Helping a Hang Glider

When we were in Anacortes, Washington in early April, we visited Mt. Erie on the southern part of Fidalgo Island. There is a wonderful view of the area from this 1,200 ft peak. The park there is well kept and you there are views in all directions.

While we were up there, we saw a man preparing his hang glider for a flight. We thought seeing him take off would be interesting, so we stuck around while he went through his preparations. When he was just about done, he walked up to me and said “So you’ll drive my car down?”

I paused and smiled. He said “I’m not kidding.”

He introduced himself as Konrad. He had a Volkswagen Eurovan with 175,000 miles on it. It was a stick shift, which has made it harder to find drivers as many drivers do not know how to drive a stick shift. After he took off, I drove his car down to the Lake Campbell boat launch. He had already landed. He told us that he has been flying for 20 some years, and that we should be careful about trying it as we might get hooked.

Here is a video of Konrad taking off and flying.

I have always wondered how a solo hang glider got his car down to the landing area. Now I know. He just asks someone to drive it down. My family followed me in the car we had taken up the mountain.

India: Nashik and Galibore Visits

In late February and early March, I traveled to India for work. I visited our service provider Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) in Mumbai and Sony ORMC in Bangalore. I was fortunate to be hosted on two day trips over the weekends I was there.

The first weekend, I was in Mumbai. At my colleague Kunal Mittal’s suggestion, we visited Nashik, northeast of Mumbai and an emerging wine producing region in India. Kunal and his wife are producing some wonderful wine up in Paso Robles under the LXV Wine label, and this drove his interest in visiting this area.

We had a pleasant drive out. Our first destination was the Trimbakeshwar Shiva Temple in Trimbak, west of Nashik. We used Google Maps to navigate from the main Mumbai — Nashik highway. It was amazingly accurate as it took us down through small villages along single-lane dirt roads. My hosts from TCS were often concerned about being lost, even stopping for directions, but it took us very accurately across the countryside. This time of year the land is dry. One often sees herds of goats, farming, and other agricultural activity.

A goat herd being tended on the road to Trembakeshwar

A goat herd being tended on the road to Trembakeshwar

As anywhere in India, people play cricket everywhere.

A cricket game being played outside of Nashik

A cricket game being played outside of Nashik

We had a very nice visit at the beautiful temple of Tremakeswar. I do not have any pictures as cameras are not allowed.

From there we proceeded to the Sula Winery which is just west of Nashik. Sula was founded in the 1990s by a former Oracle executive. It has produced some award winning wine. The quality of Indian wine is increasing rapidly and it is becoming a popular drink in the country. Sula has a very nice tour, showing the tanks for fermenting, crushing units, some actual crushing since it is harvest time, and wine tasting, of course.

Visitors can stomp grapes if they’d like (no, these grapes are not used for wine). You can see the vineyards in the background.

Grape stomping at Sula Vineyards

Grape stomping at Sula Vineyards

I was able to see some grapes just before they were crushed.

I hold some grapes just before they are put into the crushing machinery

I hold some grapes just before they are put into the crushing machinery

After a fine lunch at the winery, we drove south to Pandav Caves. These are a series of 30 caves carved in the rock of the hillside on the southwest corner of Nashik over the last thousand years. It is a steep climb up to the caves, but they are quite impressive.

The work in the rock is quite extensive.

Large entry to temple in Pandav Caves in Nashik

Large entry to temple in Pandav Caves in Nashik

There are many beautiful, detailed carvings.

Carvings in Pandav Caves near Nashik

Carvings in Pandav Caves near Nashik

There is a very nice view of Nashik from the hill where the caves are located.

View of Nashik from Pandav Caves

View of Nashik from Pandav Caves

This concluded our visit to Nashik. We headed back to Mumbai. I cannot thank my hosts at TCS enough for their hospitality.

The next weekend, I was in Bangalore. My colleague and good friend Pankaj found an interesting destination for a Saturday day trip. Since business trips inevitably involve airports, hotels, offices, and restaurants, I always want to get away from the city and really see the country. The Galibore Fishing and Nature Camp was the perfect destination. Located about 100 kilometers (60 miles) south of Bangalore, it is a Karnataka state-run wilderness camp. While there is not fishing due to a regulatory dispute at this time, it is a wonderful drive there and a good destination for either a day trip or an overnight stay.

Again, we used Google Maps to navigate and they were very accurate. Perhaps too accurate. We found ourselves on a one-lane road with not turnarounds or room for two cars to pass if we met one head one for a mile at a time. As it turns out, we were directed through a nature preserve and would have been cited and fined if a ranger found us on the road. When we arrived a the camp, our wrong-way arrival was clear as the sign for the camp was facing the other direction down the road. If you do go, take Route 92 south from Kanakapura. It’s a dirt road for the last several miles, but well kept up and well marked. Google has been notified about this problem and will hopefully fix it soon.

The camp has 15 tents for overnight stays. The tents are under hard roofs, so rain is not a concern, and each has facilities. There is a common eating area for meals. There are places for children to play, guides to take you on a hike (or a “trek” as is common usage in India), and boating.

The tents look reasonably comfortable.

Tents at Galibore Nature camp with the common area in the foreground.

Tents at Galibore Nature camp with the common area in the foreground.

There are many monkeys in the area.

A monkey looks down from a tree at Galibore Nature camp.

A monkey looks down from a tree at Galibore Nature camp.

They play a game at meal time with the staff. They sneak up as close as they can get into the cafeteria area and are then chased away by a staff member. This process repeats several times during a meal. Here is a monkey getting a bit close, soon to be chased off.

A monkey sneaking into the eating area -- he was chased off moments later.

A monkey sneaking into the eating area — he was chased off moments later.

The camp is directly on and overlooks the Kaveri River and is very picturesque and restful. We took a trek up river for about a mile. We saw many cormorants fishing, some other birds, and some elephant dung. That’s the closest I’ve been to an elephant in the wild. We visited at low water. In late summer, the water levels are much higher and there is good rafting and running of rapids according to our guide.

The Kaveri river just south of Galibore Nature Camp.

The Kaveri river just south of Galibore Nature Camp.

After our hike and a good meal. We watched the river for a while. Then we had a 30 minute ride down river in a coracle. We started earlier in the day than recommended, but we were only on a day trip. Ideally we would have left around 3:30 pm and spent an hour or so floating gently downstream.

Here I am about to set sail aboard the coracle on the Kaveri river.

Here I am about to set sail aboard the coracle on the Kaveri river.

The view from the coracle was very pleasant. It would be perhaps a bit more exciting at high water, but it was very pleasant during our visit. As it was, we had a very nice trip down river, seeing more wildlife, including many birds and some deer. A pleasant end to our visit to the wilderness of Karnataka.

The Kaveri River seen from a coracle

The Kaveri River seen from a coracle

I cannot thank Pankaj and his family enough for their hospitality and kindness. I was a successful trip from a business standpoint, but the trips outside of the city helped me to appreciate the people, sites, and beauty of India and made this a truly memorable visit.

And the Sun sets over the Bangalore skyline as my visit comes to a close, seen from my room at the Leela Palace Hotel.

Sunset over Bangalore seen from my hotel room at the Leela Palace.

Sunset over Bangalore seen from my hotel room at the Leela Palace.

Maple Syrup Production, Circa 1981

When I was a sophomore at UCLA, I took the Spring quarter off to help my step father make maple syrup. He had a sugar bush in Upper Michigan, in eastern Powell Township on the south shore of Lake Superior. It is about 10 miles west of Big Bay.

I took pictures of the process way back then, but never put them into the photo essay I was planning. Thanks to a film scanner lent to me by by brother-in-law Art, I have good copies of the photos to present here. It was fun to be able to do in Photoshop all the things I did in the darkroom when I first printed the pictures. 30 years after kicking off the project, it is finally complete.

Maple syrup is made by collecting the sap of sugar or hard maple trees in the spring. It is then boiled to concentrate the sugars in the sap to make syrup. It takes about 40 gallons of sap to make one gallon of syrup. The first step is to collect the sap. While many people think of buckets on trees, tubing among the trees is far easier and less labor intensive.

Tubing collecting sap in the sugar bush

Tubing collecting sap in the sugar bush

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Scripture December 2012

As I have done in the past, I am posting a collection of scripture quotes from Magnificat. These are just quotes that, for whatever reason, caught my attention.

One comment does not have a place in the structure below. Magnificat writes in a prayer, “Saint Ignatius of Loyola tells us that discouragement never comes from God beacuase it clouds faith and hope.”

Ephesians 6:11
Put on the armor of God so that you may be able to stand firm against the tactics of the devil.

1 Peter 3:15
Always be ready to give an explanation to anyone who asks you for a reason for your hope.

St Augustine of Hippo († 430) (From November 23, 2011 Magnificat)
Why am I saying this? Because you do not know yourself unless you learn through trial, temptation, and testing. When you have learned yourself, don’t be heedless about yourself. At least, if you were heedless about yourself when hidden from you, don’t be heedless about that self when it has become known to you.

Psalm 40:12
LORD, may you not withhold
your compassion from me;
May your mercy and your faithfulness
continually protect me.

Sirach 24:15
Like cinnamon and fragrant cane,
like precious myrrh I gave forth perfume;
Like galbanum and onycha and mastic,
like the odor of incense in the holy tent

Hebrews 2:17-18
[Christ] had to become like his brothers in every way, that he might be a merciful and faithful high priest before God to expiate the sins of the people.
Because he himself was tested through what he suffered, he is able to help those who are being tested.

Isaiah 64:7
Yet, LORD, you are our father;
we are the clay and you our potter:
we are all the work of your hand.

Saint Francis de Sales († 1622) (January 24, 2012 Magnificat)
Living according to the spirit means doing actions with the spirit of God asks of us, saying the words and thinking the things that he wants. And when I say thinking the the things he wants, I am referring to your willed thoughts. I am miserable and so I don’t feel like talking: draymen and parrots do as much; I feel miserable, but since charity demands that I should talk I will do it: that is what spiritual people say. I have been slighted and I get cross: peacocks and monkeys do as much; I have been slighted and I rejoice: that is what the Apostles did. So to live according to the spirit is to do what faith, hope, and charity teach us to do, whether in things temporal or things spiritual.

St. Theresa of Avila († 1582) (January 26, 2012 Magnificat) Thanks to the Words to Live By blog for transcribing this passage.
We are renouncing our status when…we begin to live a spiritual life and follow the path of perfection. No sooner is some little point of etiquette concerning our status brought up than we forget we have already offered it to God; and we desire to take it right back out of his hands, so to speak, after having made him, as it seemed, the Lord of our wills. So it is with everything else.
What a charming way to seek the love of God! And then we desire it with our hands full, as they say. We have our attachments since we do not strive to direct our desires to a good effect and raise them up from the earth completely; but to have many spiritual consolations along with attachments is incongruous, nor does it seem to me that the two can get along together. Since we do not succeed in giving up everything at once, this treasure as a result is not given to us all at once. May it please the Lord that drop by drop he may give it to us, even though it cost us all the trials in the world.
Indeed a great mercy does he bestow on anyone to whom he gives the grace and courage to resolve to strive for this good with every ounce of energy. For God does not deny himself to anyone who perseveres. Little by little he will measure out the courage sufficient to attain this victory. I say “courage” because there are so many things the devil puts in the minds of beginners to prevent them in fact from starting out on this path. For he knows the damage that will be done to him in losing not only that one soul but many others. If beginners with the assistance of God struggle to reach the summit of perfections, I believe they will never go to heaven alone; they will always lead many people along after them. Like good captains they will give whoever marches in their company to God.

Isaiah 49:4
Though I thought I had toiled in vain,
for nothing and for naught spent my strength,
Yet my right is with the LORD,
my recompense is with my God.

1 Corinthinans 3:7
Neither the one who plants nor the one who waters is anything, but only God, who causes the growth.

James 1:19-20
Know this, my dear brothers: everyone should be quick to hear,* slow to speak, slow to wrath,
for the wrath of a man does not accomplish the righteousness of God.

Mathew 7:7-8
Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you.
For everyone who asks, receives; and the one who seeks, finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.

Numbers 6:24-26
The LORD bless you and keep you!
The LORD let his face shine upon you, and be gracious to you!
The LORD look upon you kindly and give you peace!

Hebrews 12:11
At the time, all discipline seems a cause not for joy but for pain, yet later it brings the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who are trained by it.

Isaiah 58:6-9
This, rather, is the fasting that I wish: releasing those bound unjustly, untying the thongs of the yoke; Setting free the oppressed, breaking every yoke;
Sharing your bread with the hungry, sheltering the oppressed and the homeless; Clothing the naked when you see them, and not turning your back on your own.
Then your light shall break forth like the dawn, and your wound shall quickly be healed; Your vindication shall go before you, and the glory of the LORD shall be your rear guard.
Then you shall call, and the LORD will answer, you shall cry for help, and he will say: Here I am!

James 4:7-10
So submit yourselves to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.
Draw near to God, and he will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you of two minds.
Begin to lament, to mourn, to weep. Let your laughter be turned into mourning and your joy into dejection.
Humble yourselves before the Lord and he will exalt you.

Mathew 26:41
Watch and pray that you may not undergo the test. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.

This completes selections from five Magnificats over the last year. I have six in a stack that will wait for later this month or or next.

May

What a month. Two weeks in India, which was a great trip. Saw an IPL game (that’s a 3-hour format cricket league in India) which was a blast. The Mumbai Indians beat the Deccan Chargers (Hyderabad) by two wickets with only 4 balls remaining. I visited Amby Valley and Karla Caves. Had a great trip to Mysore from Bangalore. Even though the last 17 klicks took 90 minutes. Then watched a great cricket match, seeing the winner grab the game by scoring 14 runs on the last three balls.

And there was good progress at work too. There is no substitute for visiting an offshore team and seeing them in person.

It was good to get home. There was a Solar eclipse starting at the end of Don Giovanni, with an arrival at home just as the clouds come in. But I should explain. The last concert in our annual subscription to the LA Phil was a performance of Don Giovanni. Not excerpts as I expected, but the whole opera. That’s four hours. A fabulous performance, but our eclipse viewing was limited by the marine layer coming in just at the greatest extent of the eclipse.

We finally got back to Lake Riverside, I faced five weeks of grass growth. Six barrels full of grass. Moderate (I’m being charitable) infiltration of gophers. But most things ok. We had a great visit to the Living Desert zoo in Palm Desert. It is a very good zoo.

Less fortunately, I had an unfortunate encounter with Papaya, our recently adopted cat. She showed up as a starving kitten/stray after Sam (our old alpha male cat) died. The we discovered she was pregnant. She gave birth in the outdoor house I built for Sam years ago and they are all safely and completely human adapted kittens.

Last weekend was Papaya’s first trip to LRE. On Sunday morning at 3am, she got caught in the rope handle of a paper bag and freaked out. I found her in the house and then proceeded to pick her up to remove the loop of rope around her neck. I didn’t require stitches, but now I know what an existentially scared cat can do. I am happy for antibiotics and for my tetanus shot.

I’ll write an update on how we deal with the seven cats in our house at a later date.

With God’s blessings and help, it has been a good month.

Scripture Selections November 2011

A few scriptural items selected from Magnificat over the past year.

Hebrews 12:11
At the time, all discipline seems a cause not for joy but for pain, yet later it brings the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who are trained by it.

Exodus 14:14
The Lord himself will fight for you
you have only to keep still.

Mathew 13:16-17
But blessed are your eyes, because they see, and your ears, because they hear.
Amen, I say to you, many prophets and righteous people longed to see what you see but did not see it, and to hear what you hear but did not hear it.

Job 22:28
When you make a decision, it shall succeed for you, and upon your ways the light shall shine.

Psalm 37:8-9
Calm your anger and forget your rage;
do not fret, it only leads to evil.
For those who do evil shall perish;
the patient shall inherit the land.

Psalm 8:4-5
When I see your heavens, the work of your fingers,
the moon and stars that you set in place—
What is man that you are mindful of him,
and a son of man that you care for him?

Mathew 6:20-21
Store up treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor decay destroys, nor thieves break in and steal.
For where your treasure is, there also will your heart be.

Psalm 18:29-30
You O Lors, are my lamp,
my God who lightens my darkness.
With you I can break through any barrier,
with my God I can scale any wall.

Titus 2:11-13
The grace of God has appeared, saving all and training us to reject godless ways and worldly desires and to live temperately, justly, and devoutly in this age, as we await the blessed hope, the appearance 3 of the glory of the great God and of our savior Jesus Christ.

2 Corinthians 10:17
Whoever boasts, should boast in the Lord.

Psalm 138
I thank you, Lord, with all my heart;
in the presence of the angels to you I sing.
I bow low toward your holy temple;

I praise your name for your mercy and faithfulness.
For you have exalted over all
your name and your promise.
On the day I cried out, you answered;
you strengthened my spirit.

All the kings of earth will praise you, LORD,
when they hear the words of your mouth.
They will sing of the ways of the LORD:
“How great is the glory of the LORD!”

The LORD is on high, but cares for the lowly
and knows the proud from afar.
Though I walk in the midst of dangers,
you guard my life when my enemies rage.

You stretch out your hand;
your right hand saves me.
The LORD is with me to the end.
LORD, your mercy endures forever.
Never forsake the work of your hands!

Ephesians 5:1
So be imitators of God, as beloved children.

Driving to Anacortes

Back in June we drove up to Anacortes, Washington to see my wife’s parents. Our first driving vacation in many years. We went up the Eastern Sierra on US Highway 395 up into Northern California. When I was a kid, we went camping and skiing up on the Easter Sierra and at Mammoth, so it was great to go up that road again.

We got up early, heading out of the city at 7:30am, going north on Interstate 405 to California route 14. On the 14 just north of Mojave, we stopped at Red Rock Canyon State Park. It is a nice desert badlands park. There is nice hike in the wonderfully named Nightmare Gulch, but we just stopped for a snack. With the wet Winter and Spring, the plant were in bloom and covered in interesting bugs. Click on the picture for a larger version.

Red Rock Canyon

Red Rock Canyon

The Sierra was beautiful and snow-covered. North of Lone Pine and just south of Independence, we stopped at Manzanar. There is now a Park Service-run facility there with very good exhibits and a good short film describing the internment of the Nisei during WWII. The facility was built in 2002. Here is the iconic memorial at the cemetery.

Manzanar Memorial

Manzanar Memorial

We stopped for lunch in Independence, California, population 250. The post office has a fresh coat of paint.

Independence Post Office

Independence Post Office

Not knowing were to stop for lunch, we stopped for gas first. Right across the street from the gas station was a small restaurant advertising itself as a “Biere et Vin Bistro.” We had to try it. It is the Still Life Cafe, run by a French couple. The food was wonderful. I had sausages, my wife had a brie sandwich. An amazing find in this pretty small town.

Still Life Cafe

Still Life Cafe

Of course we had to stop at Mono Lake. Believe it or not, Tioga Pass which goes to Yosemite from the east, was still closed due to snow, and this was in mid-June.

Mono Lake

Mono Lake

Our first night stay was in Minden, Nevada. We continued north on 395 to Susanville where we turned off to visit Lava Beds National Monument.

We went through two lava tubes at the park. Here we are at the entrance to the second one, known as Skull Cave.

Skull Cave Entrance

Skull Cave Entrance

There is permanent water ice at the bottom of the cave. We all made it down, even my wife who had a badly sprained ankle.

Water Ice in Skull Cave

Water Ice in Skull Cave

After spending the night in Klamath Falls, Oregon, we drove north and then cut over to the west through Eugene to the coast at Florence. Just north of Florence, we visited Sea Lion Caves which has nice views of the coast and some nice views of sea lions.

Looking South on the Oregon Coast

Looking South on the Oregon Coast

Looking Down at the Sea Lions

Looking Down at the Sea Lions

We spent our third night in Tillamook, Oregon and had a nice visit at the Tillamook Cheese Factory the next morning.

By this time, we could smell the barn. We drove with purpose the final day to Anacortes. (Well, we did stop for a walk but that will wait for a post update.)

Several days after arriving in Anacortes, my wife’s sister and her family joined us. My daughter, my nephew, and I walked around Cranberry Lake in Anacortes and visited an abandoned mine there. I have no clue what they were trying to mine.

Cranberry Lake Mine

Cranberry Lake Mine

Investments and Luck

No, this isn’t a post about financial investments and chances of getting a return. It is about investment of time and the luck of the weather.

Over the last several months, we’ve invested a lot of time in the landscaping around the house in Aguanga. We’ve added six trees (two olive and four pines) and at almost 20 shrubs. I’ve run drip irrigation lines to them all. We’ve pulled innumerable mustard plants and loco weeds. We’ve mowed and trimmed. I’ve gone after many gopher mounds. We have two goals for all this work: Less effort at maintenance and a prettier property. With each week having more to do, I wonder about the first goal.

Luck is needed for astronomy. Actually, it’s clear skies that are needed but without the luck to have clear skies, there is no astronomy. That’s been the situation over the past six months. I’ve only had a few nights when we’ve been out there without a major Moon and had clear skies. And on those nights, I’ve been whacked out tired from the work on the property.

As we move into Summer, I am hopeful that there will be less maintenance and more clear skies.

A Trip to India

In the middle of March, I had a very nice trip to India. I was welcomed both by our business partners and the people of India. Here are some pictures from the trip. Please click on the images to get a larger sized image. The detail is excellent.

First a shot of a major laundry area in Mumbai. Here is where people get their clothes cleaned, and it is done well and delivered to their homes.

We were able to visit the Taj Mahal, and here are a series of images from that trip. Our visit coincided with the Holi Holiday in India. Wild colors are painted on everything in a great festival of joy. This shot shows PC, our guide, and the colors on the ground next to a bonfire site made of cow pies.

Here is the Taj Mahal seen from the entrance garden.

Now a detailed shot of the amazing inlays in the building.

A wide shot looking to the east as the Sun sets.

Finally, two shots taken the next morning, looking from the Red Fort in Agra.

India truly is a dynamic country. Many contrasts and tremendous energy.

The Birds

A very large group of blackbirds filled our trees this morning. I walked out into a cacophonyThe Birds of bird noise. These are red-winged blackbirds who nest in Lake Riverside and surrounding areas. A very nice, bug group of birds. The YouTube version is ok, and if you can download the AVI (35mb) you’ll have your own copy. Update, killed the link because the same set of IP addresses kept downloading the avi. No point in slamming HostGator’s bandwidth.

If I were paranoid, I’d be thinking of The Birds