Saturday, December 30, 2006
Hola de Peru!
Hey kids, it´s December 29th and we´re enjoying our second day in Cusco, Peru. I´ll be making occasional trip posts on our dedicated trip blog, Cuzcotopia. You can use that there link, or the one that I´ve added over there on the side. Doooo it.... dooooo it.
Friday, December 22, 2006
The Great Blizzard of Diggity Six
At the turn of the 21st century, my friends and I were sitting around the Hub, drinking coffee, playing Scrabble, and trying to outdo all the retarded media talking heads who were trying to predict how people would come to refer to the first decade of the century. "The Eighties" sounded great, but "The Oughts"? "The Zeroes"? Here it is, in the Year of Our Lord 2006, and we still don't have anything good. The best we came up with on that balmy California fall evening was "The Diggitys." Individual years would be referred to as "diggity-ought," "diggity-one," "diggity-two," and so forth. As with all moments of brilliance, it comes from the Simpsons -- specifically, Grampa Simpson:
"Now, my story begins in 19-dickety-two. We had to say "dickety" cause that Kaiser had stolen our word "twenty". I chased that rascal to get it back, but gave up after dickety-six miles…"
See? Diggity-six. 2006. Perfect. Please don't quibble with me on the spelling. We decided that "diggity" was the way to go.
So anyway, the blizzard. Our neighborhood got some of the heaviest snowfall in metro Denver, according to the snow pundits. In addition to a good two feet of snow, the wind was fierce, causing drifts five feet high in some places. We shoveled our driveway clear of 1 1/2 feet of snow -- twice. Mr. Plow came by this morning, and hopefully they'll soon spray the mag chloride stuff that melts the streets. The only thing that sucks is it looks like my car will be living at work for the next 2 weeks -- I still don't trust it to not get stuck at icy intersections.
Overall, the Diggity Six Blizzard was a good adventure. I'm just glad we don't see them too often round these parts. Check out the pictures from Wednesday night on Chris' blog. Below are some more.
Here's me, post-snow angel.
"Now, my story begins in 19-dickety-two. We had to say "dickety" cause that Kaiser had stolen our word "twenty". I chased that rascal to get it back, but gave up after dickety-six miles…"
See? Diggity-six. 2006. Perfect. Please don't quibble with me on the spelling. We decided that "diggity" was the way to go.
So anyway, the blizzard. Our neighborhood got some of the heaviest snowfall in metro Denver, according to the snow pundits. In addition to a good two feet of snow, the wind was fierce, causing drifts five feet high in some places. We shoveled our driveway clear of 1 1/2 feet of snow -- twice. Mr. Plow came by this morning, and hopefully they'll soon spray the mag chloride stuff that melts the streets. The only thing that sucks is it looks like my car will be living at work for the next 2 weeks -- I still don't trust it to not get stuck at icy intersections.
Overall, the Diggity Six Blizzard was a good adventure. I'm just glad we don't see them too often round these parts. Check out the pictures from Wednesday night on Chris' blog. Below are some more.
Here's me, post-snow angel.
This is a view out our kitchen window, looking into our side yard and that of the neighbors. Those fences are about 5 feet high.
Thursday, December 21, 2006
Best. Dog. Ever.
Tuesday, December 19, 2006
Proof of God... or that I need more sleep.
There are many thousands of tiny things that I must successfully accomplish before leaving on Friday to go home for Christmas. Among them is making a stocking for Chris to be hung up at my house. I was working on it this evening, and found that I needed to quickly dry some glitter that I had glued to a pipe cleaner, so I threw it in the bathroom sink and applied the wrath of the hair dryer.
This process is exceedingly boring.
So I was kind of drifting off and wondering whether I'd get any good sleep tonight (with this cough I've got, probably not) when I noticed one of those little things that makes one think "I bet no one on Earth has ever seen this before," right before doing the math of billions of people times millions of years and realizing that one is probably dead wrong. There were two drops of water clinging stubbornly to the sink basin, each containing a single piece of silver glitter. As the air from the hair dryer agitated the water, each bit of glitter was spinning slowly around in its respective drop of water. It looked like the most abstract googly eyes I had ever seen.
Back to gluing bits of felt to other, larger, bits of felt. Thank you for your time.
This process is exceedingly boring.
So I was kind of drifting off and wondering whether I'd get any good sleep tonight (with this cough I've got, probably not) when I noticed one of those little things that makes one think "I bet no one on Earth has ever seen this before," right before doing the math of billions of people times millions of years and realizing that one is probably dead wrong. There were two drops of water clinging stubbornly to the sink basin, each containing a single piece of silver glitter. As the air from the hair dryer agitated the water, each bit of glitter was spinning slowly around in its respective drop of water. It looked like the most abstract googly eyes I had ever seen.
Back to gluing bits of felt to other, larger, bits of felt. Thank you for your time.
The elusive giant bow.
Every Christmas, car manufacturers roll out their "Holiday Sales Event" commercials, which inevitably show a woman being surprised by her husband revealing a new car in the garage or driveway on Christmas morning. It's never the other way around. Ever. But that's not part of this story. What I'm here to talk about today is the gigantic bow that's always perched triumphantly on the top of the car.
Where do these bows come from? Do the dealerships always order a few of these in November to have them on hand for the holiday season? I finally got obsessed enough with this concept that Chris Googled "giant bow" and came up with the company that makes them. So they exist. But I've never seen one on a car, known anyone who has received a car with a bow on, or known anyone who's known anyone who's received a car with a bow on.
I call shenanigans.
Where do these bows come from? Do the dealerships always order a few of these in November to have them on hand for the holiday season? I finally got obsessed enough with this concept that Chris Googled "giant bow" and came up with the company that makes them. So they exist. But I've never seen one on a car, known anyone who has received a car with a bow on, or known anyone who's known anyone who's received a car with a bow on.
I call shenanigans.
Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Maggie turns four
Attention new parents, including Michelle and Justin. If you're ever looking for a surefire way to remember your child's date of birth or litter number, why not consider getting tattoos placed inside his or her ears? It was with the help of such technology that we were able to learn about Maggie's beginnings. She was whelped on December 12, 2002 and is the progeny of sire Talented Mr Ripley and dam Abita Tinkerbell. Her racing name was TS Talented Tami. She was then cruelly named Tilia by her first family, which I still don't get.
At any rate, yesterday was Maggie's fourth birthday. We thought for a moment about buying a small cake from one of those specialty dog bakeries (one of the things that's seriously wrong with America), but realized that she's a dog who licks her own butt and doesn't realize it's her birthday to begin with. So we candled up a raw turkey neck that we would have given her anyway, sang the song, and watched her gnaw at it. Good times.
At any rate, yesterday was Maggie's fourth birthday. We thought for a moment about buying a small cake from one of those specialty dog bakeries (one of the things that's seriously wrong with America), but realized that she's a dog who licks her own butt and doesn't realize it's her birthday to begin with. So we candled up a raw turkey neck that we would have given her anyway, sang the song, and watched her gnaw at it. Good times.
Kittens do not equal Christmas.
It's that time again. "You know, ho ho ho, and mistletoe, and presents to pretty girls," as Lucy would say. I love it all. Someday I will have a Christmas with mulled cider and a gingerbread house placed carefully somewhere that my dog can't eat it, and a tree that's not denuded of all ornaments below greyhound mouth height. This is not that year. I'm doing what I can with a little bit of snowfall, a tree that's beautiful above greyhound mouth height, and the promise of some really good stocking presents on Christmas Day.
I also enjoy Christmas music. Most of us do. It's a guilty pleasure to sing along with the Waitresses' song "Christmas Wrapping" or anything done by Bing Crosby. Throughout the years, tradition has also placed some songs firmly in the holiday genre, though they may have very little to do with Christmas itself. Some examples are "Baby, It's Cold Outside" and, well, others. "Winter Wonderland" perhaps. They get by quite nicely with solid winter references. I'm not sure how the Southern Hemisphere feels about these songs. They're too busy standing around the barbie turning snags.*
There is, however, one song that baffles me to the point of apoplexy every single year. It has nothing to do with Christmas, very little to do with winter (or summer for that matter) and makes no mention of anything that reminds me of Christmas.
That song is "My Favorite Things" from The Sound of Music. What the hell, people. I have asked roughly 736 people why they think this song has any right to be a Christmas song, and most of them either try to tell me that it's a song about what people want for Christmas or else that it's about presents, citing the "packages" lyric.
I spent hundreds of hours in high school and college tearing apart lines of poetry. As a result, I'm uniquely qualified to tell you that this vaguely retarded song has nothing at all to do with Christmas. For your convenience, I have reproduced the lyrics below.
Raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens
Bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens
Brown paper packages tied up with strings
These are a few of my favorite things.
Cream-colored ponies and crisp apple strudels
Doorbells and sleigh bells and schnitzel with noodles
Wild geese that fly with the moon on their wings
These are a few of my favorite things.
Girls in white dresses with blue satin sashes
Snowflakes that stay on my nose and eyelashes
Silver-white winters that melt into springs
These are a few of my favorite things.
When the dog bites,
When the bee stings,
When I'm feeling sad,
I simply remember my favorite things,
And then I don't feel so bad.
"Aha!" you say, "but look at the mentions of wintery things!" Yeah, but there's more stuff that's non-winter than there is winter stuff. And the packages thing? Let's look a little closer. "Brown paper packages tied up with strings." Um, no. If I got anything of this nature under the Christmas tree, I'd assume it was filled with poo and refuse to open it.
Since it's past time for me to leave for work, I'll leave it at that. If anyone can give me the remotest reason why this song should be accepted into the pantheon of holiday classics, I'm willing to listen. But I probably still won't believe you.
*This description of Christmas, by the way, is what my dad thinks heaven must be like. I sure hope so.
I also enjoy Christmas music. Most of us do. It's a guilty pleasure to sing along with the Waitresses' song "Christmas Wrapping" or anything done by Bing Crosby. Throughout the years, tradition has also placed some songs firmly in the holiday genre, though they may have very little to do with Christmas itself. Some examples are "Baby, It's Cold Outside" and, well, others. "Winter Wonderland" perhaps. They get by quite nicely with solid winter references. I'm not sure how the Southern Hemisphere feels about these songs. They're too busy standing around the barbie turning snags.*
There is, however, one song that baffles me to the point of apoplexy every single year. It has nothing to do with Christmas, very little to do with winter (or summer for that matter) and makes no mention of anything that reminds me of Christmas.
That song is "My Favorite Things" from The Sound of Music. What the hell, people. I have asked roughly 736 people why they think this song has any right to be a Christmas song, and most of them either try to tell me that it's a song about what people want for Christmas or else that it's about presents, citing the "packages" lyric.
I spent hundreds of hours in high school and college tearing apart lines of poetry. As a result, I'm uniquely qualified to tell you that this vaguely retarded song has nothing at all to do with Christmas. For your convenience, I have reproduced the lyrics below.
Raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens
Bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens
Brown paper packages tied up with strings
These are a few of my favorite things.
Cream-colored ponies and crisp apple strudels
Doorbells and sleigh bells and schnitzel with noodles
Wild geese that fly with the moon on their wings
These are a few of my favorite things.
Girls in white dresses with blue satin sashes
Snowflakes that stay on my nose and eyelashes
Silver-white winters that melt into springs
These are a few of my favorite things.
When the dog bites,
When the bee stings,
When I'm feeling sad,
I simply remember my favorite things,
And then I don't feel so bad.
"Aha!" you say, "but look at the mentions of wintery things!" Yeah, but there's more stuff that's non-winter than there is winter stuff. And the packages thing? Let's look a little closer. "Brown paper packages tied up with strings." Um, no. If I got anything of this nature under the Christmas tree, I'd assume it was filled with poo and refuse to open it.
Since it's past time for me to leave for work, I'll leave it at that. If anyone can give me the remotest reason why this song should be accepted into the pantheon of holiday classics, I'm willing to listen. But I probably still won't believe you.
*This description of Christmas, by the way, is what my dad thinks heaven must be like. I sure hope so.
Monday, December 04, 2006
Christmas time is here!
Yay!!! We are shopping and it has been snowing and just now, some Olde-Tyme carolers from the days of yore stopped by for some wassail. Okay, everything but the carolers. We went out and got a tree yesterday. The trees here are really fresh, on account of them being kept out of doors in below freezing weather. Darn thing drank a gallon of water in its first 12 hours in our house.
My parents will be happy to note that it passes the only Christmas Tree Rule that I've ever insisted upon: it can be scraggly, lop-sided, a little bald in places, or just plain sincere looking, as long as it's taller than I am. This one's a beauty, even though we don't have as many ornaments for it as I'd like (yet). I still plan on making some, and Christmas ornaments have a funny way of multiplying over the years.
Here's a couple of pictures of the tree and the front of the house, so you folks can feel the same Hallmarky Christmas cheer that we are.
It was damn cold that night. We are wearing ski gear.
My turn to hold the dog...
My parents will be happy to note that it passes the only Christmas Tree Rule that I've ever insisted upon: it can be scraggly, lop-sided, a little bald in places, or just plain sincere looking, as long as it's taller than I am. This one's a beauty, even though we don't have as many ornaments for it as I'd like (yet). I still plan on making some, and Christmas ornaments have a funny way of multiplying over the years.
Here's a couple of pictures of the tree and the front of the house, so you folks can feel the same Hallmarky Christmas cheer that we are.
It was damn cold that night. We are wearing ski gear.
My turn to hold the dog...
OBEY THE HYPNODOG
HypnoDog™ here wishing you a Merry Christmas season. YOU SHALL ENJOY THE BOUNTEOUS HOLIDAY CELEBRATIONS GOING ON AROUND YOU. HYPNODOG™ COMMANDS IT.
The longer you gaze into HypnoDog™'s mesmerizing DazzleTron™ eyes, the more likely you are to think, yes, the couch is a perfectly good place for a hairy collection of dog legs to take a load off. The good couch? Certainly. WHOOMPwhoompwhoomp- WHOOMPwhoompwhoomp [this is meant to be a kind of Flash Gordony-type noise indicating either hydroelectric turbines or HypnoDog™'s amazing powers].
HypnoDog™ also wants cookies.
HypnoDog™ sold separately from HypnoToad™, HypnoGoat™, and the rest of the Amazing DazzleTron™ Collection. Suggested serving pictured. HypnoDog™ measured by weight, not volume. Some settling may have occurred during shipping. Some assembly required. You put it together. Batteries not included. Do not use in the bathtub or while sleeping. HypnoDog™ may include small parts that present a choking hazard for children under the age of three. The Surgeon General has determined that using HypnoDog™ impairs your ability to drive a car or operate machinery, and may cause health problems.
My company has lost it: Update
Just so's you understand that I'm not totally making this up, here's a terrible picture of me and Linc together. Linc looks great -- me... well, I thought they had already taken the picture and I pulled my head back in reaction to something someone said. Voila, double chin. But at least now I have this eternal keepsake commemorating the time I spent with Linc, the anthropomorphic, philanthropic hot dog.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)