U.S. Navy, Circa 1993

So one of the things I "discovered" while in the Navy was Chrysanthemum Tea.  In Hong Kong, I believe, and it was quite addictive.  I had kept three cans of it as a souvenir, and as I was attempting (in vain) to organize our crawl space, I came upon them in one of my memento boxes.  

I drank all three, and had happy flashbacks to my tours of Kowloon.  Slightly more metallic than I remember, but after 20 years in a can what can you expect.  And it still had the pull tab opening, where the ring pull and tab come off entirely.  Ah, memories...!    

So 

Holiday Gift Part 1

Santa brought me the book below, that I have found quite enjoyable.  It consists of a series of short vignettes that portray the more unusual and surprising mechanisms of evolution.   For example, there are a group of 'false' fishes:  fishes because they look very much like what a layperson would quickly identify as a fish, and yet they are more closely related to a cow than a salmon.  Come to find out, some of these false fishes were transitional actors to life's eventual movement onto land, and their skeletons provide the telltale signs of changes that would be required to do so.  

There are also discussions of five fingers, of large vs. small size, and body armor.  Having just come from a trip to the Galapagos last year I found the explanation of the land tortoises's skeletal anatomy fascinating.  

In 2006 Richard Dawkins published a book called The Ancestor's Tale, that follows along similar lines but in far greater detail, and with enough scientific nomenclature to give you the distinct impression you're back in an intermediate college biology course.  Equally as fascinating, but intimidating at times and not as accessible as de Panafieu's effort.  

Thank you, Santa!  

Burbank!

Brother Greg, sister-in-law Heidi, and niece Andi were in town last week, checking out Burbank and environs.  We met up with them at the Ghetty Museum (a must-see if you're in LA), and had a nice dinner afterwards.  Aren't we the cute group!  

(family explainer:  Greg is the younger brother of Stewart, and is married to Dr. Heidi Graham, both Army retirees.  They live in Alexandria, VA, with their angelic dog Sam.  Andrea, aka Andi, is Greg's daughter, a budding architect living in Kingston NY.)  

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Beauty

Water is the essence of wetness, and wetness is the essence of beauty.
— Derek, Zoolander

(One of my favorite types of movies is slapstick, dating back to the movie Airplane! and continuing with such titles as Zoolander and Shaun of the Dead.  It appears to be a difficult genre, as it's done so badly so often, but when done right it is hilarious.)

Holiday Card Map Explainer

On the back of our holiday card is a marriage equality map from Wikipedia.  Despite a setback in my home Commonwealth of Kentucky, marriage equality advocates have nonetheless made surprising and unprecedented progress in 2014.  And since Stewart and I have been involved in both the marriage equality (and DADT repeal) movements, we thought it important to share.

It was not, on any level, motivated by shaudenfreude.  And I'm not even sure that's even possible, given the preponderance of the world map indicating a distinct lack marriage equality, and given Africa where imprisonment and at times even death for LGBT citizens have been incorporated into the legal code.  

To briefly summarize the colors, navy blue are states/countries with full marriage equality, mustard means marriage equality is in some form pending (in the U.S., usually the result of a favorable court ruling followed by a stay of the ruling), and light blue/periwinkle represents a 'less-than' recognition (e.g., domestic partnerships).  Interestingly, although all of Mexico is not navy blue, if you get married in those parts that are, then everywhere you go within the country it's recognized.   Sort of like Arkansas is for us right now.   

The map was current at the printing of our cards, with the last change being Finland, where marriage equality just passed the legislature.  Here's to 2015, and hopefully more progress.  

Merry Christmas, Maybe

The book I'm reading now is the 'Historicity of Jesus', by David Carrier.  It is quite a dense and lengthy tome, written from a hard-core historian's perspective, and I keep making the mistake of attempting to absorb its contents right before bed.  But it's one I should have read decades ago.

The term 'historicity' refers to the issue of whether Jesus of Nazareth actually existed as a person, or if he were mythological in nature.   I'm only halfway through the book, but I'm getting the distinct sense that the evidence for an actual, physical Jesus is quite slim.  The Gospels in the New Testament were all written many decades after Jesus' apparent death and resurrection (and all by unknown authors), and there are no recorded eyewitness accounts of Jesus' life--either in the Christian Bible or elsewhere.  Think about that:  not a single, documented eyewitness account of Jesus ever existing. 

 All that Christians have to go on, then, is the canonical statement that the words of Scripture were (divinely) revealed to their authors, even though it is widely accepted that those same texts have undergone significant redaction and alteration over the centuries.   And when that is all you have, without any sort or degree of independent corroboration,  one is hard pressed to distinguish between divinely inspired/revealed and simply made up.

The other disconcerting conclusion is that savior/resurrection myths appeared to be a small cottage industry back in the day, with numerous stories/myths/revelations each competing with one another for the hearts and minds (and money and power) of the people.  There are at least 15 such saviors--all predating Jesus of Nazareth--who strangely have nearly identical stories, down to their virgin births, an attempt to kill them when they are a baby, rising to power (or being called a king or king-like), meeting a mysterious death often involving crucifixion, his/her body then turns up missing, etc.   There are so many of them that historians have invented a formalized measurement for it, the 'Rank-Raglan hero-type'.  And within the savior cottage industry there is a subset of Christian sects, each with their own story of Jesus (of Nazareth), battling it out in the public sphere.  None of them survived, save for the one we know of now.  

Imagine living in the first or early second century CE, hearing of Jesus of Nazareth's death and resurrection, and thinking, "sheesh, another one?"  

What I also find interesting, layered on top of this, is how neat and clean Christianity looks now, two thousand years later, and how little most Christians know about its very un-neat and un-clean origins.  And quite possibly, all made up from pre-existing mythologies of the period.   

None of which, by the way, mars my expectation of Santa Claus coming next month.  Merry Christmas!  

 

 

leaf peeing and sundry things part 2

Whoops, sorry for the time gap, this is a continuation post of our New England trip in October.  

After Vermont we headed down to New York City, first stopping in Kingston to visit with Stewart's niece, Andi.  Andi is an architect working in a very architechy building and in a newly renovated architechy home (well done, Andi!).  While in Kingston we visited the "four corners", the only intersection in the U.S. whose four buildings predate the Revolutionary War.  We also visited Opus 40 just outside of Kingston, a jaw dropping lifetime art project made out of stone using only old-world quarry techniques.  

Then to New York City, to visit friend Peter Buotte.  We ate NY bagels for breakfast, with about a pound of cream cheese on them, spread by the guy behind the counter who does not have more than five seconds to stand there while you figure out what the hell you want.   We visited museums, the 9/11 Memorial, the High Line Park, the Statue of Liberty (my first time), and about a gazillion other places, all packed into three days.  Below is a photo of Stewart and Peter at a local German restaurant.  Good beer and sauerkraut.

After NYC, we attended Stewart's 45th Annual US Military Academy (USMA) (aka West Point) reunion.  I was the only male spouse there, and the only noticeably younger spouse there, too, lol (okay, I'm no spring chicken, granted, but I'm not 67 either).  But I was generally very well received, and we had a great time.   

Following West Point we traveled to Connecticut and Rhode Island, having lunch with Stewart's cousin George and his partner Jack, then dinner with Stewart's Cousin Steve, his wife Gloria, and his Aunt Mary.    Boston the next few days with gracious hosts Dan and Laura, during which we whirlwinded the historic downtown area and environs.  My favorites were the Harvard Natural History Museum, and the Boston Atheneum .  Both were marvelous.  

 

 

 

 

Airborne

I dutifully track my flight time hours, now more out of curiosity than anything else.  4,886 hours so far, quite low compared to Vietnam-era and younger "production" pilots, but not terrible given the kinds of flights and experiences I've had.  In any case it's not a gauge of happiness or satisfaction for me, as even a helicopter pilot will tell you that after eight hours of flying in one day, day after day, the fun can sort of wear off.  

Below are my flight statistics by type; virtually all of it in helicopters save for a sliver of Cessna 152 time that I flew before entering the Navy, and my military training in the T-34.   The Navy flight time is in blue (dark blue being twin-engine, light for single engine); my time flying helicopter air ambulance with Mercy Air in burnt umber (all twin engine time);  my other "for hire" civilian flying in brown (again, twin engine in dark brown); and finally in gray the flight time that I paid for myself--mostly training for certification, and a scant few just for fun, including flights with my Mamaw and Papaw.  

The aircraft* designations probably don't mean a great deal unless you are so inclined to follow such things, but it provides perspective (at least for me) about where I have spent my career, proportionately, and what I have done.   Back in '97 when I left the Navy, the circle would have been almost entirely blue; after my first seven years with Corporate Helicopters, perhaps a 60/40 split; and now, my military career represents just a portion of my career--a good thing, I think, although it was a very meaningful part of my life and one that I nostalgically miss.  

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*If someone uses the term 'aircraft' it could, in FAA parlance, literally mean anything that flies.  Balloons, gliders, gyrocopters, anything.   The term 'rotary wing' could mean a helicopter or a gyrocopter.  

things i learned after six days in north and south carolina

1.  The first highway one encounters coming out of Charlotte is the Billy Graham Highway, and once on the Billy Graham Highway one immediately will see signs to the Billy Graham Library.   Normally that would make me instantly hate this State, as the "threat" of marriage equality during the last Presidential election cycle was the one issue that brought Graham out of the shadows, to rail against the LGBT community with full page ads in national newspapers.  But now that marriage equality is the law of the land in North (and South!) Carolina,  it makes me sort of happy, with just the slightest hint of schaudenfruede.  

2.  One should really drive the speed limit here, there are cops everywhere.  

3.  Google maps is not aware of where the North Carolina town I was driving through dispatches its two thousand school buses, all at the same time. 

4.  The politics of Ayn Rand seem to be a thing here, along with the politics of being victimized by the hordes of welfare leeches.   And the illegal Mexicans, taking white people's jobs.    When I note that the only reason the strawberries they're snacking on don't cost ten bucks a pint is because some hapless Mexican is picking them twelve hours a day, seven days a week for less than what a McDonald's cashier makes, they seem perplexed. 

5.  They make ground ambulances with a semi-truck front and rear cabin to match.  Impossibly huge.  

6.  With a thousand dollar (or so) investment, you can reload your own bullet shells at home.  Because "you don't know what kind of shape this country will be in, in 30 years."

7.  As a long time Southern California resident, I have to say--Charlotte traffic sucks. 

El Commandante

I am airborne, flying a helicopter south from San Diego towards Ensenada, Mexico.  The last air traffic controller in the U.S. clears me to switch to Tijuana Tower, and I can instinctively feel the inevitable, gradual rise in my blood pressure.  

English is the universal language of air traffic controllers, the supposed standard anywhere one flies in the world.  But in a third world country like Mexico being fluent in English is barely a criterion for getting a job as one.  I switch frequencies and immediately hear the tower conversing in Spanish with another aircraft, just departed.  I check in, and am instructed to climb to 1,500 feet for crossing over the airport.  Not because I need to be that high to deconflict with other traffic, but because the controller knows how to give that command in English, and alternate directions would require words and phrases she is likely not familiar with.  I sigh, climb up, and motor on.  

She then tells me to report 10 miles to the south, which I do at 7 miles because I've already dropped back down to a normal helicopter height and she wouldn't hear me that far away.  In truth she has no idea where I am, and so she acknowledges my transmission and tells me to contact Tijuana Approach Control (TAC).   Of course TAC doesn't even know I'm here, because Tijuana Tower never informed them, they would never hear me at my altitude anyway and they wouldn't know what to do with me had I checked in with them.  Or more accurately they wouldn't be able to convey in English what they wanted me to do.  And so I save both of us the headache and motor on to Ensenada in radio silence.  

Five miles north of the airport I check in with Ensenada Tower, and I receive a tortured communication about a non-standard approach she wants me to take to the landing area.  I honestly don't know what she wants me to do, but attempting to have a conversation with her about it would be utterly futile, and so I continue inbound with the expectation that she will correct me if I appear to be deviating from her instructions.

 I wind up deviating, she winds up correcting me, as for some reason she wants me to use the runway (and odd instruction for a helicopter).  I play along, using the first half of the runway and then--which is why helicopters don't use runways--I proceed to create one enormous, billowing dust cloud as I hover taxi off the runway towards my landing spot. 

Tower tells me to land on Spot Number 2.  There are six spot on the left, four on the right.  None are numbered.  I pick one and land, admiring the size of my dust cloud as it slowly drifts toward (and envelopes) a row of parked aircraft.   Tower doesn't say anything, so I presume I chose Spot 2 correctly, or that she doesn't really care.  

After shutting down we head in to the administrative offices to file flight plans and to check in with customs and immigration. There is no walkway for passengers, so we transit via the active airport taxiway, occasionally looking behind us for incoming aircraft.   The check in process takes at least an hour, involves five Mexican officials, three sheets of that inky transfer paper you slip in between multiple copies of a form, and the patience of Job (and all this for a very unbusy airport).  I have been flying into Mexico for the better part of 12 years, and to this day it makes my blood boil.  It process goes something like this: 

1.  Check in at the front counter with a young military officer who thankfully has a better grasp of English than anyone else in the building.  Fill out one form to close out your flight plan from the U.S. (they had no idea you were arriving, the FAA didn't call them to tell them you were arriving, and so you fill it in after the fact).   Then fill out a new flight form for your next destination.  The entries that you make on this form are different each time you arrive at the airport, and they are different for each different airport you go to.  None of it is verified, and none of it is automated.  I fill it out, give it back, they correct my entries and send me to the Commandante.  Elapsed time:  10 minutes; not terrible.  

2.  The Commandante is the one who lords over the airport.  Your fate is in his hands, and so your only goal is to ensure his happiness throughout the process so that he does not decide, halfway through, that your paperwork or documentation is somehow deficient.  Which happens not infrequently.  I smile, give him a warm introduction in Spanish, and he takes my paperwork and begins fat fingering it into the computer.  With his two index fingers.  Without the necessary glasses he needs to see the computer screen, or the requisite familiarity with the software program that one would normally acquire after a decade of using it.  He types, and types, and types, occasionally looking up at the TV next to him that has a telenova (Mexican soap opera) on.   He asks for my Mexican insurance form, although we've e-mailed it to him about a hundred times already in the past.  He studies it, never seems entirely satisfied with it, but continues typing.   He finally prints out a multi-entry permit, the Holy Grail of forms that grants me permission to travel/work/fly in Mexico.  He makes four copies, and has me sign eight times.  Then he brings out his official stamp, and begins stamping my paperwork everywhere.  In Mexican aviation, you are nothing without an official stamp.  He then directs me over to Customs.   Elapsed time:  25 minutes.  

A brief aside:  I am very sensitive to cold temperatures.  I used to be kidded at my helicopter air ambulance base for wearing long underwear when the temperature dropped below 60 degrees, and for wearing gloves in October.  But I am a polar bear compared to Mexicans.  It is uncomfortably warm in the Commandante's office, so warm I begin to sweat and seriously consider taking my jacket off but I feared it would distract him.  He, by the way, is wearing a long sleeve shirt and a fleece jacket.  

3.  The Customs guy is in a small room adjacent to the Commandante.  He is armed with his own stamp, of course, and a spiral bound, lined notebook like the kind used in high school to take notes.  He is humorless, and so I smile weakly and forego my attempt at speaking Spanish as he is clearly not having it.  He studiously copies down my passport information, my passenger's passport information, and my aircraft information in the notebook, as slowly as is humanly possible, and then gives my passenger a painfully detailed declaration form to fill out.  He then takes my flight plan forms and stamps them everywhere, and directs me to Immigration.  Because one person could not possibly do both of those jobs.  Elapsed time:  35 minutes.  

4.  Immigration is the guy I dread most, because he is almost always irritable.  He sits in a (very warm) dark room which is strangely small for what furniture is packed into it.  He's wearing a long sleeve shirt and a jacket.  For some reason he never turns the lights on, even though the Immigration forms are printed using a 6 point font and his eyesight is apparently not the greatest.  He takes our passports and types our information into his computer.  (The Customs guy does not grant the Immigration guy access to his spiral bound notebook, in which he has already copied all of our information, and Custom guy's computer is not linked to the Commandante's computer.)  He is slightly better than the Commandante in this regard, although not great.  He does have the assistance of his ten year old child however, who is sitting next to him (and inexplicably not sitting in a school classroom somewhere).  He actually has a passport reader, which he uses to check us into the Country, then he hands the passports and my flight plans to the ten year old who then makes photocopies of everything on a very large copier in the corner.  We fill out additional Customs forms, sign them, and then Customs guy opens the official drawer and pulls out his official stamp, and stamps everything.  Everything.  My passenger has to pay an entry fee, and makes the mistake of asking for a receipt which sends Customs guy into a rant about how his computer is malfunctioning and that we'll have to go downtown to a bank if we wanted a damn receipt.  I profusely apologize and back out with my forms.  Elapsed time:  50 minutes.  

5.  Back to the Commandante's office, where he checks the 16 stamps now placed on the forms, pulls a few copies out for himself and then sends me back to the front desk.  The front desk checks the 16 stamps, charges me a landing fee and then pronounces that I am free to go.  

Which I do, quickly, before they change their mind.