Maggie's FarmWe are a commune of inquiring, skeptical, politically centrist, capitalist, anglophile, traditionalist New England Yankee humans, humanoids, and animals with many interests beyond and above politics. Each of us has had a high-school education (or GED), but all had ADD so didn't pay attention very well, especially the dogs. Each one of us does "try my best to be just like I am," and none of us enjoys working for others, including for Maggie, from whom we receive neither a nickel nor a dime. Freedom from nags, cranks, government, do-gooders, control-freaks and idiots is all that we ask for. |
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Tuesday, September 17. 2013Today is Constitution Day in the USA PSA About Boobs: "Look at mine!"What nobody told you"...seven to eight times as much sexual misconduct takes place in public schools as in the Catholic Church." Northern Italy 2013, #4: Hiking in the DolomitesThe real destination of our trip was the Dolomites. We just threw in Lake Garda and Verona for fun. Hiking (plus rock-climbing and mountain-climbing) in the Dolomites is the local summer sport. People don't walk - they hike and cover a lot of ground. Most people use hiking poles or hiking staffs, for good reason. You are always going up or going down. There is some mountain biking too. In winter, it's all skiing. The Italian province is the Trentino/Alta Aldige/Sudtirol , on the Austrian border. Of the ten or so Dolomite valleys where people can stay, Mrs. BD picked the Val Gardena. We drove from Lake Garda up on the scenic route and watched the agriculture change from olives, palms, and lemons to vast apple orchards and vinegards, and finally to Alpine hay fields. ...caught the autostrade in Trent (Trentino) and drove up it to Bolzano (where the Ice Man resides) to exit before the Brenner Pass to drive up windy roads to our classic Alpine Hotel in the tiny hamlet of Bulla on a hillside up above Ortesei. Here's one of the high Alpine meadows above Ortesei - the highest Alpine meadow that exists. Alpe di Siusi. As I have said, there is no one Italy - it is many places. Observations, suggestions, and lotsa scenic pics below the fold.
Continue reading "Northern Italy 2013, #4: Hiking in the Dolomites"
Posted by Bird Dog
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11:48
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Tuesday morning linksNew Plans for Old Avenues in New York City Two new polls tell us Americans are very, very confused about Obamacare Buffett: Scrap Obamacare and Start All Over New IPCC Report Eases Global Warming Prediction The poor: Reagan vs. Obama The Most Interesting School District in America? A suburban Colorado county tests the limits of education reform. Overpopulation is Sooo Over, Explains Biologist in New York Times Monday, September 16. 2013Hell's Kitchen is no longer hell
It's not hell anymore. Hopping neighborhood. We went to 44X10 (corner of 10th Ave. and W. 44th). Did Alicia Keys really grow up there? The wait staff wore t-shirts saying "Heaven in Hell." Rule of thumb: Always make reservations. I can remember when this area was Irish and black gangland, creepy. When you see this many gay fellows, you know it is gentrifying. I had scrambled eggs, grits, and sausages. The others had better stuff: Eggs Benedict with Crab Cakes, etc.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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22:52
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Slackers: A world-wide menace
If you can't handle calculus, write a good essay quickly, or discuss Kant in a civilized manner, you do not belong in any liberal arts college. Tennis LegThree years ago, I was playing tennis during the final weekend of summer. The previous two weeks, I'd had some calf pain, nothing significant, I just kept stretching to keep it loose. Suddenly, while chasing a shot down the line, I collapsed with a sharp pain in my calf. At first, it felt like a hot stone had hit my calf. This feeling matched the description my brother had given me of tearing his Achilles, so naturally I was concerned. However, I was able to stand and walk, although stiff and in pain. This past Friday, while on a golf outing with a client, I was walking down from the first tee when I was hit by the same 'stone' in my other leg. Luckily, this time I knew what the issue was and completed the round, though I used my clubs for support at times. I suffered, both times, from a tear or strain of the Plantaris tendon. The Plantaris is a vestigial muscle in the calf, often harvested for repair work because it has a tendon which runs from the heel almost up to the knee, attaching a very small muscle. It's length and relatively low capacity makes it attractive for harvest when the need arises. The tricky part is that about 7-10% of all people don't even have this tendon.
Tennis players often suffer strains and tears of the Plantaris. My guess is this is due to less attention being paid to the calves by most workouts. At the gym I rarely see people stretching or even working out their calves. But the calves require more attention than they typically get. I'm resting it now and avoiding my usual leg workout at the gym. Doc's Computin' Tips: Computer audio to room speakers
The problem with the audio coming out of computers is that there simply isn't very much power, mainly because they're only designed for those little computer speakers. If you want to play a song or movie on the computer and have it sound decent, you need to use a couple of normal room speakers. The hitch there is that normal speakers need a lot more power to get moving than a computer can provide. So the answer is to use something like this:
That's an AudioSource AMP-100 Stereo Power Amplifier, $103 on Amazon. It's important to note when shopping for amplifiers that there are two different power ratings; RMS, the real amount of power, and 'peak power', the peak it can hit for a millisecond, which is basically worthless. If you search around Amazon for "speaker amplifier", you'll see a number of ads for a cheaper brand called 'Pyle', which cheats by advertising the peak power. Their "100-watt" unit is actually 10 watts of RMS power — which isn't much more than the computer has. So you have to be careful differentiating between the two. The AudioSource unit, above, is 100 watts RMS, or 50 watts a channel. The speakers, themselves, also make a difference. Some older 4'-high monsters might not be near as 'efficient' as a smaller, newer 'bookshelf' model, and are going to require more power to get them to a loud level without distortion. Along the same lines, how loud you plan on playing them enters the picture. For just your average speaker played at an average room level, 100 watts should be fine, but if you're planning on cranking them up, you'd better think in terms of 200 watts or higher. That'll also require much bigger bucks. In all honesty, I can't officially recommend any brand over another, simply because I haven't bought one of these in decades, but the above info should get you going if you want to search around, and don't forget the user reviews at the bottom of the page. And speaking of user reviews, there's an important point to be made if you're buying the above unit. Apparently, the 'Line 1' input has some kind of goofy feature that automatically mutes the volume if it doesn't sense any input, so use 'Line 2', which operates normally. The user reviews loved the unit but hated that feature, with a number of them bitching and moaning because they hadn't bothered to read the manual and thus didn't know that 'Line 2' doesn't use the feature. The one other piece of equipment you'll need is this rascal:
The stereo 'mini-pin' plug on the left goes into the 'Audio Out' jack on the back of the tower and the two 'RCA cup jacks' plug into the back of the amp. Hook the speakers up to the amp and you should be good to go. Update: Reader 'rhhardin' suggested a Radio Shack Ground Loop Isolator, so keep that in mind if you get any humming out of the speakers. It sometimes occurs when two power supplies are involved, in this case the computer and the amp. As for there being four speaker jacks, while you could probably play four smallish bookshelf speakers at a normal volume without distortion, I wouldn't plan on anything bigger. If you don't mind snipping off the jacks of your existing computer speakers, you could wire them into the 'Speaker A' slot and put the room speakers on 'B', then switch back and forth as needs be.
Posted by Dr. Mercury
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10:30
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Monday morning links Sky Fall: Gender Ideology Comes to the Schoolhouse How to get a good table in a restaurant What 'Fringe City' Status Means for the Look and Feel of a Community CFPB's data-mining on consumer credit cards challenged in heated House hearing Bankers Groups To Obama: Stop Criminalizing Credit Standards Lomborg: Don’t blame climate change for extreme weather Obama’s War On God Continues: FL Christian Ministry Must Choose Between Jesus and USDA Aid Matthew Shepard, Trayvon Martin, Brandon Darby and the Power of Leftist Mythmaking Texas Food Deregulation Helps the Little Guy USC Student Workshop: White Males are Privileged and Cops are Racist Even Public Workers Know Ailing Cities Need to Change Their Benefits Systems California Bill Allows Nurses, Others to Perform Abortions Defunding the Left, One Union at a Time Child Brides and Too-Early Sexual Activity Kimball: Obama Then and Now: the Rashomon Effect World's top climate scientists admit computers got the effects of greenhouse gases wrong Cook: Dems Have Reason to Fear 2014 Sunday, September 15. 2013Italian Food Before Columbus
Italian Food Before Columbus: History of Italian Food (h/t reader). A good piece (would I link it if it were not?) Restoring trout streams
Up in Montana, a group of restorationists is bringing the fishing holes to you. Free rivers, with beavers. h/t, American Digest
Posted by The Barrister
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13:02
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Northern Italy 2013, #3: Gardone Riviera on Lake Garda Dear Readers: It takes me a bit of time and effort to size and post travelogue pics. Please given them a glance. No need to comment, but I would not post them if I did not think they might be interesting...
We have spent time on the Italian lakes (both Maggiore and Como) in the past but Lake Garda was sort-of on our route up into the Italian Alps and the Dolomites, so we stopped by to stay for a couple of days at a superb B&B about halfway up the western side of the lake in Gardone Riviera at (Thanks again, Karen Brown and Trip Advisor) - Dimora Balsone. Our gracious host Rafael, a semi-retired lawyer, rebuilt a dilapidated 500 year-old farmhouse and is gradually rebuilding the farm - mostly olive groves with some fig trees and Peach trees. You can tell he loves the place and is investing a lot into it. View from our tiny rooftop balcony: More pics of food, the Lake, and side trips to Sola and Sirmione below the fold - Continue reading "Northern Italy 2013, #3: Gardone Riviera on Lake Garda"
Posted by Bird Dog
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12:42
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Advocates for utopian tyranny
"In the end, can mankind stave off the powerful and dark forces of utopian tyranny?" Mark Levin discusses: My Answer to Harry Reid's Claim That Conservatives and Tea Party Activists Are 'Anarchists'
Foreign policy: Two kinds of Jeffersonians and the Jacksonians
Mead uses the case of Syria to discuss approaches to foreign policy: The President Falls Through the Ice
From today's LectionaryPsalm 14
Saturday, September 14. 2013Every American ally is cringing with embarrassment at the amateurishness of the last month.
Steyn: American Ineffectualism
Fall lawn care: AerationRight now is the perfect time to plug or aerate your lawn and/or fields, in the northern US. Heavily used or walked-on lawns need it once a year. Do it now, then spread some fall lawn fertilizer on it, and over-seed where needed. You can rent the aeration or plugging machines for cheap, for a day or two, from any tool rental place, or Home Depot. Plugging is better than aeration, but either one is better than nothing. When Spring comes, you'll see a big difference. Remember that lawns are not natural. They are grass gardens - or sheep meadows. If you want them green all the time, try astroturf or write a big check for lawn irrigation. My lawns are too large to afford that.
Posted by The Barrister
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12:55
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Another chink in the Intelligent Design theory My personal feeling is, if nature can create this...
...then it can create pretty much anything. Furthermore, we- "Oh, Doc, that's such bullshit! Evolution, create the eye? Get serious! What's next, interlocking gears?" Well, uh, actually, yes. Creature with interlocking gears on legs discovered
Learn somethin' new every day.
Of course, not everyone might agree. My own post on the 'How we got here' question is here.
Posted by Dr. Mercury
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10:30
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Saturday morning links This Vending Machine in China Sells Living Crabs Why do sugar producers need subsidies? Apple: Ballmer has scribbled the epitaph of his own era Let's Drink...to Getting Rid of the Office of the First Spouse... The case for higher speed limits Alarming number of eagles killed by wind turbines Janet Yellen may soon be a victim of affirmative action CBS exposes unregulated dinner parties Senate Amendment Would Give DOJ Power to Determine Who Is a 'Journalist' What would Tom Paine say? Liberals are not Libertarians Obama Huddles With Union Leaders Over Obamacare Ilya's new book: Democracy and Political Ignorance: Why Smaller Government Is Smarter A reader mentioned a Dalrymple book: Romancing Opiates: Pharmacological Lies and the Addiction Bureaucracy Gallup: Public’s trust in federal government to handle problems reaches 40-year low BREAKING: IPCC AR5 report to dial back climate sensitivity Gasp!
CBS New York Exposes…Unregulated Dinner Parties! - See more at: http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2013/09/gasp-cbs-new-york-exposes-unregulated-dinner-parties/#sthash.kQ4sJCq7.dpuf Saturday Verse: Padraic Colum (1881-1972)River-Mates I'll be an otter, and I'll let you swim You can read about Irish writer Colum (aka Patrick Collumb) here. Northern Italy 2013, #3: Italy's Sud-Tyrol in the DolomitesView from our balcony in the hamlet of Bulla, outside Ortesei (down there in the valley) in the Val Gardena. Before I get to talking about the Alps, though, I need to complete my Lake Garda post (maybe tomorrow). Add to this pic the tinkling of sheep bells and the bongs of the tiny local Roman Catholic Church with its burial ground in front. Up here, German is the dominant language. Road signs are in German, Italian, and Ladin. Food a mix of German and Italian. Best veal I've ever eaten in my life, but spaetzl is something I can live without. Serious German hikers and mountain bikers all over the mountains. A few died climbing while we were there, but risk is what adds the zest to rock climbing. We called these vigorous Germans the Hitler Youth, and the Aryan gals the Rhine Maidens. It's only a few hours south of Munich, through the Brenner Pass. Europe is small. Up in these mountains, one can barely imagine the rigorous WW 1 winter Alpine fighting that occurred here. Mark Helprin's masterpiece (I think) included a lot of that. Read it, if you haven't. The outcome, of course, was that this part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire ended up as part of Italy.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, Travelogues and Travel Ideas
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05:00
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Friday, September 13. 2013Daddy Sang Bass, etc.Painkillers
Here's what I have learned, over time: - Abusers of precribed narcotics are a trivial social problem What are you views?
Posted by Dr. Joy Bliss
in Medical, Our Essays, Psychology, and Dr. Bliss
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14:33
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