Monday, October 31, 2022

Autographs — Wil Wheaton


 


Wil Wheaton was scheduled to sign his new book at Vroman's on August 31st:


I was there early. Quite a few folks came. Shortly after 7 pm, they apologized and said they were trying to contact him. After 7:30, they said they had no news. Just before 8, they said it wasn't going to happen. They also said they would try again, and they took our names, promising to notify us as soon as they knew more. As I wrote at the time, everyone hoped he was OK. The next day, he was posting on Facebook, with no mention of the book signing he had skipped.

On September 23rd, I received an email saying that he would be at Vroman's on October 26th “for real this time”. I would be out of town (Houston trip). I asked if I could drop off my book ahead of time and pick it up when I returned. I had to write three times before they answered, but they said OK, and that's what I did.

(Index to autographs)

Sunday, October 30, 2022

Houston — Oct. 2022

Link to more photos. (View the photos individually to see the captions.)

In February 2020, I booked flights for a trip to Houston a few months later. When COVID shut things down, that was the first of five trips I had to cancel. Now it's the last of them to finally happen. Rice's "Golden Reunion" weekend, my 50-year reunion, was the obvious time to go.

The trip included family, Rice, and several Houston sights, some new to me. We stayed with cousins Joel and Joan in Fulshear, 35 miles west of Houston. Victor particularly loved taking their dogs for walks.


We had dinner one night with more family: Warren, Lisa, Lauryn, Jason, Spencer and Ryan.


Around Houston, I first showed Victor the Rothko Chapel and Barnett Newman's Broken Obelisk sculpture in front, which I've always liked. We continued to the Menil Collection. I was surprised by how much they continue to acquire. I had not previously seen their Flavin Installation. (See the photos.)

Because we had recently been to Hobbiton in New Zealand, we had to stop at the Hobbit Cafe

The rest of the day was at Rice. I particularly wanted to see Duncan Hall and the Turrell Skyspace. Duncan Hall did not disappoint, but there's really not much to see at the Turrell work unless you're there at dawn or dusk, which we did not manage to do.

The next day, we started at the WaterWall. I showed Victor the Galleria, including the ice rink. The mall has expanded over the years; it is much larger than I remembered. After lunch, there was heavy rain, so I abandoned plans for other sights, and we went directly to the Rice reunion dinner location. As the rain let up, we saw large rainbows over downtown Houston. 

In the weeks before the reunion, I asked several of my classmates whether they were going, and all but one said no. So I only knew a handful of the reunion attendees, but the reception and dinner were fine.

All around the region, when you tell someone that you go to Rice, the most common response is, "You go to Rice? You must be smart!" While I was attending Rice, someone made this T-shirt, which I still have, and which I brought to the reunion:


(I read that someone later made a bumpersticker of that, and Rice students often put it on their cars upside-down!)

Thursday, October 6, 2022

New Zealand — Sept/Oct 2022


 Milford Sound

Link to more photos (As always, click any photo to enlarge it, and view the photos individually to see the captions.)

(And don't miss the link to a second album of Hobbiton photos below!)

I have long wanted to visit New Zealand. When I saw a sale price for this short tour, I signed up. Plus, I had sufficient airline miles for our round-trip flights.  But in the following weeks, there were changes. Certain activities were not going to re-open before we were there, and we made substitutions. In the end, we even cut Christchurch entirely and made the already short trip a full day shorter. 

I was not surprised that it rained at least a little almost every day, but it was also colder than I expected. I never wore any of the short-sleeve T-shirts I brought.

We started in Auckland. We walked around a bit, including Albert Park. Few people wore masks. Although we were in downtown, it was difficult to find a restaurant open for early breakfast. We then had a day-long tour of the city and surroundings, including Mount Victoria, both the Pacific and Tasman Sea coasts, the Waitakere Ranges Regional Park, and Arataki Centre. We walked a tiny bit of the [Edmund] Hillary Trail in the rain forest, saw giant ferns, large kauri trees, and Piha Beach with gray magnetic sand. (See the photos.)

From Auckland, we went by car to Rotorua via Hobbiton. Despite the drizzle, it was fun visiting Hobbiton. See my separate photo album there. 


Victor and Rodney at Bilbo's house in Hobbiton

In Rotorua, we went on a Duck Tours ride in an amphibious WW2 "duck" landing craft able to drive on city streets and become a motor boat in water. We did both. That evening, we saw the Maori presentation and had an indigenous dinner at Tamaki Village

From Rotorua, we flew to Queenstown on the South Island. The Rotorua Airport is a welcome throw-back: no security check, no metal detector, no ID check, and family and friends welcome at the gate. But our flight was canceled due to fog, and we were booked for a flight more than 7 hours later! We spent all day at the airport.

The next day, despite great weather in town, the morning Milford Sound flight/cruise was canceled! When I called, they set us up for a later time, and that worked. The flight was a bit bumpy, but beautiful; lots of snow-capped mountains. (See the photos, of course.) On the cruise, there was more beautiful scenery, a dolphin, and seals.

The following day, we walked a bit, including Queenstown Gardens, a bookstore, and an art gallery.

A cold front came through on the day we departed, so Victor saw snow falling for the first time, even though it was only a few flakes.

Crossing the International Date Line cost us a day when we flew from Los Angeles to New Zealand, but the return was weirder: We left NZ 8 pm one evening, and after a 12-hour flight, arrived in LA at noon the same day!

Thursday, September 22, 2022

Autographs — Sandra Cisneros

 


She was at Vromans, promoting her new poetry book. There was an overflow crowd, many with multiple books for her to sign.

(Index to autographs)


Wednesday, September 21, 2022

Mérida - Sept. 2022


 

Due to COVID, we had not been back to Mérida since Victor came to Los Angeles in May 2019. He had not seen his mother or any of the rest of his family in more than three years!

We were there for two weeks. We will probably return again this coming winter.

There was frequent rain, especially in the afternoons. I was pleasantly surprised by how many people on the street wore masks; many more than in L.A.

As always, we spent a lot of time on and waiting for buses, both to the downtown and to Progreso. Because Victor's house is now mostly unoccupied, there is no longer Internet service, so I used Internet cafes in the downtown or I used Internet at his sister's home in Progreso. 

Thursday, August 18, 2022

Manitoba - August 2022

Link to more photos (and one video). View the photos individually to see the captions.

Polar bears, beluga whales, and aurora borealis!

With Victor's love of bears (see here and here and here), we certainly had to go to Churchill, Manitoba to see polar bears some day. When I found this warm weather tour, I signed up. And despite some rain in the forecast ahead of time, the weather was very good.

First, we flew to Winnipeg. I was annoyed that they booked us at a hotel away from the airport that didn't offer airport pick-up.

At breakfast the next day, we met two people going on our tour. I figured there would be a handful of people joining us, but when we first gathered together, I was surprised to find more than fifty people in our tour group!

We had a charter flight just for our group (!) from Winnipeg to Churchill  no security checks!  followed by a tour of the area.

The next day, we went on a boat tour to see beluga whales. They were easy to find.

The following day was open for pricey extras (kayaking, aqua-gliding) which we didn't buy. So we wandered the town, although it's not very big and there's not a lot to do or see.

Next came polar bears! We did get good views of swimming polar bears and more distant views of them on land. Here's a 13-second video of one coming ashore and shaking off water:

We saw aurora borealis briefly one night (see the photos). On a tundra tour the next morning, we saw a distant caribou, one even more distant pair of polar bears, and birds including a golden eagle.

We left Churchill on another charter flight to Winnipeg, this time staying at an airport hotel. But the next day, our first flight to return home left too early to use the included breakfast.

Tuesday, August 2, 2022

Yellowstone, Mt. Rushmore, Dignity - July 2022



Link to more photos. View the photos individually to see the captions, several of which have more information than usual.

I have had my eye on this tour for years. In the Spring of 2019, even with the tour running almost every day during the summer, all dates were sold out. Then COVID hit, and the tour didn't run in 2020 or 2021. I was on the wait list. When it became available, I grabbed the earliest 2022 date.

Despite rain when we arrived in Rapid City, some intermittent light rain on the first full tour day, and excessive heat on the last, the weather was mostly good, and the trip went very well. We had a great time and visited many wonderful sites. 

Our initial day of travel had some problems. Flying to Rapid City, we had a connection in Las Vegas. First, we sat on the tarmac for 45 minutes in L.A. because Las Vegas was too busy. Then we left Las Vegas more than an hour late because we had a change of gate and plane. Once in Rapid City, I almost got lost trying to drive in the rain at night in a strange city.

After I saw this article, I knew I wanted to go a day early just to see the Dignity statue:


Despite having to drive most of the day to go there and back, it was worth it. Most people outside of South Dakota have still never heard of it. No one in our tour group, including the leader, knew of it. Oh, and it was the first time I've seen a highway speed limit sign saying 80 mph!

The first tour day was Mt. Rushmore and the Crazy Horse Memorial. The next day, we had breakfast in South Dakota, lunch in Wyoming, and dinner in Montana. We stopped at Devils Tower (the first U.S. National Monument), at the Buffalo Bill Center of the West (five museums) in Cody, and at the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument. Somewhere along the way, I saw a variable speed limit sign (showing 75 mph) for the first time. I didn't get a photo, but here's one from the internet:

We spent the next two days in Yellowstone National Park, the world's first national park. I had visited in 2012, and was eager to return. The photos show the highlights, including a 16-second video of Old Faithful erupting (but other than that, my Yellowstone photos from 2012 are even better). The only real disappointment was that we didn't see very many animals. In 2012, I had seen large herds of bison and quite a few other animals. This time, only a handful of bison and little else. But one, walking right down the road, did cause a bison jam of scores of cars (not on our side of the road, happily). See the photos.

Leaving Yellowstone, we cruised through Grand Teton National Park and then had lunch in Jackson, Wyoming. After a night in Pocatello, Idaho, the tour ended in Salt Lake City, including a stop at This Is the Place Heritage Park.

Thursday, June 30, 2022

Canadian Rockies - July 2022


 at Waterton Lake

Link to more photos. (View the photos individually to see the captions.)

When I did this trip in 2016, I wrote that I should have brought Victor. Now I did. He loved it. As before, we were lucky to have mild temperatures and no rain.

The itinerary had changed a little. With COVID complications for US border crossings, they had opted to omit Glacier National Park and instead added a few new sights near Waterton. (The border COVID rules eased just days before the trip, but the itinerary didn't change.) New stops were Red Rock Canyon and Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump. I had never heard of bison jumps; the film there was very instructive. Peyto Lake was even more impossibly blue than I remembered (see the photos).

In addition to deer, we saw mountain goats, big-horned sheep and black bears (see the photos). The scenery was spectacular, although there were many trees that had burned and many that were damaged by mountain pine beetles.

Walking on Athabasca Glacier was fine, but Victor noted that we walked farther and did more on Perito Moreno glacier in Argentina in 2009

On my 2016 trip, no one told me about the triple continental divide at Snow Dome above Athabasca Glacier, where some water flows to the Atlantic, some to the Pacific, and some to the Arctic Ocean.


Tuesday, May 17, 2022

Big Bend, Carlsbad Caverns, White Sands — May 2022

 

Sunset at "The Window"
Big Bend National Park

Link to more photos. View the photos individually to see the captions.

This tour took us to all four national parks in Texas and New Mexico and a few additional stops. The temperature was frequently above 100, and we used four different buses, which required adjusting the itinerary for lost time. But despite the heat and the bus issues, the trip was a success.

Our first stop was McDonald Observatory. When I drove between Los Angeles and San Antonio, I always saw the turn-off for the observatory, but because it is more than 30 miles off of the interstate highway, I had never visited. We had an excellent tour guide.

We continued to Big Bend National Park, another Texas attraction I had never visited, mainly because it is so remote. On the first night there, I lucked upon a spectacular sunset photo (above).

The next day's highlight was Santa Elena Canyon and the Rio Grande, sadly nearly completely dry (see photos). The lowlight: A road construction crew had one piece of equipment sticking out too far, and it damaged several panels of our bus! Investigating and reporting the accident involved federal officers and much time. Since the nearest replacement bus was many hours away from Big Bend, we were happy that our bus remained drivable.

The next day, we changed to a new bus as we left the park. We had lunch in Marfa and stopped at the famous Prada art installation there.

We made a brief stop at Guadalupe Mountains National Park, but saw nothing that really interested me.

The next morning, our bus driver noticed a leak under the bus, and we waited several hours for a replacement bus. It was older and from a different company, so we were told we would get yet another bus the next day!

We stopped at the Living Desert Zoo and then proceeded to Carlsbad Caverns National Park. I had visited Carlsbad Caverns when I was maybe twelve; Victor, of course, had never been there.

The next day, with our fourth and final bus, we went to White Sands National Park. I was at a different portion of the park on a 2013 tour of New Mexico's "Space Trail".

The next morning, after a short stop at Old Mesilla, we returned to El Paso for our flight home.

Sunday, April 24, 2022

Autographs — Solnit

 
After a two-year pandemic absence, The LATimes Festival of Books returned yesterday. I managed to hear at least parts of five panels, and I bought two books. I have enjoyed much of Solnit's work. I would have preferred getting her to sign some of her other books, but this was the only one available at the event.

P.S. In January 2023, a Facebook friend asked what I thought of the book, and I wrote this note.

(Index to autographs)

Autographs — Klune

 
After a two-year pandemic absence, The LATimes Festival of Books returned yesterday. I managed to hear at least parts of five panels, and I bought two books. I chose this one because Klune spoke about how pleased he was to include a "happy gay" character. I have not read any of his work yet.

(Index to autographs)

Thursday, March 31, 2022

Autographs — Sandra Tsing Loh

 

Sandra Tsing Loh spoke at Occidental today, and was happy to sign this book. Now I have to read it! When I saw that she was coming to Oxy, I bought this, hoping to get her autograph.

I have read some of her essays, and before I retired, I often heard her short "The Loh Down on Science" pieces on the radio while commuting. Today, her talk was "The Loh Down on Writing". As expected, she was informative and entertaining.

(Index to autographs)

Monday, March 28, 2022

Atlanta — March 2022


Link to more photos. (View the photos individually to see the captions.)

This tour took us to Atlanta and vicinity. I chose this because although I have been through the Atlanta airport many times, I had never stayed to visit. 

I originally booked this for Spring 2020; COVID moved it first to 2021, then to 2022. During this delay, CNN stopped giving tours, and that was dropped from the itinerary.

We were to face further disappointments: Because of a winter storm in mid-March, the cherry blossoms were delayed.  This tour had been carefully timed to include Macon's International Cherry Blossom Festival:

but the entire festival was postponed a week. Instead of seeing multitudes of cherry blossoms, we saw very few. 

Also, when we visited the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historic Park, the grounds were open, but the buildings, including the Visitor Center, were closed due to COVID. Of course, they re-opened the very next week.

Finally, when we visited Stone Mountain Park, the Summit Skyride was closed due to wind.

Despite all that, the trip was pretty good. The weather was mostly mild, with only a bit of rain one day and some strong winds on our last day. 

We did not choose the group air travel, but we did connect with the group when they arrived at the Atlanta airport, so we joined them for the bus to dinner and the hotel.

Monday, the first full tour day, included the Georgia State Capitol, a bit of the Atlanta Beltline, the World of Coca-Cola, and MLK Park. At the Coke headquarters, I finally was able to buy a couple of products I have been vaguely searching for: Coke Zero Starlight and Vanilla Coke Zero with Coffee. They were pricey  $2.50 and $3.50, respectively. I drank them later in the week; they were nothing special.

Tuesday, we went to Marietta for the Gone With the Wind Museum, and Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, then returned to the city for the Atlanta History Center, including Swan House and the Cyclorama. While on the bus, our tour guide showed us Gone With The Wind. I had not seen it in more than fifty years; now it seemed way too melodramatic, and Scarlett O'Hara was simply stupid.

Wednesday we were in Macon. A step-on guide showed us many historic Macon homes (we toured one, Hay House), and regaled us with stories of famous Macon musicians.

On Thursday, we went to FDR's Little White House in Warm Springs. On the bus traveling there, our guide showed us the movie Warm Springs, with Kenneth Branagh as FDR, which was quite good. I liked the displays at the park, but after the movie, I was disappointed that we didn't see pools full of spring water, just empty pools with one small bubbling water trough where we could touch the spring water. Later, we stopped at Callaway Gardens (more of a large forested park than a garden) and the included birds of prey program and Butterfly Center.

Friday was the last day with the tour group. We hit the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum and Stone Mountain Park, including its Historic Square of relocated period houses.

Victor and I stayed for one more day on our own. After considering many possibilities, we walked to Piedmont Park, where we stumbled upon the Atlanta Science Festival.

I was worried that Victor would not get much out of this trip, but he says he did enjoy it, even if he didn't know most of the history involved, including the U.S. Civil War!

And, repeating: Link to more photos. (View the photos individually to see the captions.)

Tuesday, March 15, 2022

Maps

(See five photo links below.)

I'm another map freak. I have hundreds of maps. Printed maps. Even in this digital age when all maps are available online, I still like printed maps. 

Many are from AAA and National Geographic. But some are from more obscure map-makers. And, from my father, some are older than I am. And, from my father's workplace as they were being discarded, a handful pre-date him!

The photo albums linked below show just a few of my maps. Each album begins with a description of the maps shown. Click on any image to see it larger.


1918 map (date circled in red)

Map Album 1: Some of my oldest maps (1900-1921)


Map Album 2: Topographic maps



Map Album 3: Thematic maps


Map Album 4: Trend maps


Map Album 5: Miscellaneous maps

Saturday, February 19, 2022

Autographs — Peter Alsop

 


My only composer autograph. I only recently remembered that I had an LP with an autograph. The album is from 1977. I don't recall the circumstances, but I think it might have been at USC. Here is his website.

(Index to autographs)