Thursday, June 26, 2008

It broke.

Spring in the desert is like a fever - the temperatures just keeps rising, till all of a sudden, one morning, it will break.
We're getting cool breezes and light clouds today - it will fuss a little bit now, and then the monsoon will hit and everything will be fine.
We've had a Mourning Dove in out cactus box, on our porch again this year. Her eggs hatched last week, and if you look close you can see one of her babies along with the mama in the photo below. She had two eggs, and I have reason to believe the second baby is down there somewhere, but I haven't seen it clearly yet...
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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Thirty foot tall snow drifts in June???

As we watch GDR and TD riders dealing with the snow, The Morning Report brings another good story of Snow lingering into the summer... except instead of being in Montana, we're in Southern Utah.


Zion National Park (UT)
Canyon Rescue Conducted By Rangers

On Saturday evening, park dispatch received a report that cries for help had been heard coming from Echo Canyon. Rangers Rob Wissinger and Tom Parrack responded and located a party of four canyoneers who’d become stranded hundreds of feet above the bottom of a side canyon. They’d attempted to exit from the side canyon because a 30-foot-high wall of snow blocked their safe progress down the canyon’s traditional route. After determining that there were no injuries, Parrack made a technical descent to their location and supplied the four men with overnight gear, food and water. They were raised up from their position the following morning after receiving instructions on ascent techniques. A similar technical rescue was performed in the same canyon on May 13th, when another group of canyoneers found snow blocking their route. They were also unable to go either forward or back and had to be rescued. Craig Thexton was the incident commander. [Submitted by Bonnie Schwartz, Chief Ranger]



When we were in Zion Canyon last week we hiked a trail that follows Echo Canyon on our way to the Mystery entrance (you have to hike up from the canyon floor to the rim and Echo is the path of least resistance through one section). I was feeling pretty crudy so about 2/3rds of the way up I turned around and went back, and D finished Mystery on his own and I met him back down at the Temple of Sinewava.

While hiking along, looking down into Echo Canyon - I remembered our descent of it, in the spring of '04... it's the closest we've ever come to needing a rescue. Thirty to forty foot tall snow drifts, hundreds of feet long, that were just starting to melt out, so you'd find bergschrunds at the start and finish of each snow drift, and about a foot of space between the drift and the walls next to it.

At times, we'd be walking a three foot wide crest of snow, reaching out touching the canyon walls for stability, with an 8 inch wide, forty foot deep drop on either side, if the snow gave way... it was really an experience - scary, but crazy odd and fun at the same time.

We were in wetsuits, and the air temperature was reasonably warm, so there was no chance of us getting too cold... it was just crazy to have snow there, like that.

Eventually we came to an undercut ledge we needed to climb on top of, to continue along the next snow drift - except the ledge was too high. And the undercut was much too deep to do anything crazy and risk falling down into it. We built a small step of snow, and placed a square Nalgene bottle upside down on the top of it, to extend it's height another foot. D put one foot onto our step and used his Neoprene glove covered hands, to essentially crack climb the juncture of the rock wall and the lip of the icy snow drift... with two or three moves (and two or three or four tries) he got his weight up over the edge, climbed up a bit higher, wedged himself in place and sent the rope down to me with six loops tied in it, for me to climb up.

Later, we came to the edge of a particularly large drift to find it severely undercut, with what looked like a twenty five foot drop to the canyon floor below. Being on top of a wide and gently sloping snow field didn't leave us many options for anchoring a rope and repelling down the overhang... this was the point where I really thought we might be stuck... I always thought we'd find Some way to climb up the previous spot... but if we couldn't anchor a rope, there was no way we were jumping down, especially because we couldn't be sure how undercut it was, how thin it was, or if the very edge would hold our weight... so we hadn't gone all the way out to the edge, and didn't know what the landing looked like...

after probably half an hour of pacing back and forth, playing with a few options to use a Dead-Man (comforting name, I know...), D finally found a flake in the canyon wall just the right size to wedge a knot of webbing... a ring was attached to the webbing, and we rappelled down... (the whole thing turned out to be much more undercut, and higher than we'd estimated).


The really insane part, is that, last week, there were 90 degree temperatures on that walk up, right past Echo Canyon... yet, deep down, between those narrow walls, there was still massive amounts of snow. The typical Zion Canyon profile is much different that others you'll find on the Colorado Plateau - they're at such a high elevation, they actually get significant amounts of snow, but usually this also translates into them being much more open, they get a lot more sunlight too... but not Echo, Echo really is a special one, and of all the rescue attempts I read about, the above is one of the few where I didn't immediately think "What idiots!!!"

I'm judgmental - I know.


We debated, going back and doing Echo some time late that summer, once the snow had melted, so we could see, just how ridiculous our webbing must have looked - a ten foot long stretch of webbing, hanging fifty feet above the canyon floor... must have seemed odd to anyone who did the canyon, not knowing what it looks like in the winter and spring...

we also lamented not having our camera with us that day, I think the image of D in a wetsuit, one foot on an upside down water bottle buried in a snow pile, two hands crammed in the ice/wall slot, trying to heave his body onto the ledge, would have made a killer Nalgene ad :)

ah well.

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Impatience.


D - "God damned RVs!!!"
Going into The Tunnel in Zion NP, we had to wait while they cleared out opposing traffic, so this RV two vehicles in front of us could use the Tunnel.

A view out one of the six Tunnel "windows" looking into the Pine Creek drainage. To complete the 1.1 mile tunnel faster, they started at both ends, and created windows along the way, so they could dump the dubris off the cliff into the drainage below, instead of hauling it out either end.
F***ing RV - ahead of us in the tunnel.
And the vehicles on the other side of the tunnel, stopped, and waiting for the RV to complete his journey. During the summer there's really never two way traffic in the tunnel, cause often enough there's an RV on one side of the other (you can see one waiting in this photo) - and the tunnel is only wide enough in the very middle, for more modern RVs and tour buses to go through...
at least they charge them $15 each time they pass through... which probably only barely pays for the poor park employees that get stuck with traffic duty on both ends.
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Friday, June 20, 2008

In the middle.

Selma Lee's title issues appear to be in the middle of a turf war between two early-thirties, male employees at the MVD.

The first time I went in I spoke to R, and then I spent a long time trying to accumulate the documents he told me to get.

Later I went in and spoke to The Woman, and she told me a few things... a few days later, I went in, seeking clarity on Woman's comments and spoke to S. S deliberated for a long time and told me that R was out of his gourd and gave me a total new plan of attack - then asked me to bring in the old directives R had given me - just cause he wanted to see how incredibly wrong R had been with my case. He also told me to ask for him, S, when I came back.

I went back in today (without all the paper work S wanted, but with something else that I thought might help)... S wasn't in - they gave me to R again.

R took all my paper work, said "Just a second" - and then walked out of sight, leaving me sitting in his little cubicle for over 25 minute with no idea what was going on.

He came back - and told me something, again, that is totally different. He's going to call up the bank that originally held the loan for the car and see if they will create a bill of sale directly to me... ignoring three other people who have previously owned this car (comment on this in a minute).

And he told me the next time I came in - I needed to make sure Not to go to S... to ask for him, R, and if R wasn't there, to ask for his boss - whom we will call Supervisor. I was told absolutely, to not talk to S - which is exactly what S told me about R.


Also - R is essentially going to ask the Bank that originally held the loan on the car, to forge a document for me... they didn't sell the car to me, they sold it to someone else, but R (and his supervisor) are calling him, asking him to forge a document... WHAT???

If they'll take a document they know describes a sale that didn't happen - why on earth do they want it at all - why not just give me the gosh darn title???


Edit: Supervisor just called me to say that the Bank will not forge a document... which is actually a bit of a relief to me, imagine that... and when I explained to Supervisor why I had actually come in today, and that I didn't want anybody forging anything - I just had a question that R had never answered, cause he took my documents without really talking to me, we re-established that S was right all along, and Supervisor is going to call my missing link and put a little Government pressure on him to send me the documents I need.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Bubble Wrap...

hides the cutest thing I've seen in at least a month.
What is it???
I've named him Horney H. Toad - after Jesus H. (you get the idea)... then I realized that that made him H. H. Toad, so I've been calling him H. H., which is somewhat cumbersome... details.
He's an early birthday present for me, from D, via The Worthington Gallery in Springdale, UT.
There was some debate between the cute little Horney Toad Lizard and a couple pretty yellow bowls (I'm not usually a yellow person, but these were pastel yellow, tan and purple and somehow it all just worked), but D said -

"yeah, but the bowls could concievable be used for something, you could eat oatmeal out of those bowls, the lizard can't do anything but sit on a shelf and gather dust and you need to indulge in more things that aren't, at all, practical."
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Wednesday, June 11, 2008

My Take.



With all this discussion of Spots - who has them, why they carry them, who actually made the purchase, I know three things -

First - it's going to be freakin' Sweet to watch the Leaderboard for The Tour Divide (and other none-official TDers who will be racing the course while packing) this year.

Second - it's really hard to quantify exactly what advantages and/or handicaps are presented to different riders depending on whether they do or do not carry a Spot, mobile phone, GPS device, iPod etc. Does it add or release you from addition pressure, knowing so many might be watching your progress???

Third - the worst part of TransIowa v4 was after I had called for help and was waiting... not knowing where help was, how long it would take them to get to me, etc. Having run into Essam while he was attempting to ride the Kokopelli trail this year, showed me just how added the uncertainty was with a Spot. He knew he had pushed the buttom, but he had no idea if that meant his contact was actually on his way to pick him up or not, or even it his contact had gotten the signal he had told the bight orange box to send. And not knowing these things, it makes it pretty darn hard to figure out what the next step is... stay where you are, move closer to where you presume help is, find water, find a place to hide from the weather, or remain as visible as possible... when you're racing and moving you can make those decisions easily but when you don't know how long you have to remain somewhere it throws a lot of uncertainty into the mix... and no one I know who has a Spot doesn't already appreciate that.

I would think, even if you had a Spot, in most cases it would still be easiest and safest to get yourself out of whatever problem situation you were in - unless you were no longer capable of movement.


In a perfect world, each person would draw their own technology line, knowing themselves well enough to know what would or would not be an unfair psychological advantage... but the world isn't perfect -

and personally, if the whole point is to be all Person against Nature, or Person against Themselves, out alone, in the desolation of their own mind and backcountry, with nothing but two hands, years worth of amped up muscles, and incessant thoughts of inferiority - I'd take away iPods and satellite radios before Spots.

Superior.

A comment on why tortillas are better than bagels when hiking.
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Monday, June 9, 2008

Quote of the Day.

D - I'm going to stop eating food - so I don't have to do so many dishes.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Arizona Political Update

70-something year old Jake Flake, the state representative from Snowflake, a town named after his great grandfather - recently fell off his horse and broke several ribs...

we can only hope his wife, thirteen children, and forty-five grandchildren are tending him well.

It appears the "conservative agenda" will be ailing, until he can make it back down to the state capital. This is frightening, as everyone's worried all those gays married in California are going to sneak across the border like a Mexican Coyote.

Quote of the Day.

D - I'm surprised they didn't make you move to Illinois, or Indiana, or somewhere.
M - Who???
D - The citizens of Iowa, for being so un-American.
M - What???
D - They never would have allowed that in Ohio, that's for sure.


I don't eat Watermelon.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Lost and Found - Paper Edition.

It all started when we moved to Arizona and had all these bare white walls. D said - "Why don't you paint something."
I only paint in scenic design class, but I got the point. I bought a bunch of old books and magazines at thrift stores, some picture frames, and went about making collages.

Since then, I've picked up a few more books, D's made collages for his Kaibab race posters, and I've used the pictures to make my postcard entries for TransIowa.

I have a system when I get materials for collage work. Essentially, I tear the book apart by the sections its bound in - all the pages of the entire book - and then separate each page into two boxes. One box is for pages with potentially useful images. The second box is recycling. Since you can't recycle whole, bound books, this allows me to recycle everything I won't use, and makes it easier to retrieve the pages I want. And instead of a pile of books, it leaves me with a box full of pages to go through when I want to make something.


I've been going through my craft stuff, packing and reorganizing anything that I'm not liable to use before our move. I had about half a dozen books I'd gotten for collaging that I hadn't gone through yet, and thought I ought to do that, to reduce their bulk, come moving time.

When I get books from thirft stores, I don't get books that might still have some useful purpose in the world. I won't cut apart a book that has something left to give. Usually it's old encyclopedias, or TimeLife series, or other books that are way out of date, but have striking or vintage images in them. When I get home, I search for them on Amazon.com, to make sure I'm not about to cut up a rare book (I have actually bought a book for $1 and found out it was worth $20). One of the books I had sitting around was titled Lost Treasures of Europe. I'd done my usual quick search for it when I first brought it home, but didn't find anything. Today, as I was pulling sections of the book apart from it's bindings, D asked about it. It was published in 1946 - and is a collection of some 450 pictures of buildings that were destroyed in World War II. The book's editors compiled a list of all the major architectural treasures that were damaged in Europe, and published images of them, taken prior to the war, in this volume (along with a few "after" shots).

My curiosity raised, I searched for the book again. It sells for somewhere between $20-$40... mine was in perfect condition... before I pulled it to pieces!!! Distressed that'd I'd just killed a fairly rare and historic volume, but realizing there was nothing much I could do, I continued hacking it to pieces. Half way through I found a small piece of paper tucked between two pages (the above and below photos).



It is an absolutely PERFECT condition 5 Mark note, issued from Berlin in August of 1917, for use as a small denomination loan against commodities, in the German occupied territories, during World War I. Technically, it was not legal tender, but was used as such during the period (isn't the information you can find on the internet in 10 minutes amazing???).

This one doesn't so much as have a corner turned. It could not possibly have circulated - ever. I thought it couldn't be real when I first saw it, and can't really be certain that it is, it's too perfect. Except for the fact that no one would ever want to produce a counterfeit, as a search of German-language eBay turns up a value of about $2 US.
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Yummy.

From the BBC.

Monday, June 2, 2008

Quote of the Day.

"I'm gonna go shave my legs, they're getting out of control!"

-D

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Quote of the Day.

Doorbell rings, D goes downstairs to answer it -

UPS guy - "Are you Dave"


Apparently Brian forgot to put the #A on our address (when he shipped a couple new tires for D) and the UPS guy just barely remembered that we, rather than our duplex neighbors, are Dave.

This is noteworthy, as right after we moved in here our UPS guy knew us well... the quantity of bike stuff arriving in the mail has steadily diminished over the last year :)

Just maybe...

“I think we’ve exploited all the countries on earth for people who really want to work for nothing.”


Mr. Konheim said.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Quotes.

From the University of Montana's website. (The university accepted it's first students in the fall of 1895).


"I hiked around town, the air sweet and dry, and was sort of overwhelmed by the perfection of it -- the old courthouse, the train depot, Mount [Jumbo] and Mount Sentinel rising up, the neon bars, the funky festivity of a college town ...."

-- Garrison Keillor


There are 3.1 million acres of wilderness within a 100-mile radius of campus.



"I’m in love with Montana. For other states I have admiration, respect, recognition, even some affection. But with Montana it is love. And it’s difficult to analyze love when you’re in it."

--John Steinbeck, "Travels with Charley"



"John Updike once called Missoula the Paris of the Nineties, because of the city’s legendary population of writers, but Paris lacks three world-renowned trout rivers and proximity to Glacier and Yellowstone National Parks."

--Outside Magazine



"Missoula -- it’s Montana, but it has feng shui and herbal tea."

-- Garrison Keillor, in the Missoulian




"Missoula ruins so many careers. People visit, and then throw everything away just so they can stay."

--Best-selling author James Lee Burke, in Men’s Journal



"Montana is the only state with a triple divide allowing water to flow into the Pacific, Atlantic and Hudson Bay. This phenomenon occurs at Triple Divide Peak in Glacier National Park."

–- 50states.com



"No. 11 small place for business and careers."
--Forbes Magazine, about Missoula

"No. 2 among small cities."
--Inc. Magazine, about Missoula in "Top 25 Places For Doing Business in America"

(Sounds good...)

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

From the National Park Service Morning Report.

Grand Canyon National Park (AZ)
Follow-up On Manhunt For Carjackers

On Monday, May 12th, park law enforcement rangers conducted a criminal manhunt following a carjacking at gunpoint of a visitor vehicle from Twin Overlooks on Desert View Drive (Highway 64). The manhunt was associated with the investigation of a motor vehicle accident in the same location that had occurred three-and-a-half hours earlier. Rangers investigating the accident immediately determined that there’d been an attempt to drive it over the rim of the canyon. Initial efforts to find the occupants – identified as brothers Travis and Willard Twiggs, ages 36 and 38 respectively – were unavailing. The vehicle was towed from the scene and impounded. Investigation revealed that Travis Twiggs, based at Quantico, Virginia, was known to suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) associated with recent tours of duty in Iraq. The search for the two men was impeded by a significant delay in receipt of the initial report by park dispatch. Immediate efforts included checkpoints outside the park and near Flagstaff, conducted with the assistance of officers from the Coconino County Sheriff’s Department and the Arizona Department of Public Safety. Weather conditions deteriorated overnight, with four inches of heavy snowfall blanketing the South Rim. The search continued on Tuesday, but without results. It was accordingly suspended that afternoon. On Wednesday, the white Dodge Caliber that the Twiggs’ had stolen was spotted at a Border Patrol checkpoint at Welton, Arizona, located 29 miles east of Yuma. A pursuit ensued which continued eastbound on Interstate 8 past Gila Bend. The 130-mile pursuit involved officers from the Border Patrol, Maricopa County Sheriff's Department, Arizona Department of Public Safety and Pinal County Sheriff's Office. Tohono O'odham Indian Reservation officers spiked the Caliber’s tires, but the car continued for another mile before going off the roadway. Pinal County deputies and Border Patrol officers converging on the car heard two shots and accordingly withdrew. Maricopa County and U.S. Customs helicopters hovered over the area for about 20 minutes, watching the vehicle. Bomb squad robots were called in and were used to determine that both Twiggs’ were dead. According to a Pinal County spokesman, one man evidently shot the other, then killed himself. [Submitted by Ken Phillips, Incident Commander]

In 1906 -

Dewey Bridge was the way to get from Moab to the outside world in Colorado.

In the 1980's it stopped serving motor vehicle traffic.

In 2000 it was restored for pedestrian and bicycle use.

In 2008 it burned as a consequence of a child starting a brush fire in a campground.


When it was build, it was the second longest suspension bridge, west of the Mississippi. It continued, till it burned, to be the longest Suspension bridge, and the longest clear-span bridge in Utah.
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Tuesday, May 20, 2008

A few more photos from the weekend.

The "Mexican Hat" - and the crazy cliffs behind it. There is really not a mile of the drive from here to Moab that isn't interesting.
D on Elephant Butte, looking through the summit register. It goes back to 1976. The first time we got to the top I was soooooo enchanted with the idea of a summit register and D was sort of like "Oh - I don't do those things." Let's just say - he does now :)

The start of the second rappel. You do one repel on your way up, and one on your way down. Right below the bottom of the photo the rappel does free, into an overhanging amphitheater. The first time we did this route it was the second Rappel I'd ever done in my life - the first overhanging, and my first in the dark. I remember it well...

D coiling the rope at the bottom of the above rappel.

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Monday, May 19, 2008

How to stem a pothole in five easy steps.

Starts are always ackward. Do your best.


The classic two legged stem, for as long as both your feet can reach both walls.


Match Feet.

Get your legs under you again for the dismount.



Only preceded in awkwardness by the start... the dismount... hope the friction holds you.
(From the descent of Elephant Butte, in Arches National Park)
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Saturday, May 17, 2008

The drive up.

We were headed NorthEast this weekend. The clouds were fun driving through Dine Country, better known as the Navajo Nation, better known as The Rez.
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Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Green.


Can you see it??? There's green in that there dirt!!!

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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Quote of the Weekend.

Six year old girl, with her mother, on their way back up the Bright Angel Trail, Grand Canyon -

Mother - "Just... wait right here a minute."
Girl - "We hike faster than daddy."

Monday, May 12, 2008

Food!!!


After getting back from Iowa, I decided, for once, I should cook D something, instead of the other way around. However my meal ended up being very Midwestern.

Mashed potatoes, watermelon, and Corn on the Cob... with Burgers.
A distinction. In Arizona you buy "Some corn on the cob", in Iowa you buy "A couple ears of Peaches 'n' Cream" or some other specific variety. In Iowa - you know the differences between varieties of corn, and you have distinct preferences.

We also substituted ground Turkey, instead of beef for the Burgers (keeping D off the Evil Red Meat as much as possible). For D's I added PepperJack cheese, green peppers and homemade Guacamole on toasted MultiGrain bread from Chompie's. Yummy.

Then - on Saturday - we pan cooked the rest of the Ground Turkey into Sausage Patties and used them on Deep-Dish Pizza.
You can now order pizza from D with either Hand-Tossed or Deep-Dish crust. Spoiled - that's me.

We were inspired to make it this way, from America's Test Kitchen. Except to access the recipe online you have to create a user name and password... lame!!! So D just edited his regular recipe with a few changes he remembered from the show - like using Milk in the dough, and lining the pan with olive oil before putting the dough in, which essentially Fries the bottom of the crust while it's in the oven cooking.
It came out lovely!!!
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Saturday, May 10, 2008

Quote of the Day.

Talking about the Pizza -

M - "Why is your pizza all puffed up on the sides and mine isn't???"
D - "Cause my pizza likes have veggies on it."

Friday, May 9, 2008

Home.

She was supposed to be delivered to our house last night... but someone at the LBS in Des Moines decided to send it back to the LBS here, instead of to our house as specifically directed. Which meant that last night, right after I got to work, I got a distraught call from D saying the tracking number showed it was delivered - to Daniel at the front desk. We don't have a front desk - nor someone named Daniel. Which caused momentary panic on his behalf, till the snaffu was figured out.

D picked her up from the bike shop after work today and brought her home. Just a shadow of her former self.
And then D promptly stole his wheel back and started working on getting it set up for tube-less. Which he says was a success!!!
We have a weekend full of Cereal planned for sometime in the future and I'm debating whether I want PomPom or M'Lady for my adventures that weekend... which might involve some Honey Nut Cherrios, but definitely no Coco Pebbles!!!
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Wondering. More and More.

Apparently the first person I talked to, over at the MVD, didn't know what he was talking about - when it comes to titling cars in Arizona.

Funny - seeing as that's his job.

So I'd assembled the majority of the paper work he had told me I needed and wanted to talk to someone in person about how to handle one link, the last link, that I was having a slight problem with.

I went in, explained my whole story to someone new, and was told that the link I was having such a problem with, wasn't even necessary.

Okady - Good news and Bad news. So one part wasn't necessary but the paperwork that I had on another part was wrong. I couldn't use Georgia papers, I needed them to fill out the Arizona version of that exact same paperwork.

I got that Arizona version filled out and went back there today. Turns out the first guy was still way off, the woman I spoke to just the other day only had it half right... and I do in fact need something from the link that was causing problems, except not what I thought I needed before.

Tomorrow morning I'm going to call up the son of the deceased car-dealership owner and tell him, that even though, just two days ago, I told him I needed nothing from him, I do, in fact, now need something from him, but it's different from what I told him I needed from him before.


Oh - and this wouldn't even be a problem if the car hadn't been repossessed. If the car hadn't been repossessed, the paperwork I have right now would be sufficient to get the car titled and registered.

The only reason they know the car has been repossessed, is because I have a Affidavit of Repossession, signed and notarized from the bank. The only reason I have that, is because the first MVD guy told me I needed it, so the bank in Georgia created one for me. So - I very well might have paperwork that I don't even need to have, but since I do have it, I need even more paperwork!!!


And right about now - I want to find that first guy from the MVD and hurt him. I want to hurt him.

If he hadn't had me get the Repo note, and knew what his job required the first time I went in there - I would have had my car titled about six months ago. As the paperwork I really, actually, truly needed to have, I have had for that time... but was told it was not enough.

Oh - and I'm going to have to pay, like, $100 in extra fees for not registering the car in the proper amount of time - because I was spending that time procuring this needless paperwork.


When things like this happen, I don't blame the bureaucracy. I blame that individual man - who did his job poorly. Who didn't bother to fully inform himself, who didn't take the time to ask his superiors, but just told me what to do himself, and in doing so, told me to do the wrong thing.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Umm...

D was downstairs playing with his bicycles when he called up - "If you hurry you can come see this tarantula" -

so I ran downstairs!!!

then I ran back up to grab the camera. I told D to keep it from crawling into the evergreen bushes while I ran - so he corralled it with the bike pump, which I included in the photo for size. It was a solid 3 1/2 inches!!!
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Monday, May 5, 2008

Walnuts.

Happy little star cookies.

Something like a cross between a sugar cookie and shortbread - then, as I've recently enjoyed doing with chocolate chip cookies, I mince up some walnuts and roll one side of the little dough balls in the walnutty powder before squishing them down into the star-form trays. Not only does it add this delicious crunchy texture to the bottom of each cookie and almost enough protein to justify eating them, it also makes them Super easy to get out of the pans... no spray, butter, or parchment needed.
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Sunday, May 4, 2008

Differences.

It is sunny in Arizona. And our apartment seems to reach out, grab the sunlight and bring it into every little corner of the house.

This was not the case during the week I was at my parents' house in Iowa. Even if there was some sun - it never seemed to make it's way inside, due to things like -
a) Large Trees
b) Elaborate Curtains
c) Room orientation

I like sunshine. It's easier to get out of bed before 10am when there's gobs of sunlight filling the bedroom. I turned into a slug at my parents' house. I really hate the yellow light put out by most incandescent light bulbs - I'd rather leave the room in semi-darkness. This exacerbated the issue of their house.

I also like our internet - which sometimes seems slow, but is a freaking Prodigy compared to the AOL Dial-up that my mother continues to suffer through. She doesn't know what she's missing.


The plan as of now, is to have D go check out Missoula during a long, two-week road trip in June. While I really can't go with him, I'm now slightly hesitant to allow him to pick out an apartment for us - as Missoula starts out having not nearly as much sunlight as Arizona, it will be doubly important that our lodgings facilitate maximum sun-capture.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Quote of the Day.

"Viewer discretion is advised.

The Renaissance artwork in the following program contains nudity."


-20/20 intro


I'm sorry - are you kidding me???