04/29/2008

The BBC: Despite The Fact There Are More Than 200 Million Guns In Circulation, There Is A Certain Tranquility And Civility About American Life

Excerpts from Justin Webb, a BBC North America editor:

A British man I met in Colorado recently told me he used to live in Kent but he moved to the American state of New Jersey and will not go home because it is, as he put it, "a gentler environment for bringing the kids up."

This is New Jersey. Home of the Sopranos.

Brits arriving in New York, hoping to avoid being slaughtered on day one of their shopping mission to Manhattan are, by day two, beginning to wonder what all the fuss was about. By day three they have had had the scales lifted from their eyes.

I have met incredulous British tourists who have been shocked to the core by the peacefulness of the place, the lack of the violent undercurrent so ubiquitous in British cities, even British market towns.

"It seems so nice here," they quaver.

Well, it is!

Ten or 20 years ago, it was a different story, but things have changed.

And this is Manhattan.

Wait till you get to London Texas, or Glasgow Montana, or Oxford Mississippi or Virgin Utah, for that matter, where every household is required by local ordinance to possess a gun.

Folks will have guns in all of these places and if you break into their homes they will probably kill you.

They will occasionally kill each other in anger or by mistake, but you never feel as unsafe as you can feel in south London.

It is a paradox. Along with the guns there is a tranquillity and civility about American life of which most British people can only dream.

(via Clayton Cramer)

03/16/2008

A List Of The Best Brands Of Gasoline For The Environment

From toptiergas.com:

TOP TIER Detergent Gasoline is the premier standard for gasoline performance. Six of the world's top automakers, BMW, General Motors, Honda, Toyota, Volkswagen and Audi recognize that the current EPA minimum detergent requirements do not go far enough to ensure optimal engine performance.

Since the minimum additive performance standards were first established by EPA in 1995, most gasoline marketers have actually reduced the concentration level of detergent additive in their gasoline by up to 50%.  As a result, the ability of a vehicle to maintain stringent Tier 2 emission standards have been hampered, leading to engine deposits which can have a big impact on in-use emissions and driver satisfaction.

These are the retailers that meet the Top Tier standards:

  • QuikTrip
  • Chevron
  • Conoco
  • Phillips
  • 76
  • Shell
  • Entec Stations
  • MFA Oil Company
  • Kwik Trip/Kwik Star
  • The Somerset Refinery, Inc.
  • Chevron-Canada
  • Aloha Petroleum
  • Jiffy Mart
  • Mahalo
  • Tri-Par Oil Company
  • Mileage Stations
  • Turkey Hill Minit Markets

Buying your gas from Hugo Chavez' Citgo? You're hurting the environment. And hey BP, with all your advertising how come you aren't on this list?

02/29/2008

Cars You Have Owned That Are So Unique That If You See One Just Like Yours Out On The Road You Wave To The Other Driver

I realize that I'm misusing the word unique here, but you get the idea. I've had three of these kinds of cars:

  • 1973 Mazda RX-3 Station Wagon: Bought this in Illinois and drove it out to California a month later.
  • 1977 Honda Accord: The nearest dealer was 65 miles away, in Albert Lea, Minnesota. Back then only three colors were available. We had the tan one.
  • 1991 Volkswagen Vanagon: Always a bit odd, this one, but we're still driving it in 2008.

Did you ever have a wave-at-the-other-driver type car? What cars on the market today would be in this category?

01/17/2008

Oregon and New Jersey: The Only Two States That Require Gas Station Attendants To Pump Your Gas

From dumblaws.com:

Oregon and New Jersey are the only two states in the United States that require attendants to pump gas at gas stations. There are many arguments for it, but many are not very well substantiated. It is claimed that it should not matter because gas prices are lower in these two states. Insurance costs for gas stations go down slightly if a "qualified attendant" is pumping the gas, but they must also pay for the cost of hiring an extra worker. Combined with varying taxes on gasoline between states, its true affect on gas price is anyone's guess.

It is also claimed that having your own gas pumped for you is superior because drivers don't have to brave the elements and fiddle with the gas pump and their gas cap. With the exception of a few elderly and disabled persons, most people are perfectly capable of getting out of their car in a covered area for five minutes and place a nozzle in their gas tank. Another argument is that by forcing consumers to go to gas stations with attendents, it helps out the job market. Opponents argue that employing these people is merely a waste of money, and if jobs are needed, other opportunities could easily be created (i.e. city beatification). Regardless of the truth behind the matter, Oregon and New Jersey are keeping this law on the books and fully enforcing it.

All of which leads to an odd situation:

Let's review the legal status of various self-administered tasks in Oregon.

Self-serve suicide (with a doctor's assistance): OK.

Self-service gasoline: Nope.

Wait, it gets better. From Wikipedia:

In both New Jersey and Oregon, it is legal for customers to pump their own diesel (although not every station permits diesel customers to do so; truck stops typically do). The intent of the Oregon Law is that diesel is not as flammable, and therefore poses less of a hazard to Oregon citizens.

But how does this all work in practice? Adam Schaeffer:

I sat in the car, aching, pondering the four-hour drive ahead while watching a long-lost, slow-motion play written by Kafka unfold in the warm failing light of an approaching summer's eve. Left-side gas-pump lines were many cars deep and right-sided ones were nearly empty. Sullen attendants shuffled unhurriedly from car-window to pump to register kiosk to car window and on again while men and women and families sat trapped, bladders full, in their tiny metal boxes. And I came unglued. My tongue lashed forth in a torrent of obscenity-laced policy proposals and cruel punishment suggestions for all those responsible. My poor fiancé, concern and a hint of fear in her eyes, endured the high-volume tirade. I am ashamed to admit I participated in some Jersey-bashing. I like New Jerseyians — some of my best friends are New Jerseyians. But New Jersey has gone completely sideways when it comes to gas stations.

It took a full 25 minutes to get our gas and get on our way. I estimate that it took at least twice as long as it does in sane States for each car to rotate through. And that doesn't count the wasted pumps at the under-utilized right-side stations. A moment in a small service station encapsulated the problem with liberal solutions and mucking-about in the economy. Here was a small sample of 20,000 government-mandated "jobs" performed by people who would have better served the economy if they simply sat there and allowed motorists to pump their own gas. Flushing the salary of all 20,000 attendants down the drain would have been a net improvement for the economy. Instead, gas stations in the Garden State are made to raise prices to pay people to waste other people's money, time, and patience.

The system is so unnecessary, so arbitrary, so rigid, so irrational, illogical, and infuriating...so like the government and so sadly unsurprising. It would have been a great lesson for children. So for your next educational fieldtrip with the kids, you can take them to New Jersey and let them see government regulation in all of its glory. But in the meantime I will make a futile request: Please, New Jersey, let me pump my own gas.

(Hat tip on this post to my brother Tim, my favorite Oregon liberal.)

01/16/2008

A Century Of Cheap Cars

1908
Ford Model T
1958
Volkswagen
2008
Tata Nano
Price (at factory)
$850
$1154
$2500
Price (2008 dollars)
$19,000
$8400
$2500
Engine
front, 4 cyl.
45 hp
rear, 4 cyl.
32 hp
rear, 2 cyl.
33 hp
Transmission
2-spd. planetary
4-spd. manual
CVT
Top speed
45 mph
68 mph
60 mph
Top cruising speed
35-40 mph
68 mph
45 mph
Mileage
15 mpg
30 mpg
50 mpg
Windows
what windows?
manual winders
manual winders
Windshield wipers
0
2
1
Wheels/tires
tall 'n narrow
5.60x15
roller skate

(from Joe Sherlock)

01/08/2008

The Dokdo Islands

Excerpts from a Special Report by the Vladivostok News:

The Dokdo Islands consist of 37 islets, with only two of them, western and eastern islands situated 150 meters apart, considered major. Japan and South Korea both claim the islands, but Korea currently owns them.

Thirty eight coast guards serve in the islands for two months, and after this period they are all changed, Captain Lee Han-Seop, the current head of this small garrison, shared in an interview. “We do not feel isolated here because besides us live lighthouse keepers and several fishermen,” he added. “There is even a post box for mail,” Lee said pointing at it.

According to him, tourists regularly come to visit the islands. There is a ferry service from Ulleung-do, another South Korean Island, and in 2004 some 1,600 tourists visited the islands. The main attraction on this rocky piece of land is a place to view the sunrise – for both North and South Korea the territory is geographically the most eastern point. ...

The territorial clash started in 1905 when Japan incorporated the islands into its Shimane Prefecture. South Korea took control of them after Japan’s defeat in the Second World War. ... In April 2006 the dispute resurfaced brusquely when Japan dispatched two ships to the islets to conduct a maritime survey, and South Korea in response sent 18 patrol ships to the disputed territory. North Korea quickly declared its support for the actions of South Korea and was ready to dispatch its ships as well. The Japanese government did not perform the study.

Ireland Is Changing

A post from William Sjostrom, an American economist living and working in Ireland:

The Irish census has already indicated a growing foreign born population here (note table 5 on page 23). I have talked to people who worked for the census, and they tell me they are persuaded many of the foreign born are undercounted. The eastern Europeans, the Africans, the Asians who come here are from places where you really do not want the government to know about you, so they hid from the census. I am inclined to believe it, although I do not know quantitatively how significant it is. But I offer this anecdote.

The other night, my wife and I went out to dinner with another couple we know. Here is how the nationalities stacked up. We, an American born couple, got a French born babysitter for our Vietnamese born daughter to go out with a Polish born couple who left their two Polish born children with their Polish born au pair. We went to a Spanish restaurant, where the waitress was Polish and the only other group in the restaurant were English. We did not encounter one Irish born person that evening.

01/04/2008

The State By State Guide To Cell Phone Laws

Get the full details by clicking the link.

12/20/2007

Springfield, Illinois: Birthplace Of The Corn Dog

I guess this would be the Yin to the Lincoln Tomb Yang.

A 10th Floor Swimming Pool With A Nifty 8-Foot Overhang

The Hotel Elan, under construction in Dallas. It might be fun to run out underneath it on the ground wearing your swimsuit when nobody's looking, then when someone comes along have your buddy let out a blood-curdling scream. Or would it be better with a mime?

12/10/2007

Contiguous State Pairs With Run-On Abbreviations

Contiguous State Pairs With Run-On Abbreviations
Contiguous State Pairs With Run-On Abbreviations

Examples:

  • Minnesota & North Dakota: MNND
  • Wisconsin & Illinois: WIIL

Exercises:

  1. Can you find all the state pairs?
  2. Can you can travel from coast-to-coast using these state pairs?
  3. Can you can travel from Canada to Mexico using these state pairs?

Idea: Use this as a game with kids learning US geography.

11/15/2007

300-lb. Wheels That Come Flying Off Of Trucks At 60 MPH And Kill People: Are Conservatives Really To Blame?

Paul Soglin thinks so:

Flying Wheel: Milwaukee Highway Death and the Role of Government

... Somewhere there was failure. Somewhere there was some government agency too busy, too over-worked, stretched beyond its resources that was not able to effectively follow up and enforce the regulations. You know, those troublesome regulations that  drive up the cost of doing business.

Right now all levels of government are under assault. With "Americans for Prosperity," Wisconsin legislators and the political right clamoring to embrace Grover Norquist's goal to "..cut government in half in twenty-five years, to get it down to the size where we can drown it in the bathtub," such incidents are not surprising.

That is not to say that government spending will eliminate all accidental deaths or that there is no limit for such spending. But statistically, the less resources there are for making highways safer, logically, there will be more deaths.

He goes on, but you get the idea. We conservatives/Republicans are pretty used to this by now. Let a major hurricane hit a city built below sea level and it's George W. Bush's fault. If a jet plane full of lesbian nuns crashes it will be due to the Iraq War. A fire in an orphanage? There will be a direct line of causation to Talk Radio.

But what do experts in the trucking industry have to say? From jsonline.com:

"In the last 10 to 15 years, more and more, they've been using liquid corrosives to melt salt on the roads instead of the solid rock salt and other compounds," Boyce said. "These liquid ice melters stick to the undercarriage and the axles and the wheels of a truck much more readily than solid de-icers.

"Because of that, when they were first started being used, maintenance managers were shocked to see that trailers were wearing out and bolts were falling off after just a few years on the road."

He said materials have been improved as a result. "But it's still a problem," he said.

And from Land Line, The Business Magazine For Professional Truckers:

The crisis of corrosion: Today’s newer ice-melting chemicals taking premature toll on equipment

Investigation led to one conclusion: Rust jacking and increased corrosion are directly traceable to the increased use of more aggressive snow- and ice-fighting chemicals.

Rock salt (sodium chloride) has been used to lower the freeze point of ice since the 1950s, and is often mixed with sand or cinders to increase traction. Passenger car and light-duty vehicle rusting increased in the 1970s. The auto industry responded with more non-corroding materials and improved coatings. Cars today are far less susceptible to rust, at least from salt. But resistance to salt alone is no longer enough.

In the late 1990s, highway departments found they could reduce costs by taking advantage of more aggressive snow-fighting chemicals. When they used rock salt, they had to position the snow plow-salt spreader combinations at regular intervals to wait for heavy snowfall or freezing rain. The trucks idled, wasting fuel and creating pollution. Drivers were paid to sit and wait, and then paid overtime when they were finally dispatched.

By adding magnesium chloride, calcium chloride and various acetates, highway departments could change operations. Mixtures were spread in anticipation of snowfall, to remain in place until snow actually fell. The mixtures would then melt the snow.

This usually gave the departments time to call up personnel and dispatch trucks, saving idling and overtime. Granular salts might be blown away, but spraying liquid compounds on the roads would leave the chemical coating to do its work later. Many departments started applying the mixtures, or brines, to the roads. The savings met and exceeded expectations – but the consequences were horrendous.

And from Heavy Duty Trucking:

Corrosion Versus Wheels

Corrosion - called rust when you're talking about iron and steel - is a natural force that eats away at metals. Left unchecked, it burrows deep into wheels. Corrosion is aided and abetted by road departments that use aggressive salts to melt ice and snow on pavements. Rock salt works well on pavement and can be fairly easily washed from vehicles to protect them. But the far more efficient magnesium- and calcium-chloride compounds are more corrosive and cling tenaciously to metal. Wheels are literally closer to salt sprays than anything else on the truck, so they need extra defensive measures to protect them.

And from truck magazine CCJ:

Confronting Corrosion

The root cause? While good old salt always has done a good job melting ice and snow — and, unfortunately, corroding metal — highway departments in snow-prone states have discovered that other compounds such as calcium chloride and magnesium chloride do a better melting job, and are far cheaper. They also are far more corrosive, often to critical vehicle safety components like brakes. ...

“It’s been tough getting people to realize the damage this stuff can do,” says Gambrell. “Even to tires. Think about it — if there’s a small nick in the tread, these chemicals can wick their way up to the steel belts and corrode them.” And it’s not just steel or other ferrous alloys that get attacked. “I’ve seen holes eaten in aluminum fuel tanks,” he attests. “No part on a truck is safe.”

Nor does it appear that the problem is getting better. Due to the low cost of the chemicals and their effectiveness at clearing roads, “it’s getting worse,” Gambrell says. “The highway departments figure that, if a little is good, more must be better.” ...

No doubt, trailer manufacturers are taking more precautions against corrosion, but the war is far from over. “Corrosion is still getting worse,” Stuart says. “We’re seeing better coatings and, just driving on the highway, you can see a lot more stainless and galvanized steel. But the use of these new chemicals is spreading faster than the industry can keep up.”

So I guess we conservatives aren't quite to blame for this one. But just wait a day and I'm sure we'll be on the hook for something else. Right, Paul?

Seven People have Been Killed This Year By Flying Truck Wheels Coming Loose Off Of Semi's On America's Highways

From jsonline.com:

The Mequon physician who was killed Thursday night by a wheel that came off a heavy truck is at least the seventh person to die in such an accident this year on the country's highways. Three of the seven victims have been from Wisconsin. ...

The latest victim is Krishna Chintamaneni, chief of staff at Wheaton Franciscan Healthcare-St. Francis. Chintamaneni, 55, was driving home on I-43 near Silver Spring Drive in Glendale when a tire flew off a southbound truck, bounced over a wall and hit Chintamaneni's windshield. He died at the scene. ...

In terms of overall truck accidents, wheel separations are rare. A 1992 study by the National Transportation Safety Board estimated there were 750 to 1,050 a year, out of 349,000 truck accidents annually at the time.

But that amounts to roughly two to three a day, and the incidents were troubling enough in Ontario in the 1990s that the province passed a law imposing strict penalties on truck owners when wheels come off. ...

Heavy-truck wheels weigh 200 to 300 pounds, and when they spin off at highway speed, their velocity typically keeps them stable and rolling even when they hit a median, Woodrooffe said. That makes the likelihood of hitting a vehicle "fairly significant," he said.

And if the wheel crosses the median, "not only do you have to worry about the velocity of the tire, you also have to worry about the velocity of the vehicle coming in the other direction, so the energy of the collision is very, very high," he said.

11/04/2007

The Business Of Tourism: Christmas In Killarney

You might remember the song about Killarney made famous by Bing Crosby:

The holly green, the ivy green
The prettiest picture you've ever seen
Is Christmas in Killarney
With all of the folks at home

It's nice, you know, to kiss your beau
While cuddling under the mistletoe
And Santa Claus you know, of course
Is one of the boys from home

The door is always open
The neighbors pay a call
And Father John before he's gone
Will bless the house and all

How grand it feels to click your heels
And join in the fun of the jigs and reels
I'm handing you no blarney
The likes you've never known
Is Christmas in Killarney
With all of the folks at home

For a couple of years now the folks in Killarney have held an annual Christmas Festival, and you can find out all about it at christmasinkillarney.com

10/25/2007

It's A Bridge! It's A Sundial! Wait, You're Both Right: It's The Sundial Bridge!

(via Google Sightseeing)

10/23/2007

The Artic Island Of Svalbard

An excerpt from Anne-Sophie Redisch:

Relations between the Russians and the Norwegians on Svalbard are generally good, but disagreements do occur. About a year ago, the Norwegians were convinced the Russian community suffered from a lack of vitamins, so a Longyearbyen chef sent over six tons of fresh food. This was not well received by Trust Arktikugol. In an article in Svalbardposten, the local Longyearbyen paper, the general director was quite incensed with this gift. He conceded a lack of fruits and veggies in Barentsburg for a short while, but that did not entail a crisis. Understandably, this was humiliating for the Russian authorities.

I don’t know what to make of this episode. The food shipment, although well-intentioned, might have been a bit hasty. After all, nobody dies from a temporary lack of fruit. At any rate, alcohol seems to be plentiful. Some years ago, 14 seagulls were found dead on a rubbish-tip. The gulls were sent to Oslo to be autopsied, and were found to have died from alcohol poisoning.

10/20/2007

The Decline Of Montreal

Excerpts from Mark Steyn:

There was a big anglo exodus when the separatist government was first elected 30 years ago, and the city has never recovered from that population adjustment. The big corporate HQs soon followed: the Bank of Montreal is no longer headquartered in Montreal, etc. If you drive west to Toronto, you head out of Montreal on a four-lane autoroute and by the time you're on the outskirts of Toronto it's some crazy New Jersey Turnpike-type gazillion-lane nightmare full of feeder lanes and express lanes. In other words, the Montreal-Toronto traffic's all one way. ...

John O'Sullivan and I occasionally discussed Montreal, and he observed that a big-city heritage without big-city overcrowding can be very pleasant: You've still got all the art galleries and symphony orchestras and so on. You've got tickets for Pavarotti at the Place des Arts. Curtain up, 7.30pm. So you leave at 7.20, park outside the front steps and stroll in. As John put it, societies in the early stages of decline can be very agreeable - and often more agreeable than societries trying to cope with prosperity and rapid growth.

Which brings me to my usual everything-comes-back-to-demography shtick. Precisely because the first stages of decline are so agreeable, it's very hard to accept it as such. Part of the problem in Europe is that, when chaps like yours truly shriek "Run for your lives! The powder keg's about to go up!", etc, the bon vivant enjoying his Dubonnet at the sidewalk cafe thinks: Are you crazy? Life's never been better. Civilized decline can be so charming you don't notice it's about to accelerate into uncivilized decline.

10/14/2007

Christmas Sale On Fine Art Prints By World-Famous Travel Photographer David Sanger

Fine art prints of travel, nature and people worldwide. New prices range from $24.95 for unframed 8x10 to $299.95 for a framed 20x30 print. I'm not trying to rush Christmas Season, you understand, but if you want to give a gift that's beyond the ordinary you usually need to plan ahead. I could spend all day browsing through David Sanger's travel photos.

10/11/2007

Oh, Just Your Usual Standard Indian Restaurant

Ben Hammersley thinks this is the best named business in the history of West London.

10/04/2007

Voltages Around The World

The linked page also has everything about all the various plugs and outlets (or do you call them "sockets"?) in the world.

10/02/2007

The Swastika On The Old Arizona Highway Signs

This was actually taken from a Native American design. It was removed in the 1940s, after it became associated with the Nazis. (via Best of the Web)

09/29/2007

The Happy Face In Every Danish Electrical Outlet

The Happy Face In Every Danish Electrical Outlet

The Happy Face In Every Danish Electrical Outlet

The Lego Homeland, that Denmark must be The Happiest Place On Earth! More happy faces here. Via J-Walk.

09/16/2007

Alexander von Humboldt: The Guy For Whom All the Rivers and Towns And Counties Are Named For

An excerpt from Peter Hannaford:

His epic journey through Central and South America in 1799-1804 yielded many discoveries and saw him reach an elevation of 19,286 in the Andes (a world record at the time) and, soon after, plodding through Amazon jungles in search of the river's source. Up and down volcanoes, he decided they came from fissures deep the earth, thus upending the popular view that they were built up from ancient oceans.

On that journey, he stopped in Washington, D.C. on the way home to dine with President Jefferson. He then settled in Paris, where the stimulating intellectual life pleased him in contrast to Berlin's provincialism at the time. He later traveled the length and breadth of Russia to expand his knowledge of the planet further.

Humboldt became the toast of Paris and the continent. His praises were sung worldwide. Charles Darwin called him "the greatest scientific traveler who ever lived." Cities and towns scrambled to attach his name to them in the hope that his intellectual prowess would rub off on them. The list of his namesakes is not endless, but very long: 14 towns in the United States and Canada, U.S. counties in California, Nevada and Iowa, a river, several flowers and shrubs, mountains in North and South America, Antarctica, Australia and New Zealand, a glacier in Greenland, a "sea" on the moon, a large bay in California, universities in Germany and California, a major ocean current, a penguin and a seven-foot-long squid that migrated from South America to Monterey Bay in California this summer, nearly gobbling up all the marine life there.

09/15/2007

Is Belgium Splitting Apart?

Excerpts from the Economist:

If Belgium did not already exist, would anyone nowadays take the trouble to invent it? Such questions could be asked of many countries. Belgium's problem, if such it is, is that they are being asked by the inhabitants themselves. True, in opinion polls most Belgians say they want to keep the show on the road. But when they vote, as they did on June 10th, they do so along linguistic lines, the French-speaking Walloons in the south for French-speaking parties, the Dutch-speaking Flemings in the north for Dutch-speaking parties. The two groups do not get on—hence the inability to form a government. They lead parallel lives, largely in ignorance of each other.  ...

The upshot was neither an unmitigated success nor an unmitigated failure. Belgium industrialised fast; grabbed a large part of Africa and ruled it particularly rapaciously; was itself invaded and occupied by Germany, not once but twice; and then cleverly secured the headquarters of what is now the European Union. Along the way it produced Magritte, Simenon, Tintin, the saxophone and a lot of chocolate. Also frites. No doubt more good things can come out of the swathe of territory once occupied by a tribe known to the Romans as the Belgae. For that, though, they do not need Belgium: they can emerge just as readily from two or three new mini-states, or perhaps from an enlarged France and Netherlands.

And from Michael van der Galien:

The relationship between the two regions has always been troubled. They have always fought about who should hold the most power and why. Furthermore, the two main groups have always lived independent from each other: neither side communicates with the other. One famous saying is that the only things all Belgian have in common are “the king, the football team, and some beers.”

Belgium proves how difficult it is to have two different peoples (with two different histories and with two different cultures) make up one country. This year the arguments (about power and influence) have escalated, and some are now calling on Flanders to separate from Wallonia. Some experts have already stated that if Belgium were to split up, nobody would notice and everybody would be better off.

09/12/2007

What Countries Use The Euro?

The UK and Denmark have special dispensation not to use the Euro, and the brown and green countries are scheduled to start using the Euro in the next few years. The gray countries are not members of the European Union and thus do not use the Euro.

09/04/2007

Four Corners: Under God Four States Here Meet In Freedom. Four States Here Meet In Freedom Under God. Here Meet In Freedom Under God Four States. In Freedom Under God Four States Here Meet.

Here's a close-up of that medallion in the center:

More Four Corners photos here. (Via Neatorama's post "Hand Stand At The Four Corners, USA")

Kilroy Was Here: Find This Secret Message On The World War II Memorial in Washington DC

The complete story is here --- there are actually two of them. (via Grow-A-Brain)

08/24/2007

Starfish On The Black Sand Beaches of Grenada Photographed By My Buddy Tom Hanson That Looks Kinda Like The Flag Of Communist North Vietnam Made By Hippie Surf Bums

Starfish On The Black Sand Beaches of Grenada Photographed By My Buddy Tom Hanson That Looks Kinda Like The Flag Of Communist North Vietnam Made By Hippie Surf Bums
Starfish On The Black Sand Beaches of Grenada Photographed By My Buddy Tom Hanson That Looks Kinda Like The Flag Of Communist North Vietnam Made By Hippie Surf Bums

08/14/2007

The World's Most Interesting Bridges

08/13/2007

The Most Dangerous Roads in the World, Part 4

08/12/2007

Kotzebue, Alaska

Kotzebue is located 33 miles North of the Arctic Circle on Alaska's Western coast.

08/06/2007

Russell W. Porter: Artic Explorer, Cutaway Artist, And Builder of the 200-Inch Palomar Telescope

Russell W. Porter (1871-1949) is one of those really interesting guys that few people have ever heard of. He first got interested in the Artic in 1892:

Porter caught what he would call Arctic fever when, in 1892, he attended a lecture by Robert Peary, who described his latest explorations in northern Greenland, which he had proved to be an island. The next year, the scientist Frederick Cook came to Boston to advertise a summer cruise up the coast of Greenland. Porter negotiated passage on Cook's voyage by offering to serve as surveyor and artist.

This would be the first of Porter's eight northern adventures over the next 15 years. The first ended above the Arctic Circle, when the small steamship was first damaged on a reef and then collided with an iceberg. The crew was rescued by Eskimos and returned to Boston by fishing boat.

Porter's turn-of-the-century Artic sketches are fascinating. After his Artic fever had cooled, Porter became the "Father of Amateur Telescope Making":

It all began on August 17, 1920 when fifteen men and one woman signed up to learn how to grind their own mirrors and make powerful reflecting telescopes. Most of the men were machinists, tool makers or pattern makers at the Jones and Lamson Machine Company in Springfield. The lone woman was a school teacher.

Their instructor, Russell W. Porter, was well prepared to guide them through the demanding though rewarding steps which required them to work to accuracies one-thousandth as large as they were used to in their daily precision machine work. Porter had spent years on the Maine coast teaching himself the art and science of building telescopes. This practically nonexistent hobby he took up to satisfy a drive which had slowly grown during his eleven years as an arctic explorer with Perry, Cook, Fiala and others. That drive was to learn more about astronomy.

Today the Springfield Telescope Makers are still going strong at their world-famous Stellafane Observatory.  And Porter went on to play a pivotal role in the construction of the 200-inch reflector telescope at Mt. Palomar:

Just how good were Porter's drawings?

Famed artist Maxfield Parrish was quoted as saying the following about Porter's drawings: "If these drawings had been made from the telescope and its machinery after it had been erected they would have been of exceptional excellence, giving an uncanny sense of reality, with shadows accurately cast and well nigh perfect perspective; but to think that any artist had his pictorial imagination in such working order as to construct these pictures with no other mechanical data than blue prints of plans and elevation of the various intricate forms is simply beyond belief."

I've known about Russell Porter ever since I was a kid. And now you do too!

07/21/2007

Bamboo Scaffolding in Asia

Anybody who has ever travelled in Asia will remember this. And just like Chickenman of long ago, "It's Everywhere! It's Everywhere!" Here's a more typical view:

Follow the links for some more great photos.

07/17/2007

The Canadian Identity

An excerpt from The Misfit:

We pride ourselves in being Canadian. Who needs McDonalds when Canada has Tim Horton’s? Who needs the NFL when Canada has the CFL? Why read Time when Canada has Maclean’s? We’d take Pamela over Laetitia any day. Not to mention Celine over Britney. Truth be told, what Canadian culture exists is nothing but a regurgitation of the American one. The Tim Horton’s/Robin’s Donuts rivalry shadows the McDonalds/Burger King one. The CFL advertises its unique Canadian game. I suppose that one down really makes a radical difference. Our celebrities, musicians, artists, and writers all say that they strive for the true Canadian identity when their real goal is making it big in the States. An integral part of Canadian culture would appear to be the simultaneous denigration and emulation of Americans.

As my friends often say, one cannot forget the beer. A recent ad campaign for Molson attempted to destroy the ridiculous myth that all Canadians live in igloos in favor of the ridiculous myth that all Canadians are drunks. In fact, beer appears to constitute the one domain in which we Canadians distinguish ourselves from American culture. Let’s get real. We have a serious problem when we take patriotic pride in our alcohol production. The pathetic nature of such a situation compares only with our staunch desire to keep Canadian spelling, which favors “favour.” Our national identity consists of a six-pack and a vowel.

07/09/2007

Into Thin Air. Again.

From jsonline.com:

The family of top female mountain climber Christine Boskoff confirmed Monday that her body has been found on a remote peak in northern China. The search for her body recently resumed after snowy conditions forced efforts to be suspended over the winter. The body of her climbing partner, photographer Charlie Fowler, was recovered from high on the mountain in December. ...

Boskoff ascended six of the world's 26,000-plus-foot peaks, including Mount Everest. She owned Mountain Madness, a Seattle adventure travel company formerly owned by Scott Fischer, one of the guides who died on Mount Everest in the 1996 season portrayed in Jon Krakauer's best-selling book, "Into Thin Air."

Boskoff, an Appleton, Wisconsin native, had said "Running a business is harder than any mountain I've climbed."

07/07/2007

Ten-Day Weather Forecast For Las Vegas

But it's a dry heat . . .

07/04/2007

Summer Storm Over London

Here's how the Daily Mail described it:

Looming angrily over London, this is the massive cloud that brought weather havoc to the capital. Within an hour, its devastating work was done. Hailstones the size of marbleshad battered Battersea and flashfloods caused chaos in Clapham. Lightning lit up the blackened sky. Taken from the 17th floor of the London Television Centre on the South Bank, this stunning picture shows the enormity of the cloud that heralded Tuesday's storms - the latest in this summer of dramatic contrasts.

Reading the story I get the feeling they don't get the really bad storms very often like we do in the Midwest.

06/25/2007

Milwaukee's Miller Park: The View From The Outback Blimp

If you're ever visiting Milwaukee a great place for lunch or dinner is the T.G.I.Friday's in the left-field corner, open year-round.

Buzkashi, The Afghani National Sport: Where Death Is Common And Broken Bones Are Just Part Of The Game

An excerpt from Rick Moran:

Watching these players race around the field, a look of concentration and determination on their faces, I was struck by the fact that we see that look all the time in our athletes. We like to say that a Michael Jordan or a Ty Cobb were fierce competitors in their day, that they would do anything to win. But they’re not really fierce in any real sense. Fierce is riding a Buzkashi horse over a dusty plain with a dozen riders behind you — another dozen bearing down on your flank — all bound and determined to use whatever means at their disposal to separate you from the carcass of a dead goat.

06/18/2007

French Arrogance: The Real Reason Princess Diana Died

Hey, I can't park myself 24 hours a day leading up to the 10-year anniversary, so help me out on this one. Since as far as I know the French haven't put up a guardrail in the past 10 years, I photoshopped one in. Just an ordinary guardrail, the type we'd put up even in the godforsaken stretches of Mississippi or Nebraska or Nevada. But in this arena, the French are third world and third rate. Maybe their new leader will finally take care of this.

06/17/2007

Speaking In and Of Iran

From motivational speaker and author Brian Tracy:

Some months ago, we received a contact from a company in Tehran. They wanted to invite me to come to Iran to meet with them and speak with their many clients. Our initial reaction was to decline the invitation because of the political situation between the United States and Iran.

However, it turned out that Americans regularly visit Iran, travel all over the country as tourists and never have any problems or difficulties. We therefore decided to go.

In my three days in Tehran, I met hundreds of people, almost all of which were warm, friendly, interested, curious and open to new information. It turns out that Iran does not recognize copyrights on books or anything else. As a result, they have published more than 20 of my books in Farsi and sold more than 3,000,000 copies, making me one of the most popular authors in the country. There is a special section of Brian Tracy books in every bookstore in Iran.

06/12/2007

The Barringer Meteor Crater: Where The Cosmic Apocalypse Meets Good Old-Fashioned American Capitalism

The Barringer Meteor Crater: Where The Cosmic Apocalypse Meets Good Old-Fashioned American Capitalism