If I were a rich man…

Since I won the PowerBall a couple of weeks ago,[1] I thought I’d start sharing things I’ve been buying with my half a billion dollars.

Check this out:

Sweet, is it not? I figure if we’re going to camp with the hippies, we might as well be comfortable.

It’s from this company, and it’s only AUD 49,995, which even less in Ameros, less than $40,000, really.

We’d want to go check it out for ourselves of course, and I’m thinking the two weeks around Memorial Day would be a great time to go.  Round trip tickets to Sydney at that time will run us about $3500—I wonder how much business class would cost?  Expedia doesn’t really give you that option; I can see that it will take a little work to get the hang of this rich thing.  Are there still travel agents?

It took a while to find a really expensive hotel in Sydney, but the ADGE will do just fine.  That will run us another AUD 6,000.

Then we could have a good time going to see the Mark Morris Dance Group at the Opera House (AUD 99.00), perhaps a trip to Ayers Rock and/or Alice Springs ($1600 US), maybe even a third week over in New Zealand and do all the LoTR things ($6400.00 NZD).

Of course, there are the meals to consider, little extras like helicopter rides and Great Reef excursions and above all shipping our new camper back to Atlanta.

Still, just spitballing here, but it appears that the whole thing will cost less than $100,000.  Pfft.  That’s nothing.  So why don’t you just come with us too?  Free trips to Middle-Earth for everyone!

—————

[1] I did not win the PowerBall.

Missing a part of me

Here is part of what I wrote for my son’s wedding in October:

It is usually said at weddings

that the ring is a circular symbol

of the unbroken, never-ending nature of love.

That is certainly true,

but I would like to take a different tack today.

When you selected these rings for each other—

and I imagine that this is true

for all those here today who are married—

you took care to select something

that would be pleasing to its wearer—

because you will be wearing these rings for a very long time,

and no one wants their spouse to look down

and be reminded of how inappropriate their wedding ring is.

More than that—

it is a physical reminder of your vows today.

At first you will find its presence an odd thing

as you constantly play with it,

testing its right to be there

and marveling at what fortune or fate

brought you to this most excellent pass.

Eventually, its presence will no longer surprise you,

but your awareness of it on your finger

never goes away,

and I hope that every time

you rather absentmindedly fiddle with it,

you will feel—even if subconsciously—

the blessing of being married to the one you love.

Finally, your ring is an outward show

of your commitment to each other.

In a few moments, its presence on your finger

will tell everyone you meet

that you have come to be with the person

you are meant to be with,

and that you have vowed to be

with him or her for the rest of your life.

Thus others know of your blessing.

I post this today because two nights ago, as I sat by the fire with my lovely first wife, I looked down at my hand and realized that my wedding ring was gone.  Completely not there. At some point that day, it had slipped from my hand and vanished into the universe.

How? is the question that keeps hammering in my head.  How did I not feel it come off?  How did I not hear it hit whatever it bounced off of before vanishing?  I never take it off (except for the occasional MRI or stage role), so it had to work its way off.

I do remember washing my hands that afternoon as I prepared soup for supper and noticing then that it was loose.  Over the years, as I’ve gained weight, I’ve had it expanded a couple of times—it was originally a very small ring for a man.  It might even have been a woman’s ring; I forget.  But now as I age and my weight fluctuates, it has gotten looser.

It has stuck in my head that it might have vanished when I pulled off gloves, either my work gloves when I trundled firewood up to the front porch or the rubber gloves after I washed dishes.  But it’s not in the kitchen or in the yard.

I didn’t leave the house after I started cooking, so even though I called Home Depot and Kroger to ask them to be on the lookout, I know it’s in neither of those places.

Needless to say, we have scoured the entire house and yard multiple times.  We’ve gone through the trash.  I’ve disassembled the bathroom sink.  (The kitchen sink has a garbage disposal—I would have known if it had gone down that drain.)  We’ve swept under furniture, pulled sheets off the bed, and emptied coats, pants, and gloves every ten minutes.

It’s gone.

my wedding ring

It was square, gold, engraved, and it is still a part of me.  Everything I said in my wedding homily was based on my ring, and everything I said is true.  I am deeply wounded by its loss; it cannot be gone.

It is gone.

Oh, FFS.

So this came in—or tried to come in—through the transom today:

===============================================.

IMPORTANT NOTICE FOR: dale@dalelyles.com.
===============================================.
URGENT – BANNED.
===============================================.

Dear Subscriber,
Prepared yourself: there is a new scandal that is poised to break.
This scandal is regarding what we now know to be a GIANT conspiracy
between our government many of the biggest producers of food in the
country.
This alarming-story is so controversial that Fox-News not only banned it
from being aired, they then fired the two-reporters who were trying to
air it.
If you are happy with our president, you shouldn’t even bother watching
this presentation.
This is so shocking that many people are going to want to IMPEACH Obama
for what he’s been doing…This may be the thing that finally takes him
down.

VISIT HERE TODAY and get more information on this story:
http://see5.yournewurgent-alerts.rocks

I must warn you though, what you are going to find out may seriously
turn your stomach.

Best-Regards,
Doug Hill
Director, LaissezFaire Club

Every day I get a report from my email server’s spam filter.  Since it’s not always 100% smart, I have taken to logging in and scanning all 100+ messages to make sure that the Chicago Symphony is not trying to reach me about William Blake’s Inn.  (Did you know that they in fact have been given the score by someone in Chicago’s arts scene?  But let that pass.)

This was clearly spam, but sometimes I just feel like mucking out the stables, you know?  So I peeked at the content, which is what you want to do when you don’t want to admit these vampires into your inbox.

I was dazed at the audacity with which the sender hit the jackpot with Nutjob Bingo:

  • scandal
  • GIANT conspiracy
  • government
  • alarming-story
  • Fox-News banned it AND fired the reporters
  • happy with our president (OF COURSE NOT THAT KENYAN USURPER ARGLE BARGLE HRNNGGH!)
  • shocking
  • IMPEACH
  • finally takes him down (my favorite)
  • turn your stomach
  • LaissezFaire

Don’t you just want to click on that link now?

Pro Tip: don’t ever click on the link.

Here’s the thing about that link: I’ve seen a lot of these floating around the spam, these URLs that end with some bizarre top-level domain. .rock?  Really?  How does that even work even?  (But it does: .rock is a generic top-level domain for “general” use, whatever the hell that means.)

Be that as it may, don’t click on the link.  Copy the text of the link, see5.yournewurgent-alerts.rocks, paste it into your browserand see where it takes you.  (Conversely, you can right-click on the link and see the actual link buried behind the text.  Dollars to donuts it’s not the same thing.)

Out of extra caution, I left off the see5 and went straight to the front page, yournewurgent-alerts.rocks, and guess what?  It doesn’t exist.

httpv://youtu.be/rX7wtNOkuHo

I put the see5 back in there.  Still doesn’t exist.

Went back to the spam filter and saw that the email was from wen.yournewurgent-alerts.rocks, so I tried that.  Nope.

So now here’s the quandary: how was this supposed to work, spam-speaking-wise?  There wasn’t anything to click on, neither to trigger a malware installation nor to take me to a terrible website.  The URL they gave me that I URGENTLY needed to read because NUTJOB BINGO WORDS, doesn’t exist.  So I mean to say, wot?

update, 1/24/15:  Another one today, identical message, this time from ConstitutionalProtectionAgency@yournewurgent-alerts.rocks

3 Old Men: Tentage

Camping with the Hippies™ is great fun, but there are challenges.  At Alchemy last October, I had borrowed my son’s tent, a perfectly cromulent “3-person” dome tent.  (N.B.: the number of persons a tent can hold is calculated by wrapping campers in sleeping bags and stacking them like cordwood.)

Since I had covered it with a huge tarp, first for rain protection and then for added insulation against the cold, getting in and out of it involved crawling through the entrance like Eskimos into an igloo.

And then inside, all our stuff was just strewn on the floor between the air mattress and the walls, and all the other stuff was stuffed into the plastic tubs outside, also covered with the tarp.

Worst of all, you crawled in, you flopped around, you crawled out.  There was no standing.

I had borrowed the tent because I (meaning one of us in the relationship) wanted to make sure that Camping with the Hippies™ was something we were going to want to do more than the one time.  As we all know, it is definitely something we (meaning me) want to do on a regular basis.

Since then, I’ve been researching and browsing and shopping for a permanent tent solution, and this weekend I made my move.  If you do your due diligence, you know that January is a great time to buy tents, because who in their right mind is going to go camping in the dead of winter (Frostburn notwithstanding)?  And lo! Academy Sports+Outdoors had some of their tents on clearance.

Here were my criteria: it had to be a cabin-style tent, i.e., tall enough for humans to walk through the entrance and stand up in.  It had to be large enough to sleep the two of us plus store all the tubs of stuff plus give us room to organize the stuff, change clothes, etc.

And so, behold the Coleman Instant Tent 10!

Instant Tent 10

Yes, I bought a tent big enough to sleep ten people for the two of us.  Notice the trimly rectangular carrying case.  Hold that thought.

Out of its trimly rectangular carrying case:

Instant Tent 10

The deal with Coleman’s Instant Tent series is that the tentpoles are permanently attached and hinged, reminiscent of an umbrella in their construction.  The trimly rectangular carrying case promises a 60-second setup, although it cautions that the “first time” may take longer.  Indeed, I can imagine some kind of Tent Olympics where a smoothly rehearsed team could get this thing erect in 60 seconds, but even if you accomplish that feat you still have to adjust the legs and the floor, and stake the thing out.

Fortunately, Camping with the Hippies™ is not a race, so who cares how long the thing takes to set up if a) it’s easy; and b) the results are good.

Instant Tent 10

We begin the setup process.

Instant Tent 10

Lots of pulling and tugging and figuring out the realities of the minimal instructions.  Trying to figure out which side is the long side so that we can fit it onto the far side of the labyrinth.

Eventually…

Instant Tent 10

A little lopsided, but it’s up, it’s staked, and all parts are accounted for.  Notice the dangling flap thing inside.  This is an actual room divider, for which some of our party had devoutly wished because of privacy who even knows.  It’s not mentioned on the trimly rectangular carrying case, and so it was a pleasant surprise.

Of course, “privacy” has little meaning in a setting where the showers are neither private nor segregated, and half the hippies you see are unclothed to some extent.  But hey, we can put up a wall if we want to.

Another view.

Instant Tent 10

And here we have the happy tent owner, standing in his new domicile.

Instant Tent 10

What goes up must come down, and this is where we need to return to our trimly rectangular carrying case.  Of course nothing ever folds up as neatly as it was originally packaged—how those third-world workers do it, I’ll never know—and the Instant Tent 10 is no exception.

We collapsed it, rolled it up, rolled it over the ground as suggested in the instructions to smoosh air out of it and get it back down to a reasonably sized bundle.  But it would not go back into the trimly rectangular carrying case.  We took it out and tried again, but it was impossible.

We tried standing the carrying case up and pushing the tent down into it, thinking that might give us a good start on stuffing it in there.  And that’s when I noticed that the label on the bottom of the case had a large arrow on it.

Aha, I thought, instructions on which end should be up!  I leaned closer to read: “Tear the label off between the seams to expand.”

Well.

I ripped the label off, the bottom of the trimly rectangular carrying case breathed a sigh of relief, and it accordioned out into a nice middle-aged carrying case into which the Instant Tent 10 slid with no problem whatsoever.

So now we’re ready to go Camping with the Hippies™ in style.  We’re already looking at oriental carpets to lay down on the floor for that extra fillip of éclat and comfort.  I’ll keep you posted.

 

A scathingly brilliant idea

So today we were making up the bed in the guest room (the west one) and were bemoaning the fact once again that one has no clue which side of the sheet is the bottom and which the side.  The tag is on a corner, which is not helpful at all of course, and many the day we’ve had to take a sheet off and rotate it 90°.   This curse is especially strong on fitted sheets, as is widely acknowledged.

If only, we mused, the tag were in the middle of the bottom, then think how much easier it would be to put sheets on the bed.

Normally, after the idea of getting rich off such a scathingly brilliant idea passes, we sigh and go on about our dreary quotidian lives.

But not today.

No, today my lovely first wife said, “We could use a magic marker to mark the center of the bottom of the sheet.”

I will pause and let you bathe in the reflected effulgence of that idea.

And so, dear reader, we enter the glorious new world of sheet-marking.  Now we will be able to make a bed with no fear of getting the sheets wrong.  We will no longer dread having to remake the bed before we even get the comforter on.  We will march confidently from the linen closet to the bedroom with no misgivings, sure that we will get it right the first time.

The universe showers us with its love.

You are welcome.

A small project

For some time now I have been wanted to get organized about my cocktail recipes.  I have several go-to books (Vintage Spirits & Forgotten Cocktails and The Ultimate Bar Book), but then I’m always inventing cocktails and downloading recipes from places like liquor.com, et al., and those especially were beginning to clutter up the kitchen in my “lab” space.

I have a notebook, of course:

It was given to me almost as a joke, but I immediately put it to use:

Now the joke was that the only recipes in it were in the Drinks section.

But I needed something better.  What I wanted was a Moleskine-type notebook with tabs in it so I could organize the drinks by name or by liquor, along with some indices in the back.

Of course, no such thing exists in any way.  Much web-searching plus visits to Barnes & Noble turned up nothing.

Finally I was struck with a brilliant idea: design stickers that would cover the tabs in my Patio Daddy-O book!  I did that thing, making about thirteen tabs for different liquors, plus two sections for “Dale’s favorites” and “Ginny’s favorites.”  But I was stopped dead in my tracks: the book didn’t have that many tabs.

Back to square one, i.e., nothing.

Finally, I went back to Barnes & Noble to see what was available and how I might make it work.  I ended up with this little beauty:

It’s about the size of a Moleskine notebook, leather-bound, nice paper, and a lot more pages than a Moleskine.  (That was a factor—who wants to run out of space and therefore cocktails?)  So it fits handily on the bar and in the hand.

I settled on numbering the pages, then reserving pages in the back for an alphabetical index by name, and an ingredient index by liquor plus the two “favorites” sections.  That way, I can add drinks willy-nilly as I go along, but always be able to find a specific drink when I need it:

The asterisks by the title indicate a cocktail that I invented.

One thing remained: a cover title.  Back in the day, I stamped students’ initials onto the back of their aluminum Accelerated Reader Point Club tags.  It made them more personal as well as sometimes coming in handy when a child lost one.  I still had the punch set; in fact, I had used it to stamp BOOK OF THE LABYRINTH on the cover of said book back in 2012.

One of the issues involved in doing this is keeping the letters in a straight line, a problem I solved—brilliantly, I thought—by using a rubber band:

Not only did it provide me with a straightedge, but it kept the book from slipping around as well.  (Notice the little black dot on the rubber band: I also could measure and mark the center of the cover.)

Clever little device, with the punch heads magnetically insertable/removable into the holder.  Each one has an engraved dot indicating the bottom of the letter, which is supposed to help you keep the letters aligned vertically.  I guess that’s the theory, because in practice I’ve never been able to keep them upright.

Still, wabi sabi and all that: it’s done, and it’s mine.

The Cold Labyrinth

You may recall that at the westpoint of the labyrinth I have a bowl to contain water, the classical element of the West.  You may also recall that the glass bowl I had there for a while succumbed to the cold last January when I left it uncovered and the Great Storm split it in twain:

broken labyrinth bowl

So when I bought Brooks Barrow‘s limestone bowl last March at the American Crafts Council show, the first thing I asked him was how it would withstand the occasional ice storm.  He assured me that Wisconsin limestone is the hardest there is and it should be fine.

And so it has proven:

frozen limestone bowl

Normally I keep the bowl covered so that water doesn’t collect in it.  During the summer, of course, it would be a breeding ground for mosquitoes, but also the decaying plant matter that inevitably collects in bowls/birdbaths/fountains will leave stains.

Here’s a closer look:

frozen limestone bowl

It’s hard to see, but the center white ice is actually bulged up.  The water froze from the cold, cold limestone inward, pushing the last of the water up and stressing it white.

The poor little beetle in the lower right is dead, not resting.  Circle of life, etc.

The only other element in the labyrinth that was affected by this week’s freezing temperatures is this one:

frozen limestone bowl

This is a bottle of Crystal Head vodka, or at least it used to be. Crystal Head is Dan Aykroyd’s product, and the packaging/marketing is a hoot.  Beside the skull-shaped bottle, the box it comes in proudly proclaims that it is filtered through “crystals” on his upstate farm/distillery/whatever.

Despite all this, it’s actually a really good vodka, and it amused me to have a skull sitting out in the labyrinth, especially one that you could stop and take a swig from as you passed by.  (It’s at the northwest corner, on the bank overlooking the Dancing Faun.) I’ve also used it for pouring libations to the Universe over at the fire pit, and the Lichtenbergians passed it around during a memorial ritual for a member.

I used to store it and then put it back out for each session, but then I got lazy.  It’s not as if it were going to freeze, after all.  Then one day the large square top to the cork came off, as I supposed all glued-on items will eventually do if exposed to the elements long enough, and all was well till one night I was walking the labyrinth and decided to take a swig and OH MY GOD IT WAS MOSTLY RAINWATER INSTEAD OF VODKA.

All I could think was amoebic dysentery and immediately rinsed my mouth out with gin, as one does.  Blergh!

I left it out there as a purely decorative object, and now the water has frozen.  I like the frost on the interior of the top.

Someday soon I will need to buy another bottle so that we can continue to consume booze ritualize to our hearts’ content.

Cocktails: the Sidecar

Have I extolled the glories of the Sidecar recently?  What a wonderful little cocktail.

It’s simplicity itself:

Sidecar

  • 1-½ oz brandy or cognac (cognac is better)
  • 1 oz Cointreau or other orange liqueur
  • ¾ oz lemon juice (fresh is better)
  • sugar rim optional

Shake the ingredients with ice, pour into a sugar-rimmed cocktail glass.

That’s it.  The fun is substituting other substances for the Cointreau.

Here we see one variation, which uses apricot brandy instead of orange liqueur.  Quite tasty.

There’s also my own Swedish Sidecar, which uses Swedish Punsch.  It may interest long-time readers to know that I solved the problem of how to make salted caramel sugar for that particular cocktail.

That is all.  I have nothing profound to say, just liking this cocktail right now.

update: And just playing around, here’s another one:

Holiday Sidecar

  • 1-½ oz brandy or cognac
  • ½ oz orange curaçao
  • ½ oz Allspice Dram
  • ¾ oz lemon juice (fresh is better)

This one has a bright, spicy flavor that just tastes holiday-ish.  A plain sugar rim really adds to it.

And one more:

Blue Chocolate

  • 1-½ oz brandy or cognac
  • ½ oz blue curaçao
  • ½ oz Allspice Dram
  • ½ oz crème de cacao
  • ¾ oz lemon juice (fresh is better)

This one was a real surprise.