A recent trip through Alamosa reminded me that I'd never written about
my trip to see the gators. High time!
As you drive up Colorado highway 17 north of Alamosa, you pass a
series of old, faded, hand-painted signs saying things like
"Alligators? In Colorado?" and "COLORADO GATORS Discount Tickets sold HERE!"
I'd seen them for years, and chuckled a little but didn't ever give them much thought.
The desert is full of signs for roadside attractions that were
abandoned fifty years ago.
But five or six years ago, someone told me
that Colorado Gators actually was quite an interesting place, too bad it had
recently closed. Darnit — why couldn't someone have told me that
before it closed? Oh, well.
Then last year, we were heading up 17 on our way to visit the
relatives, and I couldn't help noticing that there were really quite
a lot of signs for an attraction that was supposedly gone.
And some of the signs looked fairly new. We had some time to spare, so we
took the detour and found Colorado Gators still very much open for business.
I was talking to a friend about LANL's proposed new powerline.
A lot of people are opposing it because
the line would run through the Caja del Rio, an open-space
piñon-juniper area adjacent to Santa Fe which is owned by the
US Forest Service.
The proposed powerline would run from the Caja across the Rio Grande to the Lab.
It would carry not just power but also a broadband fiber line, something
Los Alamos town, if not the Lab, needs badly.
On the other hand, those opposed worry about
road-building and habitat destruction in the Caja.
I'm always puzzled reading accounts of the debate. There already is a
powerline running through the Caja and across the Rio via Powerline Point.
The discussions never say (a) whether the proposed
line would take a different route, and if so, (b) Why? why can't they
just tack on some more lines to the towers along the existing route?
For instance, in the slides from one of the public meetings, the
map
on slide 9
not only doesn't show the existing powerline, but also
uses a basemap that has no borders and NO ROADS. Why would you use a
map that doesn't show roads unless you're deliberately trying to
confuse people?
My Miata blew a radiator hose and dumped out all its coolant,
so I needed to do a radiator flush and fill.
Turns out that's kind of a nasty job on an NB (second-gen) Miata.
The radiator drain plug is accessed through a hole in the tray under
the engine. Once you get it loose enough that coolant has started to
drip out, if the screwdriver slips, it's impossible to get it back on
without getting coolant all over the screwdriver, flashlight, your
arm, your face and hair, etc. And once you do manage to loosen it
enough, it pops out,
sending coolant gushing everywhere onto the engine undertray,
from which it comes out the back and sides and it's impossible to
catch it all in a drain pan.
So that left me with quite a mess to clean up afterward. I started by
pouring the used coolant into a container with a secure cap: I've
always heard warnings about how kids and pets will try to drink
the poisonous stuff because it tastes and smells sweet.
We don't have kids or pets, but there are plenty of wild critters
and we want them to stay healthy too.
Can you follow Lower Water Canyon (in the DOE open space lands south of
White Rock, NM) all the way to the Rio Grande?
In the decade we've lived here, we've heard that question and
asked it ourselves, and have heard a few anecdotal reports.
You can follow it down most of the way, but there's a pour-off near
the end that you won't want to do without a rope. Or there was a
pour-off fifteen years ago that wasn't that big a deal, but it's
changed since then and isn't passable now.
Or ... well, anyway, the story kept changing
depending on who we asked, and nobody seemed to have tried it in many years.
Now I've done it. It's a beautiful hike, and right now there's
an abundance of wildflowers in bloom along the canyon.
On a mountain bike ride on the White Rock Canyon Rim trail yesterday,
we stopped at one of the overlooks to admire the view, and turned to
see three bighorn sheep crossing the trail behind us.
I stumbled onto the page for this year's Asimov's Magazine
Readers'
Award Finalists. They offer all the stories right there --
but only as PDF. I prefer reading fiction on my ebook reader (a Kobo
Clara with 6" screen), away from the computer. I spend too much time
sitting at the computer as it is. But trying to read a PDF on a 6" screen
is just painful.
The open-source ebook program Calibre has a command-line program called
ebook-convert that can convert some PDF to epub. It did an
okay job in this case — except that the PDFs had the wrong
author name (they all have the same author, so I'm guessing it's the
name of the person who prepared the PDFs for Asimov's), and the wrong
title information (or maybe just no title), and ebook-convert
compounded that error by generating cover images for each work that had
the wrong title and author.
I went through the files and fixed each one's title and author metadata
using my
epubtag.py
Python script. But what about the cover images? I wasn't eager to spend
the time GIMPing up a cover image by hand for each of the stories.
My new binocular came! And something curious came with them:
a "tactical pen".
It seems to be quite a nice gel pen, with an aluminum body and a
locking retractor. But the "tactical" part is less clear.
Me
What makes it tactical?
Dave
Maybe that it's black?
Me
Tactical is the new black?
And of course, my mind couldn't help wandering off to explore what might
make the difference between a tactical pen and a strategic pen.
Maybe something about how long the ink reserve lasts?
Or how long it takes to click the clicky retractor thing?
Oh, well, it was free when buying the binocular from B&H,
and it really is a pretty nice pen.