Blood Moon, Lunar Eclipse and our new Half-Moon Window

Posted By on May 25, 2021

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The final new “half-moon” window was installed on Monday this week with the proper wagon-wheel spokes (photo below) .. which coincides Superbloodmoonwith this week’s  “Super Moon.” What makes this one somewhat unique is that there will also be a lunar eclipse where the earth shadows the moon. A total lunar eclipse completely blocks the moon, but a partial shadowed moon takes on a red tint that we refer to as blood moons. This time the eclipse coinciding with the closest approach to the Earth during it’s orbit (the moon’s orbit is not perfectly circular), so as to make the moon appear bigger and brighter. The close point in the orbit is called the “perigee” and is about 28,000 miles closer than the farthest point, which is called the “apogee.”

So if the sky is clear, be sure to be out looking at the nighttime sky for a partial lunar eclipse on May 26 … early in the morning like 5 – 6:30AM EST in the Ohio areas!

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Washing cars, opening the pool before a surprise trip to Toledo

Posted By on May 25, 2021

CleaningOpeningPool2021This past weekend was a busy weekend and won’t likely let up for a little while – full schedule … and I’m not even really back to traveling for work!

It started with getting the mowing finished up on Friday night so that I could spend time on getting the initial pool cleaning and pump running. It is never a speedy process to get the dirt and worms out of the bottom of the pool. This year … as in the past few … we’ve lost a few more “aging” waterline tiles again. We no longer have replacements and will need to figure out what to do going forward. Nevertheless, the pump is running, I planted Brenda’s Mother’s Day rose bush from Taylor and washed the cars … including the Packard and covering it.

The weekend seems a bit shorter since Drew planned a Sunday surprise belated 35th birthday party for Katelyn! (photos and post archived shortly .. I’m still sifting through the photos … so Saturday photos only below)

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A few more photos below the break while cleaning the cars … primarily the Packard Hawk with the hub caps still in the trunk. I need to replace the master cylinder, lines and decide how I’m going to fix the brakes: Do I replace stock, upgrade to disc (not as simple as it seems) or rebuild like I did for the Mercedes?

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Music Monday: “Signs” by Five Man Electric Band (1971)

Posted By on May 24, 2021

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Hm, where did I park that VeeDub Beetle again? #humor

Posted By on May 23, 2021

Audio book from WSJ+: “All Against All” by Paul Jankowski

Posted By on May 22, 2021

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Audiobooks and eBooks are some of the perks that come with being a long time Wall Street Journal subscriber. This WSJ+ membership includes early AllAgainstAll_TableofContentspre-production copies and likely word-of-mouth publicity marketing associated with giving away free “controlled” copies of books. I say controlled because readers do not really own the books, but are granted the rights to read the books with an app.

Initially it was the BookShout app but a year or so ago the service switched to the Glose reader app. I don’t recall if BookShout offered the audiobooks, but that has been one nice feature in Glose – a few more audio titles are being offered.

This month I downloaded and started Paul Jankowski’s book “All Against All” in audio on Glose and found the events in the winter of 1933 and what some might concluded to be slightly biased comparison to western democracies today to be at least intriguing. Personally, I would prefer a “just the facts” approach to the in-depth study of history, but it is the author’s book, so he can come to whatever comparisons or conclusion he might like? For now, listening to the book is just another way of rounding out the variety of different political voices so as not to only hear one point of view.

A narrative history, cinematic in scope, of a process that was taking shape in the winter of 1933 as domestic passions around the world colluded to drive governments towards a war few of them wanted and none of them could control.

All Against All is the story of the season our world changed from postwar to prewar again. It is a book about the power of bad ideas—exploring why, during a single winter, between November 1932 and April 1933, so much went so wrong. Historian Paul Jankowski reveals that it was collective mentalities and popular beliefs that drove this crucial period that sent nations on the path to war, as much as any rational calculus called "national interest."

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Tech Friday: Check the password scheme you are using

Posted By on May 21, 2021

It is easy to get complacent in securing your online and computer lives, so use last weeks Colonial Pipeline cyberattack and the Statista image of “The Most Popular Passwords Around the World” as a reminder. Longer nonsensical combinations of characters help, but two-factor authentication when available is better. Oh, and stop using the same password or combinations for everything.

Perhaps you need an encrypted password manager?

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Toyota 4Runners: Remembering a couple favorite vehicles #TBT

Posted By on May 20, 2021

Car clubs and automotive aficionados have been getting together for years to talk about their vehicles with like minded folks. For my dad it was his local “in-person” Vint Car Club, car shows and museums. For me it started as just a couple friends working on restorations or rebuildable salvaged junkyard cars … then evolved to online TDIClub Volkswagen forum and daily check-ins when the Internet came along … those were my VW TDI years … and of course thinking about cars I’ve owned works for a Throwback Thursday #TBT post this week. 😉

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Nowadays its social media and spare time talking back and forth with like-minded guys (wasting time) when sharing most anything with wheels. I have to admit, it is one of the things that keeps me using Twitter

I particularly enjoy the discussions and photos of the more mundane daily drivers many of us grew up with … either cars our Wike4RunnerSalesChartparents owned or ones that we ended up with … sometimes the faux-woody station wagons. Photos of those from “car-spotting” submissions still makes me smile – I owned 2 of them: a 1978 Chevrolet Caprice Classic Estate wagon and a 1987 Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser.

That brings me to a couple of my favorite cars from the 1990s. The Toyota 4Runner came up in a discussion as one of the vehicles that grew the popularity of the SUV.  I owned two Toyota 4Runners and they are still near the top of my favorites list when thinking about cars I’ve owned (I do need to complete that list someday). 1994Toyota4RunnerinDelrayBeachFL1995What was particularly interesting was a graph showing the 4Runner and US sales throughout the years.

My first one, which was probably still my favorite, was a 1994 and had cloth seats, a tailgate with power window like my old station wagons and a 5-speed manual transmission. It was unfortunately under powered having a 4-cylinder and had very little rear seat legroom. Thankfully Taylor and Katelyn were still small.

Toyota4Runner94_k_t_heather_hikingThe second was a bit more deluxe. It was a black 1996 which was a little bigger and had more rear seat room and a leather interior. It also had more power with a 6-cylinder engine but still the “fun to drive” manual transmission. Unfortunately it gave up the functionality of a tailgate as they switched to the now normal rear hatch. Still it was a great vehicle, but it is hard to believe that I don’t have a photo of it … but did spot a photo of the car we traded it in for … Brenda’s “nearly forever” Rav4 (first photo).

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Thoughts on better sun protection with a better slim brim hat

Posted By on May 19, 2021

Like a lot of middle-aged Americans from the baby boomer generation (FYI, I”m at the tail end), I’ve spent way too many years unprotected in the sun. Although I haven’t gone out of my way to get that “healthy tan” (cough, cough) SheltaOspreyWindSunhatas we used to say in the old days, I’ve still ended up exposing my skin and eyes to the sun’s radiation. Hopefully, the generations that follow will be smarter about putting on SPF, wearing protective clothing, eye protection and a hat for their head.

The above commentary aside, I have almost always worn a ball cap when outside in the sun, but the older I get the more I think about something with a wider brim like my sailing sun hat. Unfortunately with its wider brim, flat and slightly floppy brim, it doesn’t stay on my head like a cheap lightweight ball cap. So I’m pondering this modified Shelta Osprey sun hat which in addition to my recent after-shave SPF creme (my dermatologist recommended), might be the ideal in-between? It offers enough brim to protect the ears and “maybe” back of the neck, yet is said to stay on the head with a “Winged Vision Visor” even in the wind. Hm … I only wish it were not $70 … but something I’m thinking about before the harsh rays of summer. (see Shelta sun hats)

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Archive: Family photos from Katelyn’s birthday weekend

Posted By on May 18, 2021

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Music Monday: Mercy Me and their “Say I Won’t” music video

Posted By on May 17, 2021

My Desultory Blog‘s Music Monday does not include enough music from the Christian music genre and after hearing the story of Gary Miracle last weekend, I had to include Mercy Me‘s “Say I Won’t.”

 

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