Well, it was mighty interesting watching the Metrodome in Minneapolis collapse. Good thing nobody was on the 20 yard line when it happened. We have the same design here, and when we we get snow, they pump super hot air between the two layers and open up the drains. In a few rare instances of extreme snow, they’ve deflated it so that it’s down to the support cables and let them support it while the snow melts and drains. Of course, we’re offering them our help – including inflation/deflation expertise and spare roof panels. According to wikipepedia, the Twin Cities only average about 45 inches of snow a year, so I guess it’s understandable that they don’t know how to deal with it. Hopefully everybody out there is OK.
Here, it rained yesterday. Not constantly, though, which was good. As the snow receded, some poor guy’s body popped up. He was only wearing pants and shoes (I highly recommend at least a shirt from about November ’til June). There remains enough snow to leave footprints, though, which was bad news for a freshman on the SU Football team. Well, formerly on the team. I guess he was doing some sort of reverse Santa thing, liberating flat screen TVs and whatnot from other students’ apartments. Unfortunately for him, he left footprints in the snow tracing back to his abode, where he was found with the purloined products.
So, now he’s in jail, charged with a string of burglaries, and is no longer on the team (totally expunged from the SU Athletics website in a matter of hours – very efficient; they must have that O’Brien guy from 1984 working for them). Goodbye, free education (not to mention no Pinstripe Bowl). That’s the problem when they recruit kids from Long Island – they just don’t take into account the whole snow factor.
And it was warm enough to work on the van and get it running (thanks once again to my friend John, who was willing to stick a screwdriver in the coil wire to check for spark while I turned it over; ever since I accidentally shorted a wrench across a pair of battery terminals, I’ve been a little gun shy when it comes to automotive electrical shit; not enough space to work and too much metal – especially when you’re standing in the snow, but to get to the distributor in the van, you have to break in through the inside), although the “service engine soon” light is still on, and the belt – while totally unrelated to anything we did – is pretty squeaky now). So I have a way to get plywood and lumber and pipe and whatnot again, so, for that reason alone, it was a happy and productive weekend.
I also got the garage very cleared out, and should have plenty of room for 4 tons of pellets. I took my existing stock and piled it in front of the front door that we covered with plastic last week (kind of a wood pellet snadbag system, designed to hold back the flood of heat to the outside), and built a platform for my tractor carryall, which I used to haul all kinds of shit out to the sheds.
Congratulations to the Akron Zips on their first-ever National Championship. Seems awfully late in the year for soccer, and I’m glad they weren’t playing the match in the Metrodome.
It’s still pretty warm out this morning, and it looks like there’s a little bit of drizzle. They’re promising us that that will change for the ride home from work tonight, though. Temperatures will fall throughout the day today (should make everything nice and icy), and then the snow starts up again. Oh boy. They can’t say how much we’ll get (or exactly who will get it), so we wait.
The obligatory Christmas stories are making the rounds on the news. Right now, the “don’t get all sloppy drunk at the office holiday party” one is running. Our party is on Wednesday, in fact, and if I can figure out how to avoid it entirely, I will. Not that it isn’t enjoyable (last year, I watched the “Jawhorse” infomercial, which led me to decide that I absolutely needed one – and it was one of my better tool purchases. Yes, I am willing to make the Jawhorse the official sponsor of this blog. Are the folks at Rockwell listening?), but, well, I’m not drinking (have to drive home, so even if I was drinking, I wouldn’t be drinking – managed to escape death during my misbegotten youth, and have long since learned my lesson), I’m not eating pizza and wings these days (a miserable existence, I admit), and I don’t really want to talk about work. Personally, if I’m not gonna be working, I’d just as soon go home.
I guess I’m just not festive.
Of course the Today Show weather reporter in Minneapolis said this: “Officials say the collapse was attributed to the snow”.
I am not quite so sure, I suspect terrorism.
1st, let me apologize for getting in the middle of a Syracuse-Minneapolis familial-type weather feud. I have always thought that the HHHump-free Dome was a little weird and not too far from that bridge that fell down. Still, Minneapolis is a great town but that is some of the worst weather there that I’ve seen since I moved to Cali. If Syracuse is worser, may gawd bless. I thought Buffalo had NY bragging rights.
I don’t think ol’ Bill was looking for a flat screen.
PJ, the list of things you managed to do this weekend sounds exhausting. Going to work must give you a rest.
Minneapolis is way colder than Syracuse. We just happen to get more snow. Of course, the snow Minneapolis got over the weekend was wet, heavy snow. A lot heavier than the lake effect we’ve gotten this year. We tend to get the really heavy stuff later in the year (or if a nor’easter blows through, bringing wet warm air up over the Atlantic and then dumping it down on us – and then after it goes through, it comes back across Lake Ontario and dumps lake effect on us).
Buffalo tends to get more snow than us early in the year, but Lake Erie is shallow and freezes over, which ends their lake effect.
As for lousy weather, well, I guess it’s all your perspective. I don’t typically mind the snow (I rather like it – though I was getting tired of 10 inches a day for 98 hours straight).
As I’ve mentioned before, we don’t get tornadoes or hurricanes, and I’ll take snow over hot and humid any day.
Buffalo is really flat, and the wind is fierce there. Plus, having grown up her, I don’t much care for a flat landscape.
My daughter, Jenny, has finished her masters degree in Occupational Therapy. Her class originally consisted of 24 students, only 8 of whom have successfully completed the course. This is called academic rigor. However, in public school, 8 of 24 passing is called bad teaching. Which is it?
The experts, which always refers to those who have neither taught nor known students, think public school teachers should be judged and paid by their students’ performance on tests. If Jenn’s professors were paid and judged this way, they would be poor and in search of employment.
Breaking News according to CNN: Federal judge rules unconstitutional parts of Obama health care law. Justice Department expected to appeal.
Obama health care law. You know, the one passed by both Houses of Congress and all that.
The judge ruled that the individual mandate was unconstitutional and that it could not be disguised as a tax because the purpose of the money was not to raise revenue. However, he did not stop implementation of the law because the mandate does not kick in until 2014.
I believe he is the only judge to have made such a finding.
Damn, it got awful cold out there. Not Minnesota cold, but pretty damn cold. And there’s a “suspicious package” that has a highway closed which happens to be on my way home.
Well, that sucks.
Congratulations to the Akron Zips on their first-ever National Championship. Seems awfully late in the year for soccer
The Zips made it pay off. They had home-field advantage throughout the tournament until the semis and finals over the weekend in Santa Barbara. Lee Jackson Field, where they play, is adjacent to campus and is a large open space with few buildings to block any frigid November winds that might blow in.
Yesterday the temperature in Akron was 28 degrees. This is indeed not great weather for soccer… unless you’re used to it.
To speed up the Hudson River Tunnel project, Christie successfully urged federal officials in April to use a type of funding agreement that federal law requires to be repaid if the state backed out.
According to the Early System Work Agreement, “If an applicant does not carry out the project for reasons within the control of the applicant, the applicant shall repay all government payments made under the work agreement plus reasonable interest and penalty charges the Secretary establishes in the agreement.
Christie canceled the project Oct. 27, citing potential cost overruns that he said could add $2 billion to $5 billion or more to the price.
“Gov. Christie’s decision to renege on that contract and abandon the project is what now requires us to insist on the return of federal funds expended under the ESWA,” FTA Administrator Peter Rogoff said in a statement to The Record of Woodland Park.
Last week, Christie approved the hiring of a high-powered Washington, D.C., law firm to wage the battle on the tunnel tab, which is due for repayment by Dec. 24. Christie claims New Jersey is being targeted for political reasons and that the federal government has been inconsistent in trying to recoup money when a project falls through.
http://online.wsj.com/article/AP7e2a8696b5424b25ab44f4f6bc1b3c7f.html
Tequila and grape juice is not a bad combo.
I was thinking about tying my shoes in a double knot but thought against it.
Neptune must be pissed at the northwest. There’s buckets of rain falling out there.
Hey Vernon, friend me on Facebook.
Cold here with no precipitation…was 7 degrees when I got up. I’m taking care of 7 dogs, and that’s not my full-time job. I hauled them out to the lake at lunchtime to let the
littlenot so little farts romp. Wish you could see how I feed all 7 in one room and load them in a vehicle. :billcat:Congratulations to Jenny, sp :banana:
So our young receptionist is becoming a Jehovah Witness. She was always full of zeal, had a kind and celebratory nature and delighted in giving to others. Since studying this religion, she refused to sign the company Holiday card, does not attend the company birthday lunches and won’t be donating to the owner/partner’s Xmas gift (which is to a charitable cause). BUT….she said her minister told her she could take her Christmas Bonus because it was being given to everyone.
MoneyChristmas logic, eh?Wow, just saw this about Holbrooke…
:gate: Richard Holbrooke
One of the few Dems to tell the truth despite what it’s going to cost him personally.
Udall voted against the ‘Bama tax cuts for the rich :banana:
Of course, he probably worked that out with Bennet who voted for it in a plot to keep Colorado dems off balance not knowing what to believe :billcat: