfing job postings and submitting online applications, and all of a sudden noticed that it’s way past my bedtime — with no pearls of wisdom flung out yet today into the blogosphere. (Yeah, it’s a stupid term, but it’s mostly harmless. Given some of the incredibly stupid things going on that are actually killing folks, I can give a pass to ‘blogosphere.’ Sorry, really tired, rambling aimlessly. Will stop now. Really. Now.)

So here are a couple of pictures that I found that look like they’re from an air show, but they’re not. As much as I love going to air shows, these were actually taken in our back yard. A P-51 flew over our house unexpectedly one afternoon many moons ago while I was out taking pictures of the dogs. I don’t recognize the plane (it’s certainly not ours, as in, the one the SoCal CAF flies) but there aren’t a lot of them around to begin with, so it shouldn’t be hard to track down if I really wanted to.

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So, How Was The Airshow Last Weekend?

As I mentioned about eight days ago, the Camarillo Airport, Southern California CAF, the local EAA chapter, and a bunch of other folks put on the annual “Wings Over Camarillo” airshow last weekend. It was my first experience working to help put on the airshow after many, many, MANY happy days as a spectator at one.

It was fantastic!

I took my video camera on Sunday (we’ll see what I can pull together from that, haven’t played much with video editing but this sounds like a really good excuse to do so, am I right or am I right?) but on Saturday had the DSLRs. I missed a few planes while they were in the air (such as the famous Flying Wing owned by the Planes of Fame, seen in our hanger here), but got to see most of it while running around taking care of my CAF thing.

Note: I did not get pictures of every plane flying and for the sake of making this post slightly less unwieldy and lengthy, I haven’t posted pictures of every plane I did catch in the air. Rest assured, there were plenty more. My apologies to those who aren’t show here.

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A tiny two-seater.

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Ultralights

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To start the show, parachutists brought in a giant US flag, with three of them in wingsuits.

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Judy Phelps, out of Santa Paula, performed a wonderful aerobatic routine in her Pitts.

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One of the local bizjets showed off with a low pass or two.

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The Wolf-190 (I think, about 99% sure).

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Dr. D (Dr. Frank Donnelly) does old fashioned, slow & simple aerobatics in his 1946 Taylorcraft. It’s really hard to “show” aerobatics in a still shot, but this wasn’t too bad.

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Three PT-22s, the older brother of the PT-19 flown by the Southern California Wing of the CAF. I don’t know who owns #596 and #146, but #269 is another CAF aircraft, from the 3rd Pursuit Squadron.

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The Antonov An-2 “Big Panda” is flown by the CAF’s 3rd Pursuit Squadron out of Cable Airport in Upland, CA. It’s a Russian cargo plane of a similar era and design specification to the US’s DC-3. Low, slow, built like a tank, can carry a ton, and can (literally) land and take off from a football field.

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Clay Lacy’s Pilatus PC-6 is another great “bush” STOL plane. (Short Take Off & Landing)

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Flying in formation we have the B-25J “Executive Sweet” (based at Camarillo) along with five CJ-7s.

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P-47 Thunderbolt

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British Spitfire, the plane that won the Battle of Britain. (This one is a SoCal CAF aircraft, one of only a handful still flying.)

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A P-39 Airacobra, “Pretty Polly.”

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The B-25J “Executive Sweet” up close on a low, high-speed pass.

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The CJ-7s pass in review.

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A Grumman Albatross, originally designed for air-sea rescue missions.

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A group of Navions doing their right break.

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Two of the Condor Squadron’s AT-6s, based out of Van Nuys. These two are painted with German markings.

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C-53 Skytrooper, another CAF aircraft, this one operated by the Inland Empire Wing out of Riverside, CA. Note the guy in the door near the rear – he had just dropped a test marker to see where the wind would blow his paratroopers when they jumped out on the next pass.

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Another Condor Squadron AT-6, this time painted in US markings.

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And yet another.

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The D-Day re-enactment was done with the old style round parachutes, the kind that were used in World War II.

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Not nearly as maneuverable as the newer wing-shaped parachutes. (See the one used to bring in the US Flag, above.)

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Vicki Benzing does amazing things with her high-performance aerobatic aircraft. Again, tough to show in a still picture, but follow the smoke. She was spinning up to there, then did a sharp bank up towards there, where she did a hammerhead or some kind of stall or loop way up there, then came spiraling down that way, headed straight toward the ground. Yeah, things that shouldn’t be possible with an airplane, but she does them anyway.

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To finish the show, a group of naval fighters from the Pacific theater in World War II took to the air. This is the SoCal CAF’s F6-F Hellcat.

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This is a SBD Dauntless dive bomber.

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One of the very, very few Japanese Zeros being flown still — again, a SoCal CAF aircraft.

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The SoCal CAF’s F8-F Bearcat.

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The SoCal CAF’s P-51D Mustang, “Man O’ War.” I can assure you, based on personal experience, this is one hell of a ride!

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A Curtiss P-40 Warhawk, with the obligatory shark mouth paint scheme.

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Our Bearcat and Hellcat passing by in formation.

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Our P-51D comes in for a landing at the end of a very long, and very enjoyable, day.

I’ve heard rumors that some people can go to an airshow and not have a good time and come home with a huge grin on their (sunburned) face. I’m afraid that’s a concept that’s just alien to me.

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Panorama: Camarillo Airport, California

Today was yet another wonderful day at the annual Wings Over Camarillo airshow. Perfect weather, “clear and a million,” low 70’s, a little breeze — you couldn’t possibly ask for anything better.

As was the case yesterday, ’twas busy, busy, busy. My feet and knees are sore, my neck, face, and arms are a bit pink, and I’m probably a bit dehydrated (never a good thing when one has a history of kidney stones), but the show went off really well, as did our part in it. It’s with a great deal of satisfaction in both my organization and in my own efforts that I’ll sleep well, preferably for about eighteen hours, but more likely for six or seven. (Sometimes being a grown-up sucks.)

This panoramic picture was taken from atop a set of rolling stairs on the CAF site, about twenty minutes before the gates opened up to the public yesterday. (Click to enlarge.) Seeing as how I had a nice, high spot to shoot from, it’s a 360° panorama, starting and ending with the control tower.

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This picture combines seventy-two images of 2304 x 3456 pixels (7.9 megapixels) taken with a Canon Rebel XT DSLR into an image of 76534 x 3448 pixels (263 megapixels). Because JPEG images cannot be any wider than 65,550 pixels, the final JPEG image was reduced down to 65500 x 2950 pixels (193 megapixels).

With great detail comes a need for great computing power — this panorama took fifty minutes to process and create.

A few comments about the image, if I may, moving from left to right:

  • Something funky happened just to the right of the luxury camper van and to the left of the green forklift — the BBQ is seen twice, as are the houses on the hills in the distance.
  • The first plane you see close-up is our beautiful PBJ, a B-25 variant flown by the Marines in World War II. Ours is about 75% restored and we hope to have it flying by Spring 2015.
  • The very large yellow plane to the right of the PBJ is “Big Panda”, a Russian Anatov-2 operated by the CAF Wing in Riverside, California. In the foreground in front of it you can see our P-51.
  • The area around “China Doll”, our huge C-46 transport plane, and the blue SNJ-4 trainer is also a bit munged up by the software. It may have something to do with the big metal stanchion in the immediate foreground — the software may have forced a match of two images on that, while mis-aligning the background with the two planes. This could probably be overridden manually in the software, but 22:20 already, plus two long days, plus fifty minutes more to re-process… You do the math.
  • The big, dark blue plane in front of our left (east) hanger is our Hellcat.
  • In between the hangers and in front of the right (west) hanger you can see the effect of people moving in the half-second or so between shots. They turn into “ghosts.”
  • In our right (west) hanger is the prototype Flying Wing from the Chino Planes of Fame. It’s the only one flying in the world. (I believe the Smithsonian also has one, I could be wrong, but theirs doesn’t fly.)
  • Just visible in the right (west) hanger is our Bearcat.

Questions? Comments? Were you there?

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Filed under Airshows, CAF, Flying, Panorama, Photography

Wings Over Camarillo Preview

If any of you are in the Los Angeles or Ventura County areas this weekend, I would note for your attention that the annual Wings Over Camarillo airshow will be held tomorrow and Sunday. Gates open at 9:00 with plenty of static displays of big planes, little planes, helicopters, ultralights, private planes, private jets, warbirds —  including those at the SoCal Commemorative Air Force museum where I’ll be working all weekend.

Yesterday we were staging planes all over the place.

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Our P-51, with our PT-19 trainer behind it.

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Our Hellcat.

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One of our SNJ trainers, with our C-46 transport “China Doll” behind it.

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Our PBJ (Marine Corps variant of the B-25) which should be flying for next year’s airshow. It’s been in the process of being restored from the ground up for a couple of years now, but is getting close to being ready to fly again.

Flying will run from noon through 4:30 each afternoon, and you’ll see several of our CAF planes being flown by my friends there. The weather’s looking great (77° on Saturday, 76° on Sunday, partly cloudy) so don’t forget your sunscreen. There will be plenty of places to get food and drink, including of course the Beer Garden (also serving margaritas) at the CAF hanger. (It’s a big annual fundraiser for us, as the finance officer, I would love to see you stop by for an adult beverage.) There will be plenty of souvenirs and other items to buy, including of course all of the T-shirts, hats, pins, toys, coffee mugs, decals, bumper stickers, key chains, and so on at the CAF PX. (Get a hat and a T-shirt to wear with style while drinking your adult beverage.) Rumor has it (it’s twue! it’s twue!) that at the CAF hanger you can also purchase rides in a PT-19 trainer, SNJ trainer, or even that P-51! (You can also purchase on online any time. Just sayin’.)

You get the picture. Even if you’re not in the area and can’t get to our airshow this weekend, there’s bound to be one near you this weekend or soon. Go, they’re a ton of fun.

If you get out to Camarillo, stop by and I hope I get to see you.

[Side note — no, your monitor isn’t fading, those pictures are overexposed just a tad. This is because some knucklehead forgot to check the settings on the camera and left it as it had been in manual mode while shooting pictures of the “supermoon” eleven days earlier. Stupid human. On the other hand, I found the effect sort of dreamy and mysterious as opposed to a major screwup. Lemons, meet lemonade!]

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Nantucket Sleigh Ride (Episode 1 Of N)

A “Nantucket sleigh ride” was a 19th Century whaling term referring to the ride that sailors would be taken on just after a whale was harpooned. The injured whale, attempting to swim away, would drag the small whaling boat at high speed (up to 35 mph, which in the 1800’s was really flying) for miles and miles.

More recently the term has become slang for a period of time in which things have seemingly switched into a higher gear as events, deadlines, and daily milestones seem to flying past at an accelerated rate. (It’s also the name of a 1971 album by Mountain that I remember fondly, but I digress.)

The last couple of weeks have been a bit of a Nantucket sleigh ride for me, and I’m referring to this as “Episode 1 of N” because I’m thinking (and hoping) that it may be first of many to come.

Part of it is the fact that the Younger Daughter is here for about ten days, her first visit home from Asia in two years. Part of it is that activities at the CAF have been busy. Not bad, just busy. Part of it is a series of household plumbing issues and some car issues that have been (almost) all conquered, even though at least one of the high-adrenaline problems was solved when I stopped being a freakin’ idiot. (I hate freakin’ idiots — I really, REALLY hate it when I’m the freakin’ idiot!) Part of it is a couple of employment opportunities that have finally started to potentially be real and exciting, really good employment opportunities.

We’ll see. I understand that getting my hopes up about job interviews can lead to a crash when they don’t pan out (been there, done there, got the T-shirts) but I still get excited when something exceptionally good pops up. Getting through the process, I just got to keep “The Astronaut’s Prayer” in mind.

With some patience (I’ve gone through several 50-gallon drums of it), faith (I’m trying, I’m really, really trying), and maybe just a touch of luck (I’ll take whatever I can get) we may get to exchange this “long national nightmare” or something much more exciting and enjoyable, if not necessarily less stressful and exhausting.

Yes, I’m being a bit vague. Those of you who know me personally know what I’m talking about. The rest of you, I promise that I’ll keep you updated.

 

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Filed under CAF, Family, Freakin' Idiots!, Job Hunt