Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Yelp

Thanks to my son Dave, I've been Yelping.
What's that you ask?
Have a look.
For a rough idea, look at the sidebar to the right.
Maybe down a bit.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Well I'll be damned.
For over ten years now in my emails, I've been using
Comic Sans MS as my standard type font.
Blue 14 point. A bit whimsical, not too formal.
That's what your actually looking at right now.
I actually picked the font by it's appearance,
not it's name. A font by any other name would still be as silly.
Actually it's a bit of a misnomer.
San serif means no serifs and this font uses serifs on the bottoms and tops of the
uppercase I. See. A trivial point however. They should call it almost Sans.
Or 98% Sans Serif. But once again I digress.
Hey, I used to be a printer in another life. 
I lived and died by the font. Back in the stone ages,
we had few choices and they were all costly.
You literally rubbed your letters, one at a time, from this waxy sheet on to
your camera ready artwork. And don't screw it up. You couldn't cut and paste back then.
Actually that's exactly what you did. Literally cut and paste.
Scissors and library paste were standard issue when setting "type" for your offset press.
That's where the term came from.
Now I see on the front page of today's WSJ that
I'm right in the line of fire of a raging controversy.
I appears that people who use Comic Sans MS are the type who would " show up
for a black-tie event in a clown costume".
Who me?
I appears some Comic Sans users are giving the rest of us stand-up types a bad name.
In my humble opinion, it seems to be a another case of persons with too much idle time on their hands. 
Now, where in the hell did I put my red rubber nose?

Tuesday, April 14, 2009


Well we did it. We left Good Old Long Beach at 3:30 Am Friday the third morning. Good, but intermittent wind. When we had wind, it was blowing  nicely off shore at 12 to 15 knots. 
But as soon as we would shut down the engine, it would die. So we
 motorsailed down at 6 to 7.2 knots on a nice reach. We got to Silver Gate Yacht Club at about 1700, 5:00 PM. It was a nice gentle reach and so was a good introduction into offshore sailing for Cyn and Deb. Scott and I were as happy as two supposed adults could be. Saturday Carl and Freda joined up and off to the races we all went. I am more than a little rusty and blew the start big time. Ten minutes late getting over the line. By the third mark, we had gone from DFL to the middle of the fleet. 
And there we stayed. We just couldn't catch the big schooners in the heavy air. But the wind died for a while near the finish and we had an opportunity to move up some. All in all, I can't complain. In a fleet of fifteen schooners, crappy start and all, we finished fifth corrected. I came to have fun. The race was just an excuse to get out of town for a few days and put a few hours on the new diesel engine. And we certainly did that.
 When we left, the engine had about 15 hours on it. When we got back it, the Hobbs showed about 52 hours. The trip back alone  was 18 hours. According to the newly installed fuel gauge, we used a quarter tank of fuel or about 15 gallons. Or a little less than 1/2 gallon per hour. The trip back was a real bitch. I contacted a cold in Dago and we motored uphill into the wind for the entire 18 hours back.                                                                                     Oh well, wait until next year. Right now I have to decide whether I want to eat, drink or sleep.
I think I'll take a nap. Right after I have a sandwich and a beer.