Monthly Archives: September 2010

Isaiah 12:2

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“Surely God is my salvation;
I will trust and not be afraid.
The LORD, the LORD, is my strength and my song;
he has become my salvation.”

Check out my friend Baloney for more pairings of image and scripture.

The Best American Short Stories 2009 Edited by Alice Sebold

I bought this book last Fall but didn’t read it until recently. You know how it goes, so many books, so little time. I love short stories and I have been reading this series since the mid 8’s. The 2010 edition should be coming out in October or so.

This year’s edition has some great stories.

“The Idiot President” by Daniel Alarcon -(No, it is not about W!)

“Rubiaux Raising” by Steve de Jarnatt – A story that incorporates the war in Iraq and hurricane Katrina.

“Hurricanes” by Adam Johnson – (One guess which hurricane it refers to .)

“Modulation” by Richard Powers – This story about music and viruses, and musica piracy is brilliant.

“Them Old Cowboy Songs” by Annie Proulx – Another story of the how hard life in the west was. This story is set back in the 1800’s. Annie Proulx may be my favorite author. Many people don’t realize that “Brokeback Mountain” was a short story by Proulx.

“Into the Gorge” by Ron Rash.

“The Peripatetic Coffin” by Ethan Rutherford. – A story incorporating the confederates submarine , the H.L. Hunley, used in the Civil War.

If you don’t want to buy the book, get a copy from your local library to read any of the above stories.

I give this book a solid four stars out of five. It is great.

The Switch with Jennifer Aniston

(All images from imdb.com)

Sweetie and I went to see “The Switch” with Jennifer Aniston and Jason Bateman. It’s kind of a romantic comedy. Let me see, what’s it about? Kate (Anniston) is 40, single, childless. The only man in her life is Wally (Bateman) who plays her friend, except he loves her, but won’t tell her. Kate’s throws an insemination party. The donor and his wife show up (he needs the money) and the donor makes his donation. Before Kate can do the turkey baster thing Wally tosses the donor’s donation and substitutes his own (fantasizing about Diane Sawyer!!!). Kate doesn’t know that, goes ahead with the turkey baster and we move seven years later and you know that’s when we have more fun.

I’m just going to tell you that I would give this movie a rating of 1.5 stars out of 4. Aniston and Bateman have exactly zero chemistry together. She comes across as distracted and basically calls her performance in. He is small, mean, cruel, and pathetic. Jeff Goldblum is in the movie but I am not quite sure why.

The best part of this movie is the cute little boy played by Bryce Robinson,

and Juliette Lewis, whose character is Anniston’s fun, crazy, out of control, but keeps everything going, friend Debbie. She provides some much needed comic relief to this film. In fact, if you are going to see the movie, go see it for her performance. Everybody knows a Debbie. I know several. They are the people who make life interesting.

The official trailer

Check out the web site.

Camera Critters – Helmeted Guineafowl

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SuperPizzaBoy has a friend who lives on the ouskirts of town. His family has a wide range of critters including many different types of fowl including chickens, ducks, and peacocks. The ones I like the most are the Guineafowl.

According to Wikipedia. Guinea’s eat ticks. I love all of God’s creatures but anything that eats ticks is a friend of mine.

Please check out Camera Critters.

Geocaching – with a few thoughts on Homeless People

Recently, I went into such woods here in Tulsa in search of geocache. I parked at a lumber store and found a trail along a flood control creek. I knew that I would have to walk about a quarter mile up the paved trail before I had to get off of it.

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When I get close and my GPS tells me that I got to start looking to go “off trail” I start looking for a little “crease” in the woods. For what park administrators call a “social trail” which they hate. People are supposed to stay on the designated trails. Here in Tulsa on the Riverparks, you have to get a permit to hide a geocache and you agree if your cache results in a “social trail” you are in trouble. Oh, sorry, I’m off topic, this evening I found my crease in the woods:

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I know, its kind of hard to see, its easier to see from the other side once you go through it.

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You have to keep in mind, that when people hide geocaches they rarely just blindly blunder through the woods. Almost all caches are hidden with 25 feet of a trail. They key is finding the trail. They are often social trails.

Once I got through the crease its a matter of following the trail.

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I know that it is hard to see but there is definitely a trail there.

And about 20 feet off the trail I found the cache. Actually I stubbed my toe on it so I heard it before I saw it.

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Nearby was an old homeless person’s camp.

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I’ve blundered into lots of homeless people’s camps over the years while pursuing my geocaching hobby. Many have been abandoned like this one, others you could tell are current, and more than once I have found them complete with the resident(s).

Sometimes they will have a tent but it seems lots of them sleep in the open. Lots of plastic gallon water jugs. I don’t see too many fire rings. I think fires attract too much attention. All in all, it looks to me like a miserable way to live.

Geocachers and homeless people have a lot in common. We both spend lots of time walking around looking at what is going on. Cachers are looking for places to hide caches. Homeless folks look for places to hide themselves and their belongings. In urban areas both groups gravitate to the “squalor zones” away from the nice, neat, and tidy buildings. Those usually have security cameras and guards.

There are homeless people all over Tulsa but I think the biggest concentration for various reasons is in the downtown area. I mean you have the Day Center for the Homeless, the Salvation Army Shelter and a bunch of other organizations that specialize in serving the homeless. (Sometimes, forgive me, I think some regard the homeless as a commodity, but that is another subject.)

Here is a geocaching.com map of downtown Tulsa.

This map is from my own account. So the smiley faces are caches hidden by others that I have found. The stars are caches that I have hidden myself. You can see that I have several downtown. Now what you don’t see are caches that I’ve had to abandon downtown because they are repeatedly vandalized. Also if you look at the star at the bottom of the photo you will see that it has a grey background instead of white. That is because I have temporarily suspended it. In fact I am going to delete it. Why? Because it is a nice little secluded area that I found that was perfect for a cache but has now been taken over that a homeless person as living quarters.

What the photo doesn’t show is that I have hidden over twice as many other caches downtown that I have had to abandon, almost all due to homeless people.

Nobody is more observant than homeless people. They live hand to mouth and they live in nature and they see everything.  I have found all sorts of nooks and crannies downtown in my wanderings looking for spots to hide tuppwerware and I have found places big enough to hide a small car in but they are all previously occupied. I have found people sleeping soundly in a safe little nook maybe 25 feet from the busiest intersection downtown.

So do you run into homeless people regularly? Do they scare you? What do you think of them?

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Turkey N’ Taturs Trail Race

I ran a trail race Sunday morning. The Turkey N’Taturs Trail Race on Tulsa’s Turkey Mountain Park. I’ve come to love Turkey Mountain and trail running. They had races of 10K, 25K, and 50K lengths. I opted for the 10K (about 6.2 miles). On trail runs I start at the back and pretty much stay there the whole race. I like to take photographs, and pics and fast times are mutually exclusive. Of course, those who know me think that I’d be at the back with or without a camera but I digress.

The weather was great, cool and sunny. A few pics:

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About 0.1 miles from the start. Sorry, I had to stop and get an image.

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A muddy pond near the end.

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I just loved that for a little while we ran on the “Fairy Dust Trail.”

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I just love a sense of humor.

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Luckily we just had to run besides these rocks, not through them. I refer to these as “snake condo’s.” Great place to hide a geocache huh? The clue would be “Look in the rocks.”

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Isn’t this nice? A flagstone running path. Here in Tulsa we don’t have enough money to pay our police and fire departments but nothing but first class for our runners.

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Going up hill behind the “Three Graces.” Three ladies that stayed ahead of me until just before halfway then they let me pass. They were very nice and great runners.

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Wow, just as I was in the groove running in the woods with the birds and the squirrels and fixing to go totally Ralph Waldo Emerson mode I pop onto a power line right of way, whoa, urban chaos and a strangely empty Arkansas River.

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I finished the race and rested a bit. I went looking for a malted beverage. Some lady told me, “Don’t you think that it is way to early to have beer especially on a Sunday morning?” Boy, she gave me a look when she saw what I grabbed out of the cooler. So I had two, hey, she didn’t want hers, beer doesn’t drink itself you know.

The race was great. Everybody was very chilled out. I won a technical shirt as a door prize, and ate some great barbecue. Some amazing times were run.

Kudos to the Tulsa Area Trail and Ultra Runners (“TATUR“). Kudos also to my blog friend Trail Zombie (aka Ken) who spent hours and hours marking the trails and who knows what else and was also a sponsor of the race.

Of course you know the most important part of a race,

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It’s the shirt and the participant medal. I’m the king of participant medals.

When is the next race Ken? I’m ready!