Monday, July 29, 2013

Palo Alto Trip - Monday, July 29, 2013

Dawn and I visited the Stanford Medical Center area today.

We had lunch at the Town & Country Village's Calafia Cafe & Marget A Go-Go. I had the vegan, 9-inch "A Simple Pizza" - mozzarella, tomato sauce & fresh basil (the basil tasted lovely). Dawn also had a 9-inch "Wolfgang’s Pizza" - duck confit, pumpkin-hemp seed pesto, mozzarella, goat cheese. She loved it. We split a side of vegan/gluten-free "Minty English Peas & Crispy Potatoes" - garlic, olive oil, mint, russet potatoes, touch of curry powder...except the waiter told us it would come with green beans instead of peas, "due to change in the seasons." It tasted all right--mostly green beans and just a few bits of potatoes...the green bean ends had not been snipped--my mom would have been not pleased. ; o ) Overall, an expensive lunch (~$40, with tip), but quite tasty. When in Rome....

Above our heads the Cafe had a number of historical photographs of the Stanford campus area. One included the history of Stanford's famous tree "El Palo Alto." Amazing--it has lived over 1,000 years. It had a second tree adjacent to the first, which blew down due to a storm in the 20th century.

We had a medical appointment at the Stanford Medical Center office complex, then headed to Ghirardelli Square for dessert. I tried the new Sea Salt Caramel Banana Shake (not bad--the sea salt adds a nice bite to it) - it is as described; Dawn had the Sea Cliff sundae with dark chocolate fudge (formerly the "Cookie Bottom" sundae) - "Half of a Colossal Ghirardelli® Chocolate Chip Cookie served warm under two scoops of vanilla ice cream, freshly homemade hot fudge and topped with whipped cream, chopped almonds and a cherry."

After this we walked down Embarcadero to Pier 39, where we browsed Na Hoku's super-duper nice but expensive collection. We saw a few California Sea Lions. A man was performing with flaming Devil Sticks. Dawn briefly panicked when she failed to find her phone in her purse, but we found it on the floor of the car. A number of artists had setup: a violinist, a bongo drummer, a steelpan drum band, as well as a number of spray paint artists. We popped into Rosie's Roses--one of my all-time favorite shops. Seriously--the proprietor represents one of the sweetest people I have met, the place smells amazing with all the soap, the music and bubbling water soothes, the small space and the crystals and the flowers all come together in a perfect package. Highly recommended. We like to purchase the Sacred Chocolate Raw Chocolate Heart Bars. Rosie remarked they represented her favorite, and if she had known we were a repeat customer she would have given us a discount! 

We briefly considered going down the real crookedest street in San Francisco, but due to a bit of car trouble, decided to put it off for another day.





Sunday, July 28, 2013

Yosemite - 2007 Versus 2013

Dawn and I ... 2007 and 2013, respectively : o )

2007

2013

2007

2013

Pear Festival in Courtland - 2013

Dawn and I attended the 2013 Courtland Pear Fair, the 41st annual.

We arrived around 9:30 a.m. and parked in the field lot.

We checked out the car show briefly, then chatted for a moment with an organic agricultural booth tabler. I spun a wheel and won a free wine tasting card for four at a local winery. As we waited, we watched kids playing on bounce houses and in inflatable bubbles on water. We also saw the ponies waiting to get setup for the pony rides.

The Sacramento-Yolo Mosquito & Vector Control District had a table, and we viewed the numerous mosquito types, a live "mosquito farm" plexiglass container, showing larvae and adults, and a tub filled with nearly 500,000 mosquitoes counted by the Vector Control District in 2012. They handed us packets of mosquito repellent wipes.

The food vendors had already started serving all manner of pear-themed items: I tried a pear tamale. The vendor served it piping hot inside a traditional corn husk. The vendor must have used food coloring, as I found the tamale itself completely dyed green. It tasted like corn, perhaps a bit sweeter. I didn't find much pear within it, though...perhaps it had been mushed. Overall, I would not get it again.

Next, Dawn tried a caramel pear mocha. She notes she used to like mochas a lot, but now finds them a bit too sweet. I found it OK; I'm not a big coffee drinker.

We sat and listened to music while Mynga ate a slice of deep-dish PTA-prepared pear pie. She gave it two enthusiastic thumbs up. Later, we did the same and came to the same conclusion. : o )

Dawn and I walked around looking at vendors for the next hour. We purchased a pear refrigerator magnet and Dawn got a henna tattoo in the form of a turtle. Tasneem welcomed us and did a great job. We briefly viewed the photos of the late Micheal Pieretti, a longtime Delta photo artist. Dawn purchased a pair of knock-off Dolce & Gabbana purple sunglasses--they look great.

The "Stop the Tunnels" campaign organizers had entered two floats in the parade and effectively seemed to have the support of everyone in attendance. An image of the proposed tunnels:


At noon, we listened to the youth duck calling contest, then walked around the auditorium where Fair organizers had erected posters from previous years, a gallery of photographs from the late 1800's and 1900's, and a variety of other historical artifacts. 

At 1:00 p.m., we watched the Pear Fair Parade, a small effort, but no less enthusiastic than a larger parade.

After the parade, Dawn and I split a lemonade and a (non-pear?) sausage from Lockeford Meat & Sausage...we both thought it tasted OK.

After that, we called it a day and drove out the designated back entrance to head back to Sacramento.

OTHER VENDORS

Schumacher Architectural Ceramics (PO Box 129, Clarksburg, CA, 916-744-1062)


Saturday, July 27, 2013

Second Opinion Preparations

NOTES

http://patients.about.com/od/discoveringyourdiagnosis/a/workwith2ndopin.htm
  • Plan to deliver copies of your records, including test results and notes from your first doctor, yourself, even if Doctor-1's staff tells you they will transfer your records to Doctor-2.
  • Doctor-2 will begin by reading your test results and notes. 
  • She will examine you just like Doctor-1 did
  • She will either concur with Doctor-1, or will discuss other options with you.
  • She may arrange for additional tests. 
  • You may have to make another appointment to get her opinion after she receives those results.
  • Read up on your medical condition, so that you arrive well-informed.
  • Prepare a concise chronology of how your condition developed.
  • Bring a levelheaded relative or friend to listen, take notes and ask questions you might forget if you're nervous.
  • Prepare a list of such questions
    • What is the matter with me?
    • What treatment options do I have?
    • How many procedures have you done for a condition like mine?
    • (If the doctor recommends a different course of treatment:) Why does your recommendation differ from that of my other doctor?
    • Is there anything else I should know?
  • To help avoid any misunderstandings, don't forget to ask your doctor to summarize his or her advice before you leave.
  • If you have follow-up questions, fax or e-mail them to the doctor along with a phone number where you can be reliably reached in the late afternoon or early evening.
http://www.survivorshipatoz.org/breastcancer/topics/second-opinion-101/?sid=328

  • Let the doctor ask questions.
  • Ask for a physical exam if you are otherwise not getting one.
  • Ask your questions about what the doctor is telling you, or about subjects of concern that the doctor doesn't raise. 
  • If there isn't time to cover them all, ask the doctor when you can see him or her again or call with the rest of your questions. (Some people prefer to ask questions in a fax or by e mail
  • Do not make the time about checking the diagnosing doctor's work or personality. 
  • Once you know what the second opinion doctor thinks
    • If it differs from what you've been told, ask the doctor about the differences and possible reasons for the differences. 
    • Asking after he or she gave an opinion rather than before will help keep the previous doctor's opinion from coloring the thoughts of the second opinion doctor.
  • Records the doctor is likely to need include:
    • All the medical records from the doctor who made the suggestion for which you're seeking a second opinion.
    • All relevant lab, pathology, and radiology reports.
    • Original tests, not just reports about the tests. This includes pathology slides, x-rays, CT or MRI scans, and ultrasounds.
      • For tests you took other than blood work, the likelihood is your doctor only has reports about the tests - not the actual results. For instance, if you took a scan, the medical record likely has the report of the specialist who read the scan instead of a copy of the scan itself. If there was a biopsy, there would be a pathologists report rather than a slide of a sample. A top notch doctor will want to see the originals rather than a report. A different pair of eyes looking at the same scan or sample may see something different - or the first report may even be wrong. Mistakes happen.
      • If your doctor's office cannot get the originals quickly, call the lab or testing facility yourself. It is not unusual for labs and other testing facilities to ship scans and slides overnight. 
  • Educate yourself about your diagnosis and current treatments.
    • You will have more of a foundation for asking the right questions.
    • The more precise your meetings with medical professionals will be because you will have more of an understanding of the words they use.
    • You will get a greater understanding of the doctor's advice or recommendations.
    • The better equipped you will be to make tough decisions.
  • Prepare a list of any questions to ask.
  • Do the normal prep you would do before any appointment with a new doctor
    • Make sure your list of medications is up to date so you can give a copy to the doctor.
    • If you haven't already, create a personal medical history form listing your past diseases, operations etc. It will save time completing the doctor's form (or perhaps he or she will allow you to use yours).
    • Get a recorder to record the conversation if there isn't a recorder on your mobile phone. Witha recording, you can listen to what the doctor said more closely at home.
    • If you have insurance, be sure to have a copy of your insurance verification card and personal health history form.
  • discuss all of your questions about your diagnosis and its  recommended treatment
  • Request that the doctor go over your records and test results with you
  • Your second doctor may also ask that new or additional tests be run
  • Your second doctor might agree with the original diagnosis, but suggest different treatment options, which means you will have to decide which will work best for you.
  • Your second doctor might disagree with your original diagnosis completely, which means you may need or want to seek a third opinion, or ask that your two doctors speak to each other about your case.
  • Rates of discrepancies between doctors vary, and for the most part they do not lead to changes in treatment.
  • For 30 percent of patients who voluntarily seek second opinions for elective surgery and 18 percent of those whose insurance companies require it, the second doctors disagree with the first.
  • ...many of these ill physicians sought such second, third, fourth and even fifth opinions, consulting experts nationally, even if they had previously been wary of their patients’ pursuing such consultations.
  • When a patient obtains multiple opinions, confusion can arise over who is responsible in the end.
  • After all, as patients have said to me, “If I hadn’t seen another doctor, I would have died.”

How not to say the wrong thing

How not to say the wrong thing
http://articles.latimes.com/2013/apr/07/opinion/la-oe-0407-silk-ring-theory-20130407

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Quote

"No one wakes up expecting to die."

: o |

Heard this today from someone who knows someone at the UC Davis Medical Center on Stockton Boulevard, who most likely sees a majority of their patients not make it.

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Reporting City of Sacramento Graffiti

The City of Sacramento allows citizens to report graffiti.You can call 311 twenty-four hours a day to report code enforcement or graffiti violations (from outside the City, 916-264-5011).

If doing it via a web form, you will report the following info:

  • Screen One: Location Info
    • Address Or Street
    • Cross Street
    • Select button "Continue" to advance to the next screen
  • Screen Two: Graffiti Complaint selection
    • Select option, "GRAFFITI - Vandalism, Tagging, Anti-Graffiti Program"
    • Select button "Continue" to advance to the next screen
  • Screen Three: Final detailed description
    • More detailed description
      • Racial
      • Profanity
      • Gender Bias
      • General Blight
      • Graffiti on private or public property, community facilities, utility poles, buildings, etc
      • Other (Please describe below)
      • Anti-Graffiti Program
    • Give Specific Details regarding the Graffiti (limit 500 characters)
      • Enter text into the text box
    • Complainant Contact Information
      • First Name
      • Last Name
      • Street Address
      • City / State / ZIP
      • Phone
      • Email
    • Select button "Finish" to submit the report
I've called in one report, to date; it was painless and easy; I had to do it during business hours though, Monday-Friday.



    Pokemon Anime Run

    Finished up a Bleach run, for the most part (only the last movie remains), so going through Pokemon Black and White, starting a week or two ago. Started in the English dubbed, now moving onto the Japanese subbed.

    2013-07-24: http://www.gogoanime.com/pokemon-best-wishes-s2-episode-6
    2013-07-25: http://www.gogoanime.com/pokemon-best-wishes-s2-episode-11
    2013-07-26: http://www.gogoanime.com/pokemon-best-wishes-s2-episode-14
    2013-07-30: http://www.gogoanime.com/pokemon-best-wishes-s2-episode-18
    2013-07-31: http://www.gogoanime.com/pokemon-best-wishes-s2-episode-21
    2013-08-01: http://www.gogoanime.com/pokemon-best-wishes-s2-episode-23
    2013-08-02: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/Pokemon-Episode-2 ... finished Best Wishes Season 2
    2013-08-09: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/Pokemon-Episode-3
    2013-08-12: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/Pokemon-Episode-4
    2013-08-13: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/Pokemon-Episode-5
    2013-08-20: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/Pokemon-Episode-6
    2013-08-25: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/Pokemon-Episode-7
    2013-08-31: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/Pokemon-Episode-9
    2013-09-06: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/pokemon-episode-10
    2013-10-12: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/pokemon-episode-12
    2013-10-13: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/pokemon-episode-14
    2014-01-12: http://animecenter.tv/watch/pokemon-episode-15
    2014-01-17: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/pokemon-episode-16
    2014-01-18: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/pokemon-episode-18
    2014-01-31: http://www.animecenter.tv/watch/pokemon-episode-19
    2014-02-17: http://www.nwanime.com/pokemon-episode-21/video/eb1b6d46717e726cac36/
    2014-05-08: http://www.subbedanime.tv/pokemon-season-1-indigo-league-episode-22-english-sub/
    2014-05-09: http://www.subbedanime.tv/pokemon-season-1-indigo-league-episode-25-english-sub/
    2014-05-19: http://www.subbedanime.tv/pokemon-season-1-indigo-league-episode-28-english-sub/
    2014-05-29: http://www.animecartoon.tv/pokemon-season-1-indigo-league-episode-35-english-sub/
    2014-05-30: http://www.animecartoon.tv/pokemon-season-1-indigo-league-episode-37-english-sub/
    2014-05-31: http://www.animecartoon.tv/pokemon-season-1-indigo-league-episode-38-english-sub/

    Saturday, July 20, 2013

    Silly FreeRice.com Fake Definitions

    Some of the sillier, fake suggested definitions to choose from:
    1. ataraxia = tar buildup disease
    2. sweven = between 6 and 8
    3. archicarp = oldest carp in pond
    It's nice to see these, because it eliminates some of the options, in case of guessing!

    To Be Or Not To Be

    To be, or not to be, that is the question:
    Whether 'tis Nobler in the mind to suffer
    The Slings and Arrows of outrageous Fortune,
    Or to take Arms against a Sea of troubles,
    And by opposing end them: to die, to sleep
    No more; and by a sleep, to say we end
    The Heart-ache, and the thousand Natural shocks
    That Flesh is heir to? 'Tis a consummation
    Devoutly to be wished. To die, to sleep,
    To sleep, perchance to Dream; Aye, there's the rub,
    For in that sleep of death, what dreams may come,
    When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,
    Must give us pause. There's the respect
    That makes Calamity of so long life:
    For who would bear the Whips and Scorns of time,
    The Oppressor's wrong, the proud man's Contumely,
    The pangs of despised Love, the Law’s delay,
    The insolence of Office, and the Spurns
    That patient merit of the unworthy takes,
    When he himself might his Quietus make
    With a bare Bodkin? Who would Fardels bear,
    To grunt and sweat under a weary life,
    But that the dread of something after death,
    The undiscovered Country, from whose bourn
    No Traveller returns, Puzzles the will,
    And makes us rather bear those ills we have,
    Than fly to others that we know not of.
    Thus Conscience does make Cowards of us all,
    And thus the Native hue of Resolution
    Is sicklied o'er, with the pale cast of Thought,
    And enterprises of great pitch and moment,
    With this regard their Currents turn awry,
    And lose the name of Action.

    Via; I memorized this speech about a decade ago.

    My Favorite FreeRice.com English Vocabulary Words

    To date:
    1. alethic
    2. anchorite
    3. anthophilous
    4. antilogy
    5. astilbe
    6. boon
    7. boongary - a tree-dwelling kangaroo!
    8. carminative
    9. debouch
    10. degustation
    11. dithyramb
    12. dunnage
    13. flump
    14. ghibli - because of Studio Ghibli
    15. hongi
    16. kakemono
    17. kenosis
    18. leman
    19. libeccio
    20. litotes
    21. longueur
    22. lucubration
    23. meatus
    24. meretricious
    25. patulous
    26. prehension
    27. punnet
    28. ratiocinative
    29. rhatany - toothpaste bush
    30. rufescent
    31. sandhi
    32. sassafras
    33. sault
    34. sericeous
    35. sgraffito
    36. simoom
    37. smew
    38. soign
    39. solmization
    40. sough
    41. speos
    42. strigil
    43. supererogate
    44. surrebut
    45. synonymicon - another word for "thesaurus" ; o )
    46. titanomachy
    47. tralatitious
    48. umbrageous

    FreeRice.com English Vocabulary High-Level Tips

    Tips, when presented with unfamiliar words on FreeRice.com's English Vocabulary:
    1. Often an answer containing a comma represents the correct answer
      • sweven = dream, vision
      • graal = a dish, bowl
    2. Sometimes, the correct answer will begin with the same letter(s)
      • brickle = brittle
    3. The test contains many international words:
      • Australian (shivoo = celebration)
      • UK
      • South African
      • Japanese (shichimi = Japanese spice)
      • And so forth
    4. It seems, sometimes, after re-encountering a word, the correct answer will appear at the top or bottom of the list

    Thursday, July 18, 2013

    Weird Al at the California State Fair, July 14, 2013

    Dawn and I saw Weird Al perform at the California State Fair on Sunday, July 14, 2013.

    We arrived around 6:45 p.m.. After paying $24 to enter the Fair, we immediately ordered a $18 margherita pizza from Cardinali Wood Fire Pizza on the Main Promenade.

    We walked through the “Jewels of the Jungle” exhibit in the Floriculture area, viewing snakes and parrots.

    As a birthday gift for a friend, we purchased a $60 "Best of Show" 2010 cabernet franc (red) from Imagery Estate Winery, from the "Wine Country" area.

    Next, we walked briefly through the Shopper's Expo, winding our way past the Full-Auto Airsoft shooting range and the people rolling around on top of water in inflatable, clear plastic bubbles.

    We had two Negro Modelo beers (an amber and a lager for $18) at the Tecate booth next to the main stage, in the hopes paying customers could watch from the Tecate picnic table seating. After asking Fair staff where to sit, they pointed me to an officer handing out wristbands for free seating. Dawn and I grabbed two, finished the beers, and found a decent seat in the main seating area. We had checked the night before and the only $40 reserved seats remaining were off in the corner, not too far away from where we ended up. Dawn took a short walk to the concessions booth where she purchased a navy blue "The Saga Begins" Shadow tee shirt (like this one, but in navy).

    The show started at 8:00 p.m. and the set list consisted of:
    1. Intro--Fun Zone, from "UHF – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack and Other Stuff" (song)...I did not have the mind to record the sequence : o |
    2. "Polka Face", from "Alpocalypse" (song)
      • This song ended with a bubble machine blowing bubbles out over the audience
      • Segue with Face To Face interview of Eminem (Marshall Mathers) and a cut to a clip from an epidode of The Simpsons, "That '90s Show", where Weird Al performs a parody of Homer's band, "Brain Freeze"
    3. "Smells Like Nirvana", from "Off The Deep End" (song)
      • Al wore a Kurt Kobain wig and a "Nirvana" grunge shirt
      • Song video playing on screen
      • Two cheerleaders in black outfits with red poms upstage
      • Gargles water and spits water on audience, then throws remaining water and the cup onto front row fans
      • Al sings, "And I forgot the next verse..." and trails off into silence, skipping some of the lyrics from the song, resuming with, "Oh, well, nevermind"
      • Stage hand comes out and helps Al to his feet after he collapses at end of the song
      • Segue to UHF "Wheel Of Fish" clip, then, a series of 5-second films called "Weird Owl 2"
    4. "CNR", from "Internet Leaks" (song)
      • Al wore a flat, black gambler style hat (like Jack White and SRV) and black jacket
      • Al took a break and said something like, "Say something!", followed by, "Hello Sacramento!"
      • Power drum solo
    5. "Canadian Idiot", from "Straight Outta Lynwood" (song)
      • Al wore a white Canada shirt with red maple leafs
      • Maple leaf screensaver video 
      • Nuclear explosion on screen at end of song, followed by exploding red and white streamers into crowd
      • Segue featured a parody trailer for the movie, "Weird," starring Aaron Paul (Al), Olivia Wilde (lover) Gary Cole (father), Academy Award Winner Mary Steenburgen (mother), and Patton Oswald (Dr. Demento).
    6. Medley of songs:
      1. "Money For Nothing/Beverly Hillbillies*", from "UHF – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack and Other Stuff" (song)
        • Al wore an 80's shirt and used a shoulder synthesizer keyboard
        • Note: yes, the asterisk is part of the official song title; thanks, lawyers!
      2. "Whatever You Like", from "Internet Leaks" (song)
        • Al hands off shoulder synthesizer keyboard to stage hand
        • Al loses 80's shirt, now has black shirt
      3. "Another Tattoo", from "Alpocalypse" (song)
        • Al loses the black shirt
      4. "eBay", from "Poodle Hat" (song)
      5. "I Want a New Duck", from "Dare To Be Stupid" (song)
        • Al gets the shoulder synthesizer keyboard back from the stage hand
      6. "Theme from Rocky XIII (The Rye or the Kaiser)", from ""Weird Al" Yankovic in 3-D" (song)
        • Al replaces the shoulder synthesizer keyboard with an accordion
        • Does a high leg kick : o )
      7. "Spam", from "UHF – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack and Other Stuff" (song)
      8. "My Bologna", from ""Weird Al" Yankovic" (song)
      9. "Ode to a Superhero", from "Poodle Hat" (song)
      10. "Lasagna", from "Even Worse" (song)
      11. "Eat It", from ""Weird Al" Yankovic in 3-D" (song)
        • Michael Jackson-style red jacket
        • Replaces accordion with keyboard on stand
        • Al does a fun high knee-wobble move : o )
        • Segue featuring a Face To Face interview of Robert Pattinson; a "Friends" clip mentioning Weird Al ("I'm leaving with Weird Al"); a clip from the movie "Halloween 2", in which Weird Al is on a talk show with fellow guest, an author of, "The Devil Walks Among Us"; a David Letterman mention of Weird Al on-air; another 5-second film, "Cooking With Crazy"; a short video called "Clean-Up on Aisle 5" where he cleans up a spill with his hair; and a reference on "The Cleveland Show" episode, "Gone with the wind", in which Cleveland says to his wife, in reference to his karaoke style, "Who would you rather be: Dido or Weird Al Yankovic?"
    7. "Amish Paradise", from "Bad Hair Day" (song)
      • Al and the others dressed-up with Amish costumes
      • I remember something silly happening when he sang "churning lots of butter"
      • Arms waving : o )
      • Segue into exercise video saying something like, "This next exercise is great for your thighs and uvula," after which he puts his foot behind his neck and begins hopping on the other foot; I have something about "earth bubble" ?, an Face To Face interview of Megan Fox--the I love thermoses sketch was cute
    8. "Craigslist", from "Internet Leaks" (song)
      • Al and the others wore outfits inspired by The Doors
      • The band has a keyboard solo in the middle
      • Al references a "snotty barista in a coffee shop on Franklin Boulevard" (a local reference he works into the show)
      • Segue with the 30 Rock episode, "Kidnapped By Danger", with the team discussing just letting Weird Al parodying their song 30 Rock ending credits video, the Titanic-themed video "And the Band Played On" (Dawn wonders if the girl thrown overboard was his daughter?)
    9. "Perform This Way", from Alpocalypse (song)
      • Al wore a peacock costume
      • The band members wore, respectively: Jim West - Cheese (guitar); Jon "Bermuda" Schwartz - Nun (drums); Rubén Valtierra - Foil (keyboards); Steve Jay - Tophat (bass)
      • Segue with an Face To Face interview with Jeff Bridges; a public service video from "The Weird Al Show", called "Teeth"; the "biggest fan" clip from How I Met Your Mother season 7, episode 7, "Noretta," where Ted inspires Weird Al's "Like A Surgeon"; a Face To Face interview with Patrick Stewart at Comic Con; and the intro to the Jeopardy "Weird Al" round, which sets up the next song....
    10. "White & Nerdy", from Straight Outta Lynwood (song)
      • Al wore a red bandana, a black hoodie with red letters "White & Nerdy", and khaki pants
      • He came onstage in a Segway
      • Band members wore nerdy outfits
      • Rubén Valtierra on keyboards wore a gaudy red, white, and blue striped sweater
      • Segue to video, "Our Friend Dirt"
    11. "Fat", from "Even Worse" (song)
      • Al wore the fat suit
      • Al says Hooe! Hooe! Hooe! and the stage manager comes out wearing a Santa Claus outfit; Weird Al punches him in the face and the stage manager exits
      • The rest of the band had black outfits
      • Al thanked everyone, thanked the band, and left the stage 
      • Lots of people started leaving...??? Don't they know about the encore?
    12. Encore - "The Saga Begins", from "Running With Scissors" (song)
      • Everyone wore Jedi robes
      • The local 501st storm troopers and Darth Vader costumed fans took to the stage...Darth Vader lit his light saber in the final moments of the song
      • R2-D2 was there as well, on the left side of the stage
      • "Heeeeeeeee...eeeeeeeeeee's a ghost."
      • He also did some silly hands waving at the end : o )
      • Segue with Rubén Valtierra playing the Star Wars song "The Imperial March (Darth Vader's Theme)", then the Addams Family intro
    13. Encore - "Yoda", from "Dare To Be Stupid" (song)
      • Everyone took off the outer brown robes, leaving behind the Luke Skywalker white robes
      • Green spotlights like Yoda
      • The lights on the stage spelled out the word "Y O D A" : o )
      • Al took a moment to say, "Now you sing" and the crowd sang along, "Yoda, yo-yo-yo-yo-YODA!"
      • "Now just the bedwetters!" and the crowd sang along
      • The band took a break to do the Yoda Chant
    A bit of a shortened set, I believe.

    SONGS, BY ALBUM/EP

    "Weird Al" Yankovic (1983): 1
    "Weird Al" Yankovic in 3-D (1984): 2
    Dare To Be Stupid (1985): 2
    Even Worse (1988): 2
    UHF – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack and Other Stuff (1989): 3
    Off The Deep End (1992): 1
    Bad Hair Day (1996): 1
    Running With Scissors (1999): 1
    Poodle Hat (2003): 2
    Straight Outta Lynwood (2006): 2
    Internet Leaks (2009): 3
    Alpocalypse (2011): 3

    TOTAL SONGS: 23

    Apparently, a Weird Al Alpocalypse Live Tour DVD exists.

    After the show, Dawn and I watched a bunch of people going in to see Weird Al and the band via backstage passes.

    We walked over to see the animals, but the barns were empty, so we ended the night with a walk back past the Main Promenade.


    Iconic 2013 Summer Billboard Image

    Beyonce:



    Historical Album Sales Data - Why So Hard?

    While reading Weird Al's Wikipedia article, I noticed it seemed a bit out of date on the album sales, listing 12 million total albums sold, as of 2007.

    So I took a moment to see if I could locate a more recent sales count.

    Via this site, I found Nielsen SoundScan, a subscription only service.

    So, no closer to my goal, although admittedly this would provide the bleeding edge total of album sales. From a Weird Al forum post, from 2005, it cost $600 at that time, per album, to see the sales data.

    Four worldwide organizations seem to currently certify sales figures.

    Wednesday, July 17, 2013

    FreeRice Level 60 - English Vocabulary


    This is the first time I've worked my way up to level 60 from level 55 or so with FreeRice 2.0.

    Previously.

    Sunday, July 14, 2013

    Edwin Jagger DE89

    My new shaving razor...also trying Feather blades.

    I had a Merkur 34C for many years...I dropped it in the shower last week and the internal post separated from the head of the razor. : o |

    So, trying something new.

    Saturday, July 13, 2013

    2013 9th Annual Japanese Film Festival of Sacramento

    Dawn and I attended the 9th annual Japanese Film Festival of Sacramento this weekend.
    • Barbara Kado said, during her introduction on opening night, the crowd had set a new attendance record this year
    • The 2013 opening night goodie bag (small #3 brown paper shopping bag w/handle and sticker on front) contained: 
      • Cheez-Its (1.5 oz.)
      • Cracker Jacks (1.25 oz.)
      • Famous Amos Chocalate Chip Cookies (2 oz.)
      • Quaker Chewy Granola Bar - Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip (0.84 oz.)
      • Michaels Blank Note Cards w/envelopes, 6 pc. 3.75"x5", style "Modern Seasons"
      • 2 x Kopiko coffee confectionary (4g)
      • Handbill announcing "Chili's is proud to support Sacramento Japanese United Methodist Church's 'Stop Hunger Now' project Give Back Event on July 24th from 11:00-10:00 p.m..
      • 9th Annual Sacramento Japanese Film Festival bookmark w/short multi-colored, sparkly yarn tassle...the bookmark contains a collage of images from the seven movies
      • Seems like the festival goodie bag committee "Costco'd It" for this year...no rice crackers, candies with Japanese paper buttons, local Japanese restaurant coupons, and so forth
      • Not a bad thing...just seems more generic than previous years...especially the first year we attended, when the bags had origami!
      • Probably a result of the increased attendance
    • One handout from the event:
      • Traditional Japanese Carpentry, since 1977
      • Tea houses * Shoji/Fusuma Screens * Tansu Chests * Fences - Gates * Ofuro Hot Baths
      • David Putnam Artist - Craftsman
      • 916-335-9269 davidhputnam@gmail.com
      • Looks like a good lead, if interested!
    • No zombie walk on Friday evening...apparently it will occur Saturday evening, July 13
    • Dawn and I decided to skip "13 Assassins"...we saw it a year or two ago, and it's bloody enough that we decided to skip. 
    Movies
    1. HARU’S JOURNEY: "A cantankerous grandfather and his teenage granddaughter take to the road to find a new life and home with one of the old man’s siblings. 77 years old legendary actor, Tatsuya Nakadai, and Eri Tokunaga give stunning performances as grandfather Tadao and granddaughter Haru. Tadao hasn’t seen his brothers and sister for years, and Haru has just lost her job as a cafeteria worker in the local school.  The movie reveals that Tadao wasn’t the greatest of brothers. Old resentments, sibling rivalries, and hurt pride surface in the visits to their homes. The sister is mainly interested in employing Haru in her small hotel. Another brother says that he has no room and has to consider his position in the community. Haru’s Journey is a story of brothers and a sister many years later and a portrayal of growing old in present day Japan."
      • SPOILERS ALERT
      • Haru runs kind of awkwardly...perhaps because of the heavy pack she carries?
      • The movie's opening theme and variations reminded both of us "An American Tail"'s song "Somewhere Out There"...
      • Q&A on the film: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MgjJHgH1DJI
      • Haru's hot tub bath looked so refreshing
      • I liked the running joke where each brother remarks, "It's cold" when their companion opens the screen to the outside to air out the living quarters
      • Very emotional scene with Haru and her father
      • A number of scenes done in one take...sort of took my breath away to realize they captured it in one go
        • For example, the scene where Haru's father returns ... so much emotion without saying a word
        • Or: one of the final scenes where Haru and Tadao slurp up soba noodles for minutes on end...how many takes could one do this?
      • Some great cinematography of Tadao and Nabuko framed with the mother horse and her foal
      • I felt a bit distracted watching it, as we had come from pizza and beer about 2 hours earlier, and I felt a bit thirsty
      • I thought, "How you feel physically makes a difference in how you perceive a movie." I wonder if movie reviewers standardize their pre-movie dietary regimen?
      • Lots of food shown during the movie...I wanted to go home and drink some hot green tea
      • A tragic backstory and ending, with lots of unanswered questions
      • Pride, unresolved anger, crime, and hard of heart: all these things keep Tadao's siblings from connecting with him and offering him their home
      • The older actors displayed the most poignant emotions as Tadao leaves: Shigeo and Keiko (his older brother's home) and Shigeko (sister)...they seem to sincerely grieve
      • I laughed as Tadao beat on Michio after they started acting violent like juveniles : o )
      • Who is to blame, if anyone? The root of the movie lies with forgiveness and unresolved emotions...Haru's mother kills herself after she realizes Shinichi will not return and will never forgive her cuckolding him. Tragic for everyone.
      • I found the back and forth between the older siblings comical...refreshing to see such august actors acting out the same human emotions
      • The movie gives every indication Haru will end up all right...the peaceful and stable relationship of Shinichi and Nabuko seems a stark contrast to her initial home and the dysfunctional homes of Tadao's siblings
      • The movie plods a bit, though, intentionally...lots of shots of people walking, waiting, and so forth
      • It finishes strong; Dawn choked up and I found myself moved as well
      • The grandfather reminded me of Michael Caine
    2. EVERY NIGHT DREAMS: "A single mother, Omitsu (Sumiko Kurishima), works hard in a waterfront Tokyo bar to ensure a better future for her young son. Her husband, Mizuhara (Tatsuo Saito), who abandoned the family for three years returns. Mizuhara wants to be a better father and husband, but he has difficulties finding a job in depression Japan. Difficulties ensue. Naruse is famous for his portrayal of strong women who face hard situations, domestic unease, and display calm in the face of dire circumstances. Omitsu says to her husband, “You’ll never survive with such a faint heart.”"
      • The little boy, if alive, would be in his 80's and 90's, today

    3. A LETTER TO MOMO: "Momo and her mother leave Tokyo for a small island after Momo’s father’s accidental death. Momo is burdened by guilt. Her last words to her father before he died was an argument over a broken promise. Momo is burdened by guilt. The almost totally hand drawn anime and the absence of computer graphic techniques create remarkable individuality in the characters, unparalleled beauty in the Japanese scenery, and remarkable detail of objects and background. Studio Ghibli’s  A Letter to Momo is a poignant coming of age story of growing up and coming to terms with oneself. There are also the requisite Japanese spirits, the Yokai, who help Momo and reveal themselves only to her.  2012 Asian Pacific Screen Award, Best Animated Feature Film."
      • The little monster creeped me out...the lack of memory obscured predictability about whether he was truly violent or peaceful...he reminded me of Gollum
      • Dawn liked the end monster with the googly eyes, which protected them as they crossed the bridge
      • Dawn liked the clothing style of Momo's mother
      • One of my favorites from the weekend
    4. THE KNOT: "Asako (Mukku Akazawa) is married to a company man; Keisuke (Junichi  Kawamoto) is co-owner of a laundry shop with his wife. Fourteen years ago, Asako was a student and Keisuke was a junior high school teacher who took advantage of her. Conflicts from the past arise when their paths cross. Asako’s first reaction is anger. Her reputation was damaged and the townspeople still gossip. Was it love or was she a victim of a crime? Old obsessions awaken, and the situation spins out of control. The superb acting by the cast and the depiction of small town Japanese life with its daily routines and below the surface tensions are memorable. There is also erotic tension, remorse, obsessive longing, and the desire of Asako and Keisuke to have a future without hurting others."
      • Every year, the film committee seems to choose one "WTF" film...this is this year's WTF film 
      • Edgy, taboo-confronting movie
      • Sitting in the theater, I noticed only a couple of people walk out 
      • That said, the tension/awkwardness in the air seemed palpable
      • I'll probably never forget this film; will I remember the others? Something to consider
    5. 13 ASSASSINS: "It’s 1844 during the last days of feudal Japan and the samurai. Master swordsman and samurai, Shinzaemon Shimada (Koji Yaskusho) is appointed to kill Lord Naritsuga (Goro Inagaki) a sociopath and half-brother to the ruling Shogun. Reminiscent of Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai, Shimada chooses 11 samurai and one wanna-be samurai to join forces with him.  An ambush is planned. The monumental battle of 13 samurai against a force of over 200 men takes place. The epic fight is impressive with carnage, excellent timing, and over-the-top swordplay. Takashi Miike’s formula of the noble few versus the evil many is a good fit with the ancient samurai ethic of duty and moral responsibility. Winner of 4 Japanese Academy Awards in 2011."
      • Skipped; we saw it a year or two ago
    6. KEY OF LIFE: "After a botched up suicide attempt, talentless actor, Sakurai (Masato Sakai) goes to a bath house to clean up. Hired killer, Kondo (Teruki Kagawa) slips on a bar of soap at the same bath house and suffers amnesia, giving Sakurai the opportunity to switch identities. Sakurai is attracted to Kondo’s watch and hasn’t a clue to the latter’s identity. Kanae (Ryoko Hirosue) is a driven magazine editor with no man in her life. She tells surprised co-workers that she is getting married in two months. Kanae becomes interested in Kondo, the amnesiac, who believes that he is Sakurai. First rate comedy with close calls, crazy twists, confusion and dead pan acting. 2012 Shanghai International Film Festival  winner for Best Screenplay."
      • My favorite film
      • Funny
    7. MRS. JUDO:  BE STRONG, BE GENTLE, BE BEAUTIFUL: "Born in 1913 in Tokyo, Keiko Fukuda was the granddaughter of a Meiji era samurai warrior and a juijitsu master.  Her grandfather was the sensei (teacher) of Jigoro Kano, the founder of judo that is practiced today.  Jigoro Kano, in turn, was the teacher of Keiko Fukuda, the first and only woman, awarded the highest honor in judo – the 10th degree black belt.  Her choices were hard; she chose judo over marriage and persevered on her life path.  After WWII, she moved to San Francisco, taught Judo, and founded a judo dojo (studio). Fukuda san taught that the essence of judo is a process of being which involves the inner spirit.  Mrs. Judo is documented with archival photos, film, and interviews. Yuriko Romer will be on stage at the Crest. Winner of the 2013 Moscow Film Festival Jury Award for Best Documentary."
      • A crowd favorite...great movie
    Links to Previous Years
    • 2012 (8th Annual) ... hmm, it appears I didn't do a write-up last summer! x_x But we attended!
    • 2011 (7th Annual)
    • 2010 (6th Annual)
    • 2009 (5th Annual)
    • 2008 (4th Annual)
    • 2007 (3rd Annual)

    Friday, July 12, 2013

    NorCal Badminton

    Exciting!
    http://norcalbadminton.com/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RkHHP1eKhak

    Gross domestic national happiness

    Bhutan:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gross_national_happiness

    MALM Marries Alsarp

    Hmm

    http://www.ikeahackers.net/2011/05/malm-marries-alsarp.html

    The Westing Game

    Randomly saw a reference to the young-adult book, The Westing Game, today, and I instantly recognized it as a book I read. I remember one point in particular, the moment when everyone receives their clues to the identity of the person responsible for the death of Sam Westing.

    Instead of opening their clue straight-away, one pair instead watches and listens as the others open their clues, thus gaining valuable information while not revealing their own clue.

    Brilliant! : o )

    It appears the book takes place on "the shore of Lake Michigan, somewhere in Wisconsin," which may explain why it came to my attention.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Westing_Game
    http://thebestnotes.com/booknotes/Westing_Game_Raskin/Westing_Game_Study_Guide10.html


    Kevin's Perfect Birthday - Sacramento

    Thinking about this...what's the perfect birthday look like here in Sacramento?

    Freebies
    Food
    Entertainment

    Lunch Pails and Fashion

    I came to the conclusion a few days ago it may very well be impossible to look sophisticated carrying around an insulated lunch pail. ; o )




    Thursday, July 04, 2013

    Oakland East Bay Symphony at the Craneway Pavilion

    Dawn and I attended the 2013 Oakland East Bay Symphony Independence Day celebration at the Craneway Pavilion, part of the now-defunct Richmond, California Ford Motor Company Assembly Plant. We had attended in 2011, I believe.

    We arrived without $10 for parking, but the lot attendants kindly allowed us to park and go inside to use the ATM. A strong wind carried along with it the smell of the ocean. Many people had parked some ways away on surface streets and hoofed it in, presumably to save $10 in parking, but perhaps also to avoid the crush of  post-event traffic leaving.

    We ate two hot dogs, a brownie, and drank white wine (sauvignon blanc) from a plastic cup.

    The programs contained a misprint: KDFC no longer broadcasts on 102.1; emcee Dianne Nicolini made the correction from the stage.

    I particularly enjoyed the horns on the Indiana Jones piece. Dawn sang along to The Little Mermaid, The Sound of Music, and a few of the medley of songs in Give My Regards to George.

    As the program went on, the fog rolled in over the bay, obscuring much of the previously clear view of the peninsula. We saw masts of ships go by the windows. The booms of the fireworks announced the beginning of the exterior show, with most people filing outside or to the exits. We stayed inside and watched the musicians, seeing some of the fireworks on the large screens flanking the stage.

    During the intermission, I overheard a man behind us talking about Richmond, California's transformation from drive-by capital of the world into a more respectable living space. He also mentioned the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory plans to build a second campus at the Richmond Field Station.

    The orchestra's primary harpist, Natalie Cox, seemed a bit distracted during the firework performance, turning around and watching the fireworks...not much opportunity for a harpist, I suppose, so hard to blame her.

    The musical program:
    Star Spangled Banner - F. Scott Key/J.S. Smith
    America the Beautiful - Samuel Ward
    March from Raiders of the Lost Ark - John Williams
    Little Mermaid - Alan Menken
    Give My Regards to George - George M. Cohan; arr. Mike Lewis
    Bugler's Holiday - Leroy Anderson with Diablo Wind Symphony members: Shane O'Brien, Cristina O'Brien, Taylor O'Hanlon
    Sound of Music Medley Rodgers/Hammerstein 
    INTERMISSION   
    Tara theme from Gone with the Wind - Max Steiner
    With Fireworks (with the Diablo Wind Symphony, John Maltester, director):
    John Philip Sousa
    • Washington Post  
    • The Thunderer  
    • Hands Across the Sea  
    • The Fairest of the Fair  
    • King Cotton  
    • Stars and Stripes  
    After Fireworks: Star Wars Suite
    After the program, Dawn and I waited in the parking lot until the majority of traffic had gone. As we had walked to our car, we overheard one driver say to passengers in another car, "Do you really think you are a better person than me?" Awkward...presumably, the other car had cut her off, or refused to allow her to cut in?

    We got home around midnight and collapsed into bed.

    Tuesday, July 02, 2013

    Yosemite National Park Mini-Vacation 2013

    Dawn and I went for a mini-vacation to Yosemite National Park, June 29-July 1.

    Photos: http://www.flickr.com/photos/schultkl/sets/72157634452254937/

    DAY ONE (FRIDAY)

    Snack (Jackson, CA): Starbucks yogurt, Guilty Indulgence cupcakes: peanut butter cup, rollo
    Dinner (Groveland, CA): Pizza Factory, Hawaiian/Greek half-and-half split, but the Greek seemed much more like veggie?, root beers
    Word of the day: Aquackaduct

    Synopsis: Left Sacramento around noon. Very hot, so turned on a/c, which strained car engine and decreased acceleration.
    We stopped at many random markers to take pictures. Traffic seemed light and the drive seemed pleasant, aside from the heat. Dawn felt anxious at my sudden deaccelerations and relatively risky driving habits to get some of the pictures--I promised I would attempt to drive safer and go from an intermediate safe driver to a first-class safe driver.
    Mark twain cabin: just a mile off the main road; surrounded by a gate; looked briefly at a flyer announcing a home for sale
    U-Knead-a pizza: we make-a, u bake-a
    Pizza Factory: We toss em, they're awesome. Verdict: yum. Combo Hawaiian/greek...which seemed like a traditional veggie. Lots of root beer soda.
    Gregarious, inebriated man talking with Amanda, the Yosemite Lakes front-desk clerk. Seemed demanding, to me, but Amanda later mentioned he reminded her of her grandfather. Grandfather or no, he started talking to Dawn and I felt like I wanted to protect her from unwanted advances. He said he wanted to go to Sawtooth Mountain Road, for some reason...Amanda said it was just a quarter-mile up the road, when it was really several miles. We requested site T-52, the upper tent site, but she initially gave us the gate code for the lower tent sites. The lower sites looked close to the river, but crowded, so we investigated the upper campground options. To my surprise, hardly anyone was around at the end of the camp sites, and so we successfully settled into site T52. (later, when I heard people yelling to each other in the bottom campground, and babies crying, I felt more relieved). I think Dawn might have preferred the lower tent sites, though...so perhaps it the future we will stay there. The front office had shuffleboard sticks, putt-putt golf equipment, a volleyball...but it was so hot I didn't think anyone would take them.

    We went into Groveland and ate at Pizza Factory. On the way there, they have a signal which forces only one lane open at a time, while they have green rebar in place to repair a bridge.

    We went into Yosemite Valley, a 30-45 minute one-way trip from Yosemite Lakes campground. We initially parked at Housekeeping Camp and went to the La Conte Memorial, where we heard an interactive John Muir presentation. Not the same John Muir as the Lee Stinson performance, I think, since this person had a fake beard. During the performance, a woman named Brook arrived and began exclaiming various reactions to the actor's stories. "My name is Brook; I'm named after a babbling Brook." She apparently had seen John Muir and couldn't help herself and needed to "see him." Eventually, she left, whether told to leave or not, I'm not sure. Another late-comer sat next to me and also interjected with many comments...but she seemed to have a bit more awareness of respecting the actors preference to speak.

    After the performance, we parked at Camp Curry and walked around, looking at the Pizza Deck (Pizza Patio?), took a photo with the bear, used the bathroom, and explored the outside of the building, near the pool. A lot of people were milling about, some of them unaware of us in their presence, so Dawn and I felt a bit irritated.  After this, we walked back to our car and drove to camp and fell asleep. We parked near the bathrooms and brushed our teeth and cleaned up, then drove down to our camp site. We stayed in the car with the parking lights on, planning out our next moves so as not to have to talk out in the open. Both of these worked pretty well, minimizing the stress of coordinating things in the dark. The air mattresses I had inflated didn't feel very full, but I didn't think to re-inflate them until much later. We used a small LED flashlight to light our quick change into pajamas. Then, we fell asleep under the brilliant stars. I heard a rustling noise the first night, a scrtch-scrtch-scrtch...it sounded like a small animal making a nest or eating something. Later that night, I heard two squirrels squeaking at each other. Otherwise, very quiet.

    DAY TWO (SATURDAY)

    Breakfast (Yosemite Village, CA): The Ahwahnee (splurge)--Dawn: apple flapjack with raspberry syrup and cooked apples underneath, decaf coffee; Kevin: breakfast buffet, orange juice
    Lunch (Yosemite Village, CA): endless root beer float (after our float)
    Dinner (Groveland, CA): Two Guy's Pizza (veggie), waters

    Synopsis: Unlike previous visits, our neighbors on the first night were very quiet. They left with nary a noise before we even got up. Bliss. The day became bright around 5:00 a.m.. Birds began squawking right on the picnic table next to our tent. We arose around 8:30 a.m., showered, and got out of the camp site around 9:00 a.m., arriving at the Ahwahnee for breakfast around 9:45 a.m., right before it closed for breakfast at 10:00 a.m.. Dawn got an apple flapjack with raspberry sause; I opted for the breakfast buffet. We both enjoyed our choices--I had two plates, with belgian waffles, silver dollar pancakes, mushy "crispy" hashbrowns, eggs benedict, biscuit and gravy, cheesy eggs, and orange juice. We sat at table #54, near the window. Our hostess remarked all window seats ending in "4" seem to be near the window. Our server, Paul, waited on us with great attention. Our second server, Sara, remarked that she and her husband, who teaches rock-climbing in the Valley, live in Groveland and eat at Two Guys' Pizza, behind PJ's pizza. She's never tried PJ's, strangly enough, even though she works in the Valley during the week and lives in Groveland on the weekends. We spotted another friendly face, David, who Paul called an even older dinosaur than himself. : o ) After breakfast, we used the restrooms and walked around the Ahwahnee, taking some pictures and visiting the gift shop.

    From the Ahwahnee, we parked at Camp Curry and walked back to the Raft Rental. We rented a raft after filling out the liability waiver, waited through an orientation, then hauled our raft to the water and began our float, which lasted from around 11:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Several boats had water canons, and they sprayed us successfully a few times before I returned fire with water spray from my oar. We floated past many people enjoying the beaches of the Merced River. A number of people swung from a rope into the water--one had a GoPro helmet cam. We saw a coyote cross the river in front of us. A baby duck nibbled on Dawn's toe, which impressed her greatly. We briefly anchored in the shade and I felt tired from the heat, so I attempted to take a nap, but it proved impossible. The underside of one of the bridges was covered in a multi-colored chalk drawing. The float cost $60 or so, $30 per person along with a $5.50 shuttle return service...I think this was refunded if we returned our life jackets. We saw one young boy struggling with the current before his older caretakers rescued him. Dawn and I saw one man standing in his navy blue underwear (it looked like briefs?) along with his girlfriend, who wore a bikini. We briefly beached the raft and took pictures. Whenever Half Dome or Yosemite Falls came into view, we took pictures. It's just a really nice way to see the Valley. Dawn remarked several times we should live next to a river so she could raft down it more often. : o ) We both paddled fairly randomly; I paddled more strongly on my side, as Dawn's side hurt. So, navigating the raft proved a struggle, but we managed to move relatively efficiently when we both put our oars to it. We're both novices, but improving. We saw fish floating by under the water a few times, just as we had in 2007. Dawn and I both took our shos off and we dipped our feet into the water. This, unfortunately, exposed unprotected areas of skin to direct sunlight for multiple hours, which led to lobster-red burns on Dawn's skin above the knees and the top of her feet. : o ( Lesson learned.

    The shuttle bus took a while to arrive, so we listened to the raft return assistant's musical choice: Pearl Jam's album Ten. When the shuttle bus returned, we boarded, then watched her beep her horn at multiple cars going in the wrong direction. Eventually, everything got straightened out (in one case, a park ranger assisted).

    After the raft float, we walked to the Peet's Coffee at Camp Curry cafeteria and had a root beer float. We gorged. We then took more pictures with the stuffed bear. On the way to Yosemite Village store, we passed a ground squirrel chirping. We walked to the store, taking more pictures of half dome, and walking right next to a feeding female deer. We purchased a gift for Lanna (pine needle and pine cone earrings), used the restrooms, bought a Tuolumne Meadows and Wawona map, then walked back to the Ahwahneed and purchased a gold leaf necklace charm for Dawn.  We took the shuttle back to Camp Curry, drove to Groveland, ate a veggie pizza and watched AFL football (San Jose Sabercats beat Utah Blaze), then returned to camp. We had new adjacent campers, a couple of men who liked to talk.... They, for the most part, seemed respectful, but they got up around 7:00 a.m. and talked as though we couldn't hear them. Dawn and I walked in the dark with a flashlight to the bathrooms to brush our teeth. This evening, it sounded as though a group of some people were yelling about something like a soccer match, perhaps. Strange. As with the previous night, we found it hard to sleep oun our sides, but we managed.

    DAY THREE (SUNDAY)

    Breakfast (Groveland, CA): Country Store gas station--Dawn: bacon, egg, and cheese biscuit; Kevin: foccacia with braised veggies and raspberry vinaigrette, rice krispie bar (breakfast of champions)
    Lunch (Tuolumne, CA): Tuolumne Meadows Grill: Dawn: chicken sandwich; Kevin: grilled cheese, veggie chili, split fries with Dawn (veggie chili was to die for)
    Dinner (Wawona, CA): Wawona Hotel pre-dinner cocktails--Dawn: Polka Dot Sweet Riesling; Kevin: Paul Dolan organic chardonnay; dinner--Wawona’s House Made “Locally Raised’ Turkey Meatloaf, Garlic Smashed Potatoes, Grilled Onion Gravy (split), Merlot, St. Francis, Sonoma

    Synopsis: We slept in a bit longer, broke our tent and put away our gear, then drove up to the bathrooms and showered. This worked out pretty well (showering after taking down the tent). We ate breakfast at the County Store gas station near our campground: foccachia and braised veggie sandwich with balsemic vinnegrete for me, and a bacon, egg, and cheese biscuit for Dawn. We also split a Rice Krispie treat bar. I cleaned off the windows of the car, which had streaks and had proved troublesome from the day before when driving into direct sunlight. We drove straight to Tuolumne Meadows, a breathtaking drive full of granite and pines, ascending to 8,000+ feet. We eleced not to take the shuttle bus from Olmstead Point, and it turned out fine. At Tenaya Lake, we stopped and I swam, while Dawn waded. We built a tiny cairn, skipped stones, and took pictures of Dawn with purple lupins. As I had soaked my cotton shorts, I swiched out to my swimming trunks (heh) and put the shorts in the back window of the car to dry...which they did quite efficiently. We continued to the Tuolumne Meadows visitors center, using the restrooms, refilling water bottles, and looking at a yellow-bellied Marmot plush which Dawn liked. We then headed farther east to the Tuolumne Lodge, which did not really have much of interest to us. We drove back to the Mountaineering shop, wher Dawn found a gold and rust colored pullover (North Face?). She liked it, but the Men's Medium did not fit well...too big. We then parked at the Visitor's Center again and walked to Soda Springs. No mosquitos this time! I tasted a small bit of the water from a tiny bubbler. It tastes almost like normal water, but it has just a bit of mineral taste to it. We walked into the Parson's Lodge, which has connections to a man named Parsons who has connections to the earliest days of the Sierra Club and John Muir. We used binoculars to spy on a ground squirrel or two, including baby ground squirrels. A very pleasant experience...much different than the mosquito-infested fall day from about ten years ago. We returned to the car, drove to the Tuolumne Grill and ate: grilled cheese, veggie chili, and fries (me); chicken sandwich and brownie (Dawn). As we ate on the outside, shaded picnic tables, we overheard a Pacific Crest Trail through-hiker describing how she had lost 10 pounds in the desert during the first week and was struggling to eat enough (she said maybe 3,500 calories per day). She mentioned she had some heavy carries (water?) through some of those days, and had walked for a few weeks with blistered feet. Her neck looked blistered and raw from sunburns. The people she talked with seemed shocked at her cavalierness, especially when she said she planned to get through Oregon with nine 50+ mile days. After hearing their incredulity, she hedged a bit. We shared a table with a guy who was waiting for the YARTS shuttle...his friend came out and gave him some IPA (yuck) while his friend had chosen a Coors for himself. The first guy teased him by saying he should go back in and make a better choice (instead of the Coors, hehe). Dawn and I then left Tuolumne Meadows and drove a long two hours or so to Wawona, stopping briefly at Tunnel View to take photos.

    At Wawona, we checked in. The lobby front-desk employees wore soaked hand towels to stay cool. We asked about upgrades and were told none existed. Later, they sold out. We checked into our room, #219, in the main building. Got ice. Headed downstairs and got two glasses of wine: a Riesling for Dawn and a Chardonnay for me (Paul Dolan?). We read a bit of Garrison Keilior's "Tales from Lake Wobegon", then headed outside for a bit of a walk. In the Annex building, a wedding party was blasting Gangnam Style and Def Leppard. We came back to the Main Building and decided to split a dinner of Turkey Meatloaf with a glass of Merlot. The little bread and onion breads tasted delicious, and we ...I ate two baskets of them. The meal was great, though we stuffed ourselves and I later had to go get Dawn some Sprite from the front lobby. The room #219 had a single queen bed and a dresser and an adjustable mirror over it. The ceiling fan at full speed helped cool things a bit, but not so great. No A/C, no phone, no sink or bathroom. The bathroom/showers are just down the hall, look quite new, smell of fresh paint, and have new shower fixtures. The staff all performed quite amicably given the heat. The person refilling our bread and water said his grandfather told him to always give 120% in whatever you do. After eating, we retired to our room and attempted to relax from stuffing ourselves silly, while beating the heat by keeping our window open and letting in the cool night air. Pretty much keep the heavy curtains open.... They have wifi, only in the Annex over the golf pro shop. Walking barefoot alone along the veranda in the cool night air is a pleasant memory. I did not find the walls as paper-thin as I had expected...but having the windows open really kills most expectations of privacy. The bed and pillows are comfy, especially compared to a tent experience. The front desk night staff member went out of her way to get a Sprite, even though she couldn't sell anything and the bar was locked. THey shut down the front water fountain after dark. Sitting on a veranda with a drink seems about as nice as it sounds. It's a very unique experience here, and it has its charms (and its creakiness). Dawn seemed happy. Stayed up lote capturing thoughts and notes from the first few days...before they get away permanently. : o )

    DAY FOUR (MONDAY)

    Breakfast (Wawona, CA): Wawona Hotel dining room--Dawn: pancakes with blueberries, defaf coffee; Kevin: french toast with nuts and powdered sugar, fruit compote, fried, cubed potatoes, orange juice, regular coffee
    Lunch (Wawona, CA): Wawona General Store--Dawn: Snickers bar; Kevin: strawberry trail mix, Butterfinger ice cream bar
    Dinner (Groveland, CA): PJ's pizza and cafe--ranch chicken with one-half substituting black olives for the chicken, root beer

    Clinking of bottles around midnight as Wawona staff collected the recyclables. A delivery truck beeped into position around 6:00 a.m., ignoring the sign to consider guests and not arrive until later in the morning. I decided to take a shower again, to shave and put my hair back into place, as it explodes into all sorts of unruly tufts each evening. We went down for breakfast around 8:00 a.m. and the host informed us of a 15-30 minute wait, handing us a wireless notification device. We walked out onto the veranda and relaxed in a wicker love seat. When seated in the dining room, our waitress Ilene let us know she came from the Minneapolis area. She noticed our "magic" breakfast coupon, which we received as part of our room package. She seemed to take a liking to us, and gave us a free fruit compote, and did not charge us for a side of potatoes I ordered...which was good, snice the deep-fried, fast-food smelling cubes tasted awful and I had hoped for hashbrowns. Dawn had pankcakes with blueberries, while I had french toast with nuts and powdered sugar and orange juice. We both took coffee--Dawn decaffeinated and regular for me. After breakfast, we gathered our things and checked out, using our $250 in gift certificates. The total cost, including the previous evening's cocktails and meal, the room, and the morning breakfast, came out to $270...so we only ended up paying $20! After checking out, we strolled over to the artists cabin, just to the north of the main fountain. A number of National Park Service carpenters were sawing wood and working on scaffolding, though I'm not sure exactly what they planned to do. Inside, we saw a number of reproductions of Mr. Hill's paintings, including one enormous painting covering the entire wall (including the frame). I noticed a book of illustrated wildflowers for $100 (normally $125). I also noticed a book on people who had died in Yosemite. In the adjacent room, I noticed a utility closet door ajar, and so I peeked inside. On the circuit breaker box, I saw a weathered note explaining that staff should throw breakers "7, 9, and 11" ... apparently throwing the others runs the risk of turning on the Halon fire suppression system! Wow. We exited the artist's studio and felt the 10:00 a.m. heat already quite unpleasant. A sign near the front of Wawona had noted a high of 100 F for the day. After some discussion, we decided to head to the Mariposa Grove and look at the giant sequoia trees. We parked initially at the general store and purchased more Aloe Up lotion for Dawn's feet, which looked even more red than the day before. We then attempted to drive up to the parking lot. As we approached the Wawona golf course, a number of saddled horses and riders crossed the road, momentarily halting traffic. I stopped in the shade well before the horses, putting on my hazard lights; another car, possibly thinking I was stalled, began to go around me, then saw the horses and swerved back into my lane. This semeed to trigger Dawn's protective instincts and she exclaimed, "There's horses!" to the driver behind us. After the last horse crossed, we continued to the southern gate of Yosemite Park, where a number of NPS staff turned us around, telling us the lot at the Grove was full. We returned to Wawona, about four miles, and parked in overflow parking near the Wawona horse stables. Taking plenty of water, we attempted to pet the horses--one cooperated, one mildly bucked it's head when Dawn attempted to stroke its nose. We found a dollar bill on the ground near the entrance to the corral on the other side of the horse barn, leaving it in the gate for the woman caring for the horses. The smell of hay reminded me of the hay loft on the farm where I grew up. We walked through the historical park, eventually reaching the shuttle stop. The bus appeared momentarily and we had a quiet ride to the top. We visited the Grove's gift shop, noting they sold a Sequoia National Forest tee, strangly enough. We walked slowly in the heat to the Grizzly Giant, bypassing a number of the tourist attractions which we had seen a number of times before. At the Grizzly Giant, we turned and followed a sign assuring us a 0.6 mile walk to the Faithful Couple tree. After a not-unpleasant but unexpected 0.7 mile walk, we discovered ourselves still 0.4 miles from the Faithful Couple tree. Weird. We finally reached it and took a follow-up picture of us to match our picture from 2007. Per Dawn's feet and the heat, we proceeded back down the asphalt road to the entrance. While walking, we had the pleasure to hear a number of thunder rumblings in the distance. Near the entrance, we also heard the somewhat unsettling noise of a redwood tree crashing, somewhere out-of-sight but close. The trip back to Wawona on the shuttle bus was relatively uneventful, with the bus driver attempting to get the front and back of the bus to engage him in trivia, to mixed results.

    Dawn and I continued north to Yosemite Valley. About halfway, we encountered a Monaco motorhome spewing noxious black smoke from its tailpipe. It refused to yield in pullout lanes, even after horn beeps and light flashes. Eventually we gave up and pulled back...it pulled over, finally, near Chinquapin.

    We reached Tunnel View and traded pictures with another couple...I felt nervous asking for a picture, but screwed up my courage and asked and everything worked out great. Feeling excited about the small win, I decided to retake my 2007 picture in the meadows on the valley floor. Not quite remembering the exact location, we ended up parking about a half-mile away, which, given the traffic on the exits to the valley, probably turned out relatively for the best. After getting the picture, we drove our way past hordes of tourists and headed north out of the Park for the last time.

    We ate pizza at PJ's pizza and Cafe in Groveland, ordering a ranch chicken pizza with a substitution of black olives for chicken on one side of the pizza. This completed our pizza trifecta: Pizza Factory, Two Guy's, and PJ's. Of the three, while Dawn admits it hard to compare due to different pizzas each night, she liked Two Guy's veggie pesto veggie with artichoke hearts, followed by Pizza Factory's hawaiian, followed by PJ's ranch chicken. I liked Pizza Factory the best, followed by PJ's, followed by Two Guy's (I thought the Two Guy's pizza tasted great, but it seemed much more pedestrian and a bit boring).

    We retraced our route on the way home, taking the New Priest Grade road, seeing all the markers we had stopped at just a few days earlier. We looked for the frog statue we had seen years before, but could not find it. One winery (?) we passed exclaimed, "Wine available--Finally!" A barbeque joint called Doc's Texas BBQ & Burgers in Sonora proclaimed itself the "best barbeque in California." The sunset looked magnificent. We arrived back in Sacramento around 9:30 p.m.

    Kevin's word of the trip: hantavirus
    Dawn's word of the trip: fluffy

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