Thursday, June 28, 2007

The Back Forty Idioms

I have been talking about doing a blog based on farm-related idioms for awhile now so here goes. I'll let you supply the meanings in the comment section. PS- using Google is cheating.
PPS-I'll post all the answers in a couple of days but you win a gold star for each one you get right.

tough row to hoe--

high cotton--

that dog'll hunt--

buying pig in a poke--

shut the barn door after the cows get out--

can't make a silk purse from a sow's ear--

light a shuck--

long in the tooth--

never look a gift horse in the mouth--

like a chicken with its head cut off--

dog and pony show (not really farm related)--

come a gully washer--

cotton shower--

That should be enough for this time. Stayed tuned for more or give new ones in the comments section.

Monday, June 25, 2007

Video Games

I remember the magical Christmas of 1987. There, under the tree was the Nintendo we three boys had asked for as a present. Ironically, my mom also calls that day as the last one we willing played outside. I was playing N64 the other day and reminiscing about some of my favourite games. Here they are, in no particular order. I’ll miss a few of the great ones, of course, but these are the ones I remember as I write this post.

Nintendo:

Zelda: Link, Ganon and the Triforce. I still remember figuring out you could use the rupees to buy bombs. Should have read the manual.

Super Mario Brothers: Took me ages to beat this game but what a great game. How about that warp zone? We also watched the Super Mario Brothers the TV show. Not as good as the game.

RBI Baseball: This one didn’t have all of the teams but it had some of them, plus an NL and AL all-star teams. We named home runs based on the person who hit them first. An Andre Dawson was one you never saw the ball after you hit it and cleared the lights. A Mike Schmidt hit in the center of the lights and an Eric Davis was a line drive that actually went through the wall down the left field line.

Tecmo Super Bowl: Never owned this one but traded a friend for it. You could play a 16 game season and then go to the playoffs. At some point, if you were say, 10-0 the computer would say, “No, you will not win the next game.” At which point your best player would get hurt and you would fumble sixteen times. Bo Jackson was one of the best runners on the game.

Super Mario 3: Maybe the greatest game of all time. A frog suit, a Tanooki suit, wandering spade cards and so many secrets it made your head spin.

Mike Tyson’s Punchout: Never beat this game but it was infuriating and addicting.

Metroid: Samus is a girl?

Super Nintendo:

Personally, I consider the Super Nintendo to be the pinnacle of video gaming.

Final Fantasy 2: First RPG we ever played. It was also the first game with a deep storyline and I remember how shocked I was when characters died or fell in love.

Final Fantasy 3: Even better than Final Fantasy 2, this one had Cyan and Terra and Shadow the ninja. Also, you could have two players during the battle scenes with the second controller managing two of the fighting party.

Super Mario Kart: I love games that are hard. This one was hard but non-stop fun. I was obsessed with time trials on Rainbow Road, one of the tracks. I would race it over and over to set lap and track records.

Secret of Mana: This one was one of the first of the action RPGs where there were three characters onscreen at a time and two were controlled by players. Also, I loved how you started out with a lance and could then take it to the blacksmith and make it more powerful after getting certain items.

Chronotrigger- One of the later game releases in the SNES’s life but a great RPG nonetheless.

Street Fighter 2: This one started the fighting game craze. The hype for it was unbelievable.

Ogre Battle: This game was great but hard to find, so we just rented it.

Tecmo Super Bowl: We actually owned this one, which was just better graphics and an update of the player rosters from the NES game. Also, it was easier.

Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past: Great memories of this game. Loads of secrets.

Super Metroid: Samus is back.

Super Castlevania: Mode 7 and great bosses at the end of the game.

Donkey Kong Country

N64:

Super Mario 64: I actually remember sweating as I controlled Mario walking along narrow walkways with drop-offs to infinity on both sides.

Goldeneye: The ultimate party/dorm game.

WCW Nitro: Wrestling game that was great for parties.

Mario Kart 64: Not as good as the original but a great game.

Killer Instinct: Combo Breaker!

Playstation:

Resident Evil 1 and 2: One was ok but plagued by load times but 2 was one of my favourite games of all time.

Final Fantasy 7: This game made RPGs popular because it had good graphics and chocobos.

Tony Hawk Pro Skater: This was the last game I played that as I was playing I thought, “Wow, this is so cool!”

Crono-Cross: Worthy follow up to Chrono Trigger.

Castlevania: Symphony of the Night: Great game but they made it twice as long just by turning the castle upside down. What a cheap way out!

Suikoden: Little known game that was great fun.

Metal Gear Solid: Great game but too short.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Florida

I'm finally getting around to posting some of the pictures that I took during my trip to visit my brother in Orlando. They don't follow any theme other than they were all taken in Florida and I thought they were worth the time to process and put on the blog.

A rose in a garden we visited near St. Augustine.

Gotta have a cool spider picture or it isn't a good post.

The St. Augustine light, one of the most famous in the United States.

Castillo de San Marcos
St. Augustine is the oldest settlement in the USA, founded in 1565 but the fort was built after the city, it is just 330 years old.

The light at St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge

Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge

Here is a series of photographs I took at the Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge. Mostly they are wildflowers. We (my parents and I) saw lots of painted buntings in the refuge, it is definitely the place to go to see them.








Many of the vistas in the refuge are unique with the pinkish red rocks, some of them jumbled into hills.

My Granny

Granny and Boat

You know that stereotypical grandmother figure: You arrive at her house to find granny in the kitchen, with a homey little apron tied around her waist. As you come in she wipes the flour from her hands and ushers you to the kitchen table. There on the table is a plate of hot chocolate chip cookies and a tall glass of cold milk. “Have a seat, dear,” she coos, “Granny made a little snack for her precious one.”

Not my Granny. (We called my dad’s mom “Grandma” and my mom’s mom “Granny”) My Granny is a good cook especially famous for her salads and knox blox and her lemon meringue pie. However, I do not think of the picture above when I think of her.

We used to go to my granny’s house in the summer and stay a week. We would often go to the lake and swim but we also engaged in other activities. One of these was picking up cans. Before people got conscious of the environment, we used to litter the sides of our roads with trash. One of these items was aluminum cans. So, we would load up, my granny, my two brothers and I and go traipse up and down the sides of the highway filling black garbage bags with discarded cans. We would then crush the cans and take them to a recycling center and get something like $.25 a pound for them.

Another thing we always did was go “garage saling”. Every Thursday for the last 30 years my granny and her sister, Maxine, would get up and go hit all the garage sales (where people sell off unwanted junk from their house). When we stayed with her in the summers, we would tag along and granny would give us a couple of dollars to buy stuff at the garage sales. I still remember purchasing a cow’s horn (not attached!) and a couple dozen golf balls and a game where you flicked the game pieces, a little like “carom”.

My granny is also the ultimate hippie. She has always shopped at the “Bent Can” or close out stores that sell the cans that are dropped and get bent or the label is torn off etc. She also did the recycling of cans I mentioned earlier, saved rainwater to water her flowers and rarely used the air conditioner even in the 100 degree days of summer.

All this sets the stage for the story I want to tell. My granny makes lye soap. She then sells it or gives it away and there is always a demand for her lye soap. Recently she has had a problem finding the lye that gives lye soap its name, due to the fact it is an ingredient in the manufacture of crystal methamphetamine, a popular drug.

She told her friends of her desire to make lye soap but lacking her ingredients. They offered to give her some ingredients, not lye, but animal fat. So, she came home and my parents helped her unload a box of tallow or animal fat, unprocessed, just cut off the carcass. She then rendered it on the stove, “My house still smells”, she moans, “I had to use two burners and wasted so much gas.”

Then we went to town and looked at three different stores and finally found some lye.

She started to make lye and was going to use a large wooden box to pour the liquid into and then allow them to harden over about a week.

As she poured the concoction into the wooden box, it developed a leak and the liquid poured all over the floor. So she had to spend several hours cleaning the lye mixture off her kitchen floor! No lye soap this time. Did I mention she will be 80 next February?!?

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

What's on your Ipod?

Well, for my birthday my mom got me an Ipod. I have resisted the mp3 device revolution because I am not one of those people who has to listen to music all the time or they go crazy. However, I thought it was time to enter the 21st century at last and I got an Ipod Nano. What I soon discovered was that an Ipod is very little about music. There are literally hundreds of thousands of podcasts on almost every subject imaginable. So I am loving my Ipod but just have a hundred or so songs on it. A popular interview question is: “What’s on your Ipod?” so here is my answer.

Podcasts:

Car Talk: If you have never heard of this show you are missing one of the best things out there. It is a couple of guys from Cambridge, Massachusetts who answer calls about all things automotive. Hilarity always ensues.

Radio West: I only have on program from them about great speeches in history from Churchill to Reagan to Lincoln. Very, very interesting hour of moving speeches and memories.

Martin Luther King Jr: Spurred on by the program above, I downloaded his “I have a dream” speech

John F. Kennedy: Inaugural address “Ask not what your country can do for you…”

Booker T. Washington: Address at the Atlanta Convention “Up from Slavery”.

Socrates

Napoleon Podcast: Up to this date, a 23 part podcast on the life and impact of Napoleon. So far I have listened to 2 parts (each is an hour) with my parents and we found them excellent.

Military History Podcast: Hannibal at the Gates and Alexander the Great Hannibal is my favourite non-religious historical person. Started with that term paper in the fifth grade and still continues today. One day I want to hike the route he took through the Alps from Spain when he invaded Italy and the Roman Empire.

Max Out Radio: Podcast on nutrition and health.

Coffee Break Spanish: A great podcast that is 15 minute lessons on how to learn Spanish.

Music:

Van Halen-Greatest Hits: I’ve loved their music for a long time.

Modest Mouse: Giving this one a try.

Emmylou Harris-Red Dirt Girl: My aunt sent me this CD about 7 years ago and I still love it. Any songwriter that can use “drawn and quartered” in a song is worth a listen.

The Monkees: The original boy band!

Van Morrison-Moondance: Very different, very good.

Cream: Clapton at a young age.

O Brother Where Art Thou soundtrack

Coldplay

Counting Crows

Bruce Hornsby/Billy Joel: I love piano driven songs.

Cranberries: Linger and Zombie are classics.

Natalie Imbruglia: I have no reason why but I love this CD and often in the past craved certain songs off of it. Yes, I know she is a former Aussie soaps actress and “Torn” will be her one hit wonder. To each his own, ok?

U2-The Singles: Who doesn’t love U2?

Friday, June 15, 2007

Where were you?

I've been listening to some great speeches in American history on my Ipod and it got me to thinking about world events and where I was when I heard about different tragedies.

1) The space shuttle Challenger explodes (28 January 1986)

This is the first major event that I remember. It was when I saw the flag at half-staff and I asked questions that I found out that the space shuttle exploded. I was at school at Victory Christian and saw the flag during recess. That week we went to get a dog from Gerald Neighbors and we named him "Challenger" because we got him the week the Challenger exploded. Additional note: We also had a dog named "Dollar" because my brother bought him at an auction for a dollar. My brother was young, saw the dog and bid one dollar to buy the cute dog. The problem was, he didn't have a dollar to pay for the dog after he was the highest bid, so the guy standing next to him gave him a dollar to buy "Dollar".

2) Oklahoma City bombing (19 April 1995)

I was in university at the time and had an early morning chemistry class. 100.5, the KATT, a popular radio station had a popular morning show with the DJ's "Rick and Brad". After chemistry class I went to my pickup and started it up. The radio came on and Rick and Brad, who usually finished their shift during my class were still on air. It took me a minute to figure out what was happening because I thought it might be a comedy skit and I didn't know what the word 'triage' meant. Once I figured it out, I went home and watched the live coverage at my apartment. 168 people were killed in that bombing.

3) September 11, 2001

I got up early because I needed to go to Canada and took a shower. As I was shaving I turned on the radio my roommate BJ kept in the bathroom. There was no music, they were just on news and talking about the first tower collapsing. I immediately woke up BJ and we watched a couple of minutes on TV before I went to Canada. After I got to Canada they closed the border for awhile and I wound up spending much more time there than I expected.

4) Tsunami (26 December 2004)

I was at a friend's house checking my email when I felt the house shake. At first I thought I was getting dizzy but I had experienced an earthquake while living in Washington state, so I quickly realised it had been an earthquake. I went for my scuba dive training at a local pool and then started to go to my friend's house for a Christmas open house. Before I left, he smsed (texted) to say not to use the main road. The back road was congested but I was on motorbike so didn't have much trouble. After I arrived I found out there had been a tsunami and that was the reason the roads were closed. It had washed boats and other debris onto the roadway. As we talked, we heard a sound like a jet landing. We looked out from his balcony, which had an ocean view, and was a much smaller secondary wave coming in from the open ocean. It was months before the world realised over 200,000 people died that day. I still remember the Internet reports that evening were reporting 9,000 dead.

5) Space shuttle Columbia (1 February 2003)

I don't remember where I was when I heard about this but I remember I went for a swim and stopped at a roadside Malay restaurant the day after it happened. On the table was a newspaper with a picture of the explosion as the front page news. I had just arrived in Malaysia and knew almost zero Bahasa Malaysia. An elderly man in a Muslim skullcap and sarong came over and sat down. He spoke no English but he looked at the picture on the newspaper and wanted to say something. Eventually he said, "Sad" and walked away. I've always been touched by his desire to express sympathy that day.




Monday, June 11, 2007

Second star to the right and straight on till morning

Malaysia is hoping to send an astronaut (or bolehnaut) to space in the next couple of years, so on Friday, June 8th I went to see a shuttle launch in Florida in case I am named to an adviser to the space program in Malaysia.

We went to Titusville, Florida and watched the launch from there because they close off some of the areas close to NASA and won't let you get really close to the launch site. The street was just lined with cars and people out with their families and their lawn chairs to watch the launch. It is a h
uge event that thousands of people turn out for. We found a place about 5 p.m. and sat down to wait for the 7:38 p.m. launch.

This osprey glided by several times during the two hour wait.

While we were waiting, a lady amused us by talking to her dogs. Personally, I think people have entered dangerous territory when they start calling their dogs "kids" and themselves as "mom" and "dad" to the dogs. Perhaps indicates a loss of perspective...but I digress.

When time for the launch came, I have to admit I was really excited. The shuttle program will be retired in 2010, so this is probably the only time I'll ever get to see a launch. When the ignition hit and the clouds of smoke plumed up from both sides of the launch tower, I got goose bumps. I mean, this thing is blasting off to visit the international space station and will orbit the earth for 11 days. Not a small feat!


This picture is just after lift off and is darker because I properly exposed the flame from the rockets.


We were a long distance from the launch site so I was thankful for my 400 mm zoom.



Long after the shuttle was in space this trail lingered in the air. Beautiful!


Red-cockaded woodpecker

I'm currently in Florida spending some time with my brother and having fun, hence the long silence in posting.

On the drive to Orlando, one of my goals was to stop by the Apalachicola National Forest in an attempt to see the red-cockaded woodpecker. These woodpeck
ers live in specific trees located in the southern United States and are declining in numbers. An estimated 14,000 birds are all that remain of this species.

I stopped in Apalachicola to enquire about the possibility of finding this rare bird. I was directed to the nature centre, where a helpful lady called an avid birder. She relayed to me that I needed to head east over the bridge out of town, then tur
n north on state route 65 towards Sumatra. An aside: Although the same name as a large island in Indonesia, this Sumatra is pronounced with a short 'a' sound in the middle syllable where the island is an "ah" sound.

My adviser told me to drive north and keep my eyes open for trees marked with white painted bands around the base. These marked the red-cockaded woodpecker's colonies. These colonies appear to be clusters of trees that are near one another that several different birds nest in.


Several trees in the area had white bands painted around the base and a letter as well. Trees were marked 'A' through 'N'.


I drove north and almost caused a car crash when I saw the first white-banded tree. I jumped out, camera in hand and binoculars around my neck. Unfortunatel
y, the bird was not waiting for me to snap his picture. I began to walk up and down the highway, as there were several trees with white bands along a 300 meter stretch of the road. Suddenly, I saw a bird with the distinctive undulating flight pattern of a woodpecker. It landed on one of the white-banded trees and my heart hit 200 beats per minute. But, this was one shy woodpecker and never came to the side of the tree so that I could see her! After 20 seconds she flew out of sight. Arrgghh! Soon the same bird came flying back and I whipped the binoculars up again, as this time she was in clear view. Nooooooooo! Just a red-bellied woodpecker.

I began to walk up the road towards the first tree when a smaller woodpecker flew into a tree about 20 meters off the highway. Again my pulse hit an erratic rate and the bins came up again. Yes! This was a red-cockaded woodpecker. I took out my camera and took a few distant snaps of this elusive bird. I feel very luck to have had the chance to get a two minute viewing of this rare and unique bird.

The red-cockaded woodpecker