Sunday, April 22, 2012

Goodbye Earth Day

Ah yes, what difference a missing comma makes, for the title should read, "Goodbye, Earth Day."  Actually, December 21 is "Goodbye Earth Day."  :-)

OK, that was lame.

I thought about doing something earthy today, but the rain came in for the first time in weeks, and truth be told, Mother Nature is doing the best thing for the dry earth around my house.  My help is not needed today.  I'll do something crunchy later, I promise.

Instead, I got a good start on "Running Week."  Next Saturday is my 4.5 mile race, and I plan to get immersed!  I started my next reading project, Born to Run, by Christopher McDougall.  Two chapters in and I already know it's going to be tough to put down!


Drops from My 2012 Bucket: Apr. 22, 243 days remaining


Angel One  (Riker takes a Kirk turn with Mistress Beata)
11001001  (The Binars are interesting, but Minuet is captivating)
Too Short A Season  (The curious case of Admiral Jameson)

Video Mission Update: 118 / 728 hours = 16.2%

Field day

(April 21)

Today was the day where everything lined up for some outside work!  Warm, sunny weekend day, before the much needed rain comes tomorrow.  I tuned up the lawnmower and purchased some gas for its first trip around the backyard this season.  (The second time the lawn was mowed, though.  It's been so dry that sadly the lawn is patchy and limp.)

In the evening, it was time to fire up the grill for the first time of the year!  Aside from the teriyaki chicken I tried grilling some mango wedges and served it all up with some long grain rice.  (OK, that last one I prepared with the help of Uncle Ben.)  A memorable meal!



Drops from My 2012 Bucket: Apr. 21, 244 days remaining


Justice  (I wonder how many fans wish Wes were executed?)
The Battle  (Picard encounters his old ship, and some induced memories)
Hide and Q  (Q tempts Riker)
Haven  (A wedding party fitting of Melancholia)
The Big Goodbye  (Dixon Hill -- classic holodeck)
Datalore  (Data's "evil" twin)

Video Mission Update: 115 / 728 hours = 15.8%

Melancholia

(April 20)

In the realm of planetary demises, impact with a large object from space is always high on the list.  Do you remember the year when the movie talk was Deep Impact vs. Armageddon?

Today I watched Melancholia, another entry in this series, but definitely an art film as opposed to a scientific presentation; a drama as opposed to an action blockbuster; a Wagneresque opera of a film (and you'll understand my blatant reference right from the first few seconds, if you recognize the score).  The visual imagery was lush and appealing while the human characters were intentionally flawed.  If I need to condense the message of the film down to one statement it might be this:  melancholic people have a better grip on EOTW than we "normal" folks.

Now, I do not have a sustained interest for the opus of Lars von Trier, or for Mr. von Trier himself, but I consider my life richer for having watched Melancholia once before the end.  While I don't echo Justine's worldview that humanity deserves to meet its end (or that we are alone in the universe), I do recognize how the Justines of the world might come to that conclusion.

Per the scientific backdrop of the film, the rogue planet Melancholia has approached Earth on a trajectory that kept it hidden behind the Sun until that last days or weeks, and hence was not detected early.  Based on a bonus material interview on the DVD, in reality, such a space object would be detected later than an object that was not obscured by the Sun, but we on Earth would still have years of notice, not weeks.  (Actually, the amount of time passage in the film is not clear to me, or I do not recall it being overt.  It's pretty short.)

I'm not completely discounting a space object collision as the cause of our EOTW, though.  Let's check our data twice!


Drops from My 2012 Bucket: Apr. 20, 245 days remaining


Where No One Has Gone Before  (Journey to the intersection of space, time and mind.)
Lonely Among Us  (Indubitably, Data Holmes!)

Video Mission Update: 109 / 728 hours = 15.0%

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Best Run Ever*

(April 19)

Taking a prompt from my morning telephone conversation with Tom Donovan, this evening I went out and ran a full 5 miles non-stop.  My pacing is probably on order of 12 minute miles, 1 hour in total, but I am not certain because once again I goofed up with my measuring (iPod nano using Nike+) and do not have an accurate recording.  It figures.  Here I have my longest continuous run, and I'm griping afterwards about how I won't be able to transmit the data to my Nike account and have the distance accrue towards my set goals in that program.  :-)

You'll just have to take my word for it, but if it makes you feel any better, I'll mark my accomplishment with an asterisk.

A couple of notable things from today's run:  first, I did it without music, and I found the ability to just think about other things whiled away the time.  I thought of a nice solution to a coding problem from work in the first half of the run!  Second, in understanding the topology of the rail trail on which I run, the 2.5 miles out is generally on a decline, which means the 2.5 miles back is generally incline -- a tougher workout.  There is one half mile stretch of steep decline (between 1.0 and 1.5 miles) which becomes steep incline on the return (between 3.5 and 4.0 miles).  This incline is what I've come to call my "Heartbreak Hill."  And yes, this was the first 5-miler that I did not stop running -- not even for Heartbreak Hill.

I really felt the burn in my calves after this run.  This is exactly why I can only run every third day; I need the recuperation in between!

Before signing off on this post, I'd like to take a moment to thank my parents for tying the knot on this date some years ago... an event that is quite directly responsible for the existence of this crappy blog!  Enjoy!  :-)


Drops from My 2012 Bucket: Apr. 19, 246 days remaining

Made a credit card payment!

Debt Mission Update: 4 / 11 payments = 36%

A Whale of a Tale

(April 18)

At my first outdoor lunch of the season with my colleagues, the topic turned to the consumption of whale in Japan.  I've known for a long time that Japan figures large in the whaling industry, but I never really gave much thought to how they consumed whale meat, so I researched Japan's whale consumption a bit when I got home.

Here's a really interesting summary.  What really got my attention was how whale meat accounted for nearly half of all the consumed animal protein in post-WWII Japan, midst a food shortage.

Here's a story about making whale burgers in Hokkaido.  The picture looks a lot like a delicious hamburger -- I'd definitely try one of those!  I need someone to send be to Japan for a "research" mission.  Yeah, that's right.

Drops from My 2012 Bucket: Apr. 18, 247 days remaining


Code of Honor  (Tasha fights to the death)
The Last Outpost  (Enter the Ferengi!)

Video Mission Update: 107 / 728 hours = 14.7%

Fare Thee Well, Discovery

(April 17)

I caught the live televised final "take-off" of Space Shuttle Discovery, piggybacking on a larger aircraft.  It is a fitting year for the Space Shuttle to be retired, and today is a fitting day to begin Star Trek: The Next Generation, as we await the next generation of space exploration from NASA.  (They'd better act quickly, though.)

In the episode "Encounter at Farpoint," we have the privilege of encountering the the new Enterprise crew for the first time.  We're also treated to lots of fun stuff, such as Q, the holodeck, a couple of space jellyfish, Wes irritating Captain Picard, and a hilarious cameo by Bones McCoy.

In more down-to-earth news, it looks like the business woes of Twinkies are deepening.  I made sure to pick up a box of chocolate-filled Twinkies during my shopping trip.  Stock up before it's too late!



Drops from My 2012 Bucket: Apr. 17, 248 days remaining



Encounter at Farpoint  (Let the new voyages begin!)
The Naked Now  (TNG's twist in The Naked Time)


Video Mission Update: 105 / 728 hours = 14.4%

The Final Boston Marathon

(April 16)

Runners sweated it out in the near-90 degree weather today for the very last Boston Marathon.  Which makes it official that I will never run in one of those!

I did have a scheduled run today, but could only muster up a couple of miles.  The heat was a factor, but I'm sure the 10 hour drive the day before didn't help things.  A woman and I took turns passing each other on the rail trail.  I would pass her when she stopped to do a set of push-ups every quarter mile or so;  I like that workout strategy -- I think she's getting in shape for the apocalypse!

Question of the day:  what do you do when you can't choose between trying the Honeydew Donuts Monte Cristo Sandwich, or Dunkin Donuts Artisan Bagels?  You try both, of course!  The world's not getting any younger, my friends.