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Sunday, November 30, 2014

SATURDAY WIND -- AND COLD


Northeast winds pound the beach
As Cliff Mass put it, we went from Hawaii to Alaska without getting on a plane.  Wednesday and Thursday were warm on the island — just below 60 degrees in November is quite something.  Warm air, straight from the tropics made for warm days and near balmy evenings.

Just after midnight on Friday, the North wind started blowing bringing arctic air streaming in.  Cold Arctic air.  The temperature went from just shy of 60 to the mid twenties in just a few hours.  The peak gust at the house Friday was just over 40 mph, which made for quite a wind chill.  As Cliff said, we went from the tropics to the arctic without ever moving.

Looking South, sun low in the sky

Elwa with Baker in the distance. Like to climb Baker next year

Coast Guard cutter in the distance

Elwa again with Canadian mountains outlined faintly above

Saturday, November 29, 2014

THANKSGIVING DAY

Thanksgiving day was a success.  While the turkey and gravy came from Kings, all the rest of the preparation was done by several cooks.  Jodi’s vegetables and endive salad were a hits as was Kylies cranberry sauce and Maren’s salad.

And did I mention the pies?  Mom makes great pies. Apple, pecan, and that special pumpkin cheese cake! oh my word what wonderful pies.  Out of this world fantastic. (Mom - if you are reading sorry for not mentioning the dessert in the original post.  Does that addition resolve the original omission?).

The pies were very good....

We turned things a little upside down by having dinner first and appetizers much later to accommodate the Seahawks / 49ers game.  The Seahawk win just added to the day.  As did the rainbow over Presidents channel.

Jill, Andy, and Porter came out to the house so the table was delightfully full.
Early afternoon rainbow

Jodi's veges



Ever have that feeling someone is always looking at you?


Perhaps someone snuck in some magic mushrooms?





Ready for adventure!



New friends



and old friends


Thursday, November 27, 2014

PRE THANKSGIVING

A few pre Thanksgiving day pics from the island

Maren cooked a vegetarian meal.  Some of us were perhaps a little less than enthusiastic anticipating a vegetarian dinner, but this was good.  Really good.  Really, Really Good.

The cousins preparing their dish

The final creation

A very difficult puzzle

Maren coaching me on how to clean my camera

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Saturday night sunset
I don’t use the blog to rant about things, but here goes.

First, do you know what the highest grossing movie was over the weekend?  An epic of world war II?  The Oscar buzzed space movie ‘Intersteller’?  Perhaps the new Bill Murrey flick?  A story about one of the greatest physicists of all time? None of the above.

“Dumb and dumber to”.  Top movie last week. Grossed 38 million dollars.  As a species we are doomed.

But I suspect both dumb and dumber were engineers at Chevrolet during the Malibu’s inception.  Remember I bought a 2008 Chevy Malibu, the most unexciting car in the world?  As I get to know it better, I have two complaints.

First off the speedometer goes to 220 miles per hour.  This in a car where ‘crisp’ would be an overstatement when describing acceleration.  ‘Pedestrian’ would be more appropriate. I’ve had the car up to perhaps 75 miles an hour and I suppose it could go a little faster if I wanted.  But even in free fall, I suspect terminal velocity for the car is under 220 and under its own power I doubt the thing would hit 100.


So why did engineers at GM have a gauge that is double the maximum and triple the practical?  I’ll probably never know.  But all my driving will be in the first third of the gauge and the difference between 50 and 60 or 60 to 70 is pretty difficult to discern.

The second complaint is the method of changing a simple headlight bulb.  I went to the owners manual and in clear simple terms it describes how to change nearly every light on the car.  The tail light was a snap.  But nothing about the head light.  There is a sentence in the manual that says ‘for any lamp not covered by this manual please go to your dealer’.

A quick check on the internet reveals why.  You need to take the entire front bumper off the car to change the headlamp.  There are several you tube videos on the subject, one where a 7 year old performs the procedure.  The 7 year old said was a pain and I believe him.  But it did give me the courage to do it myself.

Other than those 2 things, the Malibu is performing as advertised.  Which means it gets me from point A to point B in a quasi economical matter.

UPDATE:  I wrestled with the car for an hour yesterday.  I followed all the steps on the internet.  Failed miserably.  The light housing is immovable.  Looks like I need to take the car to the dealer to get a headlight replaced.  Phooey.

UPDATE #2:  Today (Sunday) I wrestled with the car again. Success. Still much ill will towards whoever decided to design the car the way they did.

Other updates:  A neighbor came over to dinner Saturday night to enjoy Jodi’s homemade winter chili.  Great conversation, turns out he worked on the show ‘Northern Exposure’ as the lead actors stand in and was part of the core group that worked on the show.  We quickly found out we had a common friend who was the animal trainer on that show.  Anne now lives in Panama but pinged in on Facebook Sunday morning and we had one of those ‘small world’ conversations via Facebook messaging.



Bruno stopped by with Chewie, a great, but somewhat stubborn, dog.  When chewie wants to go somewhere, he really digs in his heels and goes, sometimes dragging Bruno — or at minimum impeding his forward progress.  It doesn’t help that whenever we see him a dog cookie magically appears.

Experimented with night photography Saturday night as well.





It rained heavily Saturday night with strong winds.  After coffee the clouds parted, the wind stopped and the seas were calm.  Perfect time for a kayak outing.

Here are some pics.









First snow



Thursday, November 20, 2014

NIGHT HIKE

A far too early sunset from Bellevue just before heading out


November in Seattle.  The days are half as long as they are in June.  Last night’s sunset was 4:28. Tonights sunset will be a minute earlier.

All of this makes keeping up a mid week hiking routine tough.  Or more fun, depending on your point of view.

Last night we had a good crew going up cable line.  Justin and I for what seemed like the umpteenth time, Marc who has hiked with us many times, and new comers Michael and Violet.  Michael and Violet are recent transplants from the midwest, and have been in Seattle for about 3 months.

The hike up was challenging as aways, but a good conversation set up and everyone had a good time.

On the way down, Justin’s natural fast gait took him ahead of the group and, taking point, he was the first to see 'the eyes'.  Several yards ahead of us, alone, he encountered an unexpected noise and when he turned his headlamp towards the noise in the woods, he froze.  There was something out there in the dark looking at him.

Justin used the time tested wilderness method of alerting us to possible danger.  He texted.



Sure enough when we got to the spot, there were a large set of eyes staring back at us about 50 to 70 feet off the trail.  Justin asked what type of animals were around here.  There are bear, coyote, mountain lion, and back in the 60’s someone claimed to have seen a sasquatch a little east of where we were.

We couldn’t see what was attached to the eyes, but they were definitely alive and the head was moving back and forth.  The way the head moved, my hunch was a large owl.

Being the brave, courageous set of guys we were, we asked Violet to venture into the woods to see what type of animal was attached to the eyes, but she declined the invite.

It probably was an owl.  Or a bear.  We’ll never know.

A little farther down, Justin ran into another set of eyes (it was just his night).  This time, he got pictures...



Sinister -- Bear?  Mountain lion?  This one turned out to be a deer.

Still kinda creepy though.......






Here are some pics from the hike.

Michael and Violet getting ready.  Marc on the right ready to go.

Justin




Held the shutter open for about 30 seconds to capture more light


Flash then a 30 second exposure

Michael and Violet