Astrophotography is an interesting but expensive hobby #TBT

Posted By on June 16, 2022

As the warm evening and nights of summer arrive, I catch myself looking up at the sky again. It may have started with a purpose back when Charlie (Kamikaze) and BrassSextantImageI were locally sailing the “Fiberpile” and studying celestial navigation before there was much more than radio directional finders (LoranC was too costly and wasn’t helpful offshore anyway). That was the beginning (and end) of studyingSteerByTheStars_book1944 the night sky for navigation and to make accurate star sights with a sextant … I was never really proficient. Anyway, the books got put back on the shelf, the plastic practice sextant tossed and by the time we had a real sailboatBrenich (still own the domain); we weren’t sailing offshore anyway and didn’t need to navigate by the stars or even “steer by the stars” as in the phrase or in 1944 Olivia FitzRoy book title.

In the 1990s, we sailed Tulla, a NorSea 27 and I had a Garmin GPS 75 … and never looked back as Global Positioning expanded to fill the need and worked even when the weather turned sour.

Of course, the point of this post was to reflect on THIS century when my daughter Katelyn took an interest in astronomy. It was something I could semi-do with her and we enjoy the learning, and evenings looking at the stars and planets. She even bought a fairly expensive telescope with her own money and took an elective class while in college. AJamesMcCarthyTwitterProfileFor my part, it was just the grandeur of space, the beauty of the heavens and the awesomeness of God’s continually expanding creation that amazed and amazes me.

I probably read something on social media every day pertaining to space, astronomy and astrophotography … and realized just how invested some hobbyists are in their hobby and interest. Here are a couple photos from Andrew McCarthy as an example.

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Click on images of Saturn and Jupiter for high resolution version

Big storms ripped through SW Ohio and knocked trees down

Posted By on June 15, 2022

PineTree220613Big storms ripped through our area on Monday night and left a mess of things in much of SW Ohio. Lots of tree damage and even a loss of power for 24+ hours in our neighborhood.

I spent the lunch hour working with a couple of neighbors to clear our lane and yet still have our own downed trees to deal with (photos). It is shocking just how much we depend on air conditioning and ALL of our electrical conveniences these days. Thankfully our small Predator generator is keeping the lights on and refrigerator running. If I would have known how long the power would have been out, I would have rigged up the diesel John Deere 330 and 10KW generator head.

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Books: “Rightful Heritage: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Land of America” by Douglas Brinkley

Posted By on June 14, 2022

RightfulHeritage_DouglasBrinkleyAlthough I once enjoyed reading biographical and history oriented books by Douglas Brinkley, as well as enjoyed interviews with him on TV, I’ve recently noticed a bit more political partisanship in his commentary and his appearances.

To be fair, I wanted to give his writings another shot and try to remain open-minded. The book “Rightful Heritage” is about an icon of the political left, Franklin D. Roosevelt, so I suspect the subject matter will be more aligned with his currently ideology … but I could be wrong.

I’ve yet to start the ebook downloaded to my Glose reader so will look forward to starting it as soon as I finish the audiobook, “Land of Big Numbers.” Perhaps I should have read “The Wilderness Warrior” about a “distant cousin” Theodore Roosevelt first?

A brief synopsis online mention that both men were environmental leaders who desired to protect our public lands, scenic roadways and national parks.

Rightful Heritage is an epic chronicle that is both an irresistible portrait of FDR’s unrivaled passion and drive, and an indispensable analysis that skillfully illuminates the tension between business and nature—exploiting our natural resources and conserving them. Within the narrative are brilliant capsule biographies of such environmental warriors as Eleanor Roosevelt, Harold Ickes, and Rosalie Edge. Rightful Heritage is essential reading for everyone seeking to preserve our treasured landscapes as an American birthright.

Music Monday: “South City Midnight Lady” – Doobie Brothers

Posted By on June 13, 2022

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Sunday thoughts: A rainbow photo and delicious fish dinner

Posted By on June 12, 2022

Thank you Drew for sharing this amazing backyard rainbow photo from last week!

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“I set My rainbow in the cloud … and I will remember My [promise to] … every living creature of all flesh; the waters shall never again become a flood to destroy all flesh … that is on the earth” 
— Genesis 9:13-16 (Devotional thoughts from TruthForLife.org)

PizzaGeniusTilapiaSince I also had a leftover photo from a HelloFresh.com fish dinner (below), I’ll include the delicious looking and tasting Tilapia  AND for the genius “toaster for pizza leftovers” idea. Brilliant!

TilapiaHelloFresh_June2022

Inflation hits a new FOUR-Decade High, with food and energy increases hurting those who can least afford it

Posted By on June 11, 2022

Inflation4DecadeHigh220610CPI up 8.6% driven by a 35% jump in energy prices and 12% increase in groceries

SeaOfRed220610This is what asea of red looks like for investors and stock market traders … and I can angeremojionly imagine the red those living on a fixed income or families struggling to make ends meet must be seeing?

When it comes to 401K or IRA retirement savings, very little was left untouched on Friday after May’s CPI report indicated that inflation is now part of our lives (as if we didn’t know when grocery shopping, eating out, paying bills or filling up our vehicles). The rest of the year is going to be a “tough row to hoe” … as the Davy Crockett idiom suggests.

GasPrices2020-2022

Someone online posted a price for gas prices the other day “before” they even more recently jumped to a national average of $4.98/gal for unleaded gasoline. It does tell the story as to an inflation trigger:

  1. Restrictive US energy policy
  2. Print and spend gobs of US$
  3. Keep the economy shutdown longer than necessary
  4. Pay people to stay home
  5. Portray weakness abroad (Putin invades Ukraine forcing world to react by sanctioning Russian gas and oil)
  6. THEN … double down on even more spending, ESG and Green New Deal policies … 👉 “just look into my eyes,” campaigned then candidate Joe Biden   🤔

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Wishing my son Taylor a very Happy 33rd Birthday

Posted By on June 10, 2022

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Taylor last weekend at the Cincinnati Zoo with Megan

While typing the subject line of this post, I wondered at what “age” is respectful to NOT mention a number when sharing a Happy Birthday greeting?  Hopefully not at 33 yet, since from memory those were the years I pretty much felt my best (pre Menieres!) .
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A movie remake, with a twist? “iMac Down” & stocks down too

Posted By on June 10, 2022

A semi-disaster struck as my iMac choked on a Parallel 17 "virtual Windows" updateDownMarkets220609 on Thursday. It reminded me of the movie "Blackhawk Down" or perhaps "White House Down" … hence the subject line for Tech Friday.  

The virtual Windows 10 side of my computer booted, but everything from the connected drives to the display resolution was messed up. I stayed up late … or early… working on the problem only to throw in the towel and crawl into bed at 2:30AM. By morning I had things to do and decided to use my Apple TimeMachine backup from before the update to rebuild the 200GB virtual drive. Unfortunately this process from a USB connected drive was an 8 hour ordeal so computing and "market slide" watching for the day was on my Lenovo notebook (it seems sluggish too … or perhaps that new Apple MacBook M2 powered Air is just looking attractive)?

MacBookAirM2_2022

So as I’m prepping this post for Friday morning … I’m tweaking the reinstall and debating if I should try to update Parallels to 17 again??? Gulp.

In all of God’s magnificent creation, mankind is unique #TBT

Posted By on June 9, 2022

Voyager1LookingBackatEarthThere are days we humans need to be reminded that we are small in relation to the universe, but unique (Genesis 1:27) and loved (John 3:16) in relation to God’s magnificent creation.

TIDBITS:

Voyager 1 continues into heading into our outer solar system as the space probe continues to communicate with the Deep Space Network and transmits back to Earth (to make this post a Throwback Thursday #TBT post, it was launched when I moved into Founder’s Hall at Ohio Northern University back on September 5th 1977).

Here’s a photo “of Earth” … and according to NASA and JPL it is currently 14.5 Billion miles away. It is the “most distant artificial object from Earth.”  Amazing.

In a further testament to the robustness of Voyager 1, the Voyager team tested the spacecraft’s trajectory correction maneuver (TCM) thrusters in late 2017 (the first time these thrusters had been fired since 1980), a project enabling the mission to be extended by two to three years. Voyager 1‘s extended mission is expected to continue until about 2025, when its radioisotope thermoelectric generators (RTGs) will no longer supply enough electric power to operate its scientific instruments.

LINK

EDIT: From recent ScienceAlert feed

NASA’s Voyager 1 Is Sending Back Mysterious Data From Beyond Our Solar System

NASA’s Voyager 1 is continuing its journey beyond our Solar System, 45 years after it was launched. But now the veteran spacecraft is sending back strange data, puzzling its engineers.

NASA said on Wednesday that while the probe is still operating properly, readouts from its attitude articulation and control system – AACS for short – don’t seem to match the spacecraft’s movements and orientation, suggesting the craft is confused about its location in space.

The AACS is essential for Voyager to send NASA data about its surrounding interstellar environment as it keeps the craft’s antenna pointing right at our planet.

“A mystery like this is sort of par for the course at this stage of the Voyager mission,” Suzanne Dodd, a project manager for Voyager 1 and 2 at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in a statement.

“The spacecraft are both almost 45 years old, which is far beyond what the mission planners anticipated.” (more…)

Audiobook: “Land Of Big Numbers” by WSJ’s Te-Ping Chen

Posted By on June 8, 2022

LandOfBigNumbersAudioBookTe-Ping_ChenIn keeping with a previous book, I downloaded another book: “Land Of Big Numbers” by Te-Ping Chen. It is a collection of stories … on the “diverse and legion Chinese people” and according to a review, this book offers an “acute social insight” on Chinese history, their government, “and how all of that tumbled—messy, violently, but still beautifully—into the present.”

Currently, I’ve only listened up to track 4 of 13 of the “Lulu” story published in the The New Yorker and record for this HarperAudio book. The reader Eddy Lee does a great job of reading and it is interesting contemplating all the young Chinese people trying to circumvent China’s censors … and risking their future by resisting the CCP.

  “Land of Big Numbers” – 2 min 30 sec –> “Lulu taken by CCP”

I’ll keep listening and am looking forward to the stories from Fiona Rene, Matt Yang King, Christine Lakin, Katie Tang, Chris Naoki Lee.

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Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
My Desultory Blog