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Cats, bats, and bikes

Posted by Photonstopper on April 28, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: bicycling, car, cat, cats, observatory, tasha. 3 Comments

Things have been fairly routine around here. Well, routine can mean different things to different people. Mostly it was the weekend when things were happening….

Tasha developed disturbing symptoms that appeared to be cystitis. Frequent urination, straining at the litter box, inappropriate urination, and restlessness/meowing all presented themselves. The symptoms had come and gone about a week earlier, but reoccurred with a vengeance late last week. So I took off early Friday and delivered one unhappy kitty to the vet; her symptoms had calmed so it was the trip to the vet that displeased her. Tests showed no crystals in her urine but there were signs of a bladder infection so poor Tasha got a penicillin injection and is receiving a week-long course of twice-a-day oral antibiotics to try and knock out whatever bug was causing her discomfort. She's tolerating the dosing well in part because I've (finally) become somewhat adept at the eyedropper. Kitty seems to be back to normal. We'll hear from Dr. B concerning lab results today or tomorrow.

Saturday my car went to the "car vet" –dealer service– for regular maintenance. They checked our record and found it's time for the timing belt to be replaced! Oh, joy: another big, unexpected expense! It's better than having the darned thing break which, we were told, does enough damage to the engine to cost on the order of $3,500 to fix. Still we didn't see this one coming.

Saturday night I had the observatory open from 9 to 11:00 PM at the behest of the student environmental group. This open night was to be a part of their Earth Day activities. A bat had moved back into the dome and/or shutter as had a bird or two. I chased the bat out of the dome and, before leaving, turned up the obnoxious "sonic repellent" that had been successful in keeping "Baxter" away. Unfortunately –or not, given sky conditions– this was also the college Springfest and the poor old observatory was up against a pop music concert, an orientation day, and several other activities. With many alternatives and little promotion we had only two visitors –a student couple– all night. Gave them a look at Saturn with moons Titan, Rhea, and Dione visible and told them about the observatory, telescope, etc. Sky conditions were clear but seeing was generally not very good with high-altitude water vapor preventing the sky from being very black. I couldn't find dim objects, not even M44 (The Beehive star cluster) but Saturn looked surprisingly good; the shadow of the ring system could be seen on the planetary body. Maybe a hint, now and again, at cloud banding on the planet. I took a look at Mars but between seeing preventing high-power views and with Mars receding and becoming quite small, it was less interesting than usual. That was about it for observing! I was happy to head home.

Sunday activity was chosen by She Who Must be Obeyed so we took our first bicycle ride of the season… the flat and easy rail-to-trail facility that runs through Oberlin. The weather was clear and cool with temperatures of about 65 degrees and light wind. The riding was easy and pleasant though we both wound up with sore-ish muscles from that short and easy 27-mile jaunt! Felt pitiable but it's been many months since we've been on two wheels. Lunch at Oberlin's Quizno's was very good and did not make us feel more guilt. One weird experience: when we parked our bikes at Quizno's my wireless bicycle computer, instead of registering zero miles-per-hour was reading upwards of 65 miles-per-hour whilst standing still! Apparently some radio source inside the building was causing the bizarre behavior. We didn't think about photographing the display until later and, when we returned to the sandwich shop to reproduce the experience, nothing happened! Cool photo gets away.

In all this weekend of cats, bats, and bikes was a good one.

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Bread and wine

Posted by Photonstopper on April 22, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: bread, wine, wine label. 1 Comment

We are fortunate to have found, in our favorite grocery store(s), a wonderful locally-baked fresh bread. Miller's Multi-Grain is produced by The Stone Oven Bakery & Café headquartered in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. We haven't visited their bakery but find it hard to purchase anything but their Miller's Multi-Grain. The nine-grain bread is created and par-baked at The Stone Oven. Then it is shipped to the retailer –in our case, Heinen's– where the staff of the in-store bakery finish the job. The result, if our timing is just right, is a delicacy still warm (hot, sometimes) that has a beautiful deep brown and crisp crust on the outside; the inside is tender, grainy, and sweet. It's hard not to sit right down and eat half a loaf when it's that good! Forget the pastries, gimme this bread! The good folks at Heinen's even have the sense to offer a ventilated take-home bag for the crusty delights when they are asked to machine slice the loafs.

Mommys Time Out
Mommys Time Out

I love shopping the wine aisles. Not that I pick up expensive bottles to stock an ever-growing cellar. Nope. I enjoy finding very good wines in the $10 to $15 range and we never have much around the house — certainly no collection. A current favorite is Monkey Business wines at about $12 a bottle. No, what I really enjoy is the art, tradition, and humor expressed upon the wine labels. Monkey Business is one good example. Recently I ran across another doozy… Mommy's Time Out. Okay, so the label art is very simple, but the name, well it's precious! I haven't tried them but the wines are said to be enjoyable, with good fruit; excellent with cheese and crackers. Most people pick up a bottle for, yes, the label. Maybe a good gift idea for Mother's Day! Or for a mom who could use a little rest.

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“Clueless bozos steering the ship of state…”

Posted by Photonstopper on April 22, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: book, iacocca, politics. Leave a comment

Given his position as a famous business leader, I'd have assumed Lee Iacocca would be a staunch conservative Republican and, therefore persona non grata to me. Then I happened across a surprising extraction from Iacocca's book, Where Have all the Leaders Gone? I was shocked and gratified; I really didn't expect this statement. I don't know if I'll ever read his book but Iacocca is delivering a message here we all need to take to heart.

Am I the only guy in this country who's fed up with what's happening? Where the hell is our outrage? We should be screaming bloody murder. We've got a gang of clueless bozos steering our ship of state right over a cliff, we've got corporate gangsters stealing us blind, and we can't even clean up after a hurricane much less build a hybrid car. But instead of getting mad, everyone sits around and nods their heads when the politicians say, "Stay the course."

Stay the course? You've got to be kidding. This is America, not the damned Titanic. I'll give you a sound bite: Throw the bums out!

From Where Have All the Leaders Gone?. Copyright © 2007 by Lee Iacocca. All rights reserved. Read an extended excerpt at: BordersStores.com.


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Buzzards and blooms on a very good morning

Posted by Photonstopper on April 16, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: birds, buzzard, flowers, hinckley lake. 4 Comments

We are enjoying a string of very beautiful spring days. Since I'll go to the office late today, what better way to spend the morning than taking a photo hike along the shores of wooded Hinckley Lake. I imagined fog rising from the surface of the water, backlit by the low sun. I hoped for deeply blue skies. And I hoped I'd see buzzards basking in the first warmth of the day, as I'd seen once before. I got most of what I wanted and I am a happy fellow indeed. I also shot my first digital photos in RAW format, which I will play with later.

Spring Morning at Hinckley Lake
Spring Morning at Hinckley Lake

Walking along the gravel path was a pleasure. I spotted a downy woodpecker up in a tree but couldn't get a clear view for photos. Meanwhile a male cardinal perched above me and gave me a stern look; I was wearing a red jacket and he probably thought I was a rather gigantic intruder! Rounding a curve I sighted them: perched all over the top of a dead tree were turkey vultures, "buzzards," basking in the morning sun to relieve the nighttime chill.

Basking Buzzards
Basking Buzzards


The big birds watched me cautiously and some folded their wings preparing to make an escape, if necessary, as I approached and stood beneath their perch. Leaning against the trunk of a neighboring tree, I watched as some of the buzzards took short flights from branch to branch, and others to a nearby tree. As time passed the birds became more and more active, ruffling their feathers and moving around.

Buzzard Banking
Buzzard Banking


One by one, over the ensuing quarter hour or so, the birds took flight and began soaring individually and in groups. They circled, sometimes alighting again on their tree. Once or twice birds landed on branches that could not support their weight and the twigs, without birds, came crashing to the ground. Soon all but one of the birds were in the air and moving off over the surrounding countryside. Vultures are magnificent fliers.

Gliding Overhead
Gliding Overhead


Just in case large carrion-eating birds aren't your aesthetical cup of tea, here's one last shot for you –taken from among the many bunches of spring flowers blooming around the entrance to the park and boat house– a backlit daffodil.

Hinckley Lake Daffodil
Hinckley Lake Daffodil


It was a very good morning and I'm feeling better today than I have in quite some time! Unfortunately, I now must leave for work.

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Liquidity and the goose

Posted by Photonstopper on April 15, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: goose, photograph, pond, ripples. 2 Comments
Ripples on the Pond
Ripples on the Pond

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It’s been a long road…

Posted by Photonstopper on April 14, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: apollo 14, astronaut, enterprise, moon, shepard, star trek. 4 Comments
Alan Shepard
Alan Shepard

She Who Must Be Obeyed has been recording episodes of Star Trek Enterprise daily as they are shown on HDNET — in excellent ("HD") quality and with no commercials. So we've been watching them very regularly. There were many good shows early on but I lost interest in it later with its serialized struggles with the same baddies week after week. One thing I did like, however, were the opening titles. Artistically done, those "credits" with historical, contemporary, and imagined images showing humankind's adventures of exploration were and are a pleasure to behold. My quibble with them is the images aren't presented in sequential order –earliest, to current, to future– but jumbled up. That aside, as a long-time space exploration enthusiast those images bring back memories. There's Auguste Piccard the physicist and balloonist high over a mountain range under a gas balloon. That's physicist and rocket pioneer (a boyhood hero) Robert H. Goddard writing out equations on a chalkboard. What gets me every time, however, is the shot of astronaut Alan B. Shepard in his space suit, complete with "Snoopy cap," getting ready to travel to the Moon. The way he turns, cocks his head to one side, and smiles a serene smile; he looks like he'd have been a good friend and fun guy to hang out with. Though I never met the man, the clip of Shepard does bring back personal memories. I was privileged to have been among the press corps covering the launch of Apollo 14 –Shepard's flight– at, then, Cape Kennedy.

Apollo-14 Launch
Apollo-14 Launch

The night before the launch we were taken by bus to a spot near the launch pad where the mighty Saturn V rocket, resplendent in white, stood floodlit and waiting against the black sky. The next day I stood at the cordon watching, and shooting photos, as Shepard and his crewmates, only feet away, boarded the van that drove them to the pad. Later I witnessed the mammoth rocket thunder into the sky and disappear through the clouds as I was pummeled by the physical force of the sound from 3.5 miles away. The Apollo 14 mission, especially after the near-disaster of Apollo 13, was a tremendous success. It was, of course, a most memorable personal experience for me. I was saddened years later when the news read, "Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American to fly in space and one of only 12 humans who walked on the Moon, died … (July 22, 1998) … after a lengthy illness in Monterey, CA. He was 74." The cause of his death was leukemia. The filmed picture of his smiling face from launch day, replayed in the Star Trek titles, is the image that remains freeze-framed in my mind. That was a great day. It's been a long road.

NOTE: "It's been a long road" — the opening words to the song, "Faith Of The Heart," by Russell Watson, the theme to Star Trek: Enterprise

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Do not look for that light

Posted by Photonstopper on April 11, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: buddhist, darkness, light, philosophy, physics, zen. 1 Comment

Here is a quotation I found in a beautiful essay, "Astronomy Lessons," by Anne Cushman, which appeared in the May 2008 edition of Shambhala Sun. There are so very many levels of meaning to be found in these few lines…

Within light there is darkness,
but do not try to understand that darkness.
Within darkness there is light,
but do not look for that light.

— Zen Chant, "Identity of Relative and Absolute"

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Rest and decompression

Posted by Photonstopper on April 11, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: daffodils, machio kaku, photography, physics. Leave a comment

On this, a Friday off for me, I see some of the daffodils are now blooming: one white and several yellow. While it is warming (about 70 F degrees) it's windy as all get out, sometimes rainy, and not suitable conditions for macro photography. I'd hoped to post a close-up of a cheery yellow bloom but that's not likely to happen today.

After a brief (and rare) morning nap, I shipped some more packages, then enjoyed lunch watching physicist Machio Kaku's TV program on "Cosmic Time" (part of his BBC "Time" series) I had recorded overnight.

This afternoon, instead of shooting flower photos, I paid my credit card bill (burgeoned by major reimbursable shipping charges), sent off a 2009 budget request to my boss, updated the cycling Web site, and started thinking about registration for an historical observatory conference set for May. Not fun stuff, by and large, but what I did took much self-imposed pressure off and I feel much more relaxed now. Hopefully it will be a quiet weekend suitable for rest and decompression!

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Vox Hunt: New Coke!

Posted by Photonstopper on April 7, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: discontinued product, postum, vox hunt. 3 Comments

Show us a discontinued food or product you wish would return.
Submitted by Shawn.

Postum
Postum

Understand, I don't drink or even like coffee. And I never drank coffee substitutes: why would I drink a substitute for something I don't like? But She Who Must Be Obeyed really liked Postum. A lot of other people liked the stuff, too… including a bunch of Mormons (they aren't supposed to take caffeine). The product's origin is not, however, related to Mormonism. It was developed in 1895 by Charles William Post, a Seventh-day Adventist who felt that caffeine was a bad thing. So the Seventh-Day Adventists are left hanging as well. In our case She discovered it was missing when we visited a local store to buy more of the stuff. We couldn't find it and the store manager delivered the bad news that, as of late last year, it was no longer being manufactured. Now Postum lovers are left looking at other coffee substitutes and, I guess, many of those products are, well, drek! So rest in peace, oh long-lived cereal beverage; you are missed.

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Hot air not a good thing

Posted by Photonstopper on April 7, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: it, server, windows. 1 Comment

I did, indeed, spend my day in the office instead of enjoying a very pleasant spring day out-of-doors. I was rewarded, however, with success in moving the DHCP service from one server to another, newer one. I'd failed in my first attempt –last night– but tonight's efforts paid off. Next I need to move user profiles and user personal file spaces off of the old server. The old machine has been very reliable but is getting up in years. Where servers are concerned it is best to replace them before they fail … there's much less pain involved! So I'll work on that over the next week or so and then try and figure out what to do with a big vintage Windows 2000 Server that has been in near continuous operation since just after Windows 2000 was introduced. Good thing I was in the Server Room, as it turns out… the air conditioner stopped working and the temperature was rising. Hot air in the Server Room is not a good thing.

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