Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Vacation time...

Left on a short vacation last week, Thursday through Sunday, just to get some R&R before the new semester starts.

We went to a wonderful state park in West Virginia called Pipestem. The first night we spent camping, then the next two nights in a lodge at the bottom of a river canyon - the only access to the lodge was via an aerial tram (imported from Switzerland apparently). Photos of course can be found in the gallery.

It all started with us arriving at the last minute thursday night, just barely getting into the park before the gates were closed. We set up camp, built a nice campfire, and had a couple beers before it started raining and we retired to the tent. Next morning the rain stopped long enough for us to cook up a nice breakfast and break camp, but then it rained like cats and dogs.

We explored the park, went down to our room at the lodge, and went on a rainy 3-mile hike. those who know me will be surprised to hear I actually had a great time walking in the rain (my head was covered though!) When we got back to the lodge, we cleaned up and went down to the extra-fancy restaurant and ate a great meal, probably took us two hours, watching the storm out the window the whole time.

Next day was better weather and we went horseback riding for an hour, and there was also time for a golf lesson, and we cooked out in front of our room some tacos on my MSR stove...

Sunday we played the par-3 course before heading back home. Great time.

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

2006 EMS Memorial Bike Ride


Back in May, I participated in the 2006 EMS Memorial Bike Ride. This ride consists of EMS professionals and volunteers riding six hundred miles in six days from New York City to Roanoke, Virginia. The ride concluded as part of the annual EMS Memorial events. The participants ride in honor of the memories of EMS workers that have lost their lives while serving the public.

Alison and I joined the ride in Woodstock, VA. I rode the next day from Woodstock down to Staunton, and then again the day after that to the conclusion in Roanoke. Except for some rain the first morning, the weather was nice and we had a great experience.

A few photos, mostly of us, are uploaded to the photo gallery.

Thursday, June 22, 2006

PMKP Weekend


Well, obviously been awhile since the last post. Went caving down at PMKP last weekend though and took a few photos, available in the gallery.

I enjoyed the caving and a weekend with my girlfriend "away-from-things". I'm not sure she was very happy I drove her car far, far further up a 4-wheel drive trail to camp than it should have gone, smoking the clutch and spitting gravel most of the way. But it DID make it which was very impressive, and no serious damage appeared to have been done.

The black widow here was found on our tent when we were packing up at the end of the trip - everyone wanted to kill it but me. I let it live since it posed so nicely for the photo...

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Politics

This morning (5/11/2006) in the USA Today, I read an article with the headline, “NSA has massive database of Americans' phone calls”. The article was by Leslie Cauley, and appeared in the on-line version of the publication. According to the article, the NSA has been secretly collecting the phone call records of tens of millions of Americans, using data provided by AT&T, Verizon and BellSouth. There is no warrant for specific records, and according to the article most records are from customers that are not suspected of any crime.

I remember reading that President Bush had authorized the NSA to eavesdrop sans warrants on international calls, but according to the article the NSA has actually been given access to “records of billions of domestic calls.” The article states that customers names and other information are not associated with the data the NSA is collecting, but anyone with a clue knows that connecting a person’s name with a known phone number is usually easy; I would expect something like that to be trivial for an agency such as the NSA. I don’t believe the government should be spying on it’s own citizens, and unless I am specifically under court-ordered investigation for a crime, I don’t believe the government has any business investigating with whom I speak on the phone.

While this letter is triggered by the specific actions of the NSA mentioned in the article today, the problem is much deeper than just that single issue. We constantly tell other countries they need to embrace democracy and freedom and improve the civil rights of their citizens. I guess it’s do as we say, not as we do, eh? Almost every day on the news there another invasion on my privacy. Another civil liberty trounced. No fly lists. Government ID. Prisoners held by us indefinitely without charges. Dispensing with Geneva conventions. After seeing all these things, I find it difficult to believe that the leaders in Washington represent the will of the people. How many people, if asked, would agree to let the government track every call they make without a court order or suspicion of wrong-doing? Hold a man with no hearing or charges for years? Use torture in an interrogation? With no public check or balance? The answer is almost no one until someone makes up some mumbo-jumbo BS about fighting terror to scare them into giving up the basic right not to live in a police state.

I hate to risk invoking Godwin's Law with this letter, but where is the line between patriotism and fascism? The parallels between current events in the US and WWII Germany are striking: War launched on false or misleading pretense, control of popular feelings through fear of outsiders, religious intolerance and fundamentalism partly cloaked in us-vs-them patriotism that allows a self-righteous leader new levels of un-balanced control, meticulous and copious secret government records including serious domestic spying – I don’t need any tin-foil-hat conspiracy theories to make this frightening list because the topics are in the headlines every day.

We almost impeached our last president for what (after Kenneth Starr spent about $45 million investigating) turned out to be basically poor choices in his personal life. Why can we do nothing when the very most basic values of the country are under siege from our own government - when the leader brazenly ignores law, science, reason, and good judgment to treat us like fools. But we are not all fools. There are no weapons of mass destruction. The mission is not accomplished. We are not better off today than we were in 2001. Two-thousand-four-hundred-and-counting dead serviceman in Iraq later, we are not safer today than we were then: real bad men like Osama Bin Laden are still out there (despite the fact that the TSA took my toenail clippers on the way through Atlanta).

So for the record, I don’t want to give up anymore of the rights and freedoms that make living in a “free” country worthwhile. I would rather fight terrorism by accepting the risk, whatever it truly is, of being killed or injured by a terrorist. I would rather fight terrorism by using our wealth and prosperity to rebuild, better than before, the things terrorists destroy. I would rather fight terrorism by reaching out with non-intrusive diplomacy to countries and cultures not like our own, and finding some common ground to base a peaceful co-existence upon. You cannot pick and win fights with everyone you disagree with – most of us learned this basic fact in kindergarten.

I believe that we, the people, can be strong in the face of the enemy. Someone please help us take rational precautions against attacks without resorting to stoking our most irrational fears into a cowardly retreat from our basic principles.


Monday, April 10, 2006

We're in!

Last weekend we dug sat and sunday. Saturday we got right up to the point at the beginning of the photo series, where Ray is wedged into a crack. We can't quite turn the corner but for the first time there is a nice echo on the other side...

Sunday we return and dig all day, just get get around the corner. Wells, Philip, Justin, and Sarah slip thru the pinch - booming passage on the other side (sort-of) WE'RE IN! However, when K-Rock decides he'd like to come through the pinch, the big rock on the top of the pinch falls down about a foot and nearly kills him, luckily wedging where seen in the photo. However, the pinch is now really small and full of some debris from the collapse. Wells etc. dig awhile from inside to get the pinch open enough to try and get out. With help from others outside the pinch pulling on them and their clothes, they make it out. No further incident.

This weekend we go back - Wells and I armed with two different drills (battery and gas), a bag with serious supplies, hammers, crowbar, several days supply of food etc. and go back through the tiny, collapsed pinch again. It was not fun for me at all, but we made it back inside. We then bring the whole thing down and seal us inside. Then we dug it out, dropped it again, dug it out, dropped it again, and dug it out one last time until all the breakdown above the pinch was gone, and the passage wide enough to pass a bucket through.

Now it's a superhighway :) Survey starts next weekend!

Monday, March 27, 2006

Another day at the mine...

Spent another weekend working in Williams. Going is getting tougher; we didn't break out into any free passage on Saturday so every foot had to be earned the hard way.

Saturday turnout was good, we had enough people to completely empty the spoils from the entire previous weekend and two evenings during the week - created enough space within the cave to work with a smaller crew Sunday, before another big gang is required to haul again.

Photos in the gallery...

Sunday's 4-person crew refilled a good portion of the passage while making another 5-6 feet of progress. So it's still a mine.

Monday, March 20, 2006

Extrication Class

Yes, I look like a total geek. What can I say? I took a class last week where we learned to rescue people trapped in a vehicle accident. Basically we cut up cars.

One of the cars available was Joan and Ko's old Mazda. Although I didn't get to do it, the ensuing class did a simulation and they did use it - so the Mazda is no more.

See photos of the remains here.

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Big turnout at Williams

At least 9 people helped dig again on Saturday. Although about 15 feet of prgress was made, a lot of rock still needs to be hauled, and the hauling is people-intensive. See the gallery for a few more shots of the dig. The ongoing crevice still draws a lot of air, but isn't very big. Breakthrough appears to still be at least a trip or two away...

Thursday, March 02, 2006

Photo gallery options...

Here is an alternative Williams Dig gallery - Flickr only allows three galleries for free, and it's hard to host small web images, so the GreatJournal site might be a better long-term solution to hosting sets of photos.

The interface at GreatJournal isn't as nice as Flickr though - you can't change the order of photos in the gallery being the worst problem. Photos are listed in the order they're uploaded, and that is that.

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Digging at Williams

Here's an appropriate miner-looking photo of K-Rock with the Ryobi. Check out the Williams Dig gallery for more photos.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

First post


Well, it's now official. I have a blog. Welcome, and enjoy whatever it is that brought you here.

If you found this by accident, you probably don't know who I am. That is fine, I don't know you either. Go away.