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Wreck-It Ralph the Raccoon Wreaks Havoc

Wednesday, July 11, 2018


We knew my Medieval Bird Feeder Modification didn’t work because a week and a half or so ago we caught the raccoon sitting on top1 pleased as punch munching seeds. We let the seed get used up, either by him or the backyard birds and didn’t refill it, hoping he would move on.

This past weekend when we went shopping we bought another bag of seed and filled it up. Every thing was fine for the first couple of days, but then on Tuesday morning when we came outside to eat breakfast. nearly half the seed was gone. Our pesky raccoon was back. And with a vengeance. Not only had it gobbled down $3 or $4 worth of bird seed, but to show his displeasure with our attempt at starving him, he knocked a glass bowl birdbath off a railing shattering it on the deck and also knocked the adjacent hummingbird feeder off its hook to the ground, emptying its contents, but fortunately not breaking it.

I picked up the glass birdbath pieces off the deck, cleaned off the hummingbird feeder, refilled it and hung it back up. Because this was happening at night after Donna and I got off the porch and I figured most birds wouldn’t feed at night I opted to take a set of small vice grips and clamp the spring-loaded seed tray cover down, so nothing could get in there, be it raccoon or squirrel or bird.

This morning, the vice grips were still in place and the hummingbird feeder was too, but somehow that sneaky bastard had managed to completely empty the sugar water out of it. The ground underneath the hanging feeder was dry too, unlike the dark dirt under yesterday’s ground dwelling feeder. I cannot image how that was possible.

Tonight I clamped the bird feeder shut and carried the hummingbird feeder into the house. I’ll let you know how Wreck-It Ralph retaliates.

Tagged: Bird Feeder, Raccoons

A Walk in the Woods

Saturday, July 7, 2018

For the first time in over a year, we went for a walk in Hitchcock Woods today. We started at Fulmer’s Stables and headed basically uphill to Mystery Field and then worked our way back downhill to the start for a nice little sweat inducing 3.1 mile walk. There was one couple in a truck with a horse trailer and one Miata with us in it in the parking area when we started. There were about a dozen trucks with horse trailers and one Miata in the parking area when we got back. The natives were up.

We have taken to listening to podcasts of the BBC4 interview show Desert Island Discs while having breakfast or lunch on the screened porch. The premise is simple, a host interviews a famous (or if they are British, somewhat famous to us) person and at the end will cast them away on a desert island. During the interview we get the list of the 8 songs they will be allowed to take with them and why they are picking them. The guests are then asked to pick just one to save in the event a wave is going to wash their collection out sea. They also get to pick one book and one luxury item to be stranded with them.

The show has been running for the last 76 years! They have almost 2,000 shows, some from as far back as 1946, available to listen to online. Right now we are cherry picking from people we know and want to hear, but sometimes I will just scroll real fast in the podcast app and stop on a random show and they too have been very entertaining. A couple days ago I happened on the author Bill Bryson that way and he talked about his book called A Walk in the Woods about hiking the Appalachian Trail. Both Donna and I thought we had read it before, but couldn’t be sure, so I found the kindle version. We both finished reading it and now we are still not so sure, but we both did enjoy the book, be it our first or second reading.

Tagged: Books, Hitchcock Woods

Lucked Out

Tuesday, July 3, 2018

Pulled off the inside door panel this morning to see what was going on with the door not opening from the inside. The worse case scenario would have been that the cable from the inside handle to the latch would be broken. I did a little search on the Miata.net Forum and it seems like the cable is not available by itself, you have to buy the entire inside door handle assembly which included the handle and the two cables (one each for the latch and the lock.) The best case scenario would have been that the interior door handle itself had broken somehow.

I got lucky. Back a couple of years ago, just a couple months after we bought the CTBNL, I had worked out a deal where I got the OEM silver interior bits from a newer Miata to brighten up the cockpit some. I saved the old black pieces those items replaced, so I actually had an extra set of interior door handles in a box in the garage.

The top picture is of the back side of the passenger handle. The blue and yellow plastic pieces are where the cable ends hook into the mechanism. If you hover over the image you can see the arm that the yellow piece is on has physically separated the part you pull on to open the door.

Tagged: Miata Service

Hope The Window Doesn’t Quit Too

Sunday, July 1, 2018

The reason we were at the one-lane bridge yesterday was because we needed a picture of one for the Motoring Challenge. It is worth three points. We have one not too far from home that we used for the challenge back in 2015, so we didn’t want to use it again and we wanted something a little more scenic for this year.

Friday night, while sitting in the hotel, Donna asked, “See if there are any one-lane bridges in south Georgia?” The first one I found was this beauty and it was perfect. Even with having to drive a 1/4 mile of dirt road to get there.

Of the half dozen or so photos we took, the one above was my favorite of the bunch, but there is one problem, no person with flyer in it. We’ll probably submit the one below for the challenge. Who knows, we might be driving right by it on the way home tomorrow, maybe we’ll stop in again…

Tonight when I went to fill it up with gas, I couldn’t get out of the car. I pulled on the door handle and it moved, but nothing happened. Naturally I could not believe what was happening, so I tried pulling it several more times with the same negative results. I could reach out the window and lift the outside handle and the door would open.

I wasn’t trapped, but the window needs to keep working or I would be. I shouldn’t be worried, it isn’t exhibiting any hint of troubles, but then again neither was the inside door handle. I’m guessing that a cable has broken or come unhooked inside the door, should be an easy fix when we get home.

Tagged: Motoring Challenge, Road Trip

47,203.98 Foot-Pounds

Saturday, June 30, 2018

We started the day listening to Ray Charles “play” the piano and ended with watching fireworks. In between we found a one lane bridge on a dirt road, found the Blue Angels flying indoors and took in a Double A baseball game.

The Ray Charles statue in downtown Albany, GA
Old Hoggard Mill Bridge over the Ichawaynochaway Creek
The National Naval Air Museum on NAS Pensacola

The Pensacola Blue Wahoo defeated the Mississippi Braves 2-1
Post game fireworks over Admiral Fetterman Field in downtown Pensacola, FL

The CTBNL ticked over 64,000 miles just north of Newton, Georgia (47,203.98 ft-lb converts into 64,000 Newton-Meters.)

Tagged: Miata Mileage, Road Trip

Philosophical Question

Friday, June 29, 2018

If you take a trip after you are retired, can you call it a vacation?

I say yes.

Tagged: Retirement, Road Trip

Brian Drives Several Poor-shas

Friday, June 22, 2018

An event that has been over a year in the making finally came to fruition yesterday morning. Back very early in 2017, when that year’s Motoring Challenge flyer came out with the requirement to take a picture of a car from every decade I had in mind what I wanted for my 80’s photo.

Somewhere in the past, either during a Miata Club meeting when he was a member or during the process of my buying the CTBNL from him, my Fairy Godfather David mentioned that he had an 1987 Porsche 911 Carrera. When I first asked him about it, he told me it was in the shop having the top end of the engine rebuilt and wouldn’t be done for a couple of months. He said, “When I get it back we’ll get together and you can drive it and then we’ll take the picture.” When the car was finished, he was then busy taking care of an aging father, I was still working and we never could get together. I ended up using a Pontiac Fiero for that decade instead.

Fast forward to last week, I’m on my morning neighborhood walk and who should pull up next to me in a Jeep, but David. Turns out has moved into my neck of the woods and was out running errands. He says, “I still owe you that drive.” His dad had since passed away and I’m retired, so I tell him, “Let’s do this crazy thing.” He says, “We can set aside a morning and you can drive the ’87 911 and whichever of my other cars you want.”

I knew he owned a 70’s vintage 914 and a 2016 Cayman S to go along with the 911, but I didn’t know about the 2nd 914, the 2nd 911 and a 2011 Boxster Spyder. So in the 4 hours we spent together I drove all 6 cars on a 15-20 mile loop along mostly county back roads. I drove them, not outrageously and only sometimes spirtedly because I’m not a professional driver and I’m basically used to driving relatively new-ish Miatas. Plus I really didn’t want to get a speeding ticket, smoosh somebody else’s car or them (or me for that matter.) I’ll try and give you a brief synopsis of my thoughts on each car, in the order I drove them.

1. 2016 Cayman S – A large2, comfortable, very fast, sharp handling Grand Touring vehicle. David would tell you that it handles to beat the band and from the couple of turns I took at speeds slightly faster than I have in the Miata it was so composed that I’m sure he is right.

2. 2011 Boxster Spider – Driving this was a bit like driving the Cayman, though a touch lighter with same horsepower. It has a 6-speed transmission, but in the US, and driving legal speed limits, you really only need 1st and 2nd. Almost stupid fast. It is a Boxster so it is a convertible, it is a Spyder because the top is not the normal two-layer motorized stowing top, it has some cloth and poles and straps so that it goes up like erecting a 1950s era pup tent3.

All these cars are standard transmission with three pedals on the floor. The first two cars were six-speed and the shift pattern was the same as the Mini. The last two cars had 5-speed transmissions with a shift pattern identical to the Miata. These next two in the middle are 5-speed as well, but gave me the most difficulty because the shift pattern was weird. Reverse is where 1st is traditionally in the upper left and 1st gear is in the lower left, where 2nd gear normally is.

3. 1973 914 2.0 – This car is more my style. It is roughly Miata sized all the way around. It has a slightly reduced HP number, but is a couple hundred pounds lighter making it maybe feel marginally faster. It drove nothing like a Miata though, along with the odd, to me, shift pattern it has no power steering and surprise, no power brakes4. Halfway through the loop the no power items turned into features, not bugs, and made the drive quite engaging. By the time I was finished even the shift pattern made sense and became second nature.

4. 1971 914/6 GT – While not a GT from the factory, it has nearly all the bits on it from the factory kit to make it pretty darn close to one. So, you take the previous car and bump the HP to more than double, add on some tidy upgraded suspension pieces and, from the sound of the thing, throw the muffler in the dust bin. It is a race car, thinly disguised as a street car and one hell of a hoot to drive. There were a couple of cars ahead of me when it came time to take the left turn which led to the usual loop, they went that way, so I went straight. I spent the next couple of miles stomping the go pedal for awhile and letting off to just to hear the car snarl and snap like a rabid mountain lion before turning back to the garage. It was the shortest drive of the day, but definitely the loudest.

5. 1970 911T – This is the car I think of when I dream of 911s, the Holy Grail of Porschedom. I was 15 in 1970 and I had a poster on my wall of this car5. This is the “hot rod” version of the car from that year because it has a bigger motor, has been lightened in several ways and has an upgraded suspension that lowers the car a bit. After the 914/6 GT this seemed almost too sedate, but it felt nimble and quick like I expected it to. And as a bonus, I felt like the coolest teenager on block for those 40 minutes of driving it.

6. 1987 911 Carrera – The car that started this event to begin with and it turned out it was the least satisfying of the bunch. Possibly because it was the end of day and we’d been driving around chatting for 3-1/2 hours already, but I didn’t push the car at all, I just drove like the ‘old man in a hat’ I am. Don’t get me wrong, if I won this car in a raffle or if an unknown uncle left me one in his will, I would drive the snot out of it. I would wash it monthly whether I had driven it or not. I would go to Coffee in Cars, I would take kids for rides, I would, well, you get the idea, but for this day, it was, “Meh.”

It’s nice to have friends who have cool cars. And they let you drive them!

Tagged: Cars
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"Ninety Percent Of Everything Is Crap"
Derived from a quote by science fiction author Theodore Sturgeon, who once said, "Sure, 90% of science fiction is crud. That's because 90% of everything is crud." Oddly, when Sturgeon's Law is cited, the final word is almost invariably changed to 'crap'.

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