Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Today Was a Hot Chocolate Day



Today was such a nice day.  I didn't really do anything.  It's been a long time since I went to Coleman Lake Park, but it was well worth it.  It was only slightly disappointing since the larger of the two waterfalls had zero water falling action.  Lame.  It was made so much nicer by the fact that my mom decided that she wanted to come with.  That picture is my mom on the bridge over the small "waterfall."

I think the trail around the lake is about 2 miles and we walked it twice so it was a good hour's worth of walking.  It was cold and damp and grey.


That's from the southern end of the lake.  It looks extra amazing in the spring when the cherry blossoms are blooming and the lake is full.  Again, note the grey skies.









Perfect hot chocolate weather.  I didn't have the hot chocolate till I got back home, but better late than never, no?



Friday, December 25, 2009

Some snow! and MOAR COOKIEZ!

Alright.  A quickie Christmas Day blog seems about right today.  I awoke to find that there was still some snow left in the shadows of random places!

This was in the hammock behind my grama's house!  SNOW!

From Christmas 2009


I also found some on this here fence (like what I did with the hick accent?) near the neighbor's house!

From Christmas 2009


Anyways, the snow was nice and all, but what I appreciated more than that was the cold weather.  I basically never get to wear a scarf for a reason other than looking nice.  I actually needed it.  It's just a shame that it wasn't cold enough for more than a light jacket and a scarf!

Basically all of today involved making even MORE cookies.  Sheesh.  The ones we made today are called biscochitos.  They are delicious.  Holy crap.  We only make them about once a year (sometimes twice if we're lucky!!!).  The only reason we don't make them more often is because making the dough for them is kind of like pulling off your nails one at a time with a pair of tweezers.  It sucks.  The cramped hands and arms are so worth it though.  The combo of anise, cinnamon, and whiskey just does it for me.  I know.  Sounds like a pile of ass ... but it's not.  They're pretty dense, almost hard tack biscuit-like (hence the name) but sweet-ish.  Mmmm.  I pretty much ate half of the first batch by myself.

One of the many boxes of cookies going to someone's house (who knows).  Isn't my mom adorable?

From Christmas 2009


Pressing out one of the small balls of dough:

From Christmas 2009


Cutting out the cookies with a cookie-cutter:

From Christmas 2009


Final product (well, about 1/10th of them):

From Christmas 2009


Yum.

Now off to enjoy my not Christmas dinner.  Our actual dinner and such isn't until tomorrow even though I got my presents today!  Yaaay!

Merry Christmas!

Thursday, December 24, 2009

White Christmas (Eve) and All That Other Jazz.

Hokay.  So.  Today has been amazing.

I've pretty much been up alllllll day (this is very unusual for me on a break!).  It would've been a great morning, except my grama woke me up quite vigorously because she wanted me to put on a DVD for her (how adorable, right)!!!  Awwwwww.  I love her.  Speaking of my grama, that's where I've been for the last few days.  It's great and all, but being in Sulphur Springs is like living in a leper colony.  No one wants to come here; no news makes it past Greenville apparently; there's no 3G (so my iPhone is about 48074 times slower); there's no Target, Pei Wei, a mall or any form of a shopping center outside of Wal-Mart; everything closes at 8 (even worse during the holidays); and everyone has immediately learned of my return and everyone wants to see me.  I like feeling famous and all, but there just is not enough time in a day to see everyone and then I feel all bad and such.  Haha. Oh well.  I like seeing all my family and stuff.  I missed everyone.  It's also great because I get home-cooked food and I get to cook for everyone as well as help bake all the holiday goodies!!!  Mmmmmm.  Speaking of, most of today involved prepping stuff for and baking cookies.  Insane.  Though we aren't having the family get-together until Saturday, my mom, grama, and I have to start baking and readying early for the onslaught of grandchildren, aunts, uncles, brothers, sisters, friends, and strangers that will be at the house.  I love the chaos, it gives me something to do in this otherwise crazy boring town.  I guess I could complain forever, but I won't.  After all, Dallas is only about an hour and a half away.  Still a long drive, but definitely worth it for what Dallas offers me in the way of entertainment.  At least Sulphur Springs is cute.

This is our main street (Main St, lol).

From Christmas 2009


This is some of the pictures taken of me while baking.  Woot.  Great Pumpkin Oatmeal Cookies.  Yummy.
Grama:

From Christmas 2009


Messing with pumpkin pie filling.  Right before I took a bite out of the can.  Little cousin to the right:

From Christmas 2009


After taking a bite of it (I thought it might have been sweet--I was way wrong):

From Christmas 2009


Yet another batch of cookies:

From Christmas 2009


The yummy batter after it is finally mixed:

From Christmas 2009


Wrapping last-minute gifts and listening to Christmas music!

From Christmas 2009


My last picture brings me to my last thing.  What's up with all the snow!?!?!?  Whaaaaatttt???  Last time I checked, this is one of only a handful of times that it has snowed in NE Texas, much less during the Holiday season.  I was a little dumbfounded when I was outside and started seeing flurries!!!  Pretty neat though.  I was even able to catch some snowflakes on my tongue!  Also, it's Christmas Eve!!!  Christmas presents and such tomorrow morning!!!  WOOT!  Also, Merry Christmas to anyone who may be reading this!  You can follow where Santa is at the moment on Google Earth as well!!!  It's pretty neat.  He is currently at Machu Picchu.  Hahaha. I will be checking about every, oh I dunno, 1 minute.

Oh yeah.  My last picture!

From Christmas 2009

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Passenger 18C

The following is a letter to my lovely [read: ass-wipe of a human] friend in seat 18C on the Continental flight from Houston to Colorado Springs.

Dear 18C,

I hate you.  The end.

Not really "hate," but wicked dislike.  I thought everything was going to be fine when I saw you coming down the aisle staring at my row.  I even scooted over towards the window seat so that you could have PLENTY of room to sit and be comfortable.  I thought, "surely, this man will be generous and take the aisle seat leaving the required 1-seat-padding-room on non-assigned-seat flights."  You must not have gotten the memo about this new rule.

You decided to sit in the seat directly adjacent to mine.  Now normally, I would not mind this as I have no personal space issues, but this was different.  I'm not sure how to word this politely, but you're a very large man, and I am also a fairly large guy as well, though we are large in different definitions of the word.  I have nothing against comfortably plump people, but there is a reason that larger people must buy 2 seats.  It's just uncomfortable to have a large man directly against your entire left side.  Trust me.

I thought that eventually you'd get up to use to bathroom or get hot enough to stop suffocating me ... but you didn't.  I thought you would feel uncomfortable in the same was that I was, but you must have a much higher tolerance to having someone smother you.  Instead of moving over one, you made things even worse by lifting up the only sliver of metal separating our bodies, my one barrier to cling to: the arm rest.  I didn't think this was all that horrible either, but the fact that we were now side-by-side totally, my tolerance for people in my personal bubble were beginning to thin.

If only you had brushed your teeth, maybe things would have been better.  Even a mint.  I even offered you gum as a nicety, but you would not have my delicious, melon-flavored gum.  I hate you.  I didn't appreciate you endlessly talking to me WHILE I HAD MY HEADPHONES IN MY EAR.  I hope you realize that I did not listen to a single word that you said.  I remember your name, but for anonymity's sake, I'll remain closed-lipped.  How, sir, did you not catch all my signals that I didn't want to talk, and that your body heat was making me uncomfortable!?

I thought the breath was bad, but nooooo, you had to go and outdo yourself.  Sleeping?  REALLY!?  Ughhhh.  I don't care if someone sleeps on a flight ... hell, I normally STRIVE to fall asleep on a flight.  But you had to try to sleep and then try to use MY shoulder as a pillow.  I swear, I was about 2 seconds away from punching you.  Thank GOD the flight attendant was sympathetic to my cause because she woke you up to ask if "you needed a drink" hahahahaha.  It was a short-lived victory; however, as you just haaaad to go and fall back asleep.  I didn't appreciate your head nodding and falling onto me.  I also didn't appreciate your snoring in my ear.  I basically made my ears bleed with the volume of my music to drown you out.

If you're wondering why I suddenly jerked you awake to "use the bathroom," then here's a hint: I hate you.  I also didn't come back to our row because of you.  I felt terrible the whole time, but that was hell.  I feel a little badly for sounding so harsh, but how has no one gone off on you yet!?  I even left my unfinished magazine in my seat to escape you.  I paid $5 for that sucker!  Grrrrrrrrr.  It was like being in a bad movie.  I didn't even know that there were travelers like you in real life!  Now, I'm forever scarred by you and I don't know if I'll ever look at airplane passengers the same!  You may have just made yourself the root cause of all of my personal bubble issues, hahahaha.  Ass.

Well.  I suppose that's all my grievances for now.  I hope YOU had a lovely flight because I know I sure as heck didn't.  -__-



Signed,
Jovan.

PS: I hate you.

Side note: Thank God Colorado was amazing.  And heck yes for having awesome return flight single-serving friends!  :D  Made it all okay!

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Epic Journey, Pt. 1

Destination:

From Thanksgiving 2009 - Colorado


That's Denver.  Heck yes!  Okay, so I was really on the way to Colorado Springs, but I didn't have any nice pictures that would let you know I was in a city!  Plus, Colorado Springs isn't exactly recognizable by picture alone.

Alright.  Well, I meant to document my epic journey through 6 airports, 4 states, and lots of snow in a series of blogs WHILE traveling ... but my interwebz effed up.  So no.  Now I had the idea of just doing it anyways.  Even though it was ummmm ... 2 weeks ago now.  Oh well.  Deal.

My giant journey began on November 25th.  The day before Thanksgiving.  I know.  What was I thinking travelling the DAY BEFORE Thanksgiving?  I had the first flight out of my airport so I thought I'd be okay.  My flight left at 6:26am (super random, but that's what my ticket said!).  I have always been in the practice of arriving at airports about 2 hours early for bathroom breaks, security checks, stupid random checks, gates changes, and delays--in no particular order.  Since I was leaving from College Station-Easterwood though, I felt that I only needed to be there about an hour early.  It is only one terminal with two gates after all.

Front check-in of CLL:


From Thanksgiving 2009 - Colorado


"Secure" area of CLL in front of Gate 2 (oooOOOooo ... sarcasm):


From Thanksgiving 2009 - Colorado


I was rewarded with a 30-minute wait outside of the terminal as it didn't open until 6am.  Lame.  I had to stinking wait in the cold for what seemed like ever.  Thankfully, I am quite the benevolent person, and I held my composure.  So.  The airport finally opened and I got my tickets (heck yes for electronic check-in via iPhone!).  My security check was quite thorough and consisted of the 70-something year old guard asking if I had any bombs.  Of course my answer was a resounding, "Yes!"  Okay.  So I said "no."  Same difference.  I was taken aback considering that I am always the one out of my group to be "randomly" checked.  I suppose I look like a terrorist with my dark skin/hair/eyes?  The part that freaked me out most about this portion of my journey and the airport in general was the lack of jetways!!!  I had to walk outside the terminal, onto the tarmac in cold rain, and then climb stairs to get into a plane.  Still not the worst part.  I'm a pretty tall guy, and America doesn't care about the increasingly tall average Joe (haha, I'm JOvan!!! ^_^) since I had to pretty much double myself over to fit into the plane.  Similar to how this kid looks in the safety pamphlet (probably the best part of the entire trip) on the seat backs:




To my horror, while walking out onto the tarmac, I was greeted by a plane with propellers!!!  I didn't even know that they were still used for commercial serivce!!!  I was so scary being on that sucker.  I wish it wouldn't have been so dark so I could've taken a pic.  Moving on--I've flown a lot in my life, and that was the scariest flight I've ever been on.  The propellers were loud and buzzy-sounding and the whole plane was vibrating and felt like it was going to be ripped apart by the sheer centrifugal force of those propellers.  And to top it off, the flight was to Bush Intercontinental (only one of the most horribly laid out airports of all time) which was a paltry 30 minutes away.  I felt a little badly for using such a disproportionately high amount of resources to travel this year.  Oh well.  Worth it times a million.  At least.

Speaking of Bush Intercontinental, I had to disembark onto the tarmac yet again (still raining) and get onto a cramped little bus.  I have never done this ... and I've been to some small airports ... this is one of the busiest in the country though!!!  The bus didn't even take us to all the terminals.  If you weren't terminal A, then too bad.  You had to get off that bus and walk or ride a bus to the other terminals.  Of course I was in E which is the furthest away from A.  Thank God I wasn't having to make a quick connection.  The terminal I was in was kind of neat ... in a quirky 60s chic kind of way.

Terminal E (imagine a white cylindrical room complete with faux ceiling gilding):


From Thanksgiving 2009 - Colorado


This is what I got to stare at for a good solid 3 hours:


From Thanksgiving 2009 - Colorado


The bathrooms in Terminal E are aptly named, "Mens & Womens Bathroom."  Hahahaha.  I did find a lovely little oddity that I've yet to encounter anywhere else.  The hand driers in the restroom.  They were these weird gray, curvy, newfangled boondoggles with big opening for you to stick your hands into.  It was weird.  I had to watch someone else use them first ... how embarrassing.  No joke though, those suckers don't lie!  They really dry the hands completely in about 4 seconds.  I can't remember the last time I didn't have to wipe my hands dry on my clothes after using a hand drier.  Other than that I didn't encounter anything worthwhile in Houston.  Imagine that.

Hand drier instructions with hand drier following:


From Thanksgiving 2009 - Colorado



From Thanksgiving 2009 - Colorado


From Houston, I proceeded to board my plane to Colorado Springs.  Wooooot.  CSprings is where my best friend and several other friends live (thanks to the US Army stationing them at Ft. Carson).  That flight was slightly better than the one from the other CS, but not by much because of the passenger in seat 18C.  I was in 18B.  I wished I could kill 18C the whole time I was in the damn plane.  Ugh.  That disgruntled letter will be the topic of another post.  It's funny for everyone else but me.  Moral of the story: the flights from CS to CS were hell.  It was highly worth it though ... I got to be with my best friend in her wicked awesome 3 storey house along with crazy army friends for almost 2 weeks (heck yes, no finals!!!).  I also found an amusing wonder of science in the Sky Mall magazine (see toothbrush below).

A toothbrush that cuts brushing time in half (you know, because that minute is just brutal as it is).  It looks like it would hurt and you'd have to have a perfect bite and teeth:


From Thanksgiving 2009 - Colorado


This is what I finally arrived to (Right outside Colorado Springs Airport):


From Thanksgiving 2009 - Colorado


So worth it.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

I Long For Pervious Concrete.

Okay.  So I don't really long for pervious concrete, but I would like to see more widespread usage.  This is what a sidewalk made out of pervious concrete looks like:



What is pervious concrete?  It's pretty much concrete that is permeable and allows water to pass through it, just as the name implies.  What I love about this, is that it does more for the environment than what you would think it could.  I feel like the only problem is that it isn't as glass smooth as concrete ... oh well.  I can live without smooth concrete in exchange for it's benefits.

When it rains, typically concrete and asphalt allow all rainwater to run off.  The problem of concrete/asphalt runoff is that it picks up ridiculous amounts of toxins and pollutants along the way.  Runoff also causes rivers and creeks to swell with water since none is being absorbed leading to widespread flooding.  It has been noted time after time, that the large amount of development in North Dallas (and associated parking lots and streets) is responsible for the Trinity River Levees' decreased ability to provide flood protection.  Supposedly, 11 inches of rain in one day would overwhelm the levees in Ft. Worth and Dallas.  Imagine what kind of damage that would cause.  Breaching of Dallas' levees would result in damage far greater than that of New Orleans.  It's a little scary to think that Hurricane Ike dropped 12 inches of rain here in Bryan/College Station ... eeek.

Moving on.  My solution is to replace all sidewalks and parking lots with pervious concrete.  I mean, obviously not all at once, but some here and there.  Maybe charge some kind of tax for sprawling parking lots and use that to fund the initiative.  Maybe require all new parking lots and sidewalks to be made out of pervious concrete?

The only problem with pervious concrete is that it's basically not suited for high traffic streets or highways.  Sad day.  I'm thinking residential streets and driveways can also be made from this material.  It's great for the environment because the water absorbs into the soil underneath the concrete.  It also traps pollutants and toxins in it's airspaces and allows nature to naturally degrade them and return nutrients to the soil.  How nice.  So, it lowers runoff pollution, hydrates land, reduces runoff volume, is just as durable as concrete, and costs about the same as concrete.  Hmmmm.  Why aren't we using more of this!?

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Dallas, I Just Solved Your Flooding Problem and Saved You 15% On Your Insurance.

Dear Dallas,

Your Trinity River Vision-Project-Whatever-The-Hell-It's-Called sucks.  There.  I said it.  Your plan sucks very large whale testicles (do those even exist?).  First of all, why the hell are you adding a rowing course on a river that is disgusting brown and has enough chemicals and waste to spontaneously combust?  Also, why are you making fake lakes that do nothing more than look pretty?  Another thing, why did you pay Calatrava a gazillion dollars to design 2 bridges that could've been just as pretty had they been designed by someone else?  Why are you "restoring the meandering path" of the Trinity if your ultimate goal is flood control?  Please tell me how 2 small (in comparison to the flood plain project area) chains of wetlands will help control flooding?  One last question before I move on to my solution: WHY THE HELL ARE YOU BUILDING YET ANOTHER TOLL ROAD IN SAID PROJECT AREA!?

Okay.  Whew.  I'm calm now.

My awesome plan kind of involves the same things, but in a much more practical application as well as some more realistic options to not incur billions of dollars of cost.

1.  If you're going to make lakes, you might as well make them useful AND pretty.  Instead of having 3 off-channel lakes, you should have one much larger main-channel lake.  If you have a larger, deeper lake, then you get the inherent flood control capabilities of a reservoir.  As much as the Trinity floods its flood plain, this will obviously not be the only answer to flood control.  Put the rowing course here if you MUST have one.  Added bonus: a larger, deeper lake will allow some siltation to occur, clearing up the water some.  Added bonus number 2: you'll be forced to clear up the river water quality since the lake will concentrate toxins, and I don't think you want headlines plastered everywhere reading "Dallas Lake Toxins Kill Hundreds" or "Toxic Dallas Lake Cancer Causing Nightmare," etc.

2.  This is about those dang bridges.  I wish I could say that you shouldn't have paid Calatrava to do them, but you already did it.  I will say this: the bridges look gorgeous.  It should be noted that both bridge designs have already been done and with shocking similarity.  See the following pictures.

These are pictures of the A1 bridge in Reggio Emilia, Italy.  Note how it is both bridges in one design, lol.  These pictures were taken from Flickr, the user ecatoncheires.





Now, these are the two to be built in Dallas.  Margaret McDermott on top and Margaret Hunt Hill on bottom.  These pictures were taken from the Trinity Trust's Facebook page.





Alright.  Look at how pretty those unoriginal, very expensive bridges are.  At least they'll add something to Dallas' skyline that no other city has.

3.  Flood control.  As I have already mentioned, since money is going to be spent to change the river's course and to dig out aesthetic lakes, why not spend the money to deepen the river and widen it?  Eh, eh?  I think whatever money is going to be used to do the dirt moving could be better spend by widening and deepening the current channel.  As I've calculated, if the river were widened from ~100ft. to ~1250ft. and deepened by 5 feet then most of the water during rains would stay within the actual banks of the river.  Imagine that.

This is just for fun but, I calculated the volume of a man-made lake as well as the extra storage capacity of said lake if the trinity were deepened and dammed.  I know this sounds ludicrous, but since this is supposed to be Dallas' largest public works project, I feel like the public would gladly pay more taxes to see those levees lowered or even eliminated totally.  I'll get to that part in a second.  If the Netherlands can reclaim 40% of it's land back from the ocean, then Dallas can do what I will describe.  My idea is that the Trinity River/Lake should be deepened from ~15ft. to ~55ft.  I also think it should be widened to ~1200ft. instead of the current ~100ft.  I pretty much envision the cross sectional shape of a trapezoid for the River/Lake.  To calculate the storage capacity I pretty much just did the volume of a very large trapezoidal prism.  Very easy.  I compared it to the capacity of the levees at maximum capacity (which also is a trapezoidal prism if simplified).  In my plan, I also added about 10 feet of flood capability (also in the form of a trapezoid) to protect park equipment and the like.  It would look kind of like this (it's very a very crude idea!):



The weird thing about Dallas' levee system is that the levees around downtown bottleneck.  The width between the levees at Westmoreland Rd is about ~2600ft. while the width at Commerce St is ~1500ft.  And hydrological engineers wonder why the floodwaters back up and steadily raise.  It's called the funnel effect, hello.  I'm not sure why the levees are like that, but it's part of the reason they fill so readily.  I have made adjustments to my Lake plan to follow suit.  The part near downtown would be ~1200ft. wide while around Westmoreland Rd it would be ~2200ft. wide.  If the length of the project were to extend from Loop 12 in Southeast Dallas to Loop 12 in Northwest Dallas, then there would no longer be a need for the levees.  I think it'd be pretty sweet to see Dallas without those horrific levees.  The city of Dallas could even drain the Lake/River significantly in anticipation of very heavy rains.  Then flooding really wouldn't be much of a problem anymore.  A wide river would look very lovely in Dallas.

4.  Stupid toll road.  Why the eff are you making a beautiful sprawling park that is supposed to be the central park of the South?  Last time I checked there weren't many public parks that had toll roads running through them.  As if Dallas needed yet another highway.  Why not spend the money on upgrading and reconfiguring the highways around downtown?  Pretty much every study on traffic in Dallas has indicated that adding a lame ass toll road and fixing the downtown highways have the same effect.  Heck, start tolling people for going into the city center like London.  Then you could have a toll, cut down on traffic, and encourage alternative forms of transportation.  I say scrap the toll idea in general.  Keep that frikin toll out of the park.  It'll be ugly and since it will be between the levees, don't you know what happens to smog in valleys?  Just take a look at LA or Phoenix.  Sure Dallas, give people yet another way to bypass the downtown area that you are so feverishly striving to revitalize.

5.  Why did Dallas put the Lew Sterrett Unit right next to the Trinity and Reunion Tower?  I mean, it's nice that you gave the prisoners a nice view, but really?  I thought the City was trying to encourage "river front" growth?  Yeah, a prison is the best way I can think of.  Now, when you approach the core, you get a lovely addition to the skyline in the form of a prison.  A big, giant, brown, concrete block.  Yum.  I guess it's okay since downtown doesn't seem to be able to fill all that office space.  You know, no one wants to live in downtown when there's prisoners there.  It's just a vibe thing.  It FEELS weird.  Houston has that same problem.  85% of downtown Houston's population is prisoners.  Heh.  See why no one lives there now?

6.  Why was Industrial renamed River Front?  Last time I checked, even during a crazy flood, the river is not visible from any portion of that road.  Misleading, much?  There is a nice view of the backside of a levee, though.  Maybe it should be renamed again to Levee Backside Rd?  Seems more appropriate.

See, if Dallas were to use MY plan, it would probably cost a heck of a lot more, but then River Front Blvd would actually have a meaning.  People would want to develop those decrepit industrial sites.  It's highly en vogue to develop industrial sites into more useful, attractive areas.  Humans also like to live near water.  Especially near water with views.  Humans + industrial river front property + fastest growing metro area in the US + downtown core = success.  Think of how many repeats of Victory Park (successful versions even!) the City could have.  Then, I'm thinking across the river in West Dallas, there could be a river front shopping/play area like the Boardwalk in Bossier City!  Not only is the western shore of the Trinity perfect for beautiful views of downtown, but it would serve the purpose of helping spur economic growth of the western side of Dallas.  Meh.  I suppose Dallas will never be that since it's all about exclusivity of the wealthy.

Dallas, hire me.  Done.

Isn't Dallas pretty with the river and such (even with the prison in front of Reunion Tower and the Hyatt)?  This picture was taken from the Trinity Trust's Facebook page.



Also, if Dallas had a respectable river front and ample water space, as well as maybe a new stadium or something in place of Reunion Arena, then I'm smelling Olympics!!!  Not a Dallas / Fort Worth Olympics, but a Dallas Olympics.  Sorry Ft. Worth, it just doesn't make logistical sense.  We don't need another Atlanta repeat.  Imagine.  The 2020 or 2024 Dallas Olympics ... ooooohhhhhh!!!!

My giant letter is done.  I spent random boredom time writing this and I think I may even send it in to the City of Dallas!  Whaaaat!  Not really, but maybe.

Jovan, out!  I don't even know why I wrote all this, hahaha!

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Six Flags Over Texas!

Alright so this really isn't a post as much about Six Flags as it is my sadness over the fact that the Giant is being closeddddd!!!  :(  I really liked having my neck snapped, my back broken, and my insides churned.  The Texas Giant was pretty much my favorite ride outside of Cedar Point.  Speaking of, Cedar Point pretty much destroys all other amusement parks.  The fact that Cedar Point is not even remotely close is precisely why the Giant will be sorely missed.  They better do a badass replacement or I will murder someone.  Thankfully I rode that sucker 17 times in a row about a month ago.  No joke.  17.  I had the worst headache ever.  It was awesome.


This is the lovely Texas Giant.  Heck yes for Wikipedia and permission to copy!  :D


To the right is me and my friend at Six Flags with Daffy and Porky!  Woot.  Strangely, Daffy kept face-palming me and poking me in the sides.  It was very awkward.  I am insanely ticklish and I suppose he/she thought it was funny to make me jump.  I was still laughing from the previous poking in this picture and Bethany is pretty much deathly afraid of mascots, hahahaha.  I love it.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

HALLOWEEN!!! Baking and schtuff!

Aowright.  So yesterday was Halloween.  I don't normally celebrate Halloween because it's kind of a depressing time of the year for me (Don't worry!  No depressing story in this post!)...BUT...I decided to go hardcore this year!  My friends and I decided about 2 weeks ago to throw a giant party (hooray for Facebook party invites!). Overall, yesterday was wicked fun.  Amanda and I baked stuff ALLLLLLL day.  We woke up at 10 and pretty much baked till 8 then got ready.  I'm definitely only posting the pictures of the baking since the rest are too scandalous (and no one should be allowed to be as drunk as I was, hahaha!).  I will say that my costume involved underwear, tights, towels, and toothpaste.  It was a super hero costume, but maybe just not a super hero you know of!  I did make it up after all.  That was our party theme, unusual super heroes!  There was a cucumber man, super woMAN,  and super hygiene girl and super hygiene boy (me!) to name a few!  :D


This is the lemon cake mix ... as a warning to anyone making lemon cake, you have to mix that effing mix for like 3 minutes total!  NO CAKE SHOULD TAKE THAT LONG TO MIX!!!!!  It was extra yummy though!


This was the lemon cake after frosting and before the "blood and guts" were added.  I think I may have eaten about half of this cake before midnight...

It was also our friends Brooke and Denise's birthdays so it was a two-for-one!


Decorating sugar cookies!!!  We did a really terrible job AND ran out of icing!  LAME.  Still, no one seemed to mind because all 4 dozen were gone.  Nice.


I wasn't really very sure how to imitate the face on the cookie ... I made that face a lot last night.  Heh.


Amanda making the "mud."  Seriously, so easy and tasty!  It's like rocky road ice cream that doesn't melt!  Okay, it's like rocky road ice cream with gummy worms.  The only thing that sucked: cleaning up peoples vomit later that evening.  Gag.


Random: Brooke's son as Raggedy Andy!!!  CUTE!!!  He probably ate about 483257098 pieces of candy before nightfall.  It was nice to visit with them before the party.  You know, since she's a parent, lol.




So, the moral of the story is: Halloween was awesome.  I woke up today, feeling awesome.  (Is that a comma splice?)  I never get hangovers or anything anyways.  It's like I was blessed with the ability to drink tons, never throw up, and not have hangovers.  What more could a college student ask for!?  I mean, I have to cut loose some times, right?  I have a lot of frikin studying for today though.  If anyone wants to tackle Quant. Chem with me, I'll love you forever.  I also get to write a lovely paper today.  Kill me.  I'll reiterate: I feel awesome today.  I still managed to do my normal 3 miles, and still woke up early!  I'm partially done with my paper at the moment, so pretty much all is good.

Oh!  I also need to point out that Hocus Pocus is a GREAT movie to watch on Halloween.  It's got tons fo awesome quotes and it's extra funny when you're drunk.  Just throwing that out there.

I also just realized that I probably sound like an alcoholic, but I promise I'm not one!  Uh oh, alkies always say that don't they?  Hmmm.  Well, since I'm in college, I'm allowed to just say that I'm not an alkie, I'm just a normal college student!  Plus, I'm old enough so I'm allowed!

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Lexus LFA: Not as pretty as an Aston, but still awesomeness in a bottle!

This is the 2011 Lexus LFA:



I took this picture from an article on Jalopnik.  The article can be found here: Lexus LFA.  So, I'm wicked excited about this car, not because it looks cool, or is wicked fast, or as an awesome engine, or even because it is uber exclusive, but because it's from Toyota!  WHAT!?  Toyota!?  When have they produced a car that wasn't a big pile of boring beige?  Well ... the last thing I can think of that even close to counted was the Celica, and that was front wheel drive.  So I guess then the Supra would be the last awesome car from Toyota.  Then they had to go and get all obsessed about the environment and sucking all the fun out of driving.  Okay, I'm glad they make efficient cars, but do efficient cars have to be lame?  Apparently not.  Supposedly, this 500+ V10-powered car is in the Euro 5 emissions category (the lowest one they have!).  0-60 mph in 3.6 seconds, 202 mph top speed, 9K red line, 3200lbs.  Yes please.  Moral of the story: when I have $400,000, I'll be buying one of these.  Then I can be exclusive AND have a badass, fast car while being environmentally conscious.  Okay, if I had $400K, I wouldn't buy this thing.  I'd get my dream car:




That's an Aston Martin V12 Vantage.  (Picture taken from this article.)  I could  get this and still have about $100K left over.  I would definitely get a Prius for all my long trips and everyday errands, but then I could bust out my V12 Vantage!!!  Plus, the V12 is faster around the Nurburgring, only .2 seconds slower to 60 mph, and looks about um 840275984026 times better.  Then if I got this AND my Prius, I'd still have enough money to finish school, AND a nice down payment on a loft in downtown Dallas.  See.  I just need to find a way to get $400K.  No big deal.  I'll just start selling drugs as well as selling my body, hahahahahaha!!!

Friday, October 23, 2009

30 Rock!!! PS-free zone.

I just bought this:




So I finally got around to getting the 1st and 2nd seasons of 30 Rock and my life just improved by about 480573984710 fold.  Yeah.  THAT much.  I effin love 30 Rock.  I think if all the world watched it, not only would most people miss the awesome jokes affirming my superior intelligence, but everyone would be happier!!!  I'm slightly joking about my superior intelligence.  The happiness is the important part ... right?  Anyways.  I have decided to watch the WHOLE first season today.  SHOCK!  Jovan not going out and drinking?  No parties?  No work?  No studying -- that's the REAL shocker.  I'm just gonna spend a huge chunk of time with the roomie laughing.  I'm very excited.  Of course since I'm a master of multi-tasking, I'll be Facebooking (see random rant about Facebooking, Myspacing, Googling, etc.) the night away as well.  I've also decided to make biscuits and sausage gravy!  See what 30 Rock can do?  It's Tina Fey.  She's a genius.  C'mon, Mean Girls and Baby Mama anyone?  "Bitch, I don't know yo lifeee!!!"

Side rant:  FBing, MSing, G-ing(?), and TEXTING!!!  I definitely use all of the aforementioned words in everyday life, but I've noticed that they're all verb forms of a noun.  As in, it's crazy incorrect to just add "-ing" to them.  Does that mean since they are being used more and more that they'll eventually end up in the dictionary like "ain't" or other random slang words!?  And will "texting" become an actual word that breaks yet ANOTHER English grammar rule?  Psh.  I don't know, but I felt it necessary to call them out!

AT: Why do people use "PS" in electronic form when you could easily delete something or add it in by pasting it there?  Hahaha, that was another one I liked.  Maybe we should start calling it "AT" for After Thought?  I like that one!!!  But then you could always add that too, or you could say you felt too lazy to insert it somewhere else and didn't want to be grammatically incorrect.  I guess either one then technically works, eh? Dangit.  I'm gonna start using "AT" and watch how well it catches on!  IT WILL CATCH ON!!!

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

All This Environmental Talk and Then Some

Okay, so lately, I've been talking to a lot of people about the environment, and how to mitigate our effects on it.  It's a little funny how my inspiration for doing my part comes from being a boy scout.  Yes.  I was a boy scout.  Don't judge me!  Moving on.  The thing that I always try to remember is "leave no trace."  It's pretty much pack out what you pack in.  Other than poop, haha.  I'm not saying I poop outside then cover my hole with dirt and a stick, but I have been trying to be all green and such.  I did a few cheap, but highly cost effective things to lower my impact (and my bills even reflect this!).  I replaced all the incandescent lights in our house with some custom-made LED bulbs (created by me with some soldering advice from fellow engineering students).  I also filled up a glass vodka bottle (yay for drinking a ton in college!) with sand and water and put it into my toilet tank.  My roomie and I have started a recycling program--we sort paper, aluminum, and plastic with colorful bins (gotta make it easy on the eyes!).  We also set our air conditioner to 76.  Yes, it's not 78, but we live in Texas, get off me about it!  Finally, we have been using our power strips' switches prodigiously.  Seriously, we pretty much haven't spent any money, but have saved a lot.  It also makes me feel better that we are doing little things that when added up really make an impact.  I even started walking everywhere and making use of the horrendous Texas A&M bus system.  Now, I will say that I'm going to blow it all to hell when I fly to CO for Thanksgiving, but I'll make up for it sooner or later, right?  Heh.  I'm not doing/saying all these things that I've done for the feeling of smugness, but more because when I think of 10 years from now, it scares me.  I'm scared to think of what our planet will be like.  We aren't doing enough and it's not happening fast enough.  You know, gradual changes now are better than a huge change when fossil fuels run out.  They ARE finite and we are close to peak already.

I've been thinking about oil and gas very often as of late.  I can thank several blogs and Planet Green for that. What I want to know, is why so many people are content with just going on like normal and ignoring that all these things are happening.  Hello, Texas just had a mini-monsoon season in the fall.  It doesn't typically rain like it has been raining.  At least not here.  I'm happy though because just before our "mini-monsoon" we were in a drought.  Imagine that.  Texas with wacko weather.  Just like 2005 being the biggest hurricane season on record and then 2006 having none make landfall.  It just seems like there's a new "storm of the century" or "greatest natural disaster in 50 years" every few months.  Obviously something is up, and Mother Nature is not happy with us.

Oh, and then there's Planet Green.  Man, sometimes I wish I was some giant world-influencing policy-maker *cough* Obama Llama *cough* so that I could actually force things to happen faster.  If you haven't watched Split Estate on Planet Green, you should.  It's awesome and infuriating.  Freaking oil and gas is excluded from every major environmental policy in the US: the Clean Water Act, Safe Drinking Water Act, Clean Air Act, Resource Conservation & Recovery Act, Superfund Act, and the Planning & Community Right-to-Know Act.  Holy eff.  Remember when the meat packing industry was as seemingly untouchable?  Then books like The Jungle came out.  People started questioning all the health effects of living in meat packing districts.  Things like Love Canal happened, and finally America reacted and created all these checks and balances for several polluting industries.  I'm not saying we have a comprehensive system that addresses all industries, but it seems to do well for the ones it actually regulates.  Why have the oil and gas industries stayed immune for so long?  I think it's because they're so wealthy.  They do supply a large amount of American Taxes, but it's not like we can't regulate it more.  Maybe use some turbines on those giant smoke stacks to generate electricity?  Just a random thought.  In fact, we are definitely addicted to fossil fuels.  We should put some wind turbines on the coast like by Corpus Christi (since they don't get very many crazy storms).  According to Discovery, there's enough wind power on the coasts to power the world 10 times over.  Nice.  Silver lining to living in Texas?  We are the largest producer of green power AND were're on our own power grid!!!  Take that America!  Hahaha, I always love telling people how Texas really could be it's own country (but that's a different story!).  We also have deserts that someone should figure out how to put solar collectors in.  There's also a lot of tidal estuaries that could be used for tidal hydroelectric power.  Too bad most of Texas doesn't have enough of a terrain difference to justify hydroelectric power.  I like the fact that water can be used in so many ways.  Why can't we use huge rivers like the Mississippi and Missouri to drive water wheels like back in the day?  Or use all those dang locks we have to drive some turbines?  I dunno.  I could go on forEVER about all this schtuff, but I'm hungry.  And I wanna eat some non-organic fatty foods, haha.

Hey, I have to have SOME pleasures in life!!!  I think I'll have some fried rice, mmmmmmmm.

Friday, October 9, 2009

I Think It's About Time for Some Snow, No?




K, this is from January.  And it's October now.  I want this again.  I LOVE snow.  This is one of the only times it has ever snowed here.  Not sleet (we get tons of that), not freezing rain (all of TX closes down when this happens, haha), not hail, SNOW.  It was amazing.  I felt like I was a kid again, as I have a huge affinity for winter/snow/cold.  It snows about 3 days a year in my hometown (which is in rural NE Texas).  But this snow was the only times in the history of ever that it has snowed in Bryan/College Station, Galveston, and even Port A!  I like wearing my winter clothes, walking through snow, having hot chocolate, ice skating, etc.  I was NOT made to live in Texas.  I love it here, but a REAL winter is one thing I am lacking here.  The reason I say all this is because it has finally been getting "cold."  By "cold," I mean below 55 degrees.  Woo Hoo!!!  So, now, I'm pretty much praying for it to get so cold that I'll actually wear a jacket, and maybe it will snow again!?  I do see snow every year, we go skiing every Christmas in Red River, and I spend Thanksgiving in Colorado.  The big deal is that it snowed HERE.  Hahaha.  So, Canada/Upper Midwest/Alaska, send me some of your snow!!!  :)  I want to wear my parka!!!!

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Piano Stairs!? Only the BEST Invention Ever.

So I think I've found one of the neatest things in the world!  It's so fun!  These guys from VW turned a stairwell in Stockholm into a giant WORKING piano!!!  I already use the stairs whenever I can, and this would just make it even cooler.  What I wanna know is if the sharps and flats work?  I can't really tell.  Also, I want someone to get some friends together and recreate an actual song!  How stinkin fun would that be?



I've decided that playing the piano with my hands is no longer enough.  I wish to use my feet now!  So I've either gotta go to NYC or to Stockholm.  Easy.  That's either an 8 hour trip (if I fly out of CS or drive to Houston/fly to NYC) or a 17 hour trip (if I fly out of CS or drive to Houston/fly to Stockholm).  So it's $750 vs. $1400.  Kill me.  The price to Stockholm actually isn't too horrific!  I HAVE always wanted to go to Sweden.  In fact, I want to live there.  It's pretty much my dream country.  I think I just want to live in ANY of the Nordic countries.  I mean, they do have the highest quality of living and cleanest air,water, etc.  Plus, they are all gorgeous.  And then, I'll be part of the EU in most cases.  That means I'll also be able to go to a tons of other countries using actual working public transportation, haha!  It's okay.  For now, Dallas is my closest option.  Plus, hooray for DART actually going places, and being one of the major light rail operators in America and the largest in the South, now if it could just be more pedestrian friendly...with some canals maybe?  Too much?  :)

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Emo Ranting, Chicken, and Cinnamon Quills ... huh?

Okay, so hello all again.  Or to whom it may concern.  I am soooo over life right now.  Not like in the I wanna kill myself kind of way, more like in the I’m sick and tired of getting screwed up the ass with hard, sandpapery things (thanks Kelly).  Also not literal.  I’m just waiting for bad things to stop piling up on top of each other, but I suppose that’s how life is.  I’m sure someone would likely chime in, “life isn’t fair,” blah, blah blah.  But when someone says that to me, I wanna punch ‘em in the face.  It’s annoying.  In case you haven’t noticed, some people REALLY do have it better than others.  Sometimes, life is more kind to some people.  Fortune smiles upon different people in different ways.  Then that leads me to wonder, maybe I haven’t had fortune turn its back on me so much as have it bless me in another way.  I’m not poor (yet, hahaha), I’m healthy, decently good-looking, smart, etc.  So, it seems I have been given a lot of seemingly great gifts and many things to be thankful for.  My only qualm is that I don’t get to use my talents.  I haven’t yet had the opportunity to capitalize on my abilities.  I’m stuck in a stupid college town for the time being, and at a dead end job.  I pray that when I graduate, my degree will actually mean something in a world of escalating political, social, economical, and emotional warfare.  I want to be someone that leaves a mark; someone that won’t become just another person in history.  I guess I’m not the only one that feels this way.  It seems to be a common driving force behind some of the most successful people of all time.  But then you have to ask what exactly counts as success.  Most people would agree that an awesome family, financial security, and some pretty things to show off pretty much define success.  I won’t lie, I want all those things--who doesn’t?  A lot of my friends and I pretty much have the same thing to say about life at the moment, “I’m just ready to start my real life, with a real job, and a real impact.”  I think, at the moment, that I have an impact on quite a few peoples’ lives, and I’m thankful for that.  I guess I just really don’t want to end up like my parents--afforded many opportunities, and threw them away.  The part that scares me most, is that a huge majority of children that wish to be different from their parents turn out to be eerily similar.  I don’t want that.  I also don’t want to marry someone like my mother (or father or however that works).  I love both of them, but I know that my soul mate would be hard pressed to convince me to be with him/her if he or she was like either of my parents.  I expect drive and discipline from a person.  I expect kindness and a willingness to learn, all things neither of my parents possess.  I also don’t want to settle.  Like them.  I won’t settle.  I suppose if it takes my entire life bettering myself, if only to be better than my parents, then so be it.  Thankfully, the bar has been set preeeeeetty low.  I think they’d both agree that I have practically achieved as much if not more than them by getting into college.  Still not enough.  I want an awesome job, some pretty things to show for myself, and at some point a less dysfunctional family.  Not to much to ask, right?  I feel like I’m repeating myself and being emo.  Oh well.  That’s what rants are for.  Whew.  I feel better.  This is somewhat therapeutic.  Is this why people blog so much about random stuff!?  HECK YEAH!  I just talked myself through on the interwebz, hahaha!

Anywho, moving on to something different.  I love Paula Deen.  I watch Food Network all the time, and I’m slightly obsessed with her.  She is so adorable and her food is awesome.  The whole point of mentioning this is because I made her Chicken Georgia (which is dangerously similar to something my grama makes) today.
This is hers:

It is amazing.  And after my rant that I had earlier, making this made me feel better.  Oh the joys of food.  Of course I didn’t copy her recipe exactly, I HAD to add my own flair, right?  I mean, I am a wicked awesome cook.  I'm also a very humble person (I promise! hahaha!).  Pretty much, the key to cooking savory is … ready? … CINNAMON!!!  Not powdered cinnamon from the store either, that’s not even real cinnamon.  Neither are the quills that look like cinnamon bark.  That’s fake too.  Chances are, you’ve probably never had real cinnamon in your life.  CRAZY!  Trust me, the difference is insane.  Anyways, I went to a spice shop, and got real cinnamon.  A real quill of cinnamon bark.  It was very large, btw.  Maybe like a thin baguette.   Pretty much, you add some grated cinnamon to the chicken while its cooking then turn it and add it to the other side.  My grama is a genius.  She uses cinnamon alllllllllll the time.  I guess it’s the Italian.  I dunno.  Moral of the story: try this recipe, and add cinnamon to all kinds of things (it’s extra yummy in marinara sauce or in a onion dip/Worcestershire sauce hamburger).  Oh, I also add a massive amount of cheese … and garlic.  Can’t ever go wrong with garlic or cheese, haha!  Talk about random posts!

Sunday, October 4, 2009

The Big First One (Sounds kinda dirty, eh?)

Okay, So I've finally decided to catch up to the rest of the world and start a blog.  I figure if people that are less interesting than me can have interesting blogs then I can have one too!  Hopefully, I am awesome, I mean, I kinda suck at writing my thoughts out (well, typing for that matter).  I read a lot of blogs thanks in large part to Google-fuhrer, so I guess it was only a matter of time before I got sucked in too!  I'm pretty excited, I don't even have to have a billion friends, I just think it's kind of nice to sit down and let some random stuff out on the interwebz.

Today seemed like a great day to start blogging: I woke up without the aid of an alarm, the sun was shining through my window (a rare sight lately), I felt ridiculously rested, and Facebook altered me to several comments and friends requests.  Ah, the little things in life.  Everyone will agree that logging into ANY service and having lots of friend requests/comments make you feel SO cool!  Anyways, so I checked my ritualistic sites, Jalopnik (to satisfy my witty car-related thirst), Facebook, Myspace, Dallas Morning News, My e-mail, and YouTube.  Woot.  Seemed like any other day?  Well ... it was.  Except, for some reason while googling anything related to a Dallas Space Needle (I PROMISE it makes sense in context), I stumbled upon this blog: Durango Texas.  Weird right?  Well, this guy is awesome, too bad he's stuck in Texas (MWAHAHAHA! - I happen to love Texas).  That's where this whole blogging thing comes in, I wanted to make a comment and NOT be anonymous.  So there.  Blogging story done, if you can follow it.  I told you.  Random.  Alllllll the time.  Imagine being me, or someone that hangs around me all the time, whew!