Category Archives: Weather

Juicy Chunks O’ Wisdom For Monday, December 9th

‘Cause it’s windy as hell and I’m really starting to hate the wind, that’s why.

  • In the intro to last Thursday’s Flash Fiction Challenge, I said that no one had picked my “first two hundred word” piece. That’s changed. Someone picked it up and today (a couple days after the Friday “deadline” but who cares?) wrote a nice second part. Angela Carina Barry‘s work is posted here (scroll down until you find my original post at 8:59 PM on November 28th).
  • There was one particular really freakin’ brilliant gem that I was going to put in here, the wisest and juiciest of all of the juicy chunks o’ wisdom, which was the reason I picked this format to begin with for today’s post. Now I’ve completely forgotten what it was.
  • My desk sits next to a huge bay window, which is marvelous most of the time. I love the view of the backyard. But with the current cold snap in Los Angeles, this thing just bleeds cold air right on top of me. (Yes, it’s got double pane, insulated glass.) So I hung a blanket up across the window to shield myself from the frigid air, and it works pretty well. Except the cat’s favorite sleeping spot is in the bay window. For three days she’s been baffled by the blanket, but tonight figured out how to sneak around the corner and into the window. Then all of a sudden I see her head sticking out as she tries to figure out how to get back to me. It’s very cute. It’s a cat thing.
  • While cleaning up after painting, I tried out a technique I had read about online. It was described as a “fast and fun” way to clean the paint rollers. Basically, you take the garden hose, put the nozzle on the “Jet” setting, hold the roller out in front of you, then blast it with the hose. The roller will spin like mad, the water pressure from the hose will clean out the paint, and it’s faster than doing the cleaning by hand in the sink. Okay, first of all, it works like a charm. Having said that, I suspect that it’s “fun” if it’s done at the end of a hot, sweaty, summer’s day of painting, not out in a thirty knot wind at about 40F in the middle of the night. I guess there was a certain amount of “fun” involved, but there was also a significant amount of getting soaked. FYI.
  • It’s time for all of the “Best Of 2013” movie lists to start coming out and the jockeying for awards season. If nothing else, combining the lists of “best” movies from different groups will give you a pretty good list of what DVD’s to get (or to order on Netflix). We always try to see all of the movies nominated for the five major categories in the Academy Awards before the awards show itself, so these lists kick off a season of scrambling to see the ones we haven’t gotten to in the theaters.
  • As for 2014 movies, the first I had heard of “Jupiter Ascending” was when someone I follow on Twitter mentioned the new teaser trailer (here). It looks spectacular and has an awful lot of really talented folks involved. It could be spectacular — we can hope. We all need a little “spectacular” sometimes.
  • Vacuuming the ceiling is hard work! My arms are killing me tonight.
  • The raccoons are running around on the roof again tonight. I double checked the other day, they still haven’t gotten back into their hidey-hole.
  • On day twenty-four of the NaNoWriMo adventure, I mentioned that my computer hadn’t crashed yet even though I hadn’t rebooted it in four weeks or so and had been using the crap out of it with lots and lots of open windows and programs and bookmarks… Today it locked up and had to be rebooted. Whoever had “39 days” in the office pool can collect your winnings.
  • Still no clue what that forgotten wisest and juiciest of all of the juicy chunks o’ wisdom was. That’s disappointing and frustrating, but the worst part is hunting and trying to jog my memory and getting nowhere and knowing the whole time that the second I hit the “publish” button, THEN I’ll remember it.
  • Or at 3:30 AM.
  • Sometimes I hate my brain.

Remember that a bird in the hand will probably leave a mess there.

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Filed under Cats, Juicy Chunks, Movies, Weather, Writing

“Cold Snap” In Los Angeles

I have recently made fun of the responses Los Angeles residents and drivers have to the slightest bit of rain. Well, now it’s gotten “cold” here, so I’m going to do it again.

Just to be clear, that’s cold as in “below freezing overnight in some of the valleys” as opposed to cold as in “any exposed skin gets frostbitten in thirty seconds or less.” Granted, there are spots up in the high desert getting down into the teens, as well as plenty of sub-freezing temperatures up in the local mountains where they’re making snow for the ski resorts above 5,000′. (You didn’t know Southern California had ski resorts less than two hours’ drive from downtown? Skiing in the morning, surfing in the afternoon — people do it all the time here.) But I’m talking about down here in “the basin” and the valleys, which are all at sea level or maybe 500′ to 800′ above it.

As a result, while huge swaths of the country are experiencing scenes like these (stay safe out there, it looks ugly!), here in La-La Land for two days in a row we have had frost on the grass and windshields in the morning. And I have PROOF!

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photo 3I can’t even imagine the terror and panic we would get in Los Angeles if there was actually snow and ice on the roads, especially during rush hour. We have absolutely zero-point-zero equipment for plowing or clearing roads, so if some freak storm ever comes through and dumps three or four inches on the freeway, we’ve got no choice but to wait for it to melt.

In addition, a huge percentage of the commercial buildings and houses here have flat roofs, with just a teeny-tiny slope built in so that rain drains off. I can guarantee that none of them were designed to hold up under a few thousand pounds of snow.

If it ever happens, they might as well just nuke us from orbit. It’ll be the only way to be sure.

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Filed under Disasters, Weather

Raining In Los Angeles

Okay, let me rephrase that just a bit, because if you live anywhere with anything like normal weather, this isn’t rain. We’re finally getting a bit more water than “drizzle”, and it’s not “mist”, but if it’s “rain” it’s “really, really light rain”.

Nevertheless, this is one of the most amazing things that one sees upon moving to LA from anyplace “normal”. For two days in advance now, every single local television station has been on “Storm Watch!”. Or they’ve got their “Storm Tracker!” ads running for the 11:00 PM news. I kid you not, I couldn’t make this shit up.

Los Angeles is not washing away into the ocean. We might, might, get 0.10″ of rain out this. Places in the foothills and mountains might get 0.25″ of rain. In the next three to four days combined. Yet from looking at the media and press here, you would think that we should all be building arks in the back yard.

Better yet are the drivers in the rain. Despite the fact that most of them grew up and learned to drive someplace else (presumably someplace where there might be rain and/or snow), LA drivers become even bigger idiots with any moisture at all on the roads.

They fall into two categories, and I suspect that it’s tied to where they learned to drive. The native Angelinos are so terrified by any sort of precipitation that they immediately start driving at 10 MPH, for fear of spinning out and causing a fifty-seven car pile-up. Those who learned to drive elsewhere (but haven’t actually driven in the rain for twenty or thirty years so they’ve forgotten how) don’t bother to slow down at all, continuing to barrel down the freeways at 80+ MPH.

Put them together on the freeway at the same time, along with the layer of oil that’s been laid down on the road in the last 400 or 500 days since the last rain, and it’s no wonder that a “rain storm” that wouldn’t even get mentioned in Boston or Chicago will cause complete gridlock in the Los Angeles commute.

Meanwhile, despite the fact that we live in the desert while wasting billions of gallons of expensive water on our lawns, EVERYONE will ignore the free water falling from the sky and keep their sprinklers going on their regular daily schedule. Half the people do this because they don’t know how to work their sprinkler controls, the other half because they don’t bother.

Don’t say I didn’t warn you. Here are my Facebook posts from earlier this evening:

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Facebook Capture 2…and my Twitter warnings:

Twitter CaptureI’m doing my part to sound the warning. Now I’ve got to get back to building the ark. Or the zeppelin. Could go either way.

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The Real Life Manitou Springs

I’ve mentioned that when writing I find it easiest to describe someplace I’ve been. One of the settings of my current NaNoWriMo work in progress is Manitou Springs, Colorado. While many of the specific places that I mention are imaginary and are meant to invoke a feeling for the place in general, others, such as the police station and the Pikes Peak train station, are very real. We were there in 2008.

IMG_6294 smallThe Pikes Peak Cog Railroad Yard

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Bear WarningJust what you want to see walking from the parking lot.

IMG_6686 smallI thought they were hummingbirds. Nope. We were told that they were the biggest freakin’ moths we had ever seen. (I still think they were hummingbirds.)

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IMG_6642 smallGoing to dinner after we had gone up to the Pikes Peak summit, we came out to this HUGE thunderhead, spectacularly lit as the sun set. With the tops still brilliant white, the bottoms black and shooting out lightning, and the middles various shades of red and orange, it was gorgeous to watch.

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Filed under Photography, Travel, Weather

Here, Have A Pretty LA Sunset

First of all, I have to say that I am not posting these in order to taunt my friends and relatives back in New England and the Midwest who are getting their first big snow of the season, or my relatives up in South Dakota who are getting like their third or fourth huge freakin’ snow this year already.

Not that I wouldn’t do that, mind you. It’s just that I’m not doing it tonight.

With that having been said, it was warm today, into the lower 90’s here in the San Fernando Valley. Yesterday it was grey and gloomy and icky even though we never got any rain, but today was “clear and a million” as they say in the flying biz. Not a cloud in the sky. For most of the day, but…

When I went out with the dog just before the Long Suffering Wife came home, there were a few high, wispy clouds floating by, right as dusk started to set in. As we got further and further past sunset they started to turn pink and salmon. OK, so it wasn’t one of those “Oh, My God! My Brain Is Going To Explode This Is So Beautiful!” sunsets from Bali or Hawaii, but for Los Angeles it much less suckage than normal.

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Flash Fiction: Flash Flood

For this week’s “Flash Fiction Challenge“, Chuck Wendig has gone back to an old, familiar setup, i.e. a plot conflict chosen from a list by a random number generator. I got #9, “a spiteful child”. As usual, we’ve been instructed to write “1,000 words or so” and, as usual, my story is about 25% longer than that. This one turned out dark (again), almost to the point where I was starting to feel ill while writing it, knowing where it was headed. It’s an almost giddy feeling in retrospect, like a sign that I tapped into a little bit of the “real stuff”. I hope you enjoy it and agree.

As always, comments and constructive criticisms are appreciated.

Flash Flood

The rain was pounding outside, sheets of water flowing off the roof as the gutters and downspouts were filled beyond capacity. Flashes of lightning lit up the dark, late afternoon landscape with the accompanying thunderclaps just a second or two behind. The storm was getting worse and getting closer.

Emma didn’t care.

She sat sullenly in the dark of her bedroom, glowering at the murky twilight, simmering in her anger and feeding the rage building up within her. It wasn’t fair. Her mother couldn’t do this to her. Emma wasn’t a baby any more. She wasn’t going to put up with it.

A spectacularly bright bolt lit up the world as a deafening roar simultaneously shook the whole house. As the echoes started to die away, Emma noticed that all of the little sounds of the household had ceased. She could no longer hear the television on in the living room, the washing machine, or the fan on her computer. The light coming through the crack under her bedroom door was gone.

From the other end of the house Emma could hear her mother walking around, her footsteps echoing hollowly on the hardwood floors. Emma heard the front closet opening, soon followed by the tinny sound of the battery-powered emergency radio. Over it all, the sound of the rain kept growing louder.

Hearing her mother’s footsteps coming down the hall toward her room, Emma flopped down onto the bed and turned her back to the door. She heard the door open and saw the beam of a flashlight sweep across the wall above her.

“Emma, I need you to get your hiking boots, raincoat, and rain hat on right away. We need to leave immediately.”

“I thought that you said that I had to stay in my room,” Emma said scornfully, refusing to turn away from the wall. “So now I’m going to stay in my room, just like you said!”

“Emma, there’s no time for this. The storm’s getting worse and they’re telling everyone to get out of the canyon. They’re afraid that the creek may start to flood. We really need to get into the car right away. I need you to get ready to go while I get Andy into his car seat.”

“No! I’m not going anywhere. I’m staying here!”

“Emma, there’s no time for this. You have to be a big girl and help me. Please get ready while I take care of Andy.”

Emma heard her mother leave and walk back down the hall. Stubbornly, Emma refused to move. She waited, seething, marshaling her arguments for her mother’s return.

After a few minutes she could hear her mother coming back. Even before she got into the room she could see that Emma had completely disregarded her instructions. She forcefully let out an exasperated and angry sigh as she entered.

“Emma! This is not a game,” her mother shouted. “This is serious and dangerous. Get ready now, we have to leave right away!”

“You told me that I couldn’t play out in the rain and I had to stay in my room! Now you tell me just the opposite? I’m staying in my room!”

“Emma, the creek on the other side of the road is starting to flood. The storm is getting worse and we have to get out. If we get trapped up here it could be extremely dangerous. We have to evacuate now. It’s an emergency!

“I’m going to put Andy in the car and then I’ll be back for you in one minute. You have got to be ready to go!” Emma heard her closet door being yanked open, followed by her raincoat, hat, and boots being flung onto her bed next to her feet. “NOW, young lady!”

Emma waited until she heard her mother close the front door before she sat up on the bed. She peeked out of the shutters and saw her mother struggling to get Andy strapped into the car seat in the back of the family van. She could barely see out for all of the water on the window. Above everything she could hear water roaring in what had always been a tiny creek on the far side of the road.

Emma put her boots and rain gear on with a pout. If she was going to leave, she was not going to abandon her doll collection. She grabbed her school backpack and started stuffing her favorite toys into it. But suddenly her mother was there, dripping wet, and pulling the backpack away. She rudely tossed it into the corner.

“There’s no time for that!” her mother shouted. “In the car now!”

It was too much. She had to have her dolls.

“No! I’m not going!”

Her mother grabbed Emma by the arm and started dragging her down the hallway, leaving all of the dolls and toys behind. Emma dug in her heels and started screaming in protest, trying to grab onto a doorway or the table in the hallway, but her mother’s pull was too strong. When they got to the open front door, her mother picked her up like a sack of potatoes and carried her through the deluge.

Emma was enraged, kicking and screaming. Her mother plopped her down in the back seat next to Andy’s car seat, quickly pulled the seat belt across Emma, and buckled her in.

“Don’t you dare move!” her mother screamed over the storm, her face red and her finger pointing into Emma’s face. “I have to get my purse and our emergency packs and then I’ll be back in one minute.” She turned and charged back into the house.

Emma didn’t wait and didn’t think. She quickly unbuckled the seat belt and hopped down from the car. She was furious with her mother and was not going to do anything that she was told. In a flash she had the bright yellow raincoat and hat off, flinging them away into the wind. Turning from the car, she ran up the hill and around the bushes on the far side of the driveway.

Her mother’s scream of “EMMA!” let her know that her escape had been noted. Peering through the bushes she saw her mother dropping her load to the lawn and frantically peering around. She turned this way and that, screaming Emma’s name.

Suddenly she saw Emma’s raincoat across the street. It had been carried by a gust of wind across the road and was now headed downhill rapidly in the rushing water. Without hesitation she ran across the street toward the disappearing raincoat.

Emma watched dumbly as her mother skidded to a halt and went wading into the shin-deep water covering the street. She continued to splash down the hill, trying to catch up with the raincoat, getting closer and closer to where the edge of the roadway must be. Suddenly she lost her footing and went down into the water. In just a few seconds, her shouts and screams faded away as she was carried around a curve in the road.

Emma walked slowly down to the car, now cold, soaked, and scared out of her wits. She was stunned. Starting to shiver violently, Emma crawled up into the back seat of the car and looked out the open door into the downpour.

What had she done? What should she do next? Emma turned and looked at Andy, who was starting to squirm and fuss, but he had no answers.

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Sedona, Arizona

A few days ago I posted some pictures and a description of the area on Arizona Route 89A where the highway descends into Oak Creek Canyon. About thirteen miles south of that point Oak Creek Canyon spills out of the mountains and onto a beautiful, carved up mesa. There you’ll find the town of Sedona.

20130913-224843.jpgLike much of the US Southwest in Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, and Colorado, the area is covered in red sandstone formations, carved into all sorts of odd shapes over millions of years by wind and rain.

20130913-225002.jpgIn this part of the world it’s pretty easy to see the layering of the earth just about anywhere you look.

20130913-225029.jpgThere are plenty of tours that will take you off of the main road and into the back country. (We use the Pink Jeep tour company and were quite happy with the experience.) Unless you have the experience and vehicle to handle an off-road tour, don’t try it on your own! While we were out on our tour in country that only Jeeps and goats roamed, we encountered a couple of Japanese tourists in a compact rental car with no four-wheel drive, no water, no idea of where they were going, and no clue how much trouble they were getting themselves into. We hope that they listened to the advice our guide gave them about stopping and going back down, carefully!

20130913-225042.jpgThere are critters about and you may see some of them. We saw a lot of birds and a couple of small animals, but there are deer, coyote, snakes, and god knows what else out there.

20130913-225102.jpgYou might want to go to Sedona in the spring or fall when it’s not too expensive and not too hot. In the winter all of the snowbirds will be there and it will get expensive. In the summer it’s going to be “one hundred and stupid in the shade” before 10:00 AM.

20130913-225125.jpgOne thing that we did not do on this last trip but I would love to plan into the next one is some hiking. Again, even more so than for driving off-road, make sure you know what you’re doing, have what you need (water and sunscreen!), and have a Plan B. You might be only five miles (or 500 yards) from town, but you can still get into some serious hurt if you’re not careful. I would also just love to get out away from town here with a telescope on some clear night!

20130913-225340.jpgFrom the 1930’s on the area has been used to make dozens of movies, both Westerns and other types of films. The town has and still does promote itself as “Arizona’s Little Hollywood”.

20130913-225354.jpgEven if the off-road experience isn’t for you, there’s a very nice state park just south of town with the usual small museum, observation sites, easy to medium difficulty hiking trails, and the obligatory gift shop.

20130913-225408.jpgOne of the things that makes Sedona such a tourist attraction these days is its reputation as a location of “spiritual vortices”. Remember the “Harmonic Convergence” in 1987? According to many “New Age” groups, Sedona was where it was supposed to happen. I didn’t see or feel any of that, but there was a fantastic thunderstorm which I enjoyed a great deal!

All in all we found Sedona to be a great place to visit. The main town seems to be a bit “upscale touristy” for me, sort of like Malibu or Newport Beach without the beach. (It probably wasn’t a coincidence that The Eagles’ song “The Last Resort” was playing in my head for days after we left — it’s like the song was written for Sedona.) But it’s easy enough to avoid all of that, there were good restaurants to be found, and if you’re there for the beauty of the desert there are plenty of opportunities to get out of town and see it.

We’ll be back! (With hiking boots and a telescope, perhaps?)

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For Elaine Feldman, 1929-2013

Rest in peace, Elaine, together with Arnold again.

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Flying Pictures

I had extremely vivid and bizarre dreams last night, a very busy day doing some business consulting and catching up on a bunch of our own accounting, it’s late, and I still haven’t posted anything today.

So have some cool pictures! In fact, pictures taken one day I was flying and we ran into a bit of weather.

The pictures were taken by my flight instructor using my camera on December 16, 2008. We flew out of Whiteman in Pacoima to do some practice on “ground reference maneuvers” such as turns around a point and S-turns. We flew out to our usual practice area over Simi Valley to get our work in.

I thought we wouldn’t be flying due to the scattered showers, but part of the lesson was also about the weather and the regulations. The cloud base wasn’t that low, the showers weren’t heavy enough so that we couldn’t see, so we were legal all the way. It was good experience for flying in less-than-perfect weather and getting a feel for what was “legal but marginal” weather just in case I ever get caught in it in the future.

A Cessna 172 doesn’t have windshield wipers. You’re flying at about 90 to 100 knots and the wind will keep the windshield fairly clear, but you can see the streaks on the glass.

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Headed back home, we’re at about 2,500 feet or so coming east through the Santa Suzanna Pass back into the San Fernando Valley. We clearly have more than ten miles’ visability and the cloud base is up around 5,000 feet, so we’re legal, if wet. This is about the point on the way back where we call Van Nuys (sort of visible far off in the distance on the right edge of the picture) to get clearance to transition through their airspace to Whiteman.

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This sequence shows us coming in to land at Whiteman on Runway 12:

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Odds & Sods For Wednesday, July 24th

Item The First: Today’s APOD (Astronomy Picture Of the Day – what, you’re NOT looking at it every day? I’ll wait while you fix that…) is freakin’ brilliant. It’s a simple idea carried to an extreme and used to create something beautiful. Ken Murphy pointed a camera at the sky and had it record a picture every ten seconds. For an entire year. He then took all of those pictures and put them into a HD composite image.

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Image credit & copyright Ken Murphy (MurphLab)

Looks cool? Yeah, but it’s not just a still picture, it’s a video.

He synched up the time so that each frame shows the time-lapse video for that day starting and ending at the same time, then has them run simultaneously. And because he starts before sunrise and ends after sunset, and because he’s in San Francisco and not at the equator, at the beginning and end you can see how the days lengthen and shorten with the seasons. You see pink sunrise clouds, orange sunset clouds, rainy days, sunny days, an entire year in one short video.

Item The Second: This is another truly amazing video, showing all of the Space Shuttle flights (well, at least snippets from every one of them) in 8:01. Do yourself a favor and watch it full screen, HD, and turned up LOUD. Repeat as necessary to regain your sanity after dealing with freakin’ idiots. Except of course it made me think of the freakin’ idiots who mothballed the Shuttles… Breathe. Breathe. Om, om, om, om…

Item The Third: I knew that when telephone area codes were assigned in the late 1940’s we had only rotary phones, so New York City got “212”, Los Angeles got “213”, Dallas-Fort Worth got “214”, Chicago got “312”, Detroit got “313”, and so on so that the users in the big cities could dial long distance faster.

What I didn’t know is that in 1999 a relatively “low” area code was given to a less densely populated area of Florida instead of to densely populated suburban Chicago. A behind the scenes campaign by Florida lobbyists convinced the numbering agency to change their mind and thus Florida’s “Space Coast” got the “3-2-1” area code. (That whimsical bit of trivia just about made my day!)

Item The Fourth: Pop Quiz!! What is it you never, EVER do when taking simple astrophotos of the sun with your $1 “Solar Viewer” card? Your answers will be graded on creativeness as well as on accuracy.

Item The Fifth: The gremlin body count is slowly rising, which is a good thing. It was getting pretty frustrating there for a couple of weeks.

The cable television problem finally got fixed by a great repair guy from Time-Warner, but only after some serious frustrations with their service department before I could get him out. I had already done a fair amount of troubleshooting on the problem and had eliminated the first several dozen things they wanted me to try. (“Reboot your cable box and wait three days – if that doesn’t work, get a new cable box.” “Really? Have you listened to a single word I’ve said to describe the problem?”) I was about 99% sure I knew what the problem was and where, but I can’t access that equipment and I don’t have the parts to replace it. Once the cable guy got here, confused by the notes the service department had left him, I quickly showed him what I already knew, he came to the same conclusion I did, found the fried parts, replaced them, and we’re all happy now.

The computer that died is really dead. It wasn’t the power supply, probably the mother board or CPU, but on an eight-year-old computer it’s not possible or worth it to repair. The hard disks were all fine (no data lost) as were the video card, sound card, RAM, and so on, so a new motherboard & CPU got the system back up and going. Of course, Windows 7, MS Office, and a number of other programs are freaking out and wanting to re-authenticate since they’re seeing a “new” system, but so far that’s been an inconvenience, not a killer.

The iShower bluetooth speaker is back up and running with some new batteries. The first one I had died after three and a half months but they were great about giving me a full replacement anyway – kudos to their customer service department! But when that first one ran low on batteries I got warnings for about a week before the batteries were completely dead. This second one has given me no warnings at all, it just died. But replacing the batteries seems to have been the only problem. It was about time for new batteries, based on my experience with the first one, I just wonder why I didn’t get warnings this time. Whatever, it seems to be working again now and I really like having it in the shower to play tunes in the morning.

Best of all, I also again tackled the problems with The Long-Suffering Daughter #2’s car. I’ll tell you some time about how this whole mess started (short version – a four-day lost holiday weekend in Coalinga) but for now I’ve just got her car sitting in the driveway gathering cobwebs. (She’s in China – or Europe, it depends.) I don’t want to let the car sit too long without being driven, and the added incentive was that her car needed a smog check to get registered for the year. I was able to get it started, got it smogged, ran some errands, and put it back into the driveway. We’ll get a permanent fix when one of us can afford $2,000 to replace a $20 part, but that’s another story.

First world problems, all. But like I said, I live here in the first world. You take your little victories where you can.

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