Archive for May, 2007

Back With A Vengence

I wanted to return to my normal life relaxed and happy. Instead I returned to a home which lacks air conditioning, a bike rack situation that needs to be corrected, finding out that the computer memory I ordered last week was back-ordered (funny, it was supposedly in stock when I placed the order), and when I cranked up my iBook last night there a was narrow solid red line which ran vertically down the right hand side of the screen an inch in from the edge.

I tried rebooting the computer, in hopes that it was a software glitch, but no luck. I know that this line didn’t exist while I typed up my synopsis on the plane, so it occurred sometime between then and getting home. I also know that I didn’t drop my bag, so I have no idea how this could have occurred. This just fucking blows. As you can imagine, after coming home from vacation my budget doesn’t exactly allow for a new laptop. While the line is not obtrusive it does annoy the fuck out of me.

And You Were Expecting Only A Vacation Recap?
For the full read, click here. Pictures will be uploaded this weekend, assuming more shit doesn’t rain down on me.

ITP Flickr Pic
Hopefully The Only Bullet Hole My Body Will Every See

I feel like my life has been shot down again.

Vacation Is Over, Weight Loss Must Begin
Okay, I can no longer play the “I’m on vacation” card when eating / drinking, nor can I allow myself to remain in the condition that I am in. My current physical form is neither good for my long-term physical, nor my short-term mental, health.

Is There Such A Thing As Mid-Speed Internet?
If so, that’s what I must have. I shut down my home server and internet connection while I was away (I wasn’t going to be here to use them, why leave them powered on?). When I returned and restarted iTunes it took forever to download all of the podcasts that I missed while I was away. It seems to me that downloading this media should have gone much quicker. Seems like I am missing the “High” in my “High-Speed” internet connection.

May Goals, How Did I Do?
Lousy.

And now for some ideas stolen from LiveJournal…
Current Mood - annoyed
Current Music - nothing at the moment
Website Of The Day - While I didn’t leave my car at the airport you may want to. If you do, you may want to make parking reservations online at Airport Parking Reservations.
Exercise (b)Log - none
Mode Of Transportation To Work - Marta

June Goals
0) I give up. I am tired of missing goals. I will never be happy.

Cheers,
Paulie [eatl/ga]

Stuck On The Connector: Arizona — Hard Living Defined

My trip took me to nearly half of the state of Arizona. My path was a counter clockwise one starting in Tempe and taking me as far north as the South rim of the Grand Canyon. Whenever possible I strayed from America’s Interstate system in hopes of finding America. What follows is my recount, a better trip report than I shall ever submit for work, of my eight days in Arizona.

Keep in mind that I am writing most of this after-the-fact in Phoenix’s Sky Harbor Airport sipping a Sam Adams (no Fat Tire at this establishment) at 10:30am MT and in the plane headed to Atlanta. Even though I ate an hour only three hours ago I am considering ordering food because my flight will get me in to Atlanta 7:30pm EDT. [edit: I did and it was nothing to scream about]

I am no Jack Keurowac, but then again Jack Kuerowac was no Paulie either.

Day One: Dropping Out Of The Sky
Flying First Class was kick ass. I mentioned this the other day and I got to thinking this morning that I’d gladly pay $50 more to sit in a business class with no food or free drinks but with wider seats and more leg room. I can provide my own entertainment, so there is also no need to provide satellite radio or tv (blasphemy, I know).

“Jill” rocked the Casbah getting me to my hotel, a Comfort Inn, in Tempe. Tempe was the town in which I probably spent the most time, and of the ones in which I stayed the one I learned the least about.

Day Two: 4am Seems So Late
My hotel was near Arizona State University. With the exception of young’ins bouncing across streets as if they owned the world it was a perfect location. I’d like to revisit Tempe in the future when their light-rail project is complete. If you happen to find yourself in Tempe I highly suggest you seek out Four Peaks Brewery (on 8th Street)

With my body still clocked in to Eastern Daylight Savings Time it was amazingly easy to get up before the sun (something that I wish stayed true all week). Thursday was filled with walking trough Downtown Mesa, taking the three-hour tour at Taliesin West, driving around Tempe looking for things I forgot to pack, and then discovering Four Peaks.

Day Three: From The Desert To The Mountains To The Desert
I was finally ready to travel. Off slightly after daybreak (pattern starts) my mission was to make it to Holbrook, Arizona which is located along Historic Route 66 and near the Painted Desert and the Petrified Forest.

The drive was absolutely fantastic if not highly uneventful. I intentionally took back roads in hopes of taking me through small town America, which I did, but found out that this small town America, was nothing special. I had hoped to stay in the Wig-Wam Motel, a historic site on Route 66, but upon finding out that their office didn’t open until 3pm (it was noon when I arrived) I decided a change of plans was necessary and I sought out an alternative. While driving around I found another Comfort Inn but balked at their $79 price when I knew that a Motel 6 one hundred yards away was only $30. After taking a major nap I headed out to see the Painted Desert and Petrified Forest. Three hours passed and I returned to Holbrook at night to eat a rather unspectacular catfish dinner before passing out in my internet-free Motel 6 room.

Day Four: Getting My Kicks Along Route 66 (At Least What Still Remains)
When I was awaken at 4am by a drunken girl who mistook my room for someone else’s I wondered if I had made the proper choice by saving $49.

I took the drunken unintentional wake up call as sign to wake up so I packed up my shit and headed back to the Painted Desert and Petrified Forest even though I knew that the park didn’t open until 7am (which was too bad since I could have had an awesome sunrise shot there). I waited patiently at the park’s entrance and took a few shots of flora and fauna.

After spending another few hours in the park I headed toward Flagstaff along as much of Route 66 that still exists.

Let me now make a few asides…..

Even though I am a child of the 1960’s I have a romantic notion of Route 66 thanks to my parents who were a generation older than most people’s parents. I am sure that that we took Route 66 more when we drove from New York to California in 1972. And, as I drove around this day I realized that I am just about the same age as my mother was when we took our trip back then.

Route 66, once one of America’s much-traveled pathways from Illinois to California, has seen much better days. It saddened me greatly to see these once proud establishments so abandoned and downtrodden.

And back from the asides…

The plan was to head to Flagstaff, a city not far from the Grand Canyon, through the towns of Winslow (think of the Eagles’ song “Take It Easy”) and “Twin Arrow”.

With any luck I was planning to grab a hotel in Flagstaff, head to the Grand Canyon for the sunset, and return in the dark. Jonesin’ for some internets I stopped into the Devil’s Playground and quickly found out that hotels in the area, though plentiful, were either booked solid or very expensive. While sipping some sort of cold, caramel machiatto drink I managed to use the Dark Star’s internet to line up hotels for Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday nights, but could not line up anything for Saturday night. I drove around Flagstaff a little rejecting the roadside motels which appeared to appeal to the hourly-rental crowd, and when one man told me his shithole was going to cost $159 I bid him good luck and headed out of Flagstaff. I had no plan at this point other than to find a hotel.

I pulled into another Route 66 town called Williams. Time has been much kinder to this small town, and as I cruised for a room I wound up in a place called the Route 66 Inn, which was run by a friendly Indian family (red-dot, not woo-woo). I was able to score a tiny room for $66 (no correlation to it being on Route 66). This motel is the type of motel that time has forgotten; also forgotten in this motel was modernization, de-smokification, new linens, etc. It was the only time along this trip that I was afraid to sleep in the bed, but I was relieved since I at least didn’t have to sleep in my car.

The town of Williams, at least for this weekend, was incredible. I walked up and down the main street taking pictures before ducking into a bar to have a Fat Tire and a Four Peaks 8th Street Ale. On the night I was there, there was a small (and I mean small) family-run carnival and a small-time rodeo in town. Want to guess who went to his first rodeo? I wanted to eat at the steakhouse in Williams, but it was unnaturally warm inside the restaurant and there appeared to be a long wait to get a table, so I passed.

Day Five: Did Someone Say Grand Canyon? Canyon? Canyon?…
Alternate titles for this day
- “Nothing Like A $25 Rim Job”
- “Where’s The Worst Place A Person Who Fears Heights Should Go?”
- “Rethinking Flagstaff”

I thought Williams would provide me with a quick drive to the Grand Canyon. I was partially correct. After paying $3.59 a gallon for gas (the highest price I have ever paid, and not in line with the prices in the rest of the state) I headed out for the fifty- mile drive. I missed sunrise again. However, the park was open by arrived so I drove to the South Rim, paid the $25 entrance fee (good for seven days), parked the car, and headed out for a hike.

With the exception of some deer photos I will have the worst Grand Canyon pictures ever. My fear of heights made it impossible for me to get good downward photos of the canyon, so instead I morphed in to Panorama Paulie. Thankfully I made the decision to bring my fancy-pants tripod on the trip, although the head I bought is not ideal for panorama shots.

After getting fed up with the other tourists I headed back into my car and drove the South Rim (where I encountered the Red Squirrel and Coyote) stopping to take pictures along the way.

The plan was to do the South Rim all day and night, return to Flagstaff where I was able to get a hotel room for Sunday night and then return to see the North Rim on Monday. After realizing this plan was bunk because of my fear of heights, I decided to head to downtown Flagstaff and kick around town for the evening.

While I had written off Flagstaff the day before, this return convinced me that Flagstaff was the type of town in which I would be satisfied. I could actually see myself moving to Flagstaff; it possess a fantastically revitalized small-town downtown complete with two microbreweries and an incredible pizza place called Fratelli’s. There are times I think that I should embrace my inner-granola and take in a change of scenery.

Day Six: Sedona — Arizona’s Answer To Breckenridge, Colorado
Using Go Arizona I mapped out a scenic path from Flagstaff to Sedona which took me past dried-up lakes and down an unpaved forest road. Even more miraculously it took me into the middle of an organized bike ride which was happening that day. Because I was all about being loose with my plans, I even stopped and took some pictures of the riders as they headed out from the starting line.

When I stopped in Breckenridge last year I was incredibly unimpressed. I am not much for small resort cities filled with well-to-do people who are shopping, and high-priced housing. My initial impression of Sedona was just like that of Breckenridge.

As I drove around I was amazed to see how much housing existed near the fantastic scenery, and how much more was currently under construction. When I stopped to get a National Forest Parking Pass the woman kindly pointed out some of the trails that I should see. Unfortunately, some of these required a little more rugged a vehicle than the Hyundai Sonata that I rented.

The evening ended early as I was actually staying in a Quality Inn located a good twenty miles away from Sedona. It was Memorial Day so the hotel restaurant was closed. I opted to find Safeway where I picked up a six-pack of New Belgium Brewery’s 1554 Enlightened Black Ale (Safeway had sold out of cold Fat Tire) and some bagels.

Day Seven: It’s Like South Georgia With Gorgeous Mountains
Determined to take in some Sedona scenery I started out around 6am on a scenic drive. At some point during the drive I made the decision to step out for a hike. I was smart enough to carry water and a bagel left over from the night before as I set out on my hike. Little did I know that my hike would comprise of eight miles of hiking taking me about four hours (stopping to take photographs of course). Along the way back I had a nice conversation with a woman and her husband who hailed from Edmonton, Canada. They seemed equally surprised when I told them that I would be visiting their hometown in July.

Tired of traipsing through red dust and ready to make my way out of Sedona I headed back to my rental.

Here’s a helpful consumer tip. You may not want to put unopened bottles of 1554 into a car that is going to sit in the heat of Arizona. I am not going to incriminate myself of having a bottle semi-explode in the back of my rental car, I’m just saying…..

Hellbent on staying away from the Interstate and nothing but time to kill I chose to take a somewhat circuitous route from Sedona to Tempe. I took route 89A toward Prescott (which was actually a neat little town), a hard left to US Highways 93 and 60 which took me through Sun City to Phoenix and then Tempe.

Along the way I drove through the most amazing little city I have ever been through. It was called Jerome and it was built entirely on the side of a mountain (just look at the Google Map of the road I took). The street through Jerome was reminded me of Lombard Street in San Francisco, and all of the buildings were right on top of you as you drove. Why people decided to move there and why the town still exists today confuses me. [edit: I have since found out that it was a copper mining town and today is an artistic community] As the road climbed to over 7000 feet I also passed one incredible grey-haired man who was riding a bike up the mountain; to say that I was impressed is an understatement.

The road to Tempe wound up and down mountain sides. At one point I started to fear running out of gas in the middle of nowhere Arizona. Luckily I saw a small station in one “town” (Peeples Valley?) and was able to get some gas. Running out of gas really would have sucked.

Day Eight: (”today” as in “yesterday”) Damn You American Airlines!
According to Delta this mid-afternoon flight from Phoenix to Atlanta was half-filled until American canceled one of their flights, placing their passengers on my flight. Now I really wish that I was that I was in First Class.

A half-damning goes to Delta as well. I don’t know the “Magic Formula” for Zone assignments, but even though I booked this flight months ago and selected an Exit Row seat I was still assigned Zone 9, the last to board the plane. My disgust was reduced dramatically when I found out that no one was going to occupy the middle seat of the row in which I was seated. Even better, when I turned around an saw that the seat I had originally chosen was next to two humongous people I was even more pleased with my seating choice.

Observational Stream Of Conscience…
- Arizona, at least the southern portion, has cheaper gas prices than Georgia. Why is it again that we pay an enormous ad valorem tax for our vehicle? I was always under the impression that we did so in order to keep our gas taxes low.

- In the Choice Hotels version of Rock-Paper-Scissors Comfort Inn wins hands down. Not only was the Comfort Inn in Tempe $30 cheaper per night than the Sleep Inn in Flagstaff and Quality Inn in Cottonwood, it also provided rock-sold wireless internet access and was the only one to provide the waffle-maker at the breakfast bar.

- As a whole Arizona was a rugged, depressing state to me. With the exception of Flagstaff, or if I could overcome my fear of heights Jerome, I could never see myself moving to any of the other cities I visited. How some of these towns have existed for over a hundred years still baffles me.

- I was disturbed how many times I had to pay to get into state and national parks or monuments. I once even had to pay $2 to get into a scenic view run by the Navajo Nation (and then they made you walk through their flea market to get to the view).

- Give me a ‘C’; give me a ‘J’; give me a ‘P’. What do you have? The letters found on mountain sides on the way from Sedona to Tempe. C is for Cottonwood, J is for Jerome, and P is for Prescott.

- I caught up on a lot of podcasts on this trip. One downer was that the car I rented had no cassette deck (why would it?) and no audio input jack, so I had to listen using headphones. Lesson learned — get car with audio input jack. I nearly bought an FM transmitter for my iPod but didn’t want to spend that much on another unnecessary purchase.

- I was stunned how many restaurant signs said things like “We Serve Mexican And American Food” even in the more northern parts of Arizona.

- I still think that current-day airline “security” is a fucking joke. With the way things are today the terrorists have really won. If I was a terrorist I’d laugh every time I though about all of the hoops through which we must now jump just to board a plane.

- Knowing that I didn’t need to buy shit I resisted the urge to stop in to thrift stores. However, in Williams I did and was rewarded. In that thrift store I found a Toenut CD! Toenut, an obscure mid-1990’s band! I didn’t even know that they had more than one CD in their catalog. Niplets, you might be the only other person I know who owns a Toenut CD. I suppose that it could be another band named Toenut, but what are the odds of that? Oh, and the CD cost me $2.50.

- I should have bought stock in Nestle because I bought many liters of Nestle drinking water.

- I didn’t get to eat at Whataburger, Jack In The Box, or Wienieschnitzel. Apparently you have all alerted me to my incorrect notion that Whataburger and Jack In The Box have not made it east. Also I thought that I had, but I didn’t actually see an In-And-Out Burger in Arizone so I may have been wrong about them being there.

- I was bummed to see that the Waffle House has come this far West.

- Items packed that proved to be unnecessary:
– my monopod, the tripod did all of the work
– macro lens (it’s a big sky, panoramic world in AZ)
– second pair of jeans (I was in shorts most of the time)
– fleece (almost used it one morning in Holbrook)
– running shoes (need I explain?)
– a book (need I explain further?)
– compact umbrella (hey, it could rain in the desert)

- Items packed that proved to be invaluable:
– Jill, aka Garmin Nuvi 350 (with the exception of the Quality Inn in Cottonwood she was spot-on with her directions)
– Garmin Forerunner 201 GPS (helped me figure out how far I hiked)
– 60GB iPod (on the road entertainment)
– 12″ iBook with LaCie external hard drive (for in-hotel entertainment because I could)
– chargers for the above-mentioned electronics

Sure this was long, but I bet it was better than sitting through a slide show of the hundreds of photos I took. Was it not?

Unfinished Business

Tonight (Tuesday) finds me back in Tempe putting the other bookend on the this trip. I am staying in the same hotel that I stayed in last week, and I once again visited Four Peaks Brewery for dinner. As I sat in Four Peaks tonight I had a strange feeling. It seemed as if I had been sitting in there just last night or the night before, and not five nights ago.

Tomorrow I will head back to Mesa in the morning to try and reshoot one of the the photos I took last week, attempt to take a “big cactus” shot (which I cannot believe I haven’t shot yet) and then make my way to the airport.

While on the flight back to Atlanta I will be writing my impressions of this trip for as long as the airline will allow me. I’ll be making my return to coach class, so I will need to do something to pass the three-plus hour flight away. I will try to provide a summary and then a detailed blurb for those who like to skim.

ITP Flickr Pic
I stumbled up a family-run carnival while I stayed in Williams, Arizona last week.

The Scrambler With Motion Blur

I was smart enough not to ride any of the rides myself because I don’t trust the carnies at family-run carnivals.

And now for some ideas stolen from LiveJournal…
Current Mood - saddened slightly that the trip is coming to an end
Current Music - Adam Curry’s “Daily Source Code” from Monday
Website Of The Day - resumes tomorrow.
Exercise (b)Log - eight miles of hiking in Sedona lugging all of my camera gear
Mode Of Transportation To Work - none

May Goals
1) Lose two pounds. (starting weight 200 lbs)
2) Exercise at least five days per week.
3) Read two books, specifically
3a) “722 Miles: The Building of the Subways and How They Transformed New York”
3b) “The Evolution Of Useful Things…”

Cheers,
Paulie [eatl/ga]

You’ll Have To Cut Me Some Slack

I’m still on vacation…

Tonight (Monday) finds me in a hotel in a town called Cottonwood, Arizona. Cottonwood is about twenty miles south / southwest of Sedona. One thing that this trip has taught me is that I need to book hotels sooner, and closer to the action that I want to shoot.

This hotel room has me laughing because it has internet connectivity (thankfully) but it is wired instead of wireless. I almost forgot how to use a wired connection with my Mac.

ITP Flickr Pic
Street signs make me laugh as well.

Sometimes It's Easy Tell The Good Neighborhoods From The Bad

Wait until you see the one that post later this week.

Living The Wildlife
Not bar hopping as you would expect from me however.

I’m a city-boy so anytime I have an encounter (even when I am in a car) with wildlife I get excited.

So far I’ve seen the following
- Doe (Grand Canyon — wait until you see the photo I got)
- Red Squirrel (Grand Canyon — I was driving)
- Coyote, or a grey wolf, I don’t know which (Grand Canyon — I was driving)
- Road Runner (Cottonwood — I was driving)
- Jackrabbit (Cottonwood — I was driving)
- Male Peacock (Cottonwood — I was driving)

And now for some ideas stolen from LiveJournal…
Current Mood - feeling good, although I’d like to have accomplished more
Current Music - listening to the Dave Ramsey podcast
Website Of The Day - One of the better websites for getting information about Arizona that I used was Go Arizona.
Exercise (b)Log - none
Mode Of Transportation To Work - none, I’m on vacation

May Goals
1) Lose two pounds. (starting weight 200 lbs)
2) Exercise at least five days per week.
3) Read two books, specifically
3a) “722 Miles: The Building of the Subways and How They Transformed New York”
3b) “The Evolution Of Useful Things…”

Cheers,
Paulie [eatl/ga]

Where’s Paulie?

This being Memorial Day I am sure that the majority of you may be reading this on Tuesday.

I’ve decided to blog today because I slept in this morning in order to treat myself to breakfast. In the past few days I have been attempting to get up and shoot sunrises, but when the sun rises at 5am it has been difficult.

I am currently in Flagstaff, Arizona. Along this trip a lot of plans have been made and broken. I’ve learned that I should have done far more research before heading out here. I took the “I’m just going to ‘wing it’” attitude a little to seriously.

I can’t say that any revelations have been made thus far, except another reminder that I need to diet. I’m headed to Sedona today which I understand is spectacular, so maybe it will occur then. :)

In the next week or so I’ll be posting more in-depth stories, and I have plenty, about this trip.

ITP Flickr Pic
One of about a thousand I’ve taken. I expect that I will have my hands full five times over when I finally get around to post processing. I’ve noticed spotting on my photos again. Bummer. I’ll have to take most of the shots into Lightroom and give my equipment a good cleaning today.

Where I Wanted To Stay

This is the Wig-Wam Motel along Route 66 in Holbrook, Arizona. I wanted to rent one of the wig-wams rooms for a night, but their office didn’t open until 3pm and when I hit Holbrook around noon I needed a nap so I went elsewhere.

And now for some ideas stolen from LiveJournal…
Current Mood - pretty good
Current Music - none
Website Of The Day - none today
Exercise (b)Log - a lot of walking
Mode Of Transportation To Work - no work

May Goals
1) Lose two pounds. (starting weight 200 lbs)
2) Exercise at least five days per week.
3) Read two books, specifically
3a) “722 Miles: The Building of the Subways and How They Transformed New York”
3b) “The Evolution Of Useful Things…”

Cheers,
Paulie [eatl/ga]

It Certainly Is Easy To Get Sunburn Here

It was seriously easy for me to wake up early yesterday. With my body’s time clock still on Eastern Time I was awake before dawn. My only problem was figuring out what time it really was since most of my electronics were set to Eastern Time and I didn’t know the time difference between Atlanta and Tempe.

As you read this I am already on the road, headed for the Petrified Forest. Or not, as I “overslept” and am finally getting going at 4am MST.

I Don’t Know Where I Will Spend My Geriatric Years, But It Will Not Be Here
Take the heat of the desert and add in some of the traffic woes of Atlanta and you have Tempe / Scottsdale. I have yet to make it to Phoenix proper.

One thing is certain, I doubt that I will ever move here. On top of all of the stuff mentioned above this place seems depressing and ugly to me.

On a positive note however, I see that Tempe is putting in a light rail system for public transportation. What a concept!

ITP Flickr Pic
I just love the juxtaposition of the BOA logo and the cactus.

The Prickliest Thing On Earth

Walk into either and you suffer.

For The Campus For “America’s Greatest Architect” It Sure Is Run Down
I paid $35 for the three-hour Insider’s Tour of Taliesin West. I am not disappointed at all. In addition to seeing parts of the campus not shown on other tours we were treated to fruits, cakes, and soft drinks midway through the tour. The tour started with a short lecture from Wright’s former personal doctor. The man was easily in his mid-eighties and had the facial features that only age can deliver. I sneakily took one picture of him, but my settings were not properly set forthe conditions so the shot came out blurry. I was too scared to make another attempt. To this day Taliesin West is a functioning school so we were not allowed into part where apprentices were working on projects.

While I wish the tour was a little more educational and factual, a lot of it consisted of tales about a man whose ego was larger than life, it was rather interesting to go into the buildings he called his home.

Jack Is Going To Be So Jealous When He Finds Out How I’ve Been Pimping Jill
Jill (aka my Garmin Nuvi 350) may be the greatest purchase that I have ever made. Yesterday she navigated me to Taliesin West, REI, Best Buy, Fry’s Electronics and back to my hotel (can you surmise that I needed something and spent even more money yesterday?).

As Luck Would Have It, Part 1
I arrived at the REI shopping center a little past lunch time. Having eaten sweets and fruit earlier suppressed some of my hunger, but not all of it. I looked to my left and saw a Schlotzky’s Deli, but declined because I can get that anywhere. Then I saw a sign that read “Taco Nazo Mexican Food.” Yahtzee!

Lunch At Taco Nazo

I ordered one carnitas, one carne asada, and one lengua taco. I will admit now that when I ordered lengua that I didn’t know that lengua is cow’s tongue (my cow Stacy & Phil). I knew it wasn’t tripe (cow’s stomach) because I know that is called tripa, so I at least I had that going for me. I will say now that all three tacos were absolutely delicious. Will I order lengua again now that I know it’s cow’s tongue? Probably not…

As Luck Would Have It, Part 2
Back in my hotel room I had one thing on my mind — beer. I Googled for a local brewpub and came up with a place which was located a block from the hotel room. Unfortunately the key word in that sentence was “was” as it apparently closed shop some time ago. I was not completely out of luck however since just a few more blocks farther away was Four Peaks Brewing Company.

I should have carried Jill with me as even though the place was so close I lost my bearings a little on the walk. Or perhaps I should have walked up to strangers and ask them to take me there like they do on Amazing Race.

My efforts and persistence for finding Four Peaks were highly rewarded. Four Peaks only serves beer made on the premises. I started with the nine-beer sampler tray. Pictures of this exist on my phone because I could never get the tray situated on the bar and get a good shot of it with my camera.

The sampler tray was followed by a pint of their Kiltlifter Scottish Ale and plate of carne adovada which were huge chunks of spiced pork served with Mexican rice, refried beans, and burrito shells.

Whataburger, Jack In The Box, In And Out Burgers, Carl’s Jr.
Man I wish that I had more time. I’d love to eat in all of these burger chains that have not penetrated the East Coast.

Items Forgotten, Items Found, Items Purchased
- prescription sunglasses (forgotten)
- sunblock (fogotten, probably couldn’t get past TSA anyway)
- Moleskine notebook (found)
- Floppy hat to retard sun (purchased)
- Circular Polarization lens filters — 62mm, 72mm, 77mm (purchased)

And now for some ideas stolen from LiveJournal…
Current Mood - full
Current Music - none
Website Of The Day - I referred to so much food today that it only seems fitting to link to a food blog. Today you should check out Chocolate and Zucchini.
Exercise (b)Log - walking a lot
Mode Of Transportation To Work - None because I am not at work.

May Goals
1) Lose two pounds. (starting weight 200 lbs)
2) Exercise at least five days per week.
3) Read two books, specifically
3a) “722 Miles: The Building of the Subways and How They Transformed New York”
3b) “The Evolution Of Useful Things…”

Cheers,
Paulie [eatl/ga]

Greetings From The West

Tempe, Arizona to be exact — at least for a day or so. My internal clock is still on Eastern Time so I’ve decided to relax one morning and crank out a blog.

This Could Be My Last Year Of Flying
OMFG. I know that Memorial Day is ‘just around the corner’, but I figured that flying on a Wednesday afternoon would be a breeze. The “security” line was lined up through the center plaza to the other side of the building. Wow. At least the line moved more quickly then I thought it would.

Seriously though. When are we going to reverse this nonsensical business in the guise of security? Does anyone think that a bottle of shampoo is any more dangerous than the piping hot cup of coffee that they hand you in the plane?

But If It Is Not, I Could So Get Used To Flying First Class
It was exactly what I was afraid of. It was why I had never even thought of flying First Class in the past.

- Wide, comfortable seats
- A pre-flight beverage (I declined)
- A limited selection of Dish Network satellite tv (I watched the Red Sox v. Yankees on ESPN) or movies.
- A meal. Yes, I said a meal (chicken with au gratin potatoes and green beans, a salad, a roll, and a slice of cheesecake)
- As many “free” beverages as I desired (I have one glass of red wine, because I knew that I was going to have to drive a foreign car in a foreign land, and a cup of coffee)

I could get used to traveling if traveling was like this all of the time. Just wait until I blog about my back-of-the-bus coach seating flight home…

IP Flickr Pic
A generic photo.

Be Thankful That I Have No Kittens

For a generic post.

That Jill Is One Cool Chick
I dragged Jill (my Garmin Nuvi 350) with me and it has already paid dividends. I didn’t have to look at a single map in order to get from the airport to my hotel. Although Jill tried to get me to drive through the airport to get out — to which I declined and force her to recalculate her route — I got to the hotel with little difficulty.

I Almost Got It All Right
It never fails, even if I make a list of things to pack there are always a few things I forget

- point and shoot camera
- Moleskine notebooks and pen

Drat!

And now for some ideas stolen from LiveJournal…
Current Mood - a little out of sync
Current Music - none
Website Of The Day - Most of you do not know about my love of Frank Lloyd Wright architecture. This morning I will be visiting Taliesin West, his West Coast campus, and taking one of the tours.
Exercise (b)Log - none
Mode Of Transportation To Work - none because I am not at work

May Goals
1) Lose two pounds. (starting weight 200 lbs)
2) Exercise at least five days per week.
3) Read two books, specifically
3a) “722 Miles: The Building of the Subways and How They Transformed New York”
3b) “The Evolution Of Useful Things…”

Cheers,
Paulie [eatl/ga]

Limited Access

That’s the state I will find myself in for a little while. Okay, actually Arizona is the state that I will find myself in for a little while, but I think you get my drift. I’m not sure if high-speed internet has actually made it to Arizona yet, so if you find me in a Starbuck’s, please look the other way and know that I am only feeding my internet addiction.

Note to you early-morning readers: Remember that Arizona is a few time zones behind Atlanta. So if you wondering why I haven’t posted by the time you are normally reading, keep this in mind.

The Nights Are So Short
I thought that I had more than enough time to get my shit situated last night but I still found myself scrambling this morning. I already know of one thing that I failed to pack, although thankfully it is not crucial.

I am nervous for many reasons right now, but mostly because this will be my first big solo photography trip. I have packed my tripod legs and monopod into my checked suitcase and am hoping that they come out on the other side, and come out unscathed. The rest of my gear will be with me (in First Class on the way out w00t!) so I am not too concerned about it.

I think that I’ve nailed down the particulars of this trip and have figured out that there is more of Arizona than I can cover on one trip. Oh well, that may just mean that there is a return trip in the future.

ITP Flickr Pic
Serenity now! Serenity now!

Your Moment Of Zen

I don’t like the way that I feel about things right now. One of the goals of this trip, much like last week’s excursion, is to put life in perspective and figure out what I want to do when I grow up.

It’s Not That I Hate The Braves, It’s That I Really Hate The Braves
I have to tip my virtual cap to the Braves because it appears that they have the Mets’ number again this year. At least I didn’t waste my money by going down to the game last night.

I Can Rebuild It. I Can Make It Better Than It Was Before
Yesterday I decided to bite the bullet and order a new hard drive to replace the one that failed the other night. In the process I also decided to order a 1GB stick of memory (and am praying that I ordered the proper version because for some reason I ordered from memory) to replace the 512MB that the laptop currently has (my stupid HP laptop only has one memory slot). Hopefully this investment will be rewarded by providing me with a decent media-playing laptop and that it will curtail any desire to upgrade my computer hardware in the near future.

And now for some ideas stolen from LiveJournal…
Current Mood - nervous, excited
Current Music - Sirius Satellite Radio, Channel 26 playing St. Vincent — “Now Now” (never heard it before, won’t care if I never hear it again)
Website Of The Day - Mashable the social networking blog. It’s so jam packed with Web 2.0 goodness it’s going to explode, or perhaps implode; I’m not sure which.
Exercise (b)Log - nothing, spent all night getting ready
Mode Of Transportation To Work - My car

May Goals
1) Lose two pounds. (starting weight 200 lbs)
2) Exercise at least five days per week.
3) Read two books, specifically
3a) “722 Miles: The Building of the Subways and How They Transformed New York”
3b) “The Evolution Of Useful Things…”

Cheers,
Paulie [eatl/ga]

Smoke Gets In Your Eyes

Even with my limited sense of smell I could tell that there was something afoul in the air as soon as I emerged my house. It was like walking straight out of my house directly into The EARL. Is this all from south Georgia?

Fujitsu 2.5″ Hard Drive, 2004-2007 R.I.P.
I attempted to resurrect my Windows laptop last night to no avail. After taking the recovery process through its paces all attempts at rebooting the machine failed.

Luckily, unlike the iBook on which I type currently, the hard drive bay on my old HP Pavilion is easily accessible so I will be able to put in a new hard drive and stick the old one into an external enclosure at least until I am certain that I’ve pulled as much data as possible from it.

There is a sick part of me that is happy to have to start over again. That machine had so much clutter on it I had always wanted to reformat and reinstall. However, I failed to do so because of a fear of data loss and the fact that its CD drive had become rather finicky since I ripped a million CDs on it a few years ago (I am sure the RIAA had something to do with that).

And I Nearly Turned A Shuffle Into A Smashed
A few months ago I purchased an iPod Shuffle (in green) for my exercising efforts. Knowing this it should come as no surprise that it was making its maiden voyage with me last Saturday. Well it would have been if it had any music on it.

I’ve not been terribly impressed with the Shuffle. First there is the matter of its charging. I leave the damn thing plugged in forever and it never gets charged to the point where the LED turns green. Also, when I attempt to “Autofill” from a playlist that I’ve created, none of the music gets transfered to the Shuffle. I poked around the Apple Discussion Boards last night and have found that I am not the only one with these issues.

Today I am trying some of the Discussion Board suggestions — I have manually loaded music on it and am letting the battery discharge by playing the music. If this doesn’t work I will be marching the Shuffle back to an Apple store for a replacement (sadly sans the www.InsideThePerimeter.com engraving).

Don’t get me wrong, I fucking love my other two iPods, but this Shuffle so far has won no love from me.

ITP Flickr Pic
One more from my trip to Smith’s Olde Bar last week.

Stars Of Track And Field

This is one of the guys from Stars Of Track And Field. If you are not familiar with their music you should try and check them out.

I Wish I Could Take Myself Out To The Ball Game
But time is my enemy. Somehow my Arizona trip has crept up on me and I find myself unprepared. At least I got all of my laundry done last night. So tonight will find me at home with the Mets v. Braves game on the telly whilst I attempt to finish “the last” of whatever crap sits in the refrigerator and figure out where in the hell I am going when I get to Arizona. Nothing like a little procrastination to get the day started…

What, No Office Chatter?
I finally got around to watching last week’s Season Finale of The Office last night. I’m surprised no one has called me out on this…

First, I have to thank my friend Lisa (who will never admit to reading this drivel) for getting me hooked on the American version. I was a BBC snob (shocking, I know) and didn’t give the American version a long look before writing it off.

I figure that the show has one more good season it where Karen leaves Dunder Mifflin (am I the only one shocked to find out that NBC didn’t purchase the domain www.DunderMifflin.com?), Jim and Pam “do it”, Dwight and Angela get “outed”, Michael leaves (is forced out of) the company, and the Scranton branch gets shut down. If my assumptions are correct this leaves the “Jim and Pam Wedding Episode” as the Series Finale next Spring.

CD Pick Of The Week
Three “indie” rockers have releases today — The Bravery, The National, and Voxtrot. One “classic” rocker, Ozzy Osbourne, also has a release today. Given that I don’t think that Ozzy has released anything noteworthy since “Blizzard of Oz”, it’s safe to guess that I am not picking that.

Of the other three I am most likely to enjoy the efforts of Voxtrot. Voxtrot is also putting my in a bind because they are playing in Atlanta on June 27th, the same evening that Polyphonic Spree. Decisions. Decision.

And now for some ideas stolen from LiveJournal…
Current Mood - smoky, nervous, excited, rushed, scattered, you name it, it’s happening today
Current Music - Sirius Satellite Radio, Channel 26 playing R.E.M. — “Radio Free Europe”
Website Of The Day - Bargaineering bills itself as “the art of engineering great bargains”. While I am not convinced yet, I might be found poking around for a new hard drive during my lunch today.
Exercise (b)Log - nothing, still recovering
Mode Of Transportation To Work - My car

May Goals
1) Lose two pounds. (starting weight 200 lbs)
2) Exercise at least five days per week.
3) Read two books, specifically
3a) “722 Miles: The Building of the Subways and How They Transformed New York”
3b) “The Evolution Of Useful Things…”

Cheers,
Paulie [eatl/ga]

A Weekend Of Ups And Downs

And not all related to my trip to Summerville.

Any Time I Finish In The Top 150 I Am Happy
Nevermind that there were only 150 participants in the race.

Believe it or not I shaved two-minutes, twenty seconds off my half-marathon time from last year! Okay, I’ll be the first to admit that I’m not setting the running world on end by running the Twisted Ankle Half Marathon in 3:00:35, but considering how (severely) under-trained I was, I’ll take it.

The weather this year was a lot more amenable to the runners. This year I cramped some, but nowhere near as much as last year. And of course it wouldn’t have been a Twisted Ankle if I didn’t take at least one spill.

Perhaps It Was My Pre-Race Meal?
I can’t help myself sometimes (although the time to curb my intake is back upon me). On Friday evening I drove up to Summerville to look around for photo opportunities (I took none) and eat dinner. My first thought was to seek out a mom-and-pop restaurant for a meat-and-three, but as soon as i passed the new Chinese buffet I knew that I had a winner.

The good news from Summerville was that the Ingles now sells beer (although I recommend purchasing from BP on US27). The bad news from Summerville was that the Ingles no longer sells Cheerwine.

He Who Camps Alone Is Not Always Alone
Friday night was strange. I was alone and in the same camp spot as last year. However instead of being surrounded by hashers, I was surrounded by families with these things called “children”.

On Saturday morning I found out that some other hashers (TLS, Will You Suck, WYS’ wife Amy who probably has a hash name that I do not know, and Gasshole) were also up there for the race, and that they too camping. So, on Saturday night I sat around with them and consumed and commiserated.

ITP Flickr Pic
This is Joseph Arthur from Smith’s Olde Bar last Thursday night.

Joseph Arthur

I told you that I was close.

If A Hard Drive Crashes, And You Are There To See It Happen, Does It Make A Sound?
The answer is “no.” Last night one of my hard drives went partially belly-up. I knew I was in deep shit when the system locked up, XP blue screened, and then watched all of the error messages pop up as the system rebooted.

The good news was that I was able to boot into Linux and pull all of my data off of the disk. The bad news was that when I finally found the Windows OS disk to try and recover the install it asked for an Administrator password — I know of no Administrator password. :(

LEARN FROM MY MISTAKES…. BACK UP YOUR DATA TODAY!!! Do not, I repeat DO NOT, wait any longer. Disk drives are cheap and there is no excuse for not having your data replicated in case of something like this happening to you. I was extremely lucky.

May’s Halftime Update
This should have occurred last week, but I forgot.

Let’s just say that I haven’t done really well. While I have been getting a lot of exercise the scale still managed to read 204 last night. Not good at all. Could it be possible that I put weight on this weekend? If you saw me eat and drink the answer would definitely be “yes.” Argh.

And now for some ideas stolen from LiveJournal…
Current Mood - Meh. I am sore, but proud that I completed my half marathon. However, I am still sneezing and suffering from a runny nose. When will it all end?
Current Music - Sirius Satellite Radio, Channel 26 playing The White Stripes — “Icky Thump”
Website Of The Day - Have you ever wanted to be know so much about sunrises and sunsets it will make you crazy? Well if you do, you should go to Compute Sunrise, Sunset & Twilight For Cities & Airports Worldwide With Local TZ. btw - This sort of information is invaluable to the landscape photographer.
Exercise (b)Log - running / walking, 13.1 miles on Saturday
Mode Of Transportation To Work - My car

May Goals
1) Lose two pounds. (starting weight 200 lbs)
2) Exercise at least five days per week.
3) Read two books, specifically
3a) “722 Miles: The Building of the Subways and How They Transformed New York”
3b) “The Evolution Of Useful Things…”

Cheers,
Paulie [eatl/ga]

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