2009-06-12

Novel

For anyone not in the know, I've been working on a novel off and on for years now. It would fall in the genre of epic fantasy, hopefully not too cliche and hopefully entertaining and a page turner. The entire work is about 123,000 words, and currently has no title. I've decided to post the first chapter here in the hopes that it will produce some feedback and provide me with some motivation to get writing again. Click the Full Post link to read the whole chapter.
Chapter I: Discoveries

If I speak of myself in this story, it is because it is my story to tell, and I know of no better way to tell it. Like all stories it has a beginning, though that was a very long time ago now. Some could say that since it is my story it began with my birth in Maimanoth of the year 977, but I instead intend to start late in the summer of the year 992, with a trip to the fair.

I remember that it was a hot day as I went out into the late summer sunshine. To try to be more comfortable I wore a long flowing tunic that reached my knees, belted at the waist, leaving my legs exposed, my feet shod with sandals.

My friends were waiting for me. Zalman sat in the driver's seat of the one-horse wagon, dressed much the same way I was. The bed was occupied by Aslag and Iram but was otherwise empty. They were dressed for the heat as well.

"Climb in, Selik," Zalman said. "Time's a-wasting."

I grinned as I climbed into the bed of the wagon. Once I was settled, Zalman clicked his tongue and the horse started forward.

I had known Zalman for a very long time. We had met when we were about five years old, before we even entered school. He had chestnut brown hair that was cut very short and an oval-shaped face with hazel eyes. He had a burly build, being taller than me by at least a hand and outweighing me by perhaps a stone.

Iram I had met in school when we were six years old. He was the stoutest of the four of us, standing taller than Zalman and outweighing him by a two or three stone. He had tawny hair with blue eyes, with an oval-shaped face.

I had met Aslag in school as well. He had shaggy blonde hair and an oval-shaped face with blue eyes. He was around Zalman's height but slimmer, though not quite lanky.

The three of them made me feel kind of small at my seventeen-and-a-half hands of height, but I could hold my own at fifteen stone. I had tawny hair myself, almost blonde, and blue eyes.

"What do you want to do at the fair?" Iram asked.

"I want a sausage and a honey cake," I replied.

"I want to see the livestock," Zalman said. "I want to see the competition against my lambs."

"I'm hoping to see Isolde there," Aslag said.

"Don't forget the games," Iram said.

The wagon rumbled and creaked through the gentle hills of the orchard country in which we lived. The cherry trees had been stripped of their fruit in Yuvimanoth, but the apple trees still bore their fruit, awaiting the harvest in Oshimanoth. The late-summer weather of Elulmanoth had been dry, and the wagon stirred up a trail of dust marking where we had been. It didn't take long to arrive at the fairgrounds on the outskirts of Stoerstad. Zalman hobbled the horse and left it to graze in the pasture. We each paid the one silver bit admission charge and entered the fair.

Amongst the booths and pavilions we paused a moment and looked around. "Isolde said she'd be working today," Aslag said. "The bakery has a booth here."

He led the way to the booth set up by Jorn's Bakery. Working there was a girl wearing a white dress with a red surcoat. She was slender and petite, being almost a head shorter than the rest of us. She had fair skin, thick long black hair, and blue eyes. She smiled when she saw Aslag. "You came," she said.

Aslag smiled back at her. "We couldn't miss the fair," he said, "especially since you're working today." The girl blushed. "Isolde, I'd like you to meet my friends. This is Iram, Zalman, and Selik," he said, gesturing to each of us in turn. "Boys, this is Isolde."

They chatted for a bit while I eyed the honey cakes. They were only a penny each! I nudged Zalman. "Do you want a honey cake?"

"Since you're buying," he replied.

Isolde spoke. "I see you like our honey cakes."

"I'll take two of them," I said, pulling the money from the pouch on my belt. She handed me the cakes and I gave her the two copper pennies. I gave one of the cakes to Zalman and bit into mine. They were fresh, and the smoothly sweet cake melted on my tongue.

"I'll talk to you later," Aslag said to Isolde.

"All right," she replied, waving to us as we departed.

We made our way onward through the fairgrounds, passing a number of booths along the way. There were a number of vendors, some selling food, others selling tools or utensils, and others selling crafts. We stopped to play a game of quoits, where Zalman's obsession with throwing things helped him win a laurel chaplet.

"I think I'll wear it the rest of the day," he said, placing the chaplet on his head.

We stopped at one of the booths to buy lunch -- fried sausages on hard rolls with sauerkraut and mustard. With lunch in hand we made our way to the lists to watch some of the jousting that was going on that day. At the end of the current round of jousting and with the next round to not begin for an hour, we continued onward with the intention of going to the livestock barn to see what competition Zalman's lambs had to contend with. One of the booths along the way grabbed our attention, though.

"Hey, look at that," Zalman said. "A fortune teller."

A stooped old man with an aquiline nose sat at the booth. "Yes, yes!" he said, "I am a student of divinations. Come have your fortune told." He studied us closely. "For four strapping young men such as yourselves, I'll only charge you a silver bit each!"

"That's not a bad price," Iram said.

I nodded. "It might be fun."

We each paid a silver bit. The old man gave each of us a small, polished granite stone. "So I know you've paid," he said. Iram went first, depositing his stone in a wooden bowl. The old man led him behind a tapestry hanging in the back of the booth.

"I wonder if our fortunes will be true," I asked.

"Only because it will be so vague," Aslag replied. "These fortune tellers are all alike. They make predictions that are so vague that they could be referring to anything."

"They can't all be that bad," Zalman said. "We hear about magicians and wizards all the time. Surely some of it must be true."

"And don't forget the Libram," I said. "All kinds of magical things took place in the past."

"I'm just saying we shouldn't take anything the old man has to say too seriously," Aslag said.

Soon Iram reappeared from behind the tapestry. "Next," he said.

Aslag deposited his stone in the wooden bowl and disappeared behind the tapestry.

"What did he say?" Zalman asked Iram.

Iram shrugged. "Nothing specific," he said. "He asked when my birthday was, then looked at my palms. Then he said I'd go on a journey with some friends."

I frowned. "Maybe Aslag was right."

"We'll see," Zalman said.

Soon Aslag emerged from behind the tapestry. Zalman dropped his stone into the bowl and disappeared behind the tapestry.

"Well?" I asked.

"Just like I thought," Aslag said. "He asked when my birthday was and looked at my palms. He told me I'd go on a journey soon with some friends. That could refer to our drive home."

I rolled my eyes. Iram nodded.

Zalman soon returned. "Same thing," he said.

"Let's see if my luck's any different," I said. I dropped my stone into the bowl and went behind the tapestry.

The old man sat on an old stool beside a table. On the table was a crystal ball and what looked like a deck of cards. The crystal ball was resting on some sheets of paper with tables of numbers on them.

"Have a seat," he said. He gestured to another stool beside the table. I sat down, facing him.

"When were you born?" he asked.

Great, I thought. He was asking me the same things he asked everyone else. "Maimanoth eighth, 977," I said.

"The sign of the Bull," he said. He looked at me intently for a moment. "Let me see your palms," he said. I presented my palms to him. He grasped my hands with his, studying my palms. "Are you right- or left-handed?"

"Left," I replied.

"I see," he said. He studied both my palms a moment longer before dropping my right hand and looking at my left hand more closely. He mumbled to himself as he scrutinized my palm, sometimes tracing some of the lines with a finger. "Heart line, yes, yes," he mumbled. "Head line, life line, and here's a cross." He looked thoughtful.

"So what does that all mean?"

"You'll go on a journey soon with some friends," he said.

I rolled my eyes. "That's what you told the others."

He shrugged. "That doesn't mean it's not true," he said. "But wait. I see you don't like that answer." He reached for the deck of cards. "Shuffle these," he said.

He gave the deck of cards to me. They were larger than regular playing cards, and there were more of them; it was a full deck of Tarock cards. I shuffled them thoroughly and passed them back. He spread them out on the table, face down. "Pick one," he said.

I looked at the cards. Their backs were black and decorated with oak leaves and acorns. The cards sat in a broad heap, some overlapping others, and their backs blended together, resembling a forest floor. I picked out one of the cards and pulled it from the deck. I glanced at the picture. It was a knight on horseback.

He studied the card more closely, his eyes moving between the card and my face. "The Knight of Coins," he said. "An interesting significator." He tapped his chin with the card. "Would you like a numerological reading?"

"I don't know..." I said.

"No extra charge," he said. "I'll only need your name."

"All right," I said. "My name is Selik."

"Selik what?"

"Selik von Ramm."

"Is that your full name?" he asked.

"No," I sighed. "It's Selik Balthazar von Ramm." I spelled it for him.

He wrote my name on a blank sheet of paper. "Thank you," he said. He referred to his tables of numbers. "Let's tabulate that." He tapped his quill against his chin. "Using the Ebiru system that's five, eight, and eleven or two, with a final name number of six. Using the Kamplenian system, that's two, eight, and six, with a final name number of seven. Birth number is nine. They're all interesting numbers." He copied his results to another sheet of paper, being much neater. "Here," he said, giving the paper to me. "You can keep that." The paper was crisp and heavy.

"So what does it mean?" I asked.

"It means that you will go on a journey soon with some friends," he said. "And I don't mean the trip home."

I folded the piece of paper and stuck it in my pouch. I rose to go. "Thank you," I said.

He rose as well. Bowing deeply he said, "No. Thank you." The way he said it was kind of odd, almost... reverent. I shrugged and left.

The boys were waiting for me. "What did he say to you?" Zalman asked. "Why did it take so long?"

"He asked my birth date and checked my palms," I said. "Then he had me draw a single Tarock card and did a numerological reading."

"And?" Iram asked. "What did he tell you?"

I frowned. "That I'd go on a journey soon with some friends.

"Ha!" Aslag said. "I told you!"

"But," I began, "he said he didn't mean the trip home."

"Oh," Aslag said. He was silent.

"Let's go to the barn," Zalman said, grinning. "Maybe that's the journey he meant."


* * *

The summer wore on, and it would soon be time for the harvest. The sky was clear and the weather was warm, but the gathering flocks of birds meant the seasons would soon change. My mother and sister had gone to the market, and my father was working in the shed mending crates. I was left to myself, splitting firewood in the yard. It was mindless work, leaving my thoughts to wander on other things, like my secret infatuation for a buxom blonde girl named Flora Insen.

I paused to stack the wood I had split thus far, clearing the ground around the chopping block of the logs that had fallen randomly as they were split. I saw movement out of the corner of my eye and heard a rustle in the grass. I turned to look. A man stood there. He was tall and slim, and appeared to be between forty and fifty years of age. He had jet-black hair cut fairly short, and a well-trimmed beard of the same color. He had an aquiline nose, and his eyes were piercing and knowing, being a pale slate blue color. The most unusual thing about him, though, was that he was dressed in a white robe that showed no signs of travel. Something about him was vaguely familiar.

"I'm looking for Simak von Ramm," the man said before I could speak.

"Please wait here," I said. The man stood waiting while I went to the shed to speak to my father. I stole a quick glance, noticing there was no horse in sight.

The door to the shed stood open. Inside, working by the sunlight spilling in from outside, was my father. He was a large, stout man with broad shoulders, shorter than me by about half a hand but heavier than me by several stone. His hair was black and wavy, though it was becoming steely gray with age. His gray and black beard was well trimmed. He wore gray breeches and a dark blue tunic.

"There's a man out front who wants to speak with you," I said.

"Oh?" my father asked.

"Yes," I replied. "He seems a little odd, though. He's dressed a little like the priest from the Pantheonic temple. On top of that, there's no horse in sight, but his clothes don't show any signs of travel."

"That is very odd," my father agreed.

He followed me to the front yard and addressed our visitor. "What can I help you with, friend?"

"I should start with an introduction," the man said. "My name is Dargo."

"Master Dargo?" my father asked. Dargo nodded. "It's an honor," my father said, bowing his head. I followed suit.

"The honor is mine," Dargo said. "Young Selik is a somewhat unique person, and he will require some education that only I can provide."

My father nodded. "What kind of education do you mean?"

"I don't wish to go into much detail at the moment," Dargo replied. "That is best suited for another time, in the future. But two of the things I will cover are swordsmanship and magic. Additionally he will assist me in various duties and responsibilities at the Tower of Light. He will visit the Tower during the week beginning this fall and continuing until the spring. He will be able to stay at home on weekends and during the summer, and we'll resume again next fall if need be."

"How will he get to and from the Tower?" my father asked. "It's a long trip for a boy to make alone."

"I will take care of the travel arrangements," Dargo said.

My father nodded again. "I think I would like to talk it over with his mother, first, so she knows what's happening, but at the moment I see no problem."

"I don't foresee any," Dargo replied. "I will return in a week to speak with you again. Thank you for your time." Dargo bowed his head, turned, and departed, walking up the path from our house to the road.

My father turned to me and said, "Strange. He seemed vaguely familiar, like I've seen him somewhere before." I nodded in agreement.

That evening the matter was discussed over dinner in the presence of my mother, Carlyn, and my sister, Birkita. Everything that had happened that day was recounted.

"So what do we do?" my mother asked. She was somewhat slim with a matronly look about her, and stood about a hand shorter than me. She had very long, thick brown hair worn in a braid, and hazel eyes. She wore a simple brown linen dress with a white bodice.

"Selik goes off to study under Master Dargo," my father said. "I'm sure there's a good and important reason Selik has to do this, and that Master Dargo knows what he's talking about and can be trusted." My mother nodded her agreement.

A week later Dargo arrived again, dressed as he had been the first time. Again he showed no sign of having been submitted to the elements, and again I saw no horse. Both of my parents spoke briefly with him, and all of the arrangements were made. Thus I became a student of Master Dargo.

My first excursion to the Tower of Light followed shortly thereafter. It was a late summer day in the year 992, late Elulmanoth or early Septumanoth. It was very warm, and I wore a light tunic and breeches. I was beginning to wonder if I should have instead worn a longer tunic and forgone the breeches when Dargo arrived. Once again he had no horse.

"Are you ready?" he asked.

"Yes," I replied from where I sat on the porch. I gestured to my satchel.

"Good," Dargo said. He gestured and spoke a few words I did not understand, and a small silvery point of light appeared in the air, growing until it became a large shimmering ring. Enclosed by the ring was a view of a room built of stone instead of the hayfield near our house.

Dargo grabbed one of the satchels. I put the pack on my back and hefted the other two satchels, muttering about the weather while I glanced at Dargo. He stepped through the ring of silvery light and I followed. Once on the other side Dargo waved a hand and the ring shrunk until it was again the tiny point of light, which soon winked out.

"Welcome to the Tower of Light," Dargo said.

I looked around the room. It was small and rectangular, the wall with the window curving outward slightly. There was a narrow bed with a mattress, a small chest of drawers, a small bookshelf, and an empty desk with an oil lamp.

"How did we get here?" I asked.

"A magical portal," Dargo replied. "It's a dimensional door spell. You'll learn it yourself in time."

"Wow."

"Put your things away," Dargo said. "I will return in a few moments."

A few moments turned into an hour, for it was not until I had everything put away and the bed made out of sheer boredom that Dargo returned. He carried a large book.

"Part of your education will be the Hallowed Libram," Dargo said. He passed the book he held to me. It was indeed the tome he spoke of, a somewhat larger and thicker edition than I had seen elsewhere. I was, of course, familiar with the Libram. Most homes had at least one copy, and it was used in services at temple. It functioned as both a history text and a religious guide.

Dargo continued. "Part of your education will be swordsmanship, etiquette, and household duties. The rest," he said, "will begin with that book. But that can wait until we've eaten something."

It turned out that Dargo was a passable cook, but I'd seen much better, having learned well from my parents. I took that chore as well, in return for fewer cleaning duties, which I did not enjoy.

As we finished eating I noticed something.

"What's that?" I asked, gesturing to a large glass case I could see in the next room.

"The Dragon Wand," Dargo replied.

"Really?" I asked. I went to the glass case and examined it and its contents more closely. The case was cylindrical, and it held a sinuously curved piece of metal that was half a yard long. It looked like the end of a dragon's tail, with one end tipped with a multifaceted crystal.

"Really," Dargo replied. "What else would it be? Do you not believe what the Hallowed Libram says, that I am its keeper just as I am the Master of the Sun Orb?"

"But isn't it dangerous keeping it in a glass case, in the open?"

"I would hardly consider my Tower 'in the open,'" Dargo said. "But it serves its purpose there."

"Its purpose? Isn't it a wand, a tool? How can a tool serve its purpose lying unused in a glass case?"

"You yet have much to learn," Dargo said. He stood and paced for a moment before speaking again. "Much of what a thing is, is that which it is not. The use of a thing may not lie in its utility, but how it lays waiting. The Dragon Wand lays waiting, waiting for the day when its purpose is once again utility."

I, of course, found this explanation rather confusing. I quickly learned that Dargo's methods of operation did not always fit nicely with mine, as I discovered one day the following spring.

"Let us go outside for a walk," he said.

We spiraled down the staircase and stepped outside, Dargo leading the way. We walked through the gently rolling hills, warmed by the spring sun. I wore only a tunic and breeches.

Dargo wore his white robe, as always. He carried a staff, which had been near the door, and it appeared to serve no other purpose than a walking staff, though its ends were shod with bronze.

"When you have no other obligations," Dargo said, "and the weather is cooperative, I'd like you to spend time outside. Stay in sight of the Tower when you're here."

"You don't want me to study or to read books?" I asked.

"The only book I desire you to read right now is the Libram," Dargo replied. He gestured, arms and staff outstretched and sweeping in the surroundings. "This summer, though, will be better spent learning from the land."

"What can I learn from the land?" I asked.

"When you learn it, you will know," Dargo said enigmatically.

And thus, once I had returned home, my summer days were spent in the hills around Stoerstad, weather permitting. As the weather grew warmer I exchanged my tunic and breeches for a long knee-length tunic that left my legs bare. On those days I often sought the shade.

Not all the days were sunny, of course. The days that were too rainy to be outdoors were spent reading the Libram. The rainy days came infrequently enough that this was the only book I studied that first summer: there was plenty of material to study, for Dargo's edition of the text was different from others I'd seen. It was larger, containing more books, and it was annotated, with some of the notes written in the margins by Dargo himself.

I'm not sure exactly how long it took me to actually learn anything that first summer. I know that I did learn something, but I don't know at what point it occurred. Sometime by the end of the summer some sort of discovery had occurred, and when I wandered the orchards and fields, I observed everything around me. I noticed the way the wind made the grass ripple like waves on water. I watched the insects, especially the bees and butterflies as they floated from flower to flower in a seemingly random pattern. I saw the birds going about their business, some quietly, some calling to one another. I saw the squirrels scurrying in the branches of trees. I saw all this, and I saw the creation.

Thus knowing the creation I was able to see the connections between the world and the gods. I could see that Zoleben's hand was in all life, but it needed Ordyx's hand on the earth, and Solen's sun, and the rain falling from Lena's sky, and Adreya's love, and even Jornak's dark hand in the cycle of life. All the gods had a hand in all, but as the summer wore on and Septumanoth approached I saw that Adreya's hand was heavier upon the songs of the birds, and Ordyx's hand was strong with the creatures that burrowed in the earth. One last discovery remained, though. I barely knew the depth of it.

It was the end of Elulmanoth, and I had returned to the Tower again. Dargo and I sat in the study, Dargo quietly reading some ponderous tome, while the copy of the Hallowed Libram sat on my lap, neglected. One thing puzzled me, and I finally asked Dargo about it.

"Dargo, what creatures have Solen's hand upon them?"

Dargo smiled. "I see you learned something."

"Yes," I said. "I see Zoleben's hand upon all life, but in each creature and each plant I see the influence, usually just a little, of other gods. I didn't see Solen's hand upon them, though. Why?"

"The answer is two-fold," Dargo said. "First, Solen is with all of them, for they all have their forms of knowledge, and all serve their purpose, no matter how small it may seem. Second, Solen is with none of them, for his hand is stronger upon other, greater things. The gods are strongest with the greater creatures, like dragons, unicorns, and you and me."

"If everything has a purpose, then there must be some kind of complex balance as everything strives against everything else," I said.

"Yes," Dargo said. "Balance is what Zoleben and Ordyx sought, and this balance remains. But a greater balance existed, one that was sought by all, a balance toppled when Jornak gave the Dark Sword to Gelron so long ago."

"If the gods' hands are with different things, if one god can have influence on one thing more than another...."

"Go on," Dargo said, encouragingly. "You're on the right path."

"Then knowing what it is you wish to do, or what you want to influence, you will know which god to invoke."

"Correct," Dargo said. He rose and went to the bookcase. He pulled a tome from the shelf. "We can define magic as the imposition of the mortal will on the phenomena of nature," he began. "Without a focused will, the words and other components of magic are useless. The gods' wills are greater than ours, of course, and thus forms the basis of theurgy. Your observations prove you're now ready for this." He gave the book to me. The spine was worn and the cover blank. I opened it to the frontispiece. It was The Key of Raziel.

"This book is the foundation of ceremonial magic," Dargo said. "Now that you understand that magical power can come through the gods, you are ready to learn from it. It will serve as an introduction to theurgy and conjurations, and will indeed be your key to other magicks as well. Other books will follow as you are ready. But you must always keep studying the Hallowed Libram. Study these two together."

"Why?" I asked.

"Study and you will see. I dare say it won't take you as long as you took this summer."

Dargo was right, though it helped that the Key was annotated. The notes indicated where the versicles in various inscriptions had been taken from the Hallowed Libram. If these versicles were useful, what other things and deeds could be wrought with others?

My understanding grew further as I saw that the gods' powers over each day of the week applied to the hours of the day as well, and that the stars and planets in the sky brought their influences as well. All this and more lay ahead of me, but it would have to wait, for soon spring had arrived, and I had to return to Stoerstad and all that was there.


Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Led Zeppelin: "What Is and What Should Never Be"

2009-05-30

Tour de Annoyance

I try to share the road with bicyclists, but after days like today it's just so damn hard.

My employer, as a sponsor, was hosting the local Tour de Cure. An e-mail had been sent out regarding this, and some parking restrictions were in effect as a result.

I had left the house a little earlier than normal, and even earlier than what was probably necessary, because I needed to make a couple of stops before driving to work. When I pulled into the drive to make my way to the building in which I work, I was stopped and was told I couldn't park there because of the biking event. The woman who stopped me referred to the aforementioned e-mail.

Now I didn't remember the e-mail saying anything about the parking ramp being completely closed, just that the parking lot next to it would be closed. Of course I didn't have a copy of the e-mail with me (maybe next time!), but she didn't seem inclined whatsoever to allow me to pass, instead referring me to parking facilities on the opposite end of campus.

In my annoyance I threw my truck into reverse and began quickly backing up to choose another route when she stopped me again. I was now even more annoyed, and she asked for my name and department. Since she'd get it anyway from my license plate I provided said information and departed.

All this because of a bunch of bicyclists.

I'm sure I'll be hearing about this from my manager sometime next week, but I should have the backing of the e-mail to show that I should have been allowed through to park in the ramp, and will hopefully receive an apology.

Mood: Annoyed
Music: Eric Clapton: "I Ain't Gonna Stand for It"

2009-05-07

Sticks

When I was in high school the choir director gave me a pair of unusual aluminum drumsticks as a gift for playing with the jazz choir my senior year. They did not in any way resemble the Ahead drumsticks I had seen, and they were obviously old, as much of the lettering molded into the plastic parts was worn and unreadable. They were very slim, thinner than a 7A but longer.

A while back I tried searching for some information on them. Seeing a V-shaped mark on them, I thought they might be made by Vater; no such luck. They remained a mystery.

Today I decided to try looking again, and I finally found them. It turns out I have a mismatched pair of these, one light blue, one dark blue.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: Styx: "Come Sail Away"

2009-04-24

Host

Yahoo is pulling the plug on GeoCities, so it looks like I'll have to find a new host. I've already looked at Atspace, NXServe, and IzFree, but would entertain other suggestions as well.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Aerosmith: "Love in an Elevator"

2009-03-31

Jimmy

I recently finished watching Anatomy of a Murder, a film from 1959 with a cast including Jimmy Stewart, a very young George C. Scott, and a score from Duke Ellington.

After having also recently watched The Glenn Miller Story, along with the other Jimmy Stewart movies I've seen over the years, I decided to do a little research over at IMDB.

Does anyone else find it a travesty that besides a lifetime achievement award, Stewart only received five Oscar nominations and only won once?

Even considering some stiff competition throughout the years including Charlton Heston, Jack Lemmon, Spencer Tracy, Laurence Olivier, Gregory Peck, Henry Fonda, Charlie Chaplin, Mickey Rooney, and Clark Gable, among others, I find it a little disappointing that Stewart didn't win more Academy Awards.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Boston: "Long Time"

2009-03-18

Birds

In addition to the improvement in the weather, there have been two other tell-tale signs of spring around here. I've seen (and heard) robins, and I've seen red wing blackbirds.

Mood: Excited
Music: Led Zeppelin: "Ramble On"

2009-02-13

Links

Here is some more material for your arguments against Creationist "science."

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: The Eagles: "Hotel California"

Safe Bricks

Check this out.

Mood: Impressed
Music: Styx: "Come Sail Away"

2009-02-11

Darwined

Take that, Creationists.

Mood: Amused
Music: Foghat: "Slow Ride"

2009-01-30

Waylon

Does anyone else see a resemblance here?

The Huntsman from Disney's Snow White
Waylon Jennings


Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Yes: "Owner of a Lonely Heart"

2009-01-20

Weekend Observations

Friday was Maryanne's birthday. She wanted to go out and try the Cloud 9 Grille; my review is here. The weather was cold, but she got a good turnout, and was able to enjoy her day.

As a result of Sarah's ad nauseum viewings of Disney's Sleeping Beauty, I have come to the conclusion that all the misfortune throughout the movie is the fault of the three "good" fairies. (I use quotes because they could be subconsciously sadistic). Observe the following:

  • When Maleficent arrives at the castle, no one does anything to stop her before she curses Aurora. The fairies would have had the best chance to do so.
  • While hiding Aurora in the cottage in the forest, it is through their careless use of magic that they are discovered by Maleficent's pet raven.
  • At King Stefan's castle, it is when they leave Aurora alone that Maleficent is able to draw Aurora away and cause her to prick her finger.

I'll concede that it has been a while since I've read Perrault's version of the fairy tale, the version on which the movie was based, and I don't recall which of the above are from the "book" and which are creative license on the part of Disney. I'll also concede that fact that the fairies do their best to redeem themselves, especially by effectively rescuing the captured prince. Still, for three fairies that are supposed to be good, they certainly do a good job of botching things before getting them right.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Ozzy Osbourne: "Bark at the Moon"

2009-01-10

Greek

After finishing watching 300 last night, and with still reading The Greek Myths by Robert Graves, I came to the conclusion that until now I had an innaccurate understanding of ancient Greece. I used to think of ancient Greece as a more or less unified nation, with power shifting from one city state to another throughout history. I think now, though, some research and reading may be in order. I'm currently revising my understanding, realizing that Greece wasn't so much a place as Greek was a culture shared by different people throughout what we now know as Greece, people of similar ethnic background and with similar religious and philosophical views. The aforementioned movie is probably not a good history lesson, nor is the distorted mythical interpretations of still older events presented in the Greek myths collected in the aforementioned book. Nonetheless, it does show that I have a lot to learn about the people that shaped civilization and perhaps formed one of the first bridges between Asian and European cultures.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Ray Charles: "Ring of Fire"

2008-12-18

Uncovered

I was listening to Rod Stewart's beautiful cover of Cat Stevens' "The First Cut Is the Deepest" the other day, and remembered that I had recently heard part of Sheryl Crow's version of the song -- only part, because I turned it off.

So I thought to myself, "How many more cover songs is Sheryl Crow going to mangle?" She already destroyed Derek & Dominos' "Keep On Growing." About the only thing she's done that I like is "Picture," and that's a duet.

Mood: Disgusted
Music: Great White: "Rock Me"

2008-12-17

Fishes

The other day I remarked to Maryanne that not only do the Darwin badges some people put on their cars bother me, but so do the resulting Truth badges that feature a traditional ichthys eating the Darwin parody. While evolution and Creationism may be at odds with each other, evolution and Christianity are not mutually exclusive ideas. I think it's possible for a person to accept scientific ideas and still live a Christian life.

I think this also illustrates the absurdity of fundamental, hard-line Creationism. Maryanne started watching 17 Kids and Counting, a show I find somewhat disturbing not only because of the rigid, inflexible beliefs of the family members, but their belief in Creationism, which took them to a Creationism museum. The museum featured neighboring displays of dinosaurs and Adam and Eve -- not the same display, but they might as well be showing Jesus riding a dinosaur for the scientific inaccuracy of it all.

I also remarked that Creationism is also very self-serving and prejudiced; it presumes to suggest that the Judeo-Christian Creation story is the only one that's truthful, and the creation stories of any other religions (and mythologies) are wrong. I compared this to the First Commandment: "You shall have no other gods before Me." It doesn't say there are no other gods; to me it just says God wants to be first and only on your list.

Enter The Greek Myths by Robert Graves. Here Graves not only analyzes the symbolism of the Greek myths, but compares them to the mythology and the cults of the rest of the eastern Mediterranean. The similarities are fascinating, as he draws parallels between ancient Greek myths and the myths of other cultures, including Egypt and Babylon, and even the Norse and the ancient Jews. It's the kind of academic examination of the stories that seems to be lacking from those who take a literal view of scripture.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Led Zeppelin: "Dazed and Confused"

2008-12-08

Decorating

I finally got the Christmas tree up yesterday, which turned out to be a bigger project than I expected. It required moving a large number of large items out of the living room, including moving a number of Sarah's toys into her room and moving one of our end tables downstairs temporarily.

The remaining challenge is getting some Christmas shopping done. Between my work schedule, Maryanne's work schedule, and dealing with two young children, I really don't know when, or if, we'll get any of it done.

Mood: Stressed
Music: Autograph: "Turn Up the Radio"

2008-12-01

Making Memories

When the Packers thoroughly dismantled the Bears, I thought maybe it was a sign of them getting their season turned around. Of course, that was before seeing them get dismantled in turn by the Saints, and then lack any kind of special teams play against the Panthers. I'm now anticipating them finishing 8-8 on the season. No, I'm not one of those people that's going to blame it on Favre being traded away. The quarterback has nothing to do with inconsistency on defense and special teams.

The Thanksgiving holiday was fun, though, and in retrospect I'll likely remember it more than the Packers' mediocre season. November 22nd saw the arrival of some family for Magan's baptism: my sister and niece flew in from Colorado for the event, and my aunt and uncle flew up from Florida; my mother even came. Then over the course of the next few days everyone drove to Door County to have Thanksgiving at my mother's house. It was good having everyone together, even if it was a saddening reminder of those that are no longer here to share it with the rest of us. I also got to see some good friends. Despite the stresses of traveling with a young infant I think we all enjoyed the trip. Even Sarah enjoyed it, so much so that she didn't want to leave Sunday morning and put up a terrible temper tantrum when we finally left.

December is here, now, and with it the feeling of winter and the holidays. We got quite a bit of snow last night, enough to cause some schools to be delayed this morning. I don't anticipate the snow melting anytime soon. I enjoy having a white Christmas; I think it somehow appropriate, even if it does add another stress to the holiday season. The next several weekends will be busy while Maryanne and I try to ready ourselves.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: The Scorpions: "Wind of Change"

2008-11-17

Observations

Some weekend observations...

During Saturday afternoon's Badger football game, did anyone else find it particularly irksome that the first of the two Badgers to be injured was so injured due to an illegal block in the back?

Also, while watching the same game, I was wondering how many of the people calling for the firing of Brett Bielema are cognizant of the fact that many of the Badgers' woes have to do with poor decisions made by the players, especially the ones resulting in turnovers. It's not only the coach's fault if the quarterback throws an interception or a running back fumbles the ball.

Before the Badgers game I raked some leaves in the front yard. I didn't really get to the back yard, because I was running out of room at the curb to dump the leaves, mostly because the Stoughton street department hadn't picked up the last back of leaves I left there. We had the same problem last fall. Between this, how long it takes them to pick up brush left at the curb, and their mediocre performance at snow removal last winter, I don't have a very high opinion of their work.

Sunday brought what was perhaps the Packers best all around game of the season. The Bears didn't have many explosive plays, and the Packers were able to move the ball well both on the ground and in the air. Throw in a defensive touchdown, and it was the team's best performance so far, and hopefully indicative of getting their season turned around.

I turned on the TV before the game actually started, and caught the tail end of the Fox pregame show which featured Terry Bradshaw's rant about the Packers management and how they never should have let Favre go. Normally I like Bradshaw, and find him at least amusing if not insightful as well. However, the Jets success and the Packers mediocrity thus far are certainly not the sole result of Brett Favre, and I lost some respect for Bradshaw for him suggesting otherwise.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Judas Priest: "Breaking the Law"

2008-11-12

Struggling

As they say on Fark, "this."

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Billy Squier: "Everybody Wants You"

2008-11-11

Barsoom

I was thinking the other day, as I was reading The Chessmen of Mars, the fifth book in Edgar Rice Burroughs' classic Mars series, that the books would make spectacular movies.

Well, the staff of the Topless Robot website must agree, because it was included in their list of sci-fi and fantasy books in need of the movie treatment.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Lynyrd Skynyrd: "Free Bird"

2008-10-28

Births

With autumn in the air, it is a time of change.

Tuesday, October 14th, Maryanne gave birth to our second child, Magan Jean. We were better prepared this time than with our first child. So far things have gone about as well as could be expected. Sarah thankfully shows more excitement than jealousy over it.

Yesterday there were snow flurries in the air, a sure sign of the coming winter. Hopefully it isn't as harsh as last winter.

This morning there was yet another change: I learned that the radio station I've been listening to, WHLK, 93.1 FM, "The Lake," is no longer on the air under its previous format. It was previously a classic rock radio station, evolving a bit over the last few years. Since early this morning it's been broadcasting nothing but hip-hop. No thanks.

I wrote a long e-mail to the station. You can view it in the full post.
To whom it may concern:

To say that I'm disappointed by the demise of WHLK "The Lake" would perhaps be a gross understatement.

I don't know if there was any advanced warning of the impending end, but imagine my surprise and consternation this morning when I tried to turn on my favorite radio station and instead found something else.

When The Lake first came on the air I was intrigued by its format: a classic rock radio station that went deeper into the roots of rock and roll than most stations did and playing more obscure songs by sometimes obscure artists.

Over the years the station evolved, and I accepted that evolution, as all things must change to stay relevant and current.

This most recent change, however, seems to be a surrender, as if Mid-West Family Broadcasting is saying it can't compete with other classic rock radio stations in Madison and just gave up to play something else.

The Lake gave me an alternative to the repetition of WIBA, a station owned by Clear Channel and therefore a station I don't wish to listen to; it also gave me an alternative to the more insipid songs played on oldies stations like WOLX. It gave me a morning show I could actually listen to, unlike the irritating morning show on WWHG. In short, I could almost always count on The Lake to play something I liked, and to feature radio personalities that were interesting; it was rare that I went searching the dial for something else.

Now, unless your company owns another classic rock station in the Madison area, I will most certainly need to search the dial for something else.
This was the response I got:
Terry,

Thank you for the email. It is very difficult to make these decisions but with that said we did what our Research has been telling us to do with this signal for 3 years now.

I thank you for your loyalty to The Lake and I am sorry MWFB does not offer an alternative station for you to listen to.

Thank you.

--
Jolene K. Neis
Chief Financial Officer
Mid-West Family Broadcasting
608-441-3601
Jolene.neis@mwfbg.net


Now I have to find a new radio station.

Mood: Pensive
Music: Rush: "Working Man"

2008-09-30

Grounded

According to this article in Rolling Stone, Robert Plant denies rumors of of a Led Zeppelin tour.

Mood: Sad
Music: ZZ Top: "Got Me Under Pressure"

2008-09-29

Stung

Saturday I was able to mow the lawn for what could be the last time before winter. While doing so I was either bitten or stung by a small hornet, first on the back of my left calf, then on the back of my right ankle when it somehow fell into the back of my hiking boot.

Perhaps it was an omen of things to come, as the Badgers choked away a shutout and ended up losing to Michigan, and the Packers fared little better against the Buccaneers.

I'm sure there will be some Packers fans out there that will use this weekend as an example of how the management should have found a way to keep Brett Favre, what with Aaron Rodgers's performance yesterday compared to Favre's. I think everyone has to remember that Rodgers faced the Buccaneers yesterday, a team that made the playoffs last season, while Favre faced the Cardinals. Favre did no better than Rodgers did when faced by the Patriots, and that was a Patriots team without Tom Brady.

So will the Jets make the playoffs? Maybe, but I don't expect them to go far. Will the Packers make the playoffs? They have a much tougher schedule this season than they did last season. With a quarter of the season over, both teams are 2-2. It's rare that 8-8 teams make the playoffs. The question then is which team can pull things together, get a record that's better than .500, and make the playoffs?

Speaking of playoffs, the Brewers are in the playoffs for the first time in 26 years. That's fairly exciting, and I wish them a deep playoff run.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: The Eagles: "Hotel California"

2008-09-26

Flying

This is pretty awesome news.

Mood: Excited
Music: Led Zeppelin: "Ten Years Gone"

2008-09-25

Fiendish

So one of the web 'toons I had discovered years ago, Making Fiends, is going to be appearing on the Nick Toons cable network. I'm excited to see what they do with it. The bumps they've been running to advertise it have been amusing. It kind of strikes me more as the type of thing that should be on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim, though.

Mood: Amused
Music: Bad Company: "Bad Company"

2008-09-20

Inseam

Yesterday I split my shift, which gave me a chance, among other things, to visit J.C. Penney. I was hoping to find some more pants for work, as I could use some more. Unfortunately it's nearly impossible to find flat front trousers in a size 36/31. Now I know it's the inseam that does it. If I was a little taller (or shorter) I wouldn't have nearly as much difficulty with this. Still, it irks me knowing that the size is made by a number of brands, brands carried by J.C. Penney, yet they don't have them in the store. I could order them online, but shipping, tax, etc., are such a hassle. Maybe Amazon will be getting more of my money.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Pink Floyd: "Shine On You Crazy Diamond"

2008-09-11

Elitist

So Arianna Huffington appeared recently on Larry King Live with Chuck Norris. When the topic turned to Iraq, things got a little heated.

I can certainly understand her concern for the American troops serving in Iraq. However, the bulk of her argument, or at least the beginning of it, seemed to be based on how much money it's costing. When Chuck tried to argue that the U.S. is spending a lot of money in a lot of places, her response seemed to be "what's that got to do with anything" and she kept interrupting him. When he tried to finish what he was saying, indeed raising his voice to try to be heard, she just kept on interrupting him.

Leave it to the hippies and elitist libs that visit her website to only see her side of the issue, resorting primarily to ad hominem attacks.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Iron Butterfly: "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida"

2008-09-09

Rabbits

I recently finished reading Watership Down, having borrowed it from Caly. It was a good read, perhaps surprisingly so. For a book that's a rather even mix of exposition and dialog it's a fast read, probably because the storytelling is fairly compelling. There are moments it gets a bit bogged down, but those are few and far between. For a book that's based on uniting stories the author once told his children (like another more recent English author, J.K. Rowling), it's rich and cohesive with its own mythos and language. I don't think anyone seriously willing to give the book a try will be disappointed, and I think that one day I will buy a copy so my own children can read it.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Queen: "Son and Daughter"

2008-09-08

Bicycle

Recently I got into a debate online regarding bicyclists. (I know what's been said: Arguing on the Internet is like being in the Special Olympics -- even if you win, you're still retarded.) It was prompted by some vitriolic and overweening video about bicyclists some how standing up to ignorance and prejudice and this that and the other. I responded to the person that shared it that if more bicyclists followed the rules of the road and were more courteous then drivers would in turn be more courteous as well. Her response was to first ask if I wanted a medal for knowing the law, and then something to the effect that it's only commuters, recreational riders, and errand people that are to blame, and that true cyclists follow the rules of the road. My rebuttal was that I'd seen what I thought were true cyclists ignoring traffic signs, failing to use hand signals, and other wise being discourteous. She then chose to ignore me.

So I was reminded of this discussion, if you will, this past weekend. Friday evening while driving home Maryanne and I saw a bicyclist fail to stop at a stop sign posted on the bike bath she was using where it crosses a county highway, passing right in front of us where we had merely slowed for our yield sign.

We had also gone to Door County for part of the weekend, and while out driving Sunday we saw large number of what I would call cyclists participating in some large event. I can't answer to their actions around traffic signs and intersections, but I did see that as a whole they failed to ride single file near the shoulder of the road, thus making themselves a nuisance to motorized traffic.

So if the argument is that true cyclists obey the rules of the road and practice courteous riding, there must not be too many "true cyclists" out there, because I haven't seen very many of them.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: The Traveling Wilburys: "Last Night"

2008-09-04

X Factor

Last night I watched X-Men III on FX, or most of it, anyway. I was... disappointed. While it was certainly compelling enough to keep watching it, and used some interesting characters, it was not canonical by any means, nor did it much resemble anything from the comics beyond the characters themselves. It seemed to be more of a means to conclude a trilogy of movies.

Mood: Disappointed
Music: ZZ Top: "Waitin' for the Bus/Jesus Just Left Chicago"

2008-08-26

White

The other day Maryanne and I watched the finale of "The Singing Office" on TLC -- the show hosted by Joey Fatone and eye candy Mel B.

This video made me think of awkward white people, probably because it features them dancing awkwardly. (I know, I know... I would too.)

Anyhow, in the finale of "The Singing Office" one of the office staffs (staves?) was singing some R&B tune (I forget which one) and the audience was clapping along to the beat.

But, like the bunch of white people they were, they were all clapping on the downbeats instead of the off-beats.

Now I wish I could remember what song it was.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Van Halen: "Best of Both Worlds"

2008-08-21

Photograph

Here's an interesting collection of pictures you may not believe aren't Photoshopped.

Mood: Amused
Music: The Jimi Hendrix Experience: "Fire"

2008-08-18

Moving

Maryanne, Sarah, and I went up north this past weekend. The original motive was that an old friend of Caly's, Marcel, found us and wanted to see us and the family in Door County. Caly flew out just for the occasion, since she hadn't seen him in over a decade. He was amazed at the changes in the people and places he'd last seen almost 15 years ago, but glad to get away from the city and enjoy some quiet time in Door County. He was warmly welcomed, of course, and I'm sure I wasn't the only one glad to see that he remained the intelligent, sensible person we first met, even if a little older and a little wiser.

It turned out to be a worthwhile trip not only for that, but also because Adam is moving out of the state. He finally had enough at Cherry Hills, and decided a move was in order. He's going to go work for his cousin at a restaurant in Helena, Montana.

It was an enjoyable weekend. The weather was beautiful, Sarah was good, and it was nice to see Marcel again. It was a tad bittersweet, though, since Adam's moving and it will likely be a long time before we see him again.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: REO Speedwagon: "Roll with the Changes"

2008-08-13

Oil

Got your hippy clothes in a bundle over the prospect off offshore drilling? Read this first.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: Rush: "Working Man"

Blues

I don't know of may 8-year-old kids that have a legitimate reason to play the blues, but this kid might.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: Cream: "Crossroads"

2008-08-07

Resolution

The Brett Favre saga is over. The Brett Favre era in Green Bay is over (again).

I'm glad that the situation finally reached some form of resolution. I'm disappointed, though, that Favre couldn't be mature and put his hurt feelings aside and stay with Green Bay. I'll be disappointed if it turns out to be true that the Packers management forced him out.

It's unfortunate that someone's reputation and legacy will be tarnished by this. Favre's is most certainly tarnished by the immature and disrespectful way he's treated the Packers organization in his push to get what he wanted. Ted Thompson's reputation will be tarnished if it comes out that he's responsible, somehow, for Favre's departure.

The proof will be in the season, though. With Favre in a Jets uniform and competing against the Patriots, he'll be in the shadow of Tom Brady. In Green Bay, Thompson and Aaron Rodgers will be under the microscope. Only a winning season in Green Bay and a lackluster season from Favre will quiet some of the dissent among the Packers faithful. Anything else and Thompson will be forever questioned over his actions. Should the opposite actually happen, Thompson's career may be over.

I feel sympathetic toward Mike McCarthy. He's been caught in the middle, to some extent, trying to move the team forward with the players he has on the roster, while trying to figure out what to do with Favre, a legendary quarterback who can't make up his mind, can't commit, and apparently can't be mature and put past events behind him. I have a great deal of respect for McCarthy, especially now, after deciding that Favre's current state isn't good for the team, and since Favre won't change, move on without him.

Perhaps Favre's tenure in New York will be brief, a last hurrah to get professional football out of his system and show him that retirement is the best thing for him. I don't wish him any ill will, really, despite my disappointment in the way he's acted, though part of me selfishly hopes that something shows him it's time to call it quits and hang up the cleats. Hopefully he'll come to realize that it's time to put the bad feelings behind him and return to Green Bay for the honors that are sure to be heaped upon him.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Styx: "The Grand Illusion

2008-07-29

Dreams

I had a dream the other night (maybe a nightmare?) that Brett Favre had been traded to another team, and became their starting quarterback. The Packers ended up playing that team, so it was Rodgers vs. Favre. The Packers won.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: The Rolling Stones: "Paint It Black"

2008-07-21

Awkward

Last night while channel surfing I found the ESPY awards on ESPN, and caught just the tail end of Brett Favre's acceptance speech for whatever award it was he had received. It seemed nice enough, but at the end he made some kind of remark about waiting and seeing what happens.

As the show was about to go to commercial break, the cameras cut to the audience while Brett exited the stage, and who should appear on camera in the audience? None other than Aaron Rodgers himself.

Awkward!

I feel sorry for Rodgers being caught in the middle of it. Even though he understands the situation, having seen what happened when Joe Montana was replaced by Steve Young in San Francisco, it can't make it any easier for him.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Aerosmith: "Back in the Saddle"

2008-07-17

Continuing saga...

The Brett Favre saga continues.

It's getting to the point now that no matter how fervently I hope for things to work out well, I'm afraid to read or hear any news about it in case it's something I won't like.

So far not much has changed, so that's a bit of relief, at least for the next few minutes.

Brett wants to play. It sounds like he'd even prefer to play in Green Bay, but if that's not an option, he'd be willing to play somewhere else.

The Packers want to protect Brett's legacy, i.e., they don't want to see him on another team. Many fans don't want to see him play anywhere else, either. Hell, if he's going to play somewhere I want it to be for the Packers, too.

So other than either 1) Aaron Rodgers or 2) the principle of the thing, why aren't the Packers saying they'll welcome Favre back as the starter? Then this whole thing goes away, Brett's happy, the fans are happy, the team (except maybe Rodgers) is happy.

Nothing is that simple, of course. The situation is probably far more complicated than anybody realizes, even Brett and the Packers management. Both sides right now, though, aren't making the situation any easier on themselves.

If either side is looking for a way to save face, why not have the Packers say "We'll welcome Brett to training camp and the quarterback who gives us the greatest chance to win will be our starter," and then Brett can show up for training camp? Both quarterbacks practice, even if it's just as a formality, split time evenly in the preseason games, and then Brett's the starter for the regular season.

I suppose it will simply be more wishful thinking.

Mood: Wishful
Music: Golden Earring: "She Flies on Strange Wings"

2008-07-11

Drama

So first I read this.

And then I read this.

I guess my hope for Favre to stay retired was unfulfilled.

That said, I don't think it would be wise for the Packers to simply release him, and judging by their statement, that doesn't appear to be their intent. If Favre decides to "unretire" and seeks reinstatement, it appears the Packers will put him back on the roster.

What does this mean for Brett or for Aaron Rodgers? The team seems committed to Rodgers at this point, so my guess is Brett would either be the veteran backup the team was seeking for Rodgers, or be traded.

My hopes for this to end well might be dashed. I'll be watching to see how this all turns out.

Mood: Worried
Music: The Beatles: "Nowhere Man"

2008-07-10

Shadows

There's been a lot of rumors recently about Brett Favre having second thoughts about his retirement and wanting to play again. It's all over the media, producting all kinds of speculation and commentary from dozens of people inside and outside of the media. In what is perhaps a gross understatement, it's been suggested it could make the situation for the Packers "complicated."

I can understand Brett's desire to play; he's known little else most of his life, and the success of last season is now clearly outweighing the drudge of responsibility and even the sting of defeat. As he stated in his press conference though, he didn't feel he could apply himself 100% to the preparation aspect of the game. As great of a quarterback as he was, I'm not sure that bringing back a quarterback that's not 100% committed is a good idea.

I think the best thing for everyone is for Brett to decide he's retired and stay retired. That is my fervent hope. The rest of the team and the organization would then not have to deal with a public relations nightmare, fans wouldn't have to see Brett in any jersey besides the green and gold, and Aaron Rodgers would only have to deal with being the starting quarterback of a young but experienced team. Packers fans could then rest knowing that the man who was arguably the best quarterback to ever play the game retired from the most storied team in the NFL, to surely be inducted into the Hall of Fame five years from now as a member of the Green and Gold.

Mood: Hopeful
Music: The Beatles: "Getting Better"

2008-06-25

Memories

Every LEGO fan's wet dream: the LEGO vault.

Mood: Envious
Music: The Steve Miller Band: "Jungle Love"

2008-06-09

"It's a trap!"

Do you think there's enough, or even too much, licensed Star Wars merchandise? Well, there could have been more.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: Lynyrd Skynyrd: "Call Me the Breeze"

2008-06-06

Eruption

So, apparently lightning can form in the smoke that billows out of erupting volcanoes, and if photographed, might look like this.

Mood: Amazed
Music: Nazareth: "Whiskey Drinkin' Woman"

2008-06-04

Bo

Bo Diddley, famous for working his own name into his own songs as well as what became known as the "Bo Diddley beat" died on Monday. His influence as a founding father of rock and roll cannot be denied.

Mood: Sad
Music: Bo Diddley: "Bo Diddley"

2008-06-02

Multitool

Disease actually kills more soldiers than combat. One answer: the Battlespork.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: Jethro Tull: "Aqualung"

2008-05-27

Mai

Maryanne, Sarah, and I went up north for most of Memorial Day weekend, arriving there early Friday afternoon and departing Sunday afternoon. The weather was pleasant, if cool, and the only disappointment was that the orchards weren't in bloom yet. I suspect they'll be in bloom for Sevastopol's graduation, like they were for my own graduation.

We managed to make it to Jacksonport for the Maifest parade. Maryanne was able to enjoy a funnel cake which she shared with Sarah, and I was able to get a bratwurst fix. Sarah seemed to enjoy the parade. Sevastopol was the only school there this year, and I was pleasantly surprised to see them wearing the same uniforms I wore. They sounded good for as small as they were.

According to the ladies at the Jacksonport Historical Society tent, volume seven of the Jacksonport Through the Generations series should include the Anschutz family. I'm looking forward to it. I managed to snag some of the material from my great uncle Clayton Cardy, but as he confessed himself, there was still more material from the presentation held in August of 2005, material that he could not get copies of.

As early as the holiday weekend fell this year, it's still strange to think the May is almost over already. With June just around the corner I'm hoping to get more accomplished in the yard this year than I did last year, so long as the weather is cooperative.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: The Who: "Won't Get Fooled Again"

2008-05-02

Pants!

So for whatever reason, over the past few days I got on the scale at home again. Not once did my weight register more than 200 pounds.

Considering first that the last time I had weighed myself I was around 212 pounds, and that the scale is in Sarah's room and I therefore thought the batteries were low or it could be malfunctioning, I didn't think much of it, even after three separate weighs averaging about 197 pounds.

So at the gym today I decided to get on the beam scale wearing nothing but my towel. Sure enough -- 197 pounds.

That explains why I need new pants.

Mood: Pleased
Music: The Eagles: "Take It Easy"

2008-04-29

Brick by Brick

Think LEGO bricks are nothing more than colored plastic building blocks? Look at this and think again.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: The Jimi Hendrix Experience: "Foxey Lady"

2008-04-28

Dammit!

It's April 28. It's almost May.

And it's snowing.

Are you fucking kidding me?

Dammit!

Mood: Pissed
Music: Van Halen: "Man on a Mission"

2008-04-07

Nuked

This weekend brought with it an unexpected expense, as our microwave died. I was trying to use it to prepare supper on Saturday, and it just stopped suddenly while I was pressing buttons. It's served us well, though. It belonged to Maryanne's parents before they gave it to her, and it was probably close to 20 years old.

Sunday, then, we all took a trip to find a new one. We had a coupon for Bed Bath & Beyond, but it turns out we didn't like the one they had. We went to Brothers Main instead, as we'd had a good experience there previously when we bought our freezer. They only carry Amana microwaves in the store, but we found one we were happy with.

It's a bit noisier than the previous one, though a large part of that is the outside casing vibrating while the device is running. Since it's brand new and under warranty I think I'll contact the manufacturer to see if anything can be done about it.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Pink Floyd: "Hey You"

2008-03-31

Busy

The past weekend was rather busy. Maryanne was gone all of Saturday morning, but thankfully I was able to get some household chores done while she was gone. Saturday night we went out for a birthday celebration to Erin's Snug Irish Pub; it was a less pleasant experience than I had hoped for, though probably what I expected considering what I had heard from other people.

Saturday afternoon some friends helped us move some furniture, including moving our sofa sleeper to our basement family room, and picking up some used furniture we had bought at quite a bargain.

After such a busy weekend I expected to sleep better, but I was still awoken by last night's thunder, and didn't sleep well after that.

Mood: Tired
Music: The Doors: "Riders on the Storm"

2008-03-28

"Good news, everyone...."

Given enough time and enough LEGO bricks, some amazing and amusing things can be built, including this.

Mood: Amused
Music: ZZ Top: "Tush"

2008-03-24

Tribute

In the aftermath of Brett Favre's retirement there are all kinds of things paying tribute to him and his career. Even on the Internet, adoring fans are taking the time to create things such as this.

Mood: Pensive
Music: Three Dog Night: "One"

2008-03-21

Changes

They say in the Midwest, if you don't like the weather, just wait, because it will change.

So today, the first full day of spring, we're getting socked with a winter snow storm.

I recently posted that I had read a science fiction novel by Arthur C. Clarke. Unfortunately, I finished it mere days before he died. It also turns out he should be called Sir Arthur C. Clarke.

Speaking of things dying... my MP3 player, and old Rio Forge, is now inoperable. It boots, but it can't read any of the music loaded on it, and it fails to reformat. Barring any miracles I will be in search for a new one. I currently have my eye on the Creative Zen, and the Sandisk Sansa Fuze, e280, and Clip. If anyone has any recommendations, I'd be willing to read them, with the caveat that I will not buy an iPod.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: The Rolling Stones: "Start Me Up"

2008-03-20

Sprung

I think we can safely say spring has sprung. Not only is today the first day of spring, but yesterday I saw both a robin and a red wing blackbird, both sure signs of spring.

Mood: Pleased
Music: The Who: "Won't Get Fooled Again"

2008-03-19

Gygax

Normally I would hyperlink this, because it's so long, but since it's hosted by the New York Times, and registration is required, I'm not going to put anyone through that. Quoted below is the text of an op/ed piece written by Adam Rogers, a senior editor at Wired, in regards to the death of Gary Gygax.
Gary Gygax died last week and the universe did not collapse. This surprises me a little bit, because he built it.

I’m not talking about the cosmological, Big Bang part. Everyone who reads blogs knows that a flying spaghetti monster made all that. But Mr. Gygax co-created the game Dungeons & Dragons, and on that foundation of role-playing and polyhedral dice he constructed the social and intellectual structure of our world.

Dungeons & Dragons was a brilliant pastiche, mashing together tabletop war games, the Conan-the-Barbarian tales of Robert E. Howard and a magic trick from the fantasy writer Jack Vance with a dash of Bulfinch’s mythology, a bit of the Bible and a heaping helping of J. R. R. Tolkien.

Mr. Gygax’s genius was to give players a way to inhabit the characters inside their games, rather than to merely command faceless hordes, as you did in, say, the board game Risk. Roll the dice and you generated a character who was quantified by personal attributes like strength or intelligence.

You also got to pick your moral alignment, like whether you were “lawful good” or “chaotic evil.” And you could buy swords and fight dragons. It was cool.

Yes, I played a little. In junior high and even later. Lawful good paladin. Had a flaming sword. It did not make me popular with the ladies, or indeed with anyone. Neither did my affinity for geometry, nor my ability to recite all of “Star Wars” from memory.

Yet on the strength of those skills and others like them, I now find myself on top of the world. Not wealthy or in charge or even particularly popular, but in instead of out. The stuff I know, the geeky stuff, is the stuff you and everyone else has to know now, too.

We live in Gary Gygax’s world. The most popular books on earth are fantasy novels about wizards and magic swords. The most popular movies are about characters from superhero comic books. The most popular TV shows look like elaborate role-playing games: intricate, hidden-clue-laden science fiction stories connected to impossibly mathematical games that live both online and in the real world. And you, the viewer, can play only if you’ve sufficiently mastered your home-entertainment command center so that it can download a snippet of audio to your iPhone, process it backward with beluga whale harmonic sequences and then podcast the results to the members of your Yahoo group.

Even in the heyday of Dungeons & Dragons, when his company was selling millions of copies and parents feared that the game was somehow related to Satan worship, Mr. Gygax’s creation seemed like a niche product. Kids played it in basements instead of socializing. (To be fair, you needed at least three people to play — two adventurers and one Dungeon Master to guide the game — so Dungeons & Dragons was social. Demented and sad, but social.) Nevertheless, the game taught the right lessons to the right people.

Geeks like algorithms. We like sets of rules that guide future behavior. But people, normal people, consistently act outside rule sets. People are messy and unpredictable, until you have something like the Dungeons & Dragons character sheet. Once you’ve broken down the elements of an invented personality into numbers generated from dice, paper and pencil, you can do the same for your real self.

For us, the character sheet and the rules for adventuring in an imaginary world became a manual for how people are put together. Life could be lived as a kind of vast, always-on role-playing campaign.

Don’t give me that look. I know I’m not a paladin, and I know I don’t live in the Matrix. But the realization that everyone else was engaged in role-playing all the time gave my universe rules and order.

We geeks might not be able to intuit the subtext of a facial expression or a casual phrase, but give us a behavioral algorithm and human interactions become a data stream. We can process what’s going on in the heads of the people around us. Through careful observation of body language and awkward silences, we can even learn to detect when we are bringing the party down with our analysis of how loop quantum gravity helps explain the time travel in that new “Terminator” TV show. I mean, so I hear.

Mr. Gygax’s game allowed geeks to venture out of our dungeons, blinking against the light, just in time to create the present age of electronic miracles.

Dungeons & Dragons begat one of the first computer games, a swords-and-sorcery dungeon crawl called Adventure. In the late 1970s, the two games provided the narrative framework for the first fantasy-based computer worlds played by multiple, remotely connected users. They were called multi-user dungeons back then, and they were mostly the province of students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. But they required the same careful construction of virtual identities that Mr. Gygax had introduced to gaming.

Today millions of people are slaves to Gary Gygax. They play EverQuest and World of Warcraft, and someone must still be hanging out in Second Life. (That “massively multiplayer” computer traffic, by the way, also helped drive the development of the sort of huge server clouds that power Google.)

But that’s just gaming culture, more pervasive than it was in 1974 when Dungeons & Dragons was created and certainly more profitable — today it’s estimated to be a $40 billion-a-year business — but still a little bit nerdy. Delete the dragon-slaying, though, and you’re left with something much more mainstream: Facebook, a vast, interconnected universe populated by avatars.

Facebook and other social networks ask people to create a character — one based on the user, sure, but still a distinct entity. Your character then builds relationships by connecting to other characters. Like Dungeons & Dragons, this is not a competitive game. There’s no way to win. You just play.

This diverse evolution from Mr. Gygax’s 1970s dungeon goes much further. Every Gmail login, every instant-messaging screen name, every public photo collection on Flickr, every blog-commenting alias is a newly manifested identity, a character playing the real world.

We don’t have to say goodbye to Gary Gygax, the architect of the now. Every time I make a tactical move (like when I suggest to my wife this summer that we should see “Iron Man” instead of “The Dark Knight”), I’m counting my experience points, hoping I have enough dexterity and rolling the dice. And every time, Mr. Gygax is there — quasi-mystical, glowing in blue and bearing a simple game that was an elegant weapon from a more civilized age.

That was a reference to “Star Wars.” Cool, right?


Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Journey: "Wheel in the Sky"

2008-03-18

Supreme Decision

I found an interesting op/ed feature regarding today's Supreme Court case of District of Columbia v. Heller. The case itself could very well become one of the most important decisions the Court has ever made.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: The Beatles: "Long Tall Sally"

2008-03-14

Switch

Here's a list of reasons to switch from the Mac to PC computing platform.

While we're on the topic: is anyone else really sick of those Mac commercials with the "stuffy" guy portraying a PC and the "cool" indie guy portraying a Mac? Those, along with all the iPod hype, are making me not want to buy anything made by Apple.

Mood: Cranky
Music: The Jimi Hendrix Experience: "Crosstown Traffic"

2008-03-13

Reading Material

I've been reading a bit more science fiction recently, partially in an effort to learn more about the genre while I rework a couple of my short stories into a longer work of science fiction. More on that later.

I started with Caviar by Theodore Sturgeon. Believe it or not, it took me a while to get the pun in the title. I was somewhat familiar with Sturgeon's work, having read his short story Killdozer! as well as seeing the episode of Star Trek he wrote. Good stuff there.

I then read Soldier, Ask Not by Gordon R. Dickson, not knowing at the time it's technically book two in the Dorsai cycle. I'm familiar with Dickson's Dragon series (e.g., The Dragon and the George), but found his science fiction quite a bit different, but interesting nonetheless.

Next was another anthology, Pendulum by A. E. Van Vogt. I didn't realize it was an anthology until several pages into the second short story. I was new to his writing; the first couple of stories were not very impressive, but then things picked up.

I'm currently working on Against the Fall of Night by Arthur C. Clarke. It's very good so far. Now some might wonder why I'm reading this and not 2001. One reason is because it was in a tub of sci-fi and fantasy paperbacks I borrowed from my mother; I want to work my way through that before I turn to any of the books I've bought recently. I'm hoping by doing that I can stave off the desire to buy any more books soon, because I managed to fill up our bookshelves again.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Emerson, Lake & Palmer: "Karn Evil 9, 1st Impression, Part 2"

2008-03-12

Martial

This is utterly fascinating.

I wonder if the Wisconsin school is close to Madison....

Mood: Intrigued
Music: Rare Earth: "I'm Losing You"

2008-03-07

A Wish

I find myself wishing again that the NFC Championship game earlier this year had ended differently.

I'm sure we can all wish that the Packers had won and advanced to the Super Bowl, eventually beating the Patriots, so that if Favre still had decided to retire, he could really go out on top, with another Super Bowl ring, to so cap a stellar career.

Even if that weren't possible, or even anything remotely resembling it, I wish for Favre and for the fans that his final play in the NFL hadn't been an interception. If the Packers had to lose that game, I would have preferred that it been by the Giants' own offensive merit, and not the result of such a glaring mistake.

In the end Favre has nothing to be ashamed of, and he shouldn't have any regrets. As he said himself, you can't be perfect all the time; you don't appreciate the wins and the good times without the losses and the bad.

The sting of the defeat in the NFC Champship and the loss of Favre to retirement will eventually fade, and then we will speak of some of the blunders Favre made over the year, only to be reminded of the many more spectacular plays he made over a truly illustrious career. Then we will come to speak of how Favre helped rebuild the most storied franchise in the NFL. Then we will come to speak of Brett Favre in the same breath as the likes of Bart Starr, Paul Hornung, and Vince Lombardi.

What better honor, though, if Favre could have ended such a brilliant career with one of those spectacular plays.

Mood: Pensive
Music: The Beatles: "Magical Mystery Tour"

2008-03-06

I am...

A new trailer for the forthcoming Iron Man movie has been posted to YouTube.

Sweet.

Mood: Excited
Music: Black Sabbath: "Iron Man"

2008-03-05

Historic

Yesterday was a momentous day.

The biggest news, of course, was that Brett Favre stated he will be retiring.

The lesser news, that I discovered today, is that Gary Gygax, co-creator of Dungeons & Dragons, died.

Mood: Sad
Music: The Beatles: "In My Life"

2008-02-20

Quote

In (belated) honor of President's Day, here is an interesting list of presidential quotations.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: Joe Cocker: "With a Little Help from My Friends"

2008-02-18

Goats

Sunday afternoon Maryanne and I watched The 40-Year-Old Virgin. For a movie with advertisements that gave it that "raunchy comedy" impression it turned out to have some surprising depth. Both Maryanne and I found it very funny, sometimes bizarre, and quite entertaining.

Mood: Amused
Music: Aerosmith: "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)"

2008-02-15

Jargon

In response to similar vocabulary lists from other sources, TechRepublic enters the fray with their own list of words every sci-fi fan should know.

I guess I've got some reading to do.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Jefferson Airplane: "White Rabbit"

2008-02-14

May

Have I mentioned before that May is my favorite month?

Not only do we get Iron Man in time for my birthday, but later that same month we get this.

Damn!

Mood: Excited
Music: The Guess Who: "No Sugar Tonight/New Mother Nature"

2008-02-13

Fury

Maryanne and I recently watched Man on Fire, renting the DVD through Netflix. We both enjoyed the movie. It's a memorable revenge tale, and it builds tension quite well throughout the first and second acts, if you will. From then on it gets muddled down a bit, bogged down by perhaps too much action, but it's hard to completely fault the movie when it features such a superb cast, including Denzel Washington, Christopher Walken, and Dakota Fanning. It's long, perhaps too long, and some of John Creasy's (Denzel Washington) righteous fury gets lost in the length.

The film paints a grim picture of Mexico City: a beautiful and historic city steeped in rich culture but marred by organized crime, kidnapping, and corruption. Quite a stark contrast to Maryanne's experiences there with her mother's family. It left me with a lot of mixed emotions. Any city the size of Mexico City is going to have its share of crime, but the corruption in law enforcement and the prevalance of organized crime, especially kidnapping and extortion, is so stressed that there are moments that one can't help but feel the bleakness and hopelessness of it.

Critics were harsher on the film than the average movie goer, but most respectable critics, like Roger Ebert, were able to find some redeeming qualities in the film. Still, if you subscribe to the idea that "revenge is a dish best served cold," then this is a movie for you.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: The Who: "Who Are You"

2008-02-12

Canon

Anyone familiar with Pachelbel's Canon in D will likely find this amusing.

Mood: Amused
Music: ZZ Top: "Sharp Dressed Man"

2008-01-29

Influence

I found this list of the ten most influential and important rock bands of all time.

Let the arguments begin.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: The Eagles: "One of These Nights"

2008-01-23

Heartbreaking

I haven't been able to bring myself to think about the Packers heartbreaking playoff loss this past Sunday, at least for any great length of time.

There were a lot of people that thought the only way for the Packers to win the NFC Championship was if the Giants beat the Cowboys, allowing the Packers to host the championship game.

With the way the Cowboys faded at the end of the season, eventually losing to the Giants in the playoffs, with the way the Giants played so well on the road, and with the way the Packers performed in the cold against the Bears, maybe the Packers would have been better off traveling to Dallas to face the Cowboys instead.

As dominant as the Packers had been against the Seahawks, they seemed a bit flat against the Giants. Despite their protestations to the contrary, I really think Green Bay was affected by the cold. The Giants controlled that game, and gave the Packers all they could handle. In retrospect, it almost seemed like the Packers were trying not to lose rather than trying to win.

I commented to Maryanne that it's harder to watch a football game when you're so emotionally invested in one of the teams. Watching any other game doesn't matter too much, regardless of the outcome, when you don't care that much about who wins. But in a close game, especially a close loss like the NFC Championship, it can end up being very stressful.

When the game went in to overtime, and the Packers won the coin toss, I commented that I hoped they didn't try to go for the whole thing at once. There was plenty of time on the clock, and I was hoping they might try to get the running game going again, since the long ball wasn't there in the passing game. Instead, Favre threw up a pick, and the Giants finally got the field goal they needed to come out on top.

I'm hoping that despite the heartbreaking loss that the season as a whole was encouraging enough that Favre comes back for another season.

I'm also hoping that the Giants' surge at the end of the season, and into the playoffs, means that they have what it takes to give the Patriots all they can handle, as well.

Mood: Sad
Music: The Doors: "Light My Fire"

2008-01-18

Talent

Thanks to the power of Fark, I recently discovered a young musician by the name of Sarah Zimmerman. Here's hoping to her success.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: Sarah Zimmerman: "Traveling Riverside Blues"

2008-01-17

Jamming

Jamming cell phones has been a highly contentious topic. On one hand we have those who appreciate an end to the interruptions, dangers, and general lack of courtesy that people talking on cell phones sometimes display. On the other hand we have those who feel there are better ways of handling the situation, if it should be handled at all.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Muddy Waters: "Long Distance Call"

2008-01-16

Experience

Now this is a list I can really agree with: Five dangerous things you should let your kids do.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: The Rolling Stones: "Monkey Man"

2008-01-15

Episode III

Not only do the people behind this have too many Star Wars toys, but too much time on their hands.

Mood: Amused
Music: The Steve Miller Band: "The Joker"

2008-01-14

Click

Among the skills needed by professional photographers, timing is perhaps one of the most important after composition, especially in the high-speed world of sports photography. Here's a gallery of 30 of the most brilliant (and often hilarious) photos, many of which are worthy of Photoshop.

Mood: Amused
Music: .38 Special: "Fantasy Girl"

2008-01-11

Fight!

It's advice and instruction that parents (mostly fathers) hope their children (usually sons) will never have to use, but know they need anyway: how to fist fight. This article addresses the topic in the same way I would: a common sense, practical, no nonsense approach that faces the reality that you can't always walk away from or talk your way out of a fight.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Alison Krauss & Robert Plant: "Gone, Gone, Gone (Done Moved On)"

2008-01-08

Frabjous!

The new issue of Cheshire Crossing is up.

If you haven't been reading Cheshire Crossing, shame on you. I think it's a brilliantly creative work, borrowing heavily and accurately from classic children's literature while creating wondefully original storylines.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: The Eagles: "Life in the Fast Lane"

2008-01-03

Climate

Whatever your feelings about global warming and climate change, it's hard to argue that it's never happened, especially when looking at a chart like this. However, even after viewing the chart, a person could wonder just how much of an impact humans have in the grand scheme of climate changes.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: Aerosmith: "Dream On"

2007-12-31

Inklings

It's probably a repeat, but this article on the relationship between J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis and their impact on literature is an interesting read.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: The James Gang: "Walk Away"

2007-12-27

King on Rock and Roll

Author and apparent music lover Stephen King opines on what he considers to be the greatest rock songs ever made.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: The Allman Brothers Band: "Midnight Rider"

2007-12-17

Kissing Cousins

Maryanne and I were recently discussing with our friends Jamie and Jed the stigma in this country against cousins marrying. I referred to an article I read recently that not only noted that it is a taboo that's almost completely American, but many states don't even have laws about marrying relatives, and those that do merely state you can't marry a relative that's a first cousin or closer. In much of the world, it is not only acceptable, but normal. The only time it poses problems is when it is done repeatedly, as in the case of the European nobility.

Just in time for said discussion was this interesting list of seven notable historical figures who married their cousins, with some other notables, as well.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: Boston: "Smokin'"

2007-12-14

Hammer of the Gods

Forget the new Eagles album. Forget the Van Halen reunion. The biggest reunion in music -- what could be the reunion of the century -- is Led Zeppelin. In case you're living under a rock and have been completely ignorant of this momentous event, the verdict is in. What could have been the greatest debacle in music history is instead, by most reviews, everything fans have hoped for and more.

Robert Plant's voice isn't what it once was (witness their performance of "Stairway to Heaven"), but it was more than adequate for the definitive Zep song, "Kashmir".

The Hammer of the Gods indeed....

Mood: Pleased
Music: Led Zeppelin: "Kashmir"

2007-12-12

Sausages

While driving home last night I heard a commercial for summer sausage.

This got me to thinking, once again -- why do so many people attempt to extol the virtues of all-beef summer sausage?

Whenever Maryanne buys summer sausage for something, she always goes for the beef variety unless I stop her.

A number of sausage companies praise it as superior to other varieties. Commercials compliment it as the best summer sausage ever.

I grew up on the summer sausage made by Kerscher's Foodland in Valmy. The recipe has since passed to the Welsings, the family that bought the Foodland store and converted it into a gas station with convenience store. I've tried other varieties, including Johnsonville, Klement's, Salmon's, and other local varieties, and the Kerscher's/Welsing's recipe remains my favorite.

Could it be because they still use pork in the German tradition?

Partially, I'm sure, but there's obviously something else, too, because it still remains superior to similar varieties from other makers.

If you ever find yourself in Door County looking for a snack, stop at Welsing's in Valmy (the Mobil station) and pick up some summer sausage. You won't be disappointed.

Mood: Annoyed
Music: Jimi Hendrix: "Red House"

2007-12-11

Axes

Blender magazine offers this list of the 28 most recognizable guitars.

Somebody's bound to say something's missing, though.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: Deep Purple: "What's Going On Here"

2007-12-10

Keeping Up

In an effort to try to stay up to date (relevant?) and in touch with people I have joined not only MySpace but Facebook as well. Add this to my membership with other networking sites such as LinkedIn and Classmates.com, and this is four social networking sites I now belong to.

This is in addition to not only having a Blogger account, but an account with LiveJournal (that rarely works) so I can comment on LiveJournal blogs.

While diversity is what makes innovation thrive, it can be a little tough to keep up with it all.

Speaking of MySpace -- why are so many people abandoning their previous blogs with Blogger or LiveJournal in favor of MySpace? Personalized MySpace pages have the feeling of vanity sites from 1996, what with their tiled backgrounds and other gimmicky stuff.

Mood: Annoyed
Music: Led Zeppelin: "When the Levee Breaks"

Choose Your Weapon

ToyFare magazine offers this list of the 50 greatest fictional weapons of all time.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: George Thorogood: "Move It On Over"

2007-12-07

Partridges

This is a pretty fantastic a cappella performance.

Mood: Amused
Music: Straight No Chaser: "The Tweleve Days of Christmas"

2007-12-06

Sportsman

Sports Illustrated named Brett Favre as their 2007 Sportsman of the Year.

It's a long article, but worthwhile if you're a fan of sports, football, or Brett Favre.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Billy Squier: "In the Dark"

2007-12-04

Long

Rolling Stone offers this list of the fifty best songs over seven minutes long.

Let the flamewars begin.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: The Jimi Hendrix Experience: "Killing Floor"

2007-11-16

Traveler

It will be interesting to see if this makes any difference for holiday travelers.

Mood: Intrigued
Music: Steppenwolf: "Caroline"

2007-11-14

Build It Better

Anyone who's ever played the game Mousetrap will likely find this interesting. Even if you haven't played the game, you might find it amusing.

At least you don't have to collect any cardboard pieces of cheese.

Mood: Amused
Music: Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band: "Was"

2007-11-13

Money Talks

It will be interesting to see how this pans out.

Mood: Apprehensive
Music: Kansas: "Carry On Wayward Son"

2007-11-12

Kicking Ass

It was a weekend full of things that kick ass.

Friday night I watched most of the Marx Brothers' movie A Night at the Opera. I say most because I wasn't able to stay awake for the whole thing. Aside from being very funny and entertaining, I was struck by the talent of the Marx Brothers themselves. In my opinion it's hard to find such multitalented people today, yet in this movie not only do they act, but Groucho sings and dances, Chico plays the piano beatifully, and Harpo whistles an accompanying part for his harp. It was kind of bittersweet to watch, knowing there aren't any (many) performers like that today. (Jennifer Lopez does not count!)

Saturday saw the Badgers win against the University of Michigan in Big Ten football. It wasn't an ass kicking in the strict sense of the term, as the Badgers very nearly let the Wolverines get back in the game. Still, it was a satisfying performance in an uneven season.

Saturday night VH1 Classic showed two hours of live Led Zeppelin performances. The performances were obviously edited, because some of the songs were only "Parts" -- but also because the versions of "We're Gonna Grove" and "I Can't Quit You, Babe" sounded almost identical to the versions on Coda. It was neat to see them perform songs I'd never heard live before, including "Kashmir," "Bring It On Home," and "In My Time of Dying" among others. To quote an acquaintance from a mailing list, it "kicked my lame ass all over the place."

The biggest kick ass thing of all was Sunday, for Maryanne had managed to get tickets for the Packers game against the Vikings. It was a beautiful day for football, and the drive up to Green Bay was capped by an exciting game. Not only did the Packers win, but they shut out the Vikings in a very decisive win. They still have some challenging games ahead, though.

Mood: Pleased
Music: Led Zeppelin: "Rain Song"

2007-11-08

Ending Hunger

It's a long read, but this article about genetically-modified foods and some of their obstacles is interesting. I found the story at once fascinating and frustrating.

Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Jethro Tull: "Living in the Past"