Saturday, December 12, 2009

Did he really need something more to apologise for?

Well, our esteemed President Obama has done it again: he's offended a large segment of humanity. This time it again involved a head of state. When he went to Norway to accept his Nobel Peace Prize award, he "declined" to have lunch with the King of Norway. What's this? Are we at odds with Norway? Are their human rights policies not in line with ours, or maybe it's their nuclear material production efforts that we disagree with. Maybe it's because Norway has yet to voice outright hatred of all things American like so many of the the other country's whose heads of state President Obama HAS honored - by bowing to them, kissing their rings, APOLOGISING for going after the terrorists that have safe haven and even overt financial support from their contries?? Where is the consistency from the purportedly most powerful man in the world? Where is the common sense? Where is the political savvy? I don't believe that any of these exist within President Obama. Well, now he has fodder for his apology mill, so I guess that's something.

I guess that now that he has already cashed the check from the Nobel Foundation, it's safe for him to dis the Copenhagen meeting about global warming (hmm, didn't I recently hear something about all of the hype being just that - hype? and even falsified hype at that?). But, that conference was a joke from the outset. All of these "staunch supporters" of being green, had an issue even before the official conference started. They ran out of limosines! Go figure - all thes people who preach (to others) about reducing the carbon footprint, sharing a ride, etc. couldn't even follow their own supposed principles when going to discuss these very same principles by sharing a ride. Since they are each SO Important, they each had to have their own limo for transportation. (Huh, that's kind of like Al Gore flying around the country in his private jet to all of these "Inconvenient Truth" gatherings. Or his primary residence having a bigger carbon footprint than some third world coutries - but don't get me started on him.) I guess it's all the same as it's been for years now: you don't know who to believe, because they all have their own agenda.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

'Tis the Season

It's that time of year again: time to clean up the woodshop and get serious about making Christmas gifts. I love being able to spend time doing one of the things I really love - making gifts in my shop. I inherited a marvelous workshop full of tools from my father and now have the "technology" to make many more things than I used to. I used to have a band saw, router, table saw and a drill press. To that I've added a lathe, oscillating spindle sander, 12" disc sander, a scroll saw, a radial arm saw, a horizontal borer, a thickness planer, a jointer/planer, a dust-and-chip collector, a multitude of wooden toy parts, many plans (both 'store-bought' and those modified by my parents), and a wide selection of power sanders. And in the process, my original tools (band saw, router, table saw and drill press) were upgraded. My dad used to make some of the neatest toys I've ever seen - and he was a master at it. He took the time to make absolutely sure that all of his parts fit as they should, that they were sanded to perfection, and that they were finished in a manner that was safe for anyone to use or play with. Many times you'll see other toy vendors who sell toys made of pine: they're rough on both surfaces and edges, and being pine - prone to damage by merely standard play.

Dad worked almost exclusively with cherry (his favorite) or maple (a close second). He always told a customer that all of his toys had a limited lifetime warranty - he'd repair any toy returned to him - only limited to his lifetime. I've seen kids throw a toy my father made across the room, down the stairs, off the porch, what have you, and show virtually no damage. I've also seen some of the pine toys break because the kid rolled the toy across the floor! Sure cherry or maple is more expensive - about twice the cost of pine - but, when you compare that to the extended lifetime of the toy (probably 10 to fifteen times as long - at least), it's really a no-brainer. Dad had return customers from across the country and around the world - I know of at least some connection to Buckingham Palace for one of his "Large Trains".

So anyway I really treasure this time of year - not only do I really love making these things (I've been doing it for almost 40 years), but it also reminds me of my dad and the joy he got watching kids play with the toys he made. When it came to these toys, I think he was almost as much a kid as the kids who actually bought and played with the toys. For me, since I don't do the craft fair thing like he and Mom did, I get my joy from seeing the expression on the faces of the recipients of my efforts. Most times they are much more appreciative than the gift deserves. I'm not yet up to the standard of my father, and sometimes what I gift to others has some obvious (at least to me) flaws. I am improving with time, however, and I do more lathe work than Dad, I love the lathe - you can actually SEE the item taking shape as you work on it; turning is fairly easy to learn, but can take a long time to master.

One of the distinct advantages of this time of year comes as a result of the first step mentioned above: "time to clean up the woodshop". I do lots of DIY home improvement projects throughout the year and I tend to leave my tools in 'convenient' spots. Trouble is these spots are only convenient when you can remember where they are AND when they're in close proximity to where you're working. Since most of my Christmas-elf projects are located in the shop itself, and few, if any, of my year-round project are, most of the waylaid tools are NOT convenient for the seasonal projects. If I could just get myself to ALWAYS put my tools back, I'd be less likely to waste time looking for them when I need them. And with dozens of power tools, hundreds or maybe even thousands of hand tools, you can see where having things in unconventional places would get to be a challenge to find. I really enjoy finding most of my long lost tools again!

Well, anyway, to my whole audience of 2 or 3, I hope you have a very Merry Christmas!

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Thanksgiving Weekend

Well, I had a very nice time with the inlaws this past weekend in Toledo, OH. My wife's family mostly lives there and we decided to go for a visit - we hadn't been there for a holiday in several years - it was time for a return trip. First off the drive there was quite surprisingly nice. Shorter than I expected - only 6½ hours door to door. The next pleasant surprise was the price of gas out that way. We filled up just inside the Ohio border for $2.44 a gallon as compared to $2.89 here at home. It was only $2.46 in Toledo on Wednesday through mid morning on Friday, then I guess the going price of crude jumped because the price went up to $2.60 a gallon in one swell foop! And they maintain in Toledo that they don't play games with their pricing! Really!
Anyway, on Friday Angie and I did partake in our annual tradition: Black Friday shopping. I have to say how impressed I am with the shoppers in the stores we visited. No pushing, trampling, bad language, short tempers like there had been every other year I've gone out. Not as many miraculous deals as were promised, though. A few good deals, but, mostly we enjoy the people watching. It was refreshing to see that people CAN behave themselves on Black Friday.
My father-in-law had a good weekend also. We were able to bring him to the house each day we were there and even got special permission to keep him out later than the rules usually allowed. He really perks up when Angie comes out for a visit. He loves the rest of his family, and treasures the time he can spend with them, but, since Angie can only come out infrequently, it obviously means a whole lot to him. It was good to see him in such good spirits for such an extended time. Truly something to be thankful for!
Watched Marley and Me while we were out there; very tough movie to see after having lost our dog this April. We'd had Zeke for almost 17 years! My son doesn't really remember life without Zeke. And Zeke was not a terror like Marley was - he was just a typical Labrador. He did chew on things while he was a puppy (did I mention that he considered himself a puppy for at least 2½ years?), but he was a very good dog all-in-all. That movie really brings home just how a dog looks at you even if you don't always dote on it. They worship you. Really tore me up at the end of the movie. My wife says she's not ready to watch it yet. We own it, but it still sets in its case, unopened. Talk about a tearjerker!
Anyway I hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving holiday and had time to realize just how many things you have to truly be thankful for. If you can't think of any, post a comment, and I may be able to suggest some things!

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Maybe next year - finale

Well, it's over once more - College football with the Michigan Wolverines. Saturdays just aren't the same when the games aren't on. We did marginally better this year than last. 5-7 rather than 3-9. We added more notches in Coach Rodriguez's belt: the first coach in Wolverine history to lose BOTH of his first two games played against OSU, the first coach since the 60's to post two losing seasons in a row. The list just seems to go on. I hear that the Athletic Director was asked point blank if he was considering firing the coach and the AD just laughed. Roriguez was asked if he was worried about getting fired, and he reponded that he has a 6 year contract, and this is only year two, so no he's not getting fired. I guess we, the fans, will have to give him at least one more year to pull the team together - we don't have any say in the matter. I must admit to a particularly strong sense of being underwhelmed by him. I've heard that he doesn't have all the "pieces of the puzzle" yet. I've heard that a good coach MAKES the pieces of the puzzle - haven't seen much of that so far in his career.

Tate Forcier was disappointing today - he threw 5 interceptions. Never seen the man do that poorly before. I also heard rumours that he may be transferring. If he does that, I'll lose much of my respect for him. I find it hard to respect quitters. That man has an amazing talent; he should stick with the team and be part of its ressurection. He will be a tremendous foundation on which to begin rebuilding Wolverine football.

I do agree that we have not seen much depth of bench from Michigan in the last couple years. The talking heads attributed this to his only having one recruiting season so far. We really need to see some support for Forcier. He can scramble well, he has an arm like a cannon, he stays very cool under pressure, but he's only one person on a team of 11 on the field at one time. He can't do it all. We need to see some SIZE on the offensive line, some speed and good hands in the backfield and the receivers. We have a couple of receivers that do pretty well. But when they get tired and are off the field, there's nobody left to do the job. And ALL of the team seems to be inconsistent. Sometimes the quarterback gets lots of time to throw, and sometimes there's no time at all. And this is all within the same game!

All I can say, is next year had better be better. The coach will have even more trouble with his recruiting if he can't pull together more wins, and if he can't recruit, he'll lose more and have more trouble recruiting, and so on. With the players he'll be keeping, he has to build some depth.

Maybe next year.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

A stitch in time . . . or not

So, the driver's side windshield wiper on our Explorer has been acting up a little lately (like for a year, I think). It wasn't attached very securely to the wiper arm. I've been meaning to get it replaced, really, I have. Well, tonight we had to take it to a Ford dealer to have a safety recall issue fixed. I won't deal with the Ford garage across the street from me - I don't trust them to deal fairly with me. Ive already had a bad experience with them. So, anyway to get off the rabbit trail and back on to the main track again: Coming home from Ithaca over Route 79, it started to rain rather steadily, so I turned the wipers on to a medium intermittent speed. Not too bad - for a  while. I began to notice that it was getting tough to see the right-hand lane marker because the inner section of the wiper was no longer making contact with the windsheild. So, I pulled over in Mecklenburg and re-situated the wiper blade. This worked wonders on clearing the windshield for a time, then it started all over again. As I was gettin quite close to home, I didn't bother to stop again to re-orient it - not such a good choice as it turns out: Coming down Burdett hill, the wiper blade suddenly went "Clunk!" and turned upside down and perpendicular (rather than parallel) to the wiper arm! Now I had the driver's side wiper not touching ANY of the windshield, no street lights, rain coming down in periodic buckets, and lots of incoming traffic. To say it was difficult to see the road is a tremendous understatement. I had to slow down to less than 30 mph, much to the irritation of the drivers behind me (with the exception of my wife, who was just worried about me). So I stopped at the local Walmart and bought a new wiper blade. Isn't it amazing how much better a functioning wiper blade works than a non-functioning (or at least sporadically functioning) one does. And all of this drama would have been avoided had I just replaced the blade when it first gave me problems.
Old Ben Franklin knew what he was talking about didn't he?

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Feelin' good

You know, there's something about accomplishing something worthwhile. Even though it may take a lot of work, and you ache and are tired, you feel good. I've been working on the roof of my garage for the last several weekends. Actually longer than that, just that the last couple of weekends has been much more concerted effort. I'm making good progress, and the improvement in the second story of the garage - where my wood shop is - is phenomenal. I started out earlier (during the summer that almost wasn't) and got to the point where I had to leave the ladder and go up on the roof itself to do the work. In some cases, this wouldn't be bad, but my garage has about a 7/12 pitch to the roof. This means that in every twelve inches, the height goes up by seven inches. A standard roof pitch is 4/12 which is what I've done all my other roofing projects on. This roof is pretty steep, and it stymied me in trying to proceed. My wife objected strenously to my working on the roof that way. My son came up with a great idea for getting around securely on the roof - I borrowed his track spikes. They have just the small pin spikes, and so are ideal for getting good traction on the sheathing. I've also discovered that once the felt paper is down, normal sneakers give very secure footing.
Well, so far, I have the back section sheathed and papered. I also have the fascia/soffit repair done on the back. My roof slopes on all four sides, so, I'm just over 1/3 done. I anticipate having all of it done before the serious snow flies, and I look forward to having a 'Santa's Workshop' that is much nicer to work in this year. No snow blowing in through the cracks, or flowing down through the holes in the roof, my tools shouldn't rust as readily, and I won't have to dodge the collection buckets on the shop floor. Maybe I'll be able to keep the wasps and hornets out of there as well. Anyway, I've enjoyed working with my son, and seeing the progress. I'll have to wait for spring to put the asphalt roofing on - it won't seal properly in the cold.

Maybe next year

Well, the Michigan Wolverines have just one more game this season - almost no chance to go to a bowl game for post season play.
We started off with a bang - the first four in a row were wins! Hooray! Already this season beat last year (3-9).
Then came Michigan State, our second conference game. Watching the game was painful. We had opportunities to win the game, but we also have a young team, and inexperience ruled the day for us - we lost - in overtime.< br/>Next came the Iowa Hawkeyes - undefeated so far. We played pretty well up until Tate Forcier made a mistake in the fourth quarter. Coach Rodriguez pulled him and put in the backup quarterback, Denard Robinson, who, in my humble opinion, had yet not proven himself to be someone to count on in a pinch. Forcier had done so in several games prior to this. Well, because Robinson doesn't have the arm that Forcier does, we failed to score on our final series and lost to the Hawkeyes 30-28. It looked to me like the coach was upset and took it out on Forcier - at the expense of the team. We should have won that game and beaten the so far undefeated Iowa team.
Our final win came at the expense of poor Delaware State, who we beat 63-6 even with using the bench and not just first stringers. They were clearly out of their depth. I didn't enjoy that victory, even though it was ours - I felt sorry for Delaware State. Alas it was to be the last victory, thus far this season.
Penn State, Illinois, Purdue and finally yesterday, Wisconsin, all defeated us to leave us second from the bottom in the Big Ten conference; the only team below us in the Big Ten rankings is the one team we beat - Indiana. We have the same dismal conference record: 1-6, but we've one more win than they do.

It's still mathematically possible for us to become 'bowl eligible' but we'll have to beat the Buckeyes (that team from the middle of the state of Ohio) to do it, and guess who's in first place in the Big Ten? Yup. And they've only been beaten twice this season. Once by Purdue for the first time in a long time, and once by USC (hooray for the Trojans!). Our record against them with this coach, albeit that this is only his second chance, is not so good. He became the first coach in Michgan Wolverine history to collect a fifth in-a-row defeat from them. This year doesn't bode much better.
While I definitely do believe in miracles, I also believe that their purpose is to glorify God and not to cater to the silly desires of football fans, so I really don't expect a victory next weekend at the Big House (Michigan's Ann Arbor stadium). So another year down the tubes under the much touted leadership of Coach Rich Rodriguez. We did have a marginally better season this year, so I assume the powers that be will allow him to stay on, but, I really hope he can accomplish MUCH better things next year. It's not like he doesn't have any talented players, he does. Somehow he needs to figure out how to get them to play as a team, have some more endurance, not make rookie blunders, and so on and so on. But after all, isn't that what a coach's job is? I will grant that the team is young and inexperienced, and I hope to see great things from them in the years to come; I just hope that Coach Rodriguez can pull it off. Otherwise the team will have to go through yet another coaching change, which is never easy. Because if we don't improve greatly next year, I would expect the coach to be let go.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Fort Hood

You just have to wonder what was going on in all the minds of the people who've been mentioned as having doubts about this Major Hassan. I mean, he was transferred from his old base because of his attitude towards the army and towards America in general. He was researching suicide bombers and terrorist tactics and methods on the internet. He was in more-than-just-casual contact with a radical, jihadist imam. He was assigned a 'shadow' to try and prevent just the kind of thing that happened at Fort Hood. The FBI had him on a special watch list for his terrorist-like activity/interests. He had notations in his personnel file about all of this, and yet he was promoted just a few months ago. He bought a handgun recently and passed the FBI (note that this is the same FBI that's investigating him) background check - he was allowed to purchase the gun! Was this all political correctness carried to a deplorable conclusion? Or was it just pure laziness and stupidity? I don't condone profiling people based upon their appearance, national origin, the length of their hair, absence or presence of tatoos or piercings. However, when a person shows aberrent behavior, doesn't that justify the watchfulness? What happened to this man's "shadow"? The major's name doesn't sound anything like Peter Pan, who is the only one I know of who ever became separated from his shadow. Where was this person? What about the CO who approved his promotion? Shouldn't he be held accountable for some of this too? Or the person who ran the background check - and never bothered to search their own agency's files? How could this have POSSIBLY slipped through the cracks? You can be certain that if I exhibited the behavior that the major did, I would have my phone tapped, my computer hacked, and anything else deemed necessary to 'keep an eye on' me - as I should! But, in the interest of not offending a particular ethinic or religious group, it was let go and now many people are dead. What's wrong with us in this country? What happened to the 'land of the free and the home of the brave"? We as a country are so afraid of offending anyone - regardless of whether or not they are dangerous or wrong - that we're alienating our own citizens and placing them in harm's way - knowingly. Just to keep from offending people that already hate us! And yet, look at the lifestyle that many of these American-hating peoples strive for - OURS! Something is horribly wrong with this picture.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

What are they thinking??

We got a newsletter from the local school system the other day that contained the announcement that ALL students in grades 5-8 will be issued cell phones to test their effectiveness as a teaching tool. We are reassured that there will be strictly limited internet access, and that the only possible texting will be to the teacher - yeah right! These kids are in the age group that writes and propagates most of the viruses, worms, and other assorted malware that plagues computer users. What will keep them from circumventing the "restrictions" of these cell phones?  The teachers? The rules? But of course! The past several years, the administration of the schools has handed down edicts, rulings, etc banning cell phones during school hours. What are they thinking? Are they all transplants from California where they're so tired of fighting marijuana usage that they're in the process of legalizing it? I think I understand the "reasoning": we have too many potheads taking up valuable real estate in our jails and prisons, so let's make it legal and TAX it! Multiple birds with one stone! Reduce the frustration of law enforcement personnel who feel that they're fighting a losing battle, reduce the census in the penal institutions, and reduce the budget deficit in one fell swoop! Brilliant - NOT! While I agree that some laws are just plain silly, there's enough evidence linking pot use to mental degradation, and acceleration of drug use to cause reasonable doubt in all but the most befuddled of stoners. It defies logic to make it legal. It's really a matter of expedience - don't make waves, go with the flow, hang loose, chill out, what have you. Leave your principles at the door and come right in! This seems to me to be an early step onto a very slippery slope - look at the erosion of family values in the past 40-50 years - it doesn't take much imagination to see where this could very easily lead. . . . Not a pleasant picture.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Hello

Hello.  I'm not sure why I decided to start this blog thing. I guess I just wanted a somewhat less structured place than Facebook to put voice to my thoughts, reminiscings and reflections.

As you may have deduced from the title, I don't have any particular topic that I'll be sounding forth on. I have a tendency towards Michigan Wolverine football comments, computer and technology reflections, and venting about what I consider to be political buffoonery.

It's all highly opinionated, or of a personally significant nature I'll admit, but, I don't intend to be any kind of pundit or fount of wisdom.

Feel free to comment if you wish, and read at your own risk - not that this will be an "adult" site (it won't) - just be prepared to disagree with my opinions and statements at times. After all, despite the efforts of the current administration, this is still a country where free speech is constitutionally guaranteed.