Salvation is by faith through grace, and not of works lest any man should boast.
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
New Diet Plan
Wednesday, July 25, 2007
The Deathly Hallows
I just finished reading Rowlings final installment in the series. I was
fearing that things would get too dark and end badly. I am elated to report
that this was not the case! The final book is perhaps not her best work.
The story line drags a bit through the middle. In the first several
chapters, Harry looses a lot of things that were comforting to him. As
He-who-must-not-be named, AKA Tom Riddle, AKA Lord Voldermort, is on the
rise, Harry finds himself going into hiding, along with everyone else who
has been resisting.
My prediction that Dumbledour would have at least one Horcrux, and would be
able to return proved false, however, the shadow that he cast still has
great impact upon this book. In other words, he may not be coming back to
life, but then again he isn't exactly gone.
If you're worried about who lives and who dies, then let me tell you this:
none of the major characters die. You can be at ease on that count,
however, the list of "former friends of Harry" grows quite long by the final
pages.
Rowlings style continues to impress me. The story is imaginative, detailed,
and intriguing. There are the bits of human interaction that always make me
laugh, there is plenty of action and some mystery. She has drawn from the
vast well of details written into the previous six books, and made sense out
of them. A lot of otherwise pointless details come floating back and impact
us in this book.
And should you be wondering about moral issues, this volume is better on
that count than all the previous ones. I have often critiqued the first
book because Harry is rewarded lavishly three times for breaking the rules,
and on the one occasion that he attempts to right a wrong, he is caught and
punished. It is not a tale for young children who have no solid sense of
right-and-wrong. This book however, makes it clear that the way you do
things (meaning that your motivation) is important. At times it is even
more important than what was done. Your motives impact your method and the
final results of your actions. That moral is perhaps a bit complex, but it
comes through rather clearly.
In all, I have to say, "Thank you J.K. Rowling for so many laughs and so
many pleasurable hours of reading. Your work has been delightful,
imaginative and so true-to-life."
I'd rate the entire series PG-13 and give'm a confident thumbs up!
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
Harry Potter and the Oder of the Phoenix
My daughters and I went to the midnight movie premiere of the Harry Potter
movie. I have been a fan of the books, and have read them all to date,
(more than once). However my review of this movie is less than
enthusiastic. In one word, the movie is 'incomplete.'
Yes it was a very long book, and there are a lot of details that the movie
script writers would have to gloss over, but the film version of this book
simply cuts out way too much!
To start with are the characters which should be on screen and are not; such
as Mundungus Fletcher, Rita Skeeter, Dobby the house elf, Freinze the
Centaur, and a very noisy portrait.
Then there are the scenes that have been left out: far too numerous to
mention; but for example…
*Harry receiving a series of letters in short succession… only gets one
letter instead.
* House cleaning in the house of Black, and how the twins pocket some of the
stuff.
* Mrs. Weasley with the bogart.
* The sorting hats new song of warning.
* The visit to Mungo's Hospital, the spectar of Neviels parents and the man
who would be killed by Devils Snare.
* Harmiony's clever use of coins.
* The romantic date with Choe
* Quiddich. All of it! Nothing about Weasley twins and Potter getting
kicked off the team, Or Ron making the team. No "Weasley is our king" being
sung.. nothing!
In fact if the book had been written in the manner in which the movie
portrays it, I'd have lost interest in it altogether. These movie makers
are working at boiling down the story to it's essential plot elements, but
they miss out on the two things the J.K. Rowling has going for her in her
writing style. They miss the humor. These bits where circumstance and
personality play out in unexpected ways… are humorous! And they miss out on
the mystery. There is an element of mystery in every book, and all the
clues are in place in the details of the events. By cutting out so much
detail you loose the clues and foil the mystery element.
All that was retained was action and drama. As if, with films like Bourne
and Die Hard, the audience is staving for some action and drama.
Over all the film isn't bad, but in comparison… considering what they had to
work with… it is very very disappointing. See it if you must, but forget
what you think it should look like vis-à-vis the book version. It did not
happen.
Tuesday, July 03, 2007
I'm not sure what to make of this
to me personally and my alter-ego 'Pastor Torch'. In my personal mail I
generally get various bits of spam and the assorted "you have to forward
this to every one you know.." type messages. Once in a blue moon I'll get
an actual bit of mail (that is what makes it all worth it.) But my
alter-ego is commonly sent virused messages. I know this because my web
service affords me a layer of protection against them, thus I receive a
notice in my e-mail about a potential threat that was sent.
It comes as no shock to me that some individuals out there can't see past
the word "pastor" in the name and would go to great lengths to cause such a
one harm. But I do not know what to think of this latest attack. You see
they came in the form of greeting cards... you may know the kind. There are
many web sites you can use to create and send a friend a special greeting.
The e-mail they receive provides them with a link to view the card you
created for them.. a very nice and thoughtful service, to be sure. So what
does it mean when the 'greeting cards' are blocked because they have a
virus? Did the sender infect it, or is that the web site admin's doing?
Who can you trust any more?
So if the thoughtful greeting card you sent was not responded too.. uh,
perhaps you could try using a different web-site?!
Once again I find myself wishing I had money. Several years ago I dreamed
about building an intra-net. Only back then I don't think the term had even
been coined. The idea was simplistic enough. Put a bunch of servers online
in such a way that you had to get in thru a gate way of some sort.
Everything behind the gate would be controlled. All content would be
filtered to meet three objectives. 1) Nothing would be pornographic,
fallacious or delinquent, in other words, it must be family friendly. 2)
All commercial content would be local. Chat, e-mail, the people you meet
online, if at all possible, would be local too. 3) Finally, the most
difficult part, organization. Content would be organized as in a phone
directory. Making research a lot more profitable. The key to maintaining
these characteristics is in the organization of it. Once it caught on,
other people would be allowed to connect and include their servers, and
their servers content would be added tot he service. If however any content
on that server was non-compliant, they would be given a short window of
opportunity to fix it or be literally un-plugged until it is fixed. Then if
they connect other servers to theirs...the same rules would apply. Any
non-compliant content found via their link would put them in jeopardy of
being cut off, thus they must exercise the same level of control over their
connections as the originating service does.
Alas, I never had the money to even build a server, let alone figure out how
to create a gateway.
In the mean time, I hope at least there is some truth to story that all porn
might be forced to use the extension .prn
That makes so much sense... on so many levels... for government to place
this regulatory stipulation on the internet and all of it's content. Think
of all the school's and libraries and businesses who would then only need to
block *.prn in-order to prevent porn from being accessed by their systems!
It would end the madness and errors they struggle with now days to filter
out the porn and maintain the educational web sites.
I could further dream that malicious virus ridden sights could be regulated
to *.vrs or some such, but then no one would be foolish enough to blunder
into their trap. Even when it comes in the form of a cute greeting card.
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
So far this summer,
I'm not sure if it was the heat or the rain. Idaho's weather has been all
over the map. We have seen highs in the 60's one day and 80 to 90 the next.
We even had more rain-fall in one day than we usually get for the entire
month! (Maybe that will mean that the rest of the month will be warm and
dry? But don't count on it!)
The girls had a camping trip last week-end. They went up with the church
youth group and had a good time. They pitched tents in good weather and
packed things up in the rain. Needless to say they got back in dampened
spirits. They had hoped to have more fun than it turned out to be.
Pilar and I celebrated our 18'th wedding anniversary (on the day that it
rained all day) We had a wonderful time helping a friend pack all her
belongings and move them to storage. That is like a minus ten on the
romantic scale, but it was the right thing to do, even if the timing could
have and should have been better.
I drove school bus for a couple weeks (again) because the school year for
the local school district ended three weeks latter than my college classes
did. Meanwhile, I'd gotten an e-mail about a position open at a near-by
water park called Roaring Springs. I was interviewed and hired! This is
the answer to many prayers. It is a full time job that is seasonal and I
can return to it every summer until I'm finished with school. It will also
allow me some opportunity to apply the skills I am being taught.
I guess mom & dad have had a real trying time… ask her about their water woe's!
They hired a guy to come in and install a lawn sprinkler system. They knew
there was a tap for the water somewhere, but in all these years of living
there they had never been able to find it. After cutting the power and
phone lines to the shop and house, and digging up about half the yard I hear
they finally discovered that the tap was buried under their front steps. In
the mean time, their phones and internet access was down. Mom had to have
her lap-top set-up to run off my wireless here at home so she could keep up
with her work. She isn't allowed to return to work just yet since the knee
surgery, so she has done the mobile office thing and connects via the net to
her pc at work. That way she can still get her work done even if it means
putting up with being around her grandchildren instead of cranky office
co-workers; reclining on the sofa instead of bolt upright in a flimsy task
chair; having home cooked meals instead of fast food; and listing to some
TV, radio or water fountain gurgle in the back-ground as opposed to a lot of
chatter and telephone ringing and printers whirring and clicking. Rumor has
it that she just might be ready to get the other knee done about the time
the new school years starts up… ;-)
Pilar has been able to keep her time card filled. Maybe too much?! They
are two people short in a four-man office. In order to compensate they
shifted from four ten-hour shifts per week to five 8-hour shifts. The good
news is that they can cover all the days this way, the bad news is that they
can't get ten hours worth of work done in just 8 hours. It has caused her a
lot of stress. She is a very thorough worker. Leaving a job where only the
higher priority stuff has gotten finished is not her style. She has no job
satisfaction from a job like that! That, as well as the pressure to do more
in less time, has put a tremendous load on her.
Summers are always a blur of activities. The Mercedes is up for sale at a
local car lot. They took it on a consignment basis. A neighbor might be
interested in buying the trailer dad gave me several years ago. I told him
he could make me an offer. I would be just as happy with something about
half the size right now.
Well that is about all that is going on around here… what has your family
been up too? I'd love to hear from you too!
Monday, May 28, 2007
In Memory of our Trops Today.
In Memory of our Troops!
Then and Now.
Today is Memorial Day 2007.
We are at war in
Go back to July 1990. Saddam Hussein is the military dictator of
The UN immediately condemned these actions and a coalition was assembled against him.
[ On a side note: It is interesting that the price of gasoline in these allied nations has risen to between 3 and 7 dollars a gallon, while in Arab nations it is still under a dollar a gallon. How did that happen?]
Hussein responded with big words, threats and acts of terror. He called on all Muslims to unite in a "Holy War" against the West (US) and defined us as the satanic enemy. He had 39 Soviet-made "Scud" missiles launched at Tel-Aviv and
Hussein had the pipelines breached and spilled Kuwaiti oil into the sea in hopes of polluting the water for other Arab Nations. He also had 365 out of 700 oil wells burned.
The oil wells burned for about 8 months before they could be extinguished. It was dubbed "Ecco-Terror" and worst man-made disaster of all time. The smoke plume was thick, dark, and stayed close to the ground fouling the air.
This view up the
[ Side Note: During the eight month period about six million barrels of crude oil and about 85 million cubic meters of natural gas were burned each day! And yet the environmental & human health effects of these fires were MUCH less significant than expected. In fact, numerous studies found that concentrations of most harmful airborne chemicals like VOCs, PAHs, and heavy metals were lower in Kuwait City and at American military bases just miles from the fires than in major cities in the United States!]
On February 23'rd the ground war started, Desert Storm was now if full force. However the
Hussein remained in
Meanwhile, the best foothold our troops could enjoy, was at the hospitality of the Saudi-Arabians. And these boys made life a little less than comfortable for our troops. We could not enjoy the diversity of freedoms that we have come to know on our own soil, especially those freedoms of religious expression. One thing I know about our military, they do not care for being dictated to by anyone other than the commander and chief!
So why are we still fighting in
The question we all have to ask ourselves is this: Is it better to fight this war over here or over there? Should American soil be scorched like this?
And how do you fight such a war? Do we use weapons or do we use diplomacy, words, and actions to combat the ideas born in religious doctrines?
In my opinion you have to do both. Military action is required to deal with suicide bombers, snipers, car bombs and other terrorist activities. (The few rotten apples in the barrel.) But the freedoms we enjoy here are not exclusive to American soil. They are Basic Human Rights which all people should be able to enjoy, everywhere.
We brought down Saddam Hussein. We brought down a dictatorship. The Iraqi people have held an election and are starting to enjoy both the liberty and responsibilities of freedom. This part of the war will only be won given time and the proper use of diplomacy. Our words and our actions have to send out a message, a message which is more powerful and better thought out than the ideas behind the Muslim doctrines of hate and death toward all Westerns.
And in the process we might just find a better foothold for our troops and military bases in a more American-friendly nation as a result. It would suit our Military. It would suit American interests (in keeping oil prices down) and would allows us to continue aid to a new budding nation. Democracy in an Arab/Muslim nation… that has never happened before has it?
Keep our troops and their commanders in your prayers.
-Dan Willey.
Wednesday, May 02, 2007
This month.
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Should guns be allowed in schools?
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Geo Caching
The Benz
Sunday, April 15, 2007
End Times
Monday, April 09, 2007
An E-mail I got about Bill snd Hillary
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, April 06, 2007 10:28 AM Subject: Fw: Fwd: Bill snd Hillary
Bill Clinton registers for the draft on September 08, 1964, accepting all contractual conditions of registering for the draft.
Selective Service Number 326 46 228.
Bill Clinton classified 2-S on November 17, 1964.
Bill Clinton reclassified 1-A on March 20, 1968.
Bill Clinton ordered to report for induction on July 28, 1969.
Bill Clinton refuses to report and is not inducted into the military.
Bill Clinton reclassified 1-D after enlisting in the United States Army Reserves on August 07, 1969, under authority of Col. E. Holmes.
Clinton signs enlistment papers and takes oath of enlistment.
Bill Clinton fails to report to his duty station at the University of Arkansas ROTC , September 1969.
Bill Clinton reclassified 1-A on October 30, 1969, as enlistment with Army Reserves is revoked by Colonel E. Holmes and Clinton now AWOL and subject to arrest under Public Law 90-40 (2)(a) registrant who has failed to report...remain liable for induction.'
Bill Clinton's birth date lottery number is 311, drawn December 1, 1969, but anyone who has already been ordered to report for induction is INELIGIBLE!
Bill Clinton runs for Congress (1974), while a fugitive from justice under Public Law 90-40.
Bill Clinton runs for Arkansas Attorney General (1976), while a fugitive from justice.
Bill Clinton receives pardon on January 21,1977, from President Carter.
Bill Clinton FIRST PARDONED FEDERAL FELON ever to serve as President of the United States .
All these facts come from Freedom of Information requests, public laws, and various books that have been published, and have not been refuted by Clinton .
After the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, President Clinton promised that those responsible would be hunted down and punished.
After the 1995 bombing in Saudi Arabia , which killed five U.S. military personnel; Clinton promised t hat those responsible would be hunted down and punished.
After the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia , which killed 19 and injured 200 U.S. military personnel; Clinton promised that those responsible would be hunted down and punished.
After the 1998 bombing of U.S. embassies in Africa, which killed 224 and injured 5,000; Clinton promised that those responsible would be hunted down and punished.
After the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole, which killed 17 and injured 39 U.S. sailors; Clinton promised that those responsible would be hunted down and punished.
Maybe if Clinton had kept those promises, an estimated 3,000 people in New York and Washington , DC that are now dead would be alive today.
AN INTERESTING QUESTION: This question was raised on a Philly radio call-in show. Without casting stones, it is a legitimate question.
There are two men, both extremely wealthy. One develops relatively cheap software and gives billions of dollars to charity.
The other sponsors terrorism. That being the case, why was it that the Clinton Administration spent more money chasing down Bill Gates over the eight years in office, than Osama bin Laden?
THINK ABOUT IT! It is a strange turn of events. Hillary gets $8 Million for her forth coming memoir. Bill gets about $12 Million for his memoir yet to be written. This from two people who spent 8 years being unable to Recall anything about past events while under oath.
Sincerely,
Cdr. Hamilton McWhorter USN (ret)
P.S. Please forward this to as many people as you can! We don't want this woman to even THINK of running for President
... and, why doesn't the press ever ask any questions about these things? Do you think they would hesitate for a second to ask about it if the Clintons were Conservative Republicans?
Sunday, April 08, 2007
Long Over-due
Happy Easter! Yes, this is Easter Sunday. And wouldn't you know it, the April showers have already started. The weathermen say it will rain today until sometime after noon. So much for the morning egg-hunt-plans.
Pilar got up at 5AM to go to work. (This is why I'm up and finding some time to stop and blog). She has surgery tomorrow morning, and then a few days of R & R to re-coop. I have to hand it to Pilar, she is a trooper! She came home from 8 hours of work Saturday, and found me working around the yard. I pulled the trailer out and started loading it with trash that I need to haul off to the dump, so she came out and started collecting junk from the back yard too. Saturday was such a pretty day. I started out by washing the car, (this only a scant few hours before the rain unwashed it again, if you know about Idaho dirt, you know what I mean. Washing the car lead me to washing the oil off the driveway, which lead me to cleaning up a bit in the garage, which lead me to need the trailer to collect all the trash... and so it goes. I think they call this Adult ADD. It is difficult to finish one thing before you run into something else that needs doing, and then another, and another, and so on.
Well, on Saturdays I have the liberty to address house work, the other five days of the week (excluding Sundays) are reserved for homework of the college kind. I have made good progress with the Physics class, but I am still struggling with the math. Calculus II these days. Step by small incremental step I am getting this stuff, just no where near as fast as I should be able to learn it. It is discouraging on some levels, and hearting to know that some folk never get it. I suppose slow is better than not at all, but slow is causing the cost of learning all this stuff to go up... and that is not a good thing.
Saturdays have also become a day to do a bit of recreation. These days I have discovered Geocaching. This is a bit of a sport, only it is played with a GPS and all the common-since you can muster. Basically the game works like this: other people have hidden small plastic containers in various and random places. Inside the containers are a log-book, and nick-knacks for trade. You are given the coordinates of the location and possibly a hint or two. You use your GPS to guide you to the general location, and use your common sense to figure out where someone else might have hidden a small container in that area. All this is recorded on a web-site... geocaching.com. If you locate the cache, you write your name in the log book, and log the find on the web site. I have found 17 already, and was unable to find about half that many. Occasionally these caches are discovered by people who know nothing about the game, and so the cache is "stolen"... for that reason you have to use a bit of stealth when you find and re-hide a cache, so you don't cause anyone to become suspicious. That is the nuts and bolts of the game, but the really great part about it has nothing to do with plastic boxes, GPS technology or dollar store trinkets. The really great part is that people stash these things in some of the most scenic, unusual or off-beat places. You will be guided to some of the neatest locations... places you had no idea even existed... probably places very close to where you live. I like the caches that are just out of town the best. This summer I hope to be able to put a trip together and geocache all the locations in and around Silver City Idaho. There is so much history up there, but I have never had a road-map to find it all like I will with the GPS and numerous cache sites! I want to take a tent, a camera and rent a quad for the trip. Any body else up for a bit of adventure?
Stained glass. Back in my High-school daze, I had an art teacher that showed us how to make stained glass windows. My wife and children all enjoy some handi-crafts, and often is the time we would visit a hobby craft store. I would look for any sort of stained glass supplies, but I never found any. Well I messed around with 'stained-glass-paint' and made a design for a bit of window I have here in the office, but it never looked right to me. So I got the bug and started looking online. You can find anything online. Then I got curious, and pulled open the phone book. Believe it or not, we have a specialty stained-glass shop right here in Nampa! I was amazed! I bought three sheets of glass and went right to work. I have had a bit of trouble finding the right solder and soldering iron... a 100 to 150 watt iron is a tough find these days, and so is the traditional 60/40 solder. Building supplies used to stock it, but their stock is all the silver (lead free) junk now. When I get this project installed, I will put up some pictures.. on the photo blog.
For Sale. It was a longer project than I'd figured on, but I was at long last able to get the small blue Geo back on it's wheels. Naday is finally driving it, but not very happy about it. She never wanted to drive my Geo-Tracker either, but she became accustomed to it. At least it has the automatic. The Metro is a standard, and you'd think she was being tortured by that. She has not been easily coerced into learning how to drive a stick-shift! She even dubbed the car, "The Anti-Christ" because of how it has "treated" her. Any one else can get in it and drive it smoothly.... :-) Thank God I had the foresight to install a new clutch kit in it while I had it apart! But the additional car left me with two to drive, and some bills backing up. I need cash. So I started to sell the Tracker... but it is 4-wheel drive, seats four (just), and tows a trailer, not to mention, it has a cool (removable) hard top, and I can go convertible with it). The Mercedes-Benz is almost as good on fuel, but burns Diesel (which costs more at the pump these days), it seats five, and has a great stereo (installed by yours truly). It was a tough call, but after weighing out all the pro's and con's, I decided to sell the ol' Mercedes. It has been in the family since (gosh) I can't recall, It's a 1976, and Dad would have had to have bought it before we moved up here, so he bought it around 78 or 79 at the latest. Tina learned to drive in that car, and I took my date to the high-school prom in that car. Dad finally rebuilt the engine and turned it over to me about a year ago. I've had to do a bit of work on it myself. But most everything is working like it is supposed too... with the exceptions of non-essential air-conditioning and cruse control... options the car came with. I have it listed in the local paper coming out today as well as with three online classifieds. I hope to find it a good home with an auto-enthusiast.
Saturday, March 03, 2007
Google Re-Direct
If you Goggled dlwilley@photoblog.com and it sent you here.. it has misdirected you. Sort-of. Somewhere in all the text I've written, I mentioned the other blog I keep, the one WITH photo's
Where you want to go is:
http://dlwilley.photoblog.com
That's the one with pictures.
This is the one where I rant/rave or debate.
I don't think anyone reads this one, to tell you all the truth. At least no one has responded to anything here in a long,
long
long
long
long time.
Thursday, February 22, 2007
This week-end
Monday, January 29, 2007
The day the Wii came home.
It had taken almost two months. Every chance we got we would cruse past the Game section and check to see if any Wiis' were on the shelf. We talked to the clerks and acquired all the intel. We could about when they received them and when we should be at the store to possibly find one. On Sunday morning, we received word that one store had gotten a new shipment in. Game Crazy got them on Saturday, thus it just might be possible that other retailers in the area would be stalking them over-night. Early the next morning we set out and meet three major department stores at the door as they opened up. All to no avail it seemed. None of them had gotten any in.
Just when it looked, well, like a waist of time, suddenly a clerk blurted out that Wal-Mart was supposed to have just received a shipment of Wiis'. We headed over to Wal-Mart with all the haste possible for one wishing to avoid any police type entanglements. There they were at last. 6 unopened, fresh from the factory, white and printed boxes, each containing a brand-spanking-new Wii! The girls both beamed and grinned like Cheshire cats!
It is Monday night. The girls have already plugged in about 9 hours of Zelda, and tried out every feature of Wii-Sports. Even my wife, who has never gotten on a game machine before in her life, enjoyed a round of bowling with the family. Tonight, after dinner, Grandma Pat & Grandpa Carl joined us and tried it out. They golfed, bowled and practiced their batting and pitching on the Baseball field. Grandma went away saying she just might have to buy one of these for herself.
The Wii has got to be the biggest advancement in game systems since the development of the Attari. The X-Box and the PS3's are both doomed to go down in flames. I mean come on! A bunch of over-aged "juvenile delinquents" might like net-working a bunch of systems together and gaming all night, but lets face it. Grandma, Grandpa and the kids are not going to be up all night playing Halo! The Wii has already endeared itself to an entirely new and larger market of potential gamers! EVERYONE! Yes everyone from 102 to just big enough to handle the remote.
Programmers beware! If you think you can just port over your old games, your "first-person-shooters" .. games like Halo or Resident Evil, the Mature games et. al. It won't work! They will not sell. The Wii has opened up a market for FAMILY FRIENDLY games. Multiple player games. Games that open up social interaction, require physical movement and advance gaming physics. The Wii is about people coming together and having FUN. It is not a machine for your isolated lone predator, blood and gutts, shoot everything that moves trash. Okay! I hope your getting this!
I can't wait to see some good driving/race games on our Wii. Mario-Carts or something like it might even be fun. Hunting games, Fishing games. Olympic sports like you have never seen them before! I'd love to see Spyro, Rayman, or Odd world. All with entirely new moves and utilizing the features of the new controllers of course.
Thursday, January 04, 2007
Managing Growth
It is foolish to build houses over your farm land.
I know I read that somewhere, I thought it was in Proverbs, but try as I might, I can't seem to find it right now.
The truth of that statement should be self evident. More houses means more people. Less farm land means less food. More people, less food. This is not a sustainable trend. But that is what we are doing here in the Treasure Valley, and a lot of other places all over the Western States. We are selling out our small farms to developers. Once these fields produced corn, barley, or maybe hay, something people or live stock could eat.. Now they produce grass clippings which get put in the trash.
Americans everywhere need to re-think the way we use land. Land is a finite resource. There is only so much of it, and it is not all the same. Flat lands which are good for growing things and close to a water supply are rare. Some 70% of Idaho is reserved National lands. BLM or Forest Service land... and either way a lot of that is not sceanic or productive, endangered habitat anything. Most of it is too steep to hike, too dry to farm, and to remote for people to care about.
It would be a good thing if some of these area's were made availible for development rather than surrender any more productive farmable ground to housing tracts. I know there are some who fight against development of the Boise foothills, but the alternitives are worse in the long run. Homes can be built on hills, it gives them a view. Houses can be built on rock, it gives them a firm foundation. Homes can be built on hills and rock, but farms can't. I hope city planners everywhere will exercise some wisdom, and cause the growth to occure where it should. Use wisdom, fore-thought and planning. Preserve what is good and productive, loose only that wich we can afford to loose. We are building tomorrow, lets make it grand. If we don't, then the next generation will have to do it over again, and at a higher cost.
Tuesday, December 26, 2006
Christmas 06
Monday, December 04, 2006
Life's too short
Tuesday, October 31, 2006
Quick Notes
As it has been rather a long time since I've written, I thought I'd just make some quick notes about the major events.
Although we had him for only a few months, Tiggy, our big yellow cat has passed away. The only thing we can figure is that he must have gotten into something toxic, because he stoped eating and litterly just waisted away. I've never know an animal or person that seemed not to have an evil bone in their body, not one, like this cat did. His eyes reflected a light emerald green, rather than red, his manner was gentile and un-impossing. If I can find just one person like that before I die, and make that person my friend, I'd die a wealthy man, and I wouldn't need money to do it. The cat will be missed.
David, our friend and neighbour from the old house, stuck the front of his car under a truck. It did little to the truck, but his Geo Metro sustained a good deal of modification. I helped him bang out the worst of the dents, a replace a busted headlight. It could be fixed, but a car like that isn't worth a lot to start with, and as it is holding togeather, drivable, and still street leagel, he is content to drive it as is.
Our sea-food night appears to have been a success. Our Real-Life Group came over last tuesday for fish, salmon, shrimp, fettachinni, salad and a movie. We watched, "The God's Must Be Crazy" an older film, but still a fun one, and soo, so funny! Everyone eat a lot, laughed a lot, and had a good time.
Amanda has been in marching band. The band at Nampa High School has held a great deal of respect in the community for several years, and has proven itself again this year. They swept the local compitition, and took almost every award in the District as well, so they went to Seattle for a state wide compition, where they had placed 8'th the year before, and took 4'th place this year! We are all proud of her, and the NHS Marching Band. After all, it is hard enough for some people to walk and chew bublegum at the same time, while these kids are marching in formation and playing music at the same time! Great Job Dawwgs!
Pilar continues to excel in her carrer. She took the Discharge Planner possition a few months back, and she may not have to wait long before she is asked to take over that office. Her current supervisor is making elementry level mistakes that there are no excuses for.
Nadya is now a Junior in Highschool, and for the first time in her life she is having to work at keeping her grades up. But then, she is already taking college level courses. Through a program offered by the school, in cooperation with NNU, the local University, she can earn college credits from her classes at the Highschool this year, because some of the classes she is taking now, are equivalent to the class offerings at NNU. The program is called "concurrent credits" and requires us to pay a fee (a fraction of the price that college credits nomally cost). Her success at this level could mean that she will have most of her College freshman courses completed on graduation from H.S.
I'm just glad that I've been back in school and learning all this advanced math and stuff. Otherwise, dear old dad would have been clueless about how to help her with her homework lately. As it is I've managed to stay one or two steps ahead of her, but my lead is wanning. She got into a physics class this year, and I have to wait until the spring to get into physics. I'm required to have Calculus I under my belt before I can get into that class. I should be able to must it this time though. I got an 'A' on the frist exam, a 'C' on the second. Our thrid exam will come about the middle of next week, so there isn't much new matterial to put on an exam. I'm confident that I'll pass the class with good marks. I have been retaking the Pre-Calculus corse (for the grade) at the same time. This has enable me to re-inforce my algebra skills, and to plug a few holes. Ultamatly it should prove worth the time when it props up my GPA. I've had some trouble with all this math... at this point I'd not recomend to anyone older, looking to get a BS degree, that they go back full time. Instead, I'd recomend that they start with a series of night classes, and concentrate on the math. Get through Calculus I and then go after it full time! In any case, look to your weaknesses, and deal with them first. I always liked math, so I did not suspect that I'd have any trouble with it, but I have been having some trouble, too much trouble, with these math classes.
They are falling like flies! My Uncle passed away, our friend & Nephew to my sister passed awaw, our pet cat... and now... Mom called me saturday and told me that Terry Rock was found dead in his home. Terry was one of the few relitives that I grew up with. I think he is only a second cousin, but he and older sister Melinda were very close to the same age as Tina and I and while we lived in Eureka, we saw a lot of each other. Terry taught me how to ride a mini-bike, walk on stilts, shoot pool, and play war with rubber-band guns or stinging neddel 'gernades'. I don't think my parents ever realised how much of a bad influence he was on me. (he he)! Fortunatly for me, we had moved away before he found drugs... something that may have played a roll in his early departure. He can't be but about 45 yers of age... too young to be dying!
Well, see how much you miss when you don't keep, er, well, when I don't keep the journal upto date. ( grin ) Life is just too short and way too fast passed! -Dan.
About Me
- Pastor Torch
- Student of all trades, not ordained by any church.