![]() |
"Sun Beam" by Bruce H. |
Tuesday, February 28, 2023
Photograph: "Sun Beam"
Sunday, February 26, 2023
Weekly Ephemera #45
- On Monday the roofers came in and swapped out our box/turtle vents with turbine vents. This was done to increase the ventilation in our attic (to reduce condensation) and to prevent the sucking of snow into the attic. The snow and condensation was staining our ceiling in several rooms. The roofers also vented the bathroom fans to the outside as they should have been from the beginning. The builder had just vented the bathrooms into the attic.
While doing the work the roofers pointed out that the baffles that ensure proper airflow from the soffit vents into the attic were not installed correctly. They will be back in April (when workers return after taking off the winter season) to evaluate/fix these air flow issues. This will result in a bill between $2K and $4K depending on what they find when they tear off part of the roof. *sigh* - Geek Talk Warning: For years I've been using GoDaddy as my domain registrar for Homers Travels. This week I learned that GoDaddy had discovered a multi-year hack of their system. While this only seems to affect websites hosted by GoDaddy and I only use their Domain Name registration, I decided to play it safe and moved my registration over to Google Domains instead. I suspect you, the consumer of Homer's Travels, will not notice anything. Carry on.
- Walking was a bit chaotic this week. Due to several factors beyond my control I only managed two hikes this week - one short and one long. I ended up walking 15 miles (24 km). The longer hike, over 10 miles (16 km) felt very good so I think I can push longer miles. I don't expect any interruptions to my walking schedule this coming week so it will be interesting how my body handles longer miles.
A pair of signs that made me smile. - Saw my first Robin last week. This, and the more spring-like temperatures in the forecast, seem to be hinting at an early Spring. Our snow is almost all gone (we didn't get anything more than a trace from the storm that came through Wednesday night). We only have rain coming this week. Yay.
Labels:
Birds,
Blog,
Hikes,
Internet,
Our Home,
Photographs,
Seasons,
Tech,
What-Ive-Been-Up-To
Thursday, February 23, 2023
Photograph: "Faux Black & White"
Wednesday, February 22, 2023
Oscar Shorts 2023
Wednesday afternoon I performed the pseudo-annual tradition of seeing the Oscar Nominated Shorts (Animated and Live Action). Over the past few years the art house movie theater that shows them here has had the terrible habit of timing the airings so that it was impossible to watch both on the same day. Fortunately for me they corrected their wayward ways and this year I could watch both back to back.
The animated shorts were first. They all were pretty good. "The Boy, the Mole, the Fox, and the Horse" was a bit too saccharine for me. "The Flying Sailor", based on a true story (The Halifax harbor explosion) was a little too abstract as was "The Ice Merchants". I think "My Year of Dicks" probably should win but not sure they have the guts to give the Oscar to an adult themed short even if it was funny. The safe one would then be "An Ostrich Told Me the World Is Fake and I Think I Believe It" which is ok.
After a short break between movies - and a good piece of banana bread - the live action shorts started. The danger of the live action shorts is they often take on serious themes that are often very bleak. This year two of the five fit the potentially bleak category. The other three had enough humor and a happy enough ending to make them good. My pick to win this category is "An Irish Goodbye". It was sweet, funny, and had a satisfying ending.
There is a third category of Oscar shorts: Documentary. The Wife and I have gone to them a couple times and have left depressed. They are almost always too tragic and downbeat. I'm not sure if I'll go to those this year.
Left the theater to find a glaze of ice on the windshield. We have some ice and snow coming overnight. Yay.
Tuesday, February 21, 2023
Book: Emily St. John Mandel's "Sea Of Tranquility"
This is the second Emily St. John Mandel book I've read. The first, "Station Eleven", got a rare five stars from me so I had high hopes for her latest work. Like "Station Eleven" this book is simple and understated and an interesting read. The book weaves time travel and simulation theory together to create a really interesting read.
Now, I should note that I do not believe in the possibility of time travel. I believe we will eventually discover that time travel into the past is not allowed by the laws of physics that govern our existence. Having said this I always am able to suspend disbelief when I read a good time travel story. Frankly, if you are a reader of any science fiction, suspension of disbelief is a mandatory skill.
The only fault I can find with this book is the use of simulation theory - the idea that we are living in a simulation. After finishing the book I am still not sure why it was included in the story. It seemed superfluous and unnecessary.
I gave the book four stars out of five on Goodreads. I sometimes wish I could give half-stars since this one could have gotten four and a half stars. It was nice to read something I actually enjoyed again.
Sunday, February 19, 2023
Weekly Ephemera #44
- I was going to walk three times this week but only managed one. On Monday, when I would have walked, I decided I just didn't want to. I headed to the She-Shed, put on some music, and proceeded to take a two and a half hour nap. For a person who rarely naps for more than a half hour this was odd - I guess I was tired for some still unknown reason.
On Wednesday I actually walked. I picked a route closer to home but along streets I rarely walk and managed to hike 8.1 miles (13.0 km). It was a nice walk but I think I need to start pushing myself and go longer. I've been stuck in the 8 mile rut for the last month. This week I'll try to push up to the mid nine mile range. - On Thursday morning the snow that was going to miss us to the South didn't. By early afternoon we had 6 - 7 inches (15 - 18 cm) of relatively fluffy snow. It was our first 'real' snow we've had this winter and came quite a bit later than usual. I used the neighbor's snow blower to clear out our driveways and sidewalks.
On Friday I went over to Mom's house and shovelled her driveway and sidewalks. She has a snowblower but I'd never used it and I didn't want to wake her so I cleared it by hand. While I probably would have walked that day I got plenty of exercise moving the snow. I was concerned my back would bother me after all the exertion but to my pleasant surprise I felt fine this weekend. - Friday afternoon I went to the early IMAX showing of "Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania". This is the start of Marvel's phase five and a good start it was. I enjoyed it.
- I got a new pair of glasses a week or so ago. I have to say it's been a long time since I got a well fitting pair of glasses. These fit like a glove.
The past few times I've gotten the color changing lenses (sometimes called Transition lenses) that darken in the sun. (I had Transition lenses in high school but stopped getting them when I became an adult.) I got them again before I went on the Appalachian Trail hike and I liked them. The new pair added polarisation to the color changing. The change is amazing. The old ones always had glare issues but the new polarized lenses cut the glare and reduce my squinting and glare induced headaches.
Labels:
Health,
Hikes,
Movie,
Weather,
What-Ive-Been-Up-To
Tuesday, February 14, 2023
Travel Magnets - Key West Roadtrip 2023 Edition
What?!? You thought we wouldn't get more travel magnets on our recent roadtrip? Of course we did. We did keep it more under control limiting the number to sixteen new magnets. Actually, we could have bought more. We never got a Florida, Tennessee, or Missouri magnet (we did get an Arkansas one). We didn't get any in Mobile or Birmingham (we did get a few in Memphis). But we did get a few cool magnets this time around.
![]() |
Hemingway House. |
![]() |
A nice piece of Key West art. |
![]() |
The semi-3D Lorraine Motel magnet. |
P.S. You can also find a magnet from the Historic Park Inn Hotel where we stayed last December.
Sunday, February 12, 2023
Weekly Ephemera #43
- I did my taxes this week. This was a weird return since the Wife retired this year and our health insurance is from the affordable care act now. One of the easiest returns I've done in years. Turns out we are getting a larger than expected refund this year. It's large enough to pay for our Key West Roadtrip so that's something. I usually hate giving the Government a free loan but I'll get over it when the money is in the bank.
- I decided to skip the State of the Union speech on Tuesday. Probably the first one I've missed it in several years ... possibly decades. I felt a bit guilty as I read my book instead but the feeling passed. Things have changed a lot as you pretty much can get summaries and relevant pictures and clips any time you want. Ain't technological progress wonderful.
- Speaking of technology I deleted the "Tweet to me" button from my sidebar. I suspect it was never used and I also suspect it will likely stop functioning as Elno monitizes Twitter into the ground. I'm not leaving Twitter yet. I have read rumors that the IFTTT service I use to repost Homer's Travels to Twitter may stop working too. If it does then my Twitter presence may become read-only.
- I walked three times this week for a total of 25.7 miles (41.3 km). The two weeks off due to our Key West Roadtrip didn't help much. My legs were a bit sore but by the end of the week I'd recovered the progress I had before the trip.
Thursday, February 09, 2023
Book: Erin K. Wagner's "An Unnatural Life"
Erin K. Wagner's "An Unnatural Life" is a typical 'robot commits a crime and an idealistic lawyer defends them' story. There are some new facets - the robots are all considered sentient and humans are bigoted against them.
The issue is the story ends abruptly. Yes it's a novella but even a short novella needs a proper ending. If this was part one of a series that would make sense but it's not. It felt like the author either lost interest or got distracted and threw on a crappy ending. Very disappointing.
I gave this book three stars out of five on Goodreads. It needed more. The new facets were a jump off point with lots of potential that was tossed in the trash.
Tuesday, February 07, 2023
Book: Sequoia Nagamatsu's "How High We Go In The Dark"
Sequoia Nagamatsu's "How High We Go in the Dark" starts with an archeological discovery in the melting permafrost of Siberia. An ancient pathogen is released. The following chapters are each independent, but interconnected, stories of how the world deals with the death of children followed shortly by adult deaths after the pathogen mutates. The early chapters deal with death ... a lot. At first I wondered if it would all be about death but eventually it started to move away from death. Some of the chapters really go off the rails going on strange tangents.
Each chapter shares some characters. A baby in one chapter appears as an adult in a later chapter. In books like this I expect to find clues in each chapter that all come together in some elegant manner in the last chapter or two. If done well you will be surprised but will see how everything comes together. This book was not done correctly. The last chapter takes a hard turn introducing something that is totally unexpected. It's like reading a murder mystery and finding out the killer is a character introduced in the last chapter of the book.
I gave this book three stars out of five on Goodreads. The off the rails chapters and the totally crazy last chapter did not sit well with me. There was potential here but it was wasted.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)