Trampoline injuries Rising
From the “duh” file…

Date posted: May 15, 2005 | Filed under humor, shortlinks | Comments Off on Trampoline Injuries on the rise

I don’t think I’ve talked too much here or elsewhere about my Dad’s reposession agency. Back in 1984, my Dad decided to leave the rat race and purchase his own business. After a bunch of research, he found the most unlikely of ventures in the most unlikely of places: an established reposession agency based in a sleepy town north of New York City. I’ll have to go into some of the stories of culture shock at a different time, but this was a huge leap of faith for the whole family. We moved into a prewar house on the side of a mountain, surrounded by forest, and facing a fenced impound lot. When I say fenced, I mean chain-link fence topped with barbed wire and floodlights. The house was decent, if you count the inground pool, jacuzzi, and huge living room; it sucked for me because I lived in a tiny unheated room in the middle of nowhere with no car.

Having no car wasn’t an issue until I turned sixteen, because I wasn’t driving anyplace anyway. The bus sucked ass, but I knew my parents were too busy to be carting me all over creation. Besides, I got to drive cars all the time. I had a built-in job helping the yardman start, move, release, and fix the cars in the lot. How many people do you know who were driving Porsches at fifteen? I could parallel park a standard-shift car two years before the driving test. (I got pretty good at picking car locks, too, but that’s another story.) Besides working for my Dad, blowing shit up and exploring the local woods were pretty much all I did in the 9th grade.

By the 10th grade, though, life was getting pretty hellish. The local asshats were making bus rides a nightmare (it’s difficult to stand up to four guys who each outweigh you by 100lbs) and I was getting involved in school activities which meant I was staying after a lot.

Now, my best friend S. was taking a driving course at the Boces which meant he didn’t need a learning permit after taking the test like all the rest of us pukes. He also came from a large family which demanded a part-time chauffeur, something that was difficult for his parents, who worked all the time. They decided that he could help out and be the chauffeur, so they bought him a car. Not just any car, but a used 1970-something Cadillac Coupe De Ville. It was the ugliest car on the road, which is probably why it was affordable. It was also huge. Each door weighed about 500 pounds. The rear bench seat was half a mile wide, upholstered in a lovely shade of blue vinyl. (The car had once been baby blue, but someone had painted it rattle-can gray in the early eighties, and the paint cracked, so it looked like cat puke on a blue rug.)

Now, bear with me here. We spent a lot of summer days at the Dugan house, because of the pool. We also had a fully-stocked garage with lots of outlandish and exotic tools. One day S. came by with the Caddy and asked if I could help him replace the original AM radio with a new cassette deck. No problem, I said. This shouldn’t take more than an hour or two, and then we can swim for a while. We grabbed some pliers and screwdrivers, turned on the radio in the garage, and got to work taking apart the dashboard of his car.

Three hours later, cursing, sweating, and covered in twenty-year-old dust, we still hadn’t budged the thing. We had disassembled half the dashboard, laid it all out in neat sections on the driveway, and still couldn’t figure out how the engineers in Detroit had designed this car. It sounds like we were both idiots as far as mechanical engineers are concerned, but don’t let this story fool you: I had been taking apart and fixing things like radios, engines, and tools for years. S. also had natural skill in taking stuff apart—we weren’t just a pair of monkeys banging on suitcases out there.

For awhile it looked like we were going to have to remove the windshield to get at the back of the radio (I’m not kidding here. There was a flap of metal that curved up and over the back of the glass and down below the back of the thing) but we realized that there was another way. After taking apart most of the AC ducting under the dash, we had enough room to get at it, or at least, see the bottom of it, and we realized we had a problem: the damn thing was huge. I mean, the size of a toaster oven huge. The hole we had was about half the size, and there was no real evident way how to get it out of there.

At this point, S. had had enough of this shit, and just wanted to get the damn thing out of the car. We switched from finesse to brute strength, trading screwdrivers for chisels and hammers. Fifteen minutes later, we had a big enough hole carved out of non load-bearing metal to yank the bottom of the radio down toward the floorboards. When it finally came out, in a cloud of dust and old cigarette butts, we breathed a sigh of relief. It was then that we realized just what a bastard this thing was: it weighed about fifteen pounds, and it looked like a piece of discarded Soviet military equipment. But the corker was that it had one thick wire hanging off the back, which lead to a complicated, ancient plastic harness with no diagram. This meant bad news. This meant there would be no new radio in the Cadillac.

This radio had to die.

But how to do it? How to properly dispose of this foul, ancient, cursed beast?

It turned out that the answer was right over our heads.

At some point, when my mother’s back was obviously turned, S. and I found that we could easily climb onto the roof of the garage. From there, it was a simple matter of time before we started jumping from the roof of the garage, over four feet of solid concrete, and into the deep end of the pool. (The garage was separated from the house by the pool, and was built to withstand hurricanes. It had a two-story peak and a slope gentle enough to scale.) In a good clip, it was a one-minute circuit around the back of the garage, onto the roof, and into the water. We decided we would use this ninja skill for purposes of evil. S. backed the Cadillac up twenty feet (after filling the trunk with the assorted debris from the dashboard-half of it would remain there until the car was officially retired) and we climbed onto the roof of the garage and met at the peak. S. said a few words, which have now been lost to the ages, and lofted the radio up into the afternoon sunshine.

It came down onto the pavement with a dull thud, bounced, and came to a stop. There was no evident damage. I climbed down to retrieve it, handed it back up to him, and he threw it again. This cycle repeated at least five or six times, until one of the corners began to give way. Then, it seemed like the thing just flew apart. In a cloud of electrical components, metal, and plastic, the radio exploded, and we cheered heartily at the death of the beast.

Before retiring to the pool, we examined the lump of metal that had once been a radio. Tubes and wires stuck out the side, and little sheets of metal fell from the back plate. We realized we were standing in a circle of these things, and I bent to pick one up. It was flat, and shaped like an uppercase “E”. There were hundreds of them on the ground. It took us another half an hour to police all of the damn things up.

S. finally did put his stereo in that Caddy, hanging out of the cavernous hole left by the Beast, and it stayed with the car until its retirement. We never did figure out what the ‘E’s were for, but when I take the Jeep radio, which has begun to fail on me more and more, and throw it off the roof of our house onto the pavement, I’m going to be looking for those goddamn ‘E’s.

Date posted: May 12, 2005 | Filed under history, life | 5 Comments »

This morning I made myself late to work. I threw my stuff in the Jeep, kissed my wife goodbye, and walked around the back of the house to water our fledgling vegetable garden. Along the way, I had to replant several gladiola bulbs in their pots, due to our local squirrels digging for treasure, and carry the pots into the greenhouse for safekeeping. The vegetables all look healthy and good so far. Two eggplants have recovered from their move—I thought I was going to lose one for a day or so, but it perked right back up yesterday. The tomatoes all look healthy and happy. (Strangely, one variety recommends “damp soil” and the other asks for “daily watering”.) The red and green peppers are both looking strong.

Oddly enough, though, the thing that makes me happiest is that the cucumbers, which I planted from seed, are germinating well. I use a watering can to reach the back of the greenhouse, and the first slug of water washed the soil off the top of one of the hills I made. Tucked in together were five or six seeds, all sprouting sucessfully. I covered them back up and watered the rest of the plot, thinking about home-grown tomato and cucumber salad for dinner in August.

Next up is to get another plastic tub like the one I have (I’m using one of those under-the-bed storage containers drilled with drainage holes) and plant my pole beans.

* * *

In other geek news, I converted one of the interior pages on my main site to a mixture of about 75% CSS and 25% old-skool table-based layout. This has been something that’s brewing for a long time, and I’m pretty happy with the results. When all is said and done, the page size will have decreased by about half, the style sheets will be consolidated, and the information will be updated (I only go up to 2003 on the design page—har har) Unfortunately it blows up in IE6. There’s also an issue with Mozilla and my popup script that I haven’t deciphered yet, and some other niggling issues to be addressed. But the heavy lifting has been done, thank God.

Date posted: May 11, 2005 | Filed under garden, geek, greenhouse | 1 Comment »

Eye Color Calculator
According to this, we’ll have kids with blue or green eyes. (Hazel is not accommodated.)

Date posted: May 11, 2005 | Filed under humor, shortlinks | Comments Off on Eye Color Calculator.

The other day, I checked my account balance online only to find the same seventeen dollars that was present the day before. We’re supposed to get this righteous tax refund check, you see, and then we’re going to turn around and give that money to a company with great big sanding machines, and they’re going to do some sanding-fu on our floors and then stain them and finally polyurethane, and we’ll all be happy. Unfortunately, yesterday the Gubmint decided to deposit the money into Jen’s account, so I was waiting in vain.

Regardless, the money has arrived, and if we can manage not to blow anything up or spend it on anything stupid, the flooring company is going to come out and make our house pretty.

Which means Project Bedroom is on indefinite hold and Project Remove Kitchen Linoleum has moved to the head of the schedule (but not before Operation Restore Shade Garden has been sucessfully completed this weekend.)

Words cannot describe how excited Jen and I are for this.

Date posted: May 10, 2005 | Filed under house | Comments Off on The Great Leap Forward.

Unrealid.com
National ID’s are another step towards fascism. Take action now.

Date posted: May 9, 2005 | Filed under politics, shortlinks | Comments Off on Fax Your Senator

So this weekend, I was that guy on the beltway doing 45mph, hazards flashing, with a mattress billowing off the roof like a sail, trying to get it from Point A to Point B. Point B, for us, was IKEA, a full 30 miles or so away from our front porch—Point A. We decided a few weeks ago that the mattress was not for us, and moved it out there for eventual removal. Our 45-day window was rapidly approaching, and Saturday was the first weekend without rain since the beginning of April, so we lashed it to the roof of the Jeep, said a prayer, and set out for the Great Swedish Home Furnishing Wonderland.

Our bondage skills served us well until about halfway, at which point the front of the mattress had lifted six inches off the top of the roof rack and threatened to achieve liftoff. (This was after several hundred cars had passed us, passengers staring with Great Googly-Moogly Eyes at the pterodactyl strapped to our heads.) We pulled over, cinched that mutha down TIGHT, and limped to the IKEA parking lot, holding our breath.

I had been expecting problems trying to return the mattress (they have a no-returns-on-bedding policy, which is code for “no human soil”) as well as the transport problems, but the guy at the counter didn’t blink an eye, counting off the full purchase price in cash and sending me on my way in less than two minutes.

*WHEW*. I don’t know what I’m more relieved about—getting our money back, or simply getting the damn thing there without causing a major traffic accident.

This weekend was also the Maryland Film Festival, a home-brewed Mobtown version of Sundance. Every year they put up flyers and make announcements and we say we’re going to go be Supporters Of The Arts and we never do. Our good friend Sara has been volunteering at the festival for at least the last couple of years, and inviting us to come along with her; this year Jen decided she was actually doing it.

One of this year’s features that caught her eye was a documentary called We Are Arabbers. Arabbers are the fellows who lead a horse-drawn cart around the streets of Baltimore, filled with fresh produce, and sell door to door. At one time there used to be hundreds of them, but in recent years their ranks have dwindled to the single digits. (When I lived on Lakewood Avenue, there was an arabber who would walk our street and yell some kind of unintelligible song about what was on the cart. Because I usually don’t carry cash, I was always unable to buy anything, and I felt bad about that. The visits were infrequent and unpredictable, and apart from one experience, I wasn’t able to take advantage of it.) Aging, a city government that values chain restaurants over its blue-collar history, and pressure from big-box grocery stores have all contributed to the slow demise of the occupation.

The documentary, started sometime seven years ago, is a fascinating look into the history and current state of arabbing (pronounced A-rabbing) through interviews with the remaining men who worked the streets. It’s a fascinating story, and part from some sound and picture quality issues, an excellent film.

After the movie, Sara joined us for some tapas and a cocktail next door. She was leaving to see another film at 7, so we decided to head up the street to the lounge at the Brewer’s Art and have another cocktail on one of the couches. After our first round, when we had put our feet up on the table, smooshed back into the couch, and gotten comfortable by ourselves, we were approached by a well-dressed woman roughly ten years older than us, who asked if we had just begun dating. We held up our wedding rings with puzzled looks. She apologized and asked if she could have the other three people in her group join us on the other empty chairs around the table, explaining that she didn’t want to spoil the quiet mood for us if we were just getting to know one another. We were a little taken aback but also flattered that she bothered to ask, and we offered the extra seats.

It turned out they were two older couples (I’d guess mid-40’s and mid-50’s), well dressed, and obviously looking to unwind a little bit. The six of us easily struck up conversations, and we sat through three more rounds talking about ‘adult’ stuff like favorite restaurants and wine. It turned out they were couples related by marriage, and they were obviously of a social class several floors higher than our own—I would guess either couple could have written a check for our entire net worth without blinking an eye. The fact that we own a house in Catonsville was in our favor, though; luckily, they don’t know how much of a dump it is. Still, they all had a certain Southern graciousness that made the evening interesting and fun—we were invited for cocktails and dessert with them over at the Owl Bar, but had to torpedo that plan when their staff told us the kitchen was closed.

Returning to Catonsville, we realized we were very hungry, so we made a 1AM detour to the Double T Diner, joining the after-prom crowd for breakfast. It reminded me of the days in high school when the Olympic Diner was the only thing in my town to do after midnight; we’d jam six people in a booth and drink coffee until we ran out of money, watching people we knew come and go.

All in all, it was an invigorating, cosmopolitan evening—something Jen and I have been sorely missing in the last six months, and something I’d like to get into the habit of doing more often.

* * *

Yesterday, after dealing with the hangover (you drink vodka tonics for six hours straight and see how your head feels the next morning) I was consumed with yardwork: planting our vegetables and setting up the tables for optimum irrigation (four tomato plants plus three seedlings, two eggplant, two red peppers, two green peppers, and a tray of cucumber I’m hoping to start from seed), nuking the poison ivy, mowing, seeding two bald patches on the lawn, finishing the predrilling in the upstairs bedroom, and starting an illustration for a friend.

Date posted: May 9, 2005 | Filed under general | 2 Comments »

Don’t bother coming to me for sunshine and flowers today. Have a good weekend.

Date posted: May 6, 2005 | Filed under life | 1 Comment »

What’s The Matter With Liberals?
Great reading from the NY Review of Books.

Date posted: May 6, 2005 | Filed under politics, shortlinks | Comments Off on What’s The Matter With Liberals?

Vietnam Primer
Lessons learned, c. 1966, or, how not to fight a war. RIP D. Hackworth.

Date posted: May 6, 2005 | Filed under other, shortlinks | Comments Off on Vietnam Primer