Onward to Memphis

Today’s featured image is of a deer bouncing away from me as I stand in the parking lot of my office in Alpharetta. Apparently, there is a small herd of the critters living in a rather cramped bit of forest in the middle of the office park, and they come out to graze or pee or people-watch or whatever just about every night when I’m getting ready to leave.

Speaking of leaving, I’ll be driving over to Memphis in a few hours to start a 5-day stint setting up a new client there.  I am somewhat nervous about this, as I’ll be the only person at the site.  It’s an offshoot of a Chattanooga firm, and everyone else on this project (5 people, I think) are going to the Chatty office.  My concern is that, while I’m not overly worried about the technical aspects of the job, I’m not entirely sure about the procedures that I’m supposed to be doing.  The X-company documents pretty much nothing.  You’re just supposed to pick it up from osmosis, I guess.  Problem is, I’ve only been on one other project, with one other person, and I really don’t know what’s expected.  Guess I’ll find out.

The plan is for me to start doing some off-site work (joining machines to the local domain, getting antivirus installed, etc.) tonight – from my hotel room – and then there will be a down day tomorrow, when I’ll go to the office, physically connect our server to the firewall, set up printers, patch the workstations that I can’t get to tonight, etc.  Then I’ll work with the users Tuesday-Thursday (including a training class on Tuesday, for which I have no documentation, though there is supposed to be a PowerPoint presentation somewhere) and hit the road for home after work on Thursday.  With the time change, I should get back to Atlanta sometime around midnight Thursday and will take Friday off.

After that, I’ll go BACK to Memphis on Sunday because – I really don’t get this – the office that I will set up this week will be relocating to a new office next week.  Why they didn’t just do everything on the same week is completely beyond me, but it’ll be a shorter week for me.  I’ll drive out Sunday, move our server and firewall to the new place on Monday, then hang out and help the users until Wednesday, when I’ll again come home.  Will take the following Thursday off.  Not sure about that Friday.  I’ll probably go to work because I know that I’ll have email and old tickets backed up beyond belief by then.

I was made the primary consultant for two more firms over the last couple weeks.  One in Baltimore, the other in St. Cloud, MN.  Both are problem children and the one in Minnesota is a particular beast.  Whoever set them up (from the X-company) did a terrible job, and the firm is paying the price.  Their email system was set up incorrectly.  A couple of vital software packages were only partially installed.  Worst of all, the client opted to go with “cloud only” support, which means that I don’t have remote access to their workstations.  So this company is opening probably 20 new tickets a day, most of them having to do with their email or the poorly-installed applications, and I pretty much have to say, “Yeah.  Our bad.  We’re working on it.”

Did I mention that the project manager who did that job (in St. Cloud) is the same guy who’s leading the effort for the firm in Chattanooga and Memphis?

So yeah.  I’m a bit nervous about these upcoming trips.

On the home front, Mary is indeed moving out later this week, though she says she’ll take care of the cats into the first week of December for me when I’m gone.  As I said in a previous post, I’m mentally taking back my house and I’m sort of excited about that.  Haven’t decided yet if I’ll get a new television, since I’m strongly considering putting the one in my bedroom into my redesigned office, for use as a large monitor.  If I do that, I think I’ll be more comfortable working from home once or twice a week.  I’ve not done that yet (the offer is on the table) because working on a single screen really sucks when you’re doing the kind of work that I do.

So if I do that, I’ll move the television that I put in Mary’s room (the office) into my bedroom, and then I’ll probably want to put one downstairs.  If I decide to do that, then I’ll probably want to get a decent-sized television with all the Roku stuff (streaming channels) built in.  So I’m window shopping.

Ironically, I’ve also decided to basically stop spending money, as I’ve decided that 55 would be a great age to shoot for for retirement.  I know, I know.  It’s too young and blah blah blah.  But the fact is that I’m tired of doing what I do.  I was happy – and well-paid – in my AT&T gig, and I’m miserable – and making half of my old salary – with the X-Company.  By 2021, I’ll have about a half-million in my 401k, about $120K in my AT&T pension (from which I’ll be able to draw around $800/month – I’ve checked); and, assuming I can sell the house, I should be able to buy a few acres in the woods and put up a hovel for cash.  I recently visited my friend who did exactly this over the last two years, and – while I’d find better land and put in a few more amenities (a wood stove for sure) – she’s got a pretty sweet setup.

So there it is.  It’s out there.  I aim to retire in 3 years.

In other news, Furman won a playoff game against Elon yesterday.  Very close game, and a bit of redemption from the 2nd game of the season, when Elon won a squeaker on a last-second field goal.  The reward for the win is that Furman will travel to Wofford next week for the second round.  In the 1st week of the season, Wofford beat Furman by 1 point by stopping Furman’s 2-point conversion attempt on the last play of the game.  Furman fans are calling these games, “The Revenge Tour.”

Not much else to talk about these days.  I get up before dawn, go to work, come home after dark, and go to bed.  Not depressed.  Not elated.  Just sort of bored.

Maybe Memphis will give me something to write about.

 

Post-vacation wrap

So I’ve been back in Atlanta for a couple of weeks – the second of which I was the on-call guy for work, which sucked – and I suppose it’s a good time to catch up on all the news that is or isn’t fit to print.

The featured image for this post is one of Lake Huron that I took a couple of weeks ago as a storm was rolling in.  It was mainly bluster – not a great deal of rain – but it was chilly and raw.  I loved it.

I’m currently sitting at Tires Plus, waiting for my oil to get changed and my tires to get rotated and my wheels to get balanced and all of that other fun stuff that I do every few months.  Decided this morning that I’d bring my original Surface Pro with me and do something productive while I sit here.  I’m beginning to really appreciate this machine again.  Bought it several years ago, but it’s so small that I used it basically as a novelty.  Real work got done on one of my other laptops.  But, due in large part to it’s small size, I brought it with me to Michigan and took some notes on what was going on.  Those will be pasted, in their unedited entirety, later in this post.

The vacation was a wonderful respite from life.  I started out (and finished, actually) at the Cheboygan State Park in Cheboygan, MI.  This park – I think it’s around 800 acres – sits on Cheboygan Point on the Straits of Mackinac, and it is a lovely place.  I’m pretty sure that I’ll be going back.  I chose the park mainly because it’s a few hours closer to home than is Pictured Rocks on Lake Superior and – for the same price that I’d pay at Pictured Rocks for a basic campsite – I got a basic campsite plus electricity, showers, flushing toilets…all the good stuff.  My site itself was a fairly secluded area on the southern side of the point, sitting on the shores of Duncan Bay, which is a marsh and not at all what I had in mind for a great lakes vacation, although the breeze coming off of the bay was extremely pleasant.  I set up my car tent and a hiker’s tarp.  Bed in the car, various helpful things (camp drawers, table, stove, firewood, etc) in the tent, picnic table under the tarp.

And I had a great few days there.  Arrived in the early afternoon on Thursday, October 12 and had pretty good weather (until Saturday night).  By then, after walking around all over the park, I’d decided to rent a cabin on the northern edge of the park, right on The Straits.  Gave up the electricity and the running water, and paid triple what I’d been paying for the campsite, but gained a fantastically cozy, warm, dry, spacious domicile with easy access to Lake Huron, trails, various critters, and – of course – the ubiquitous fall houseflies of Michigan (see my writeup from last year).  If you refer back to the featured image, I actually took that between the time that I checked out of my campsite (at around noon) and the time that I entered Poe Reef Cabin (at around 2:30).  I spent the time in between just walking around on the point – on the beach, into the woods, back onto the beach, in the off-beach dunes, out on the point, etc. – and getting very cold and a bit wet and playing my wind game (hiding behind trees, under bushes, near rocks…I love my wind game).  Finally, I decided I’d waited long enough to get into the cabin, which I technically wasn’t supposed to do before 3:00.  Whoever had been in it before me, leaving by 1:00, had left a birch log slowly burning in the wood stove, and walking into that dry, warm, wonderful room was probably in the top 5 greatest experiences in my life.  It.  Felt.  So.  Good.

Stayed until the following Thursday morning, then drove home in one shot, arriving at sometime around 1:00 AM Friday.

Back at work, the first week was fine.  The second week, as I mentioned, I was on call.  Got very little sleep (I do not understand why CPAs feel the need to work – and call the help desk – at all hours of the night and on weekends), but survived until yesterday morning, when my on-call shift ended.

Learned on Thursday that the X-Company has been acquired by Right Networks in Hudson, NH, under an umbrella of a venture firm in Boston.  Not sure what that means at this point, but it doesn’t have the same stress level of the other mergers I’ve gone through.

Still looking for another job, but I’m finally starting to settle in and accept the fact that I might be stuck doing what I’m doing for a while.  With that in mind, I accepted an offer to go on a project in Memphis during the last week of November and first of December.  Sounds like I’ll drove over there on Sunday the 26th, come back on the 30th, then go back on the 3rd and return on the 6th or 7th.  Lots of driving, but at least it’s something different to do.

Mary informed me yesterday that she may be moving out at about that same time.  Not sure why, but it’s all good.  I’ve been redesigning my house in my mind since she told me.  Getting my office back (currently her bedroom) and the second guest room (currently unusable because of the boxes in it) will be nice.  I’ll also be able to drop one or two of the paid streaming services that I’m paying for, since I only picked two of them up so that she wouldn’t complain when I dumped DirecTV.

And that’s about that.  The remainder of this post consists of what I wrote while in Michigan.

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6:27 AM 10/14/2017

Saturday morning, day three (or four, if you count Wednesday) of my 2017 vacation. Cheboygan (MI) State Park, site 27. It is a brisk October morning and the sun hasn’t even though about coming up yet, but I had to pee (did so in my trusty pee jar), and then figured I’d take advantage of the bathroom building before they shut it down – I’m told that that might happen tomorrow – so I got up, got dressed, walked over to the loo, and did my business. Being up and dressed, I figured I’d go ahead and start the day, so just made some coffee and pulled out the old Surface Pro to catch up on things.

My vacation actually started on Monday. The idea when I asked for the time off was to head out for the great unwashed north (probably Pictured Rocks) on last Saturday morning and arrive sometime Sunday afternoon. As so often seems to happen to me these days, life got in the way of those plans. Found out that I had a concert on Sunday, so leaving on the weekend was out. Then the GBB set up a very agressive schedule, giving us a minimum of rehearsals between concerts; I decided that it would piss people off if I missed two rehearsals in a row, so I hung around Atlanta until Tuesday and left on Wednesday morning.

While all that was going on, Dad and Diane went to Myrtle Beach last week with plans to stay for a couple of weeks. Drove over to see them on Saturday, and also reserved a spot at the state park there for this past week in hopes of spending some more time with them. Unfortunately, Dad had some medical issues and cut the trip short. I say, “Unfortunately,” because of course I don’t want him to be sick. It did have an upside, though: Myrtle Beach was (and is) incredibly hot and humid this year, and I’ve got to admit that I was not looking forward to camping there for a week. My recent purchase of a Kelty 20-degree bag was definitely not made with hot weather in mind. So once Dad let me know that he was leaving early, I started looking for places to stay in the Upper Pennisula.

Having prepared for Myrtle Beach in my head, I had pretty much wrapped my head around the idea of having electricity, so my normal spots at Pictured Rockes were out. I looked around at other places near Grand Marais, but all of them looked kind of boring: close, tight, campsites with little direct water access. So I started to just look at other parks under the Michigan DNR umbrella. And I found this one, settled in on the Straits of Mackinac on a little jut of land that provides a marsh on one side, the Straits on the other, and an all-day breeze that is amazing. The website said that the bathroom building (showers,toilets, running water) would be shut off on October 4, but all sites have electricity – and it’s cheaper than my Pictured Rocks places! So far, I’m pleased.

photo of Duncan Bay

Duncan Bay

So what’s happened? Well, I left on Wednesday morning and drove to Lima, OH (imagine that), where I spent the night at the Country Inns and Suites – pretty much my go-to plan when heading north to either Michigan or Canada. Hit the road by about 8 Thursday morning and made it here at around 1:30. Checked in via a dedicated telephone (haven’t seen an actual ranger yet), got to my site, and got everything set up. The rest of the day was spent doing basically nothing. Sat in my chair, drank beer, took a couple of pictures of Duncan Bay (the marshy area that is my backyard), and eating an Arby’s beef sandwich leftover from Wednesday night. Went to bed at probably 8:30 (well after dark) and slept until sometime between 7:00 and 7:30 yesterday. Slept like a brick.

For much of the day yesterday, I explored the trails in the area. I walked a total of about 10 miles all over Cheboygan Point, which is nearly all park land. Discovered a couple of beautiful little cabins on the north shore that I’m going to have to check out online (with an eye toward renting next year) and also bushwhacked to the extreme northern tip of Cheboygan. Took a few pictures of Mackinaw City, Grand Mackinac Island, and “The Mighty Mac” (bridge) – although it’s quite difficult to see it on a cellphone camera (I opted not to bring any real cameras with me).

Between walks, I cooked up a couple of angus steaks and some corn on the cob – both were amazing – back at my site. Lit a fire last night as the weekend crowd started rolling in. I’ve got a couple with a very whiny daughter to my right now. Still no one on my left. I’m guessing that it’ll be just me and few folks in their motor homes if/when the water is turned off. I’ll cool with that. There’s a pit toilet about 200 yards from me and one shed where the water will remain turned on all winter. So it’s the same as Pictured Rocks would be – plus I’ve got electricity.

Camping at Cheboygan

Planning on doing some more walking on the point today, but we’ll see what the day brings.

9:51 AM 10/16/2017

On Saturday, I woke up fairly early – I’d guess around 7 – and, with no real plan in mind, started walking down the approach road away from the campground. After about a mile, I came upon road labeled “Poe Reef Cabin” and decided it looked like a nice walk. Locked gate, so I wouldn’t have to worry about traffic, and it headed off into the north woods, which I wanted to explore some more anyway.

Very shortly, I came upon the afore-mentioned cabin, which appeared to be bereft of humans, so I walked around it to the beach and sat in the wind for a while, looking across the straits to Makinac Island. Then walked back around the cabin, peered in the windows, availed myself of the outhouse, and made a snap decision to try to rent the place. Pulled out the phone (it’s great to have a couple of bars of coverage up here), and found that Poe Reef Cabin was available from Sunday until Thursday. Then checked my bank account and learned that I’d finally been reimbursed for my trip to Maryland from two months ago. That did it. I immediately tried to reserve the cabin and was immediately rejected because I already had a reservation at the campground. I resigned myself to doing it next year.

After walking some more (saw a porcupine), I ambled back to the campground – it was probably around 10:00 by then – and flagged down a passing ranger, there to clean the restrooms. I told him I still needed to pay him for my Michigan DNR passport (a parking pass necessary for all MI parks) and that I was wondering if I’d be able to get the cabin in spite of my campsite reservation. He told me, “Theresa will be in the ranger station at noon – sometime after noon – and she can probably help you.”

So I went back to my campsite, made some coffee, ate some peanuts, and waited for noon. At noon, went back to the office – no Theresa. Back to campsite. 1:00 rolled around, and Theresa still wasn’t at the office, so I tuned in to the Furman/VMI football game on my phone. I remember, back in the mid-90s, when David Willard and I would plan for days in advance trying to find a bar with a satellite dish that might possibly be able to get the Furman game. I even started a website about Furman football as a way to force myself to keep up with it and to help other people who were looking for places to hear and/or see the games. Now, I can just pull up Tune-In radio on my phone and hear the games live from anywhere in the world that has cellular coverage. Amazing.

Furman won, 42-10, by the way. But back to the story.

About halfway through the first quarter, I walked back to the ranger station and found that Theresa had arrived. We took care of my passport, and then I broached the subject of the cabin. She clicked and clattered away on her computer (complaining all the while about how slow it was, while I was still listening to my football game over the phone), and not only reserved the cabin for me for Sunday-Thursday, but also reimbursed me for those days at the campground. I told her that I’d happily eat the cost of those nights – if I have to give my money to any government entity, it would be the Michigan DNR (I mean that sincerely) – but she was adamant and I didn’t argue the point. The she offered to walk the key and combination for the cabin to my campsite later (which she did), and told me about Saturday night’s Halloween festivities.

The cabin was sounding better all the time. Apparently, the campground had set aside Saturday night as a “local kids don costumes and bother campers for candy” night. Later that night, there was the “Haunted Trail” campaign, during which, for $10, children (and, I assume, their folks) could walk along a few of the trails near the campground after dark and be frightened by various things set up on the trails.

I opted to turn my back on the moochers and drink bourbon while staring at Duncan Bay. Lit a fire somewhere around 5:30, as the wind began to pick up, and hit the sack, I’d guess, at around 8:00.

I have yet to spend any camp time in Michigan that doesn’t end with me tearing down in the rain, and Sunday morning was no exception. A squall came in out of the north shortly after I went to bed, and it more or less raged all night. At some point, one of the bungees holding my tarp up gave up the fight. This allowed my tarp to fold in half and completely expose my table – on which I’d left my lantern, stove, jetboil, and pans – and to soak everything. When I got up, somewhere around 8:00, I fixed that issue and then hoped for a break in the weather during which I could tear down while staying as dry as possible.

It never really happened. While I did get about 20 minutes of non-rain, the wind never let up. Every time a gust hit, rain fell out of the trees and covered everything again. In a nutshell, I did get everything sort of packed into the car, but I had no chance to dry out the tent or the tarp. And I was drenched. I took the opportunity, after packing everything, to use the campground’s shower, and felt much better. Headed out at about 12:45, but couldn’t check in to the cabin before 3:00. So I parked at the trail head, and started walking.

The squall had picked back up by now, so I tried to keep to the internal forest as much as possible. Every time I got within a quarter-mile of the lake, the wind and spray was pelting me and it was getting cold. I’d guess that the actual temp was around 45, but add strong winds and wet and I have no idea how cold things really were. Time went fairly slowly, as I walked probably 8 miles of trails waiting for 3:00. At 2:45, I was back at the trail head and thought, “Screw it. I’m going in.”

So I did. And when I opened the cabin door, I learned that the people who’d left earlier had left a nice birch log roasting in the wood stove. The inside of the cabin was between 75 and 80 degrees. It was the most amazing feeling that I’ve had since….it was just the most amazing feeling ever. I’m trying to compare it to sometime during a Shoreham winter when I came into the kitchen after playing outside, but it went beyond that. I was absolutely worn out and freezing when I opened the cabin door, and the sense of being warm and dry was incredible. I moved all of my stuff (except the tent) into the cabin, crawled into my sleeping bag, and slept for close to 4 hours. Then got up, ate a couple of sandwiches, played in the wind for another hour or so, and got back into bed. Slept until 9 this morning, with one interruption at 4:00 to get up and pee and throw some more wood into the stove. The wind was still howling at that hour, and it was very cold. By 9:00, however, the storm had cleared. The sun is now shining and the wind has died out as much as it can on the shore of a great lake. It’s still chilly – there was frost on my picnic table this morning – but the sun feels good and I’m hoping for temps in the upper 60s today. Inside my cabin as I type this, with some oak smoldering in the stove – flu nearly closed – it’s right at 60 degrees and feels wonderful.

I’ll do some more hiking today and, perhaps, drive into Cheboygan for a few supplies. Coffee, batteries, maybe some ice. And I’ll continue this tome as time permits.

Poe Reef Cabin

5:15 PM 10/18/2017
Today and yesterday were both phenomenal, weather-wise. Temperature was in the mid-60s and the sky was perfectly blue on both days. I did jump into the lake briefly yesterday (very cold) and considered it again today, but decided not to – though there’s still another hour or so of daylight left. Got a couple of long walks in on both days, and filled out things by sitting at my cabin, listening to podcasts and drinking. Also built a fire outside the cabin today.

During this morning’s walk, I startled an eagle out of a tree by the beach – first time I’ve ever seen one of those in the wild, and it was pretty cool. Other interesting wildlife that I’ve noticed this week are a flock of swans in the straits and a multitude of jet-black squirrels. Also got a couple of close-ups of a pilliated woodpecker over the course of the week. I assume it was the same bird, but it could be that all of them enjoy showering me with wood chips.

If you look closely, you can see a wild eagle in this picture

Planning on leaving before dawn tomorrow, but that really depends on how I sleep tonight. I woke up briefly at around 4 this morning, but convinced myself to go back to bed, where I happily snored until after 9. When I get home really depends on when I leave here. I’d like to get there before Friday night, so am hoping that I can suck it up and do the trip in one shot. Otherwise, I’ll probably end up stopping in Kentucky somewhere, and I hate to spend money in Kentucky. “Don’t support anyplace that supports Mitch McConnell,” is my motto.

As for the rest of today, I have no plans. Had a couple of sandwiches an hour or so ago, so I don’t think I’ll need to eat again. Already boiled some water and put it into my thermos for my morning sponge bath. I’ll probably have some coffee at some point, and I’m still listening to podcasts. Might watch a movie on the Surface Pro before bed. I brought 5 or 6 or them with me, planning to go through them in the campground – where I had electricity – but since moving to the cabin, I’ve had to be stingy with the amount of time that the computer is running. The phone and my iPod are fine – I’ve got a great portable charger – but once the Surface Pro dies, it’s done until I’m home or at a hotel.

To sum up, it’s been a great week – particularly the last four days – and I’m fairly certain that I’ll rent a cabin here again next year. Might try to get one of the other two that are about a mile farther up the point – they have better beaches – but I’ve got nothing negative to say about this one, and I’d take it again in a heartbeat.

Wind

And it’s been three weeks without an update again.  Neat.  I do it this way just so that I might have something worth typing about.

Brett and I went back up to our hidden hunter shelter the week after the eclipse.  Knowing what to expect this time, we planned on car camping and brought speakers and coolers and firewood and all of the other great things that you can bring with you when you don’t plan to hike anywhere – like beer.  We spent a great two nights up there (Labor Day weekend), and even found – holy of holies – a pit toilet hidden in the brush behind the shelter.  Not just a hole dug in the ground, mind you.  An actual cement vault with a toilet on top of it.  Not a great deal of privacy if anybody happened to walk up to it while you’re doing your business, but since nobody was anywhere around, it was pretty perfect.

Did a bit of walking with the dogs (Brett brought four of them), got some more ideas for my upcoming sojourn to the upper peninsula, and enjoyed nearly perfect weather for the weekend.

Then it was back to the grind at work.  Not much to say about that.  I got assigned as primary to three more companies, which isn’t as glamorous as it sounds.  Other than that, it’s just more of the same.  Oh!  I did get taken off of the phone queue, which is nice.  I can actually concentrate on some of my more pressing tickets now without worrying about being interrupted.

I guess the big news was that Atlanta was put under its first-ever tropical storm warning a few days ago.  Hurricane Irma swept up through Florida and headed towards the big A, causing damned near every idiot in my adopted city to freak out.  I couldn’t wait for the thing to arrive.  I’ve always loved strong wind.

And…that’s about all we got.  In spite of the governor declaring the entire state an emergency area.  In spite of schools somehow making the decision to close for (at least) FOUR DAYS.  In spite of my own company declaring that everyone should work at home on Monday and Tuesday (I didn’t).  Here’s what I experienced in this mega-storm:

Sunday: A beautiful day, with an absolutely fantastic breeze blowing all day.  Gusts of about 20 MPH.

Monday: Light rain and breezy in the morning.  Empty roads on the way to work.  Me and one other consultant in the office.  Sprinkler system going full-blast all around the office.  Rained on and off all day – never very heavy.  Some pretty significant gusts (50-60 MPH) in the afternoon, lasting less than 5 seconds per gust.  Lots of leaves on the ground (you know – like it’s FALL or something).  Empty roads on the way home.  Rain stopped by 7:00, beautiful breeze continued with some occasional strong gusts.  Opened all of the windows (the cats loved it).  Sat on the deck for a while with my eyes closed and imagined I was at Lake Superior.  Went to bed with the windows open.  Slept like a rock.

Tuesday: Light rain and breezy in the morning.  Empty roads on the way to work.  Drove around two trees that had fallen into roads (over the course of my 14-mile commute).  Me and three other consultants in the office.  Rain ended by about noon.  Breeze died.  Light traffic on the way home.  Rehearsal until 9:30.  Home in a drizzle.

Wednesday: Any other day.

So that was the Tropical Storm Trauma, huh?  Not much different than any summer storm.  Yet many schools are closed on Thursday….

I mentioned that I got some new ideas for my Superior trip during the Labor Day car campout.  Ended up buying a Kelty 12-foot hiker’s tarp (which I’ve actually been meaning to do for years), and while looking for it, I stumbled across a double-wide Kelty sleeping bag, rated to 20 degrees.  It’s pretty fantastic.  Has a zip-off quilt and internal blankets and I’ve been sleeping in it on my bed for the last several nights.  Incredibly comfortable, very warm when it needs to be, but wide enough to let me stretch out, cool off, and be very comfortable.  It will be a wonderful topping for the air mattress in the back of the Subaru.

Can not wait to get back to the lake.  I don’t remember the last time that I needed (and I do mean NEEDED) a vacation so much.  Ironic that I’ll be going to basically the same spot where I found out that I was probably getting laid off, which is what ended up making me need to go back so much.

And that’s about all that’s new for now.  I’ll probably think of more stuff later, but won’t write about it for another two weeks.

Fun while it lasted

As expected, I spent most of today removing Ubuntu from my Surface Pro and reinstalling Windows. I’m currently downloading the Windows 10 update for it – which is what I was trying to accomplish when everything went balls up last year. Hopefully it will work this time. I’m typing this on the SP, which has Windows 8 installed currently, and it’s just so much better than Linux. I try. I really do. But I’m still a child of Microsoft.

I finally got a little bit of training regarding the work that I’m supposed to be doing in Annapolis beginning next Sunday. One interesting li’l tidbit that came up during said training: Book flights 21 days in advance. Had I been planning on flying, that would have been a good thing to know prior to 7 days before leaving, huh? I’m also a bit ticked that travel expenses are reimbursed, rather than put on a corporate card, but maybe I got spoiled at BS and ATT. Wonder what would happen if I just say, “Hey, I can’t afford to pay for this up front. Sorry.”

Anyway, I still haven’t been able to get in touch with the project manager or the team lead for this little trip, so it’s going to be interesting. I don’t know who the client is, what the address is, if there’s a preferred hotel….this is all stuff that I was supposed to have been told three or four weeks ago. I was talking to Jenny about this stuff today, and I honestly think the X company has just grown too fast this year. They’ve got people in middle management who don’t know how to manage. Two months ago, they were doing network installations. Today, they’re supposed to be managing projects with multiple new people – like me – who haven’t been given any real training. It’s not frustrating. It’s not frightening. It’s just annoying. Trying to keep a good public attitude, but it gets tough.

Weather-wise, it has been ridiculously hot for the past couple of weeks. I actually mowed the lawn in the dark last week because I just couldn’t stand the thought of doing it when I first go home from work. Too hot. That’s also been cutting down on my morning walks, as I’d rather just go back to bed at 5:20 AM instead of walking for an hour in a 95-degree sauna. Not going out every day has started to play a bit of hell on my feet, as when I do go out, they tend to hurt. Went through the same thing a few years ago.

I’ve been toying with the idea of starting a post on this thing that will be updated frequently – like every day – with just a “what I did today” type of thing, while still reserving the right to compose longer things every week or two. I’m not sure how that would work, which is why I haven’t tried it so far.

That’s about enough for today. Not much new in my life, as you can tell. Still not satisfied with the employment situation, still wondering how and when I can just retire…still wondering what the big picture of my life is, to be honest. Or if there is one. And, if so, do I really care about it all that much? Maybe THIS is the real mid-life crisis, and that little mental vibration I had a few years ago was nothing. It felt more urgent then. Now, it’s just…eh.

Tally-ho and all that. My next post will probably be from Maryland.

Doing Stuff

Why yes, this site probably does look different to you.   It crashed completely last week, and I haven’t gotten it back to normal yet.  Back in the day, when I got home from work at a decent hour, I might’ve spent more time on it.

Actually, it’s a good problem to have.  I’ve been meaning to dig into the mechanics of WordPress.  I’ve got this fuzzy idea that I might be able to make money by setting up/maintaining/repairing other folks’ WordPress-based sites.  You never know.

Another thing I’m doing a little different today is typing this on my Microsoft Surface Pro (the original!), with Linux installed on it.  After not using the little thing for about two years, during which time Microsoft came out with a number of Windows 10 rebuilds, I pulled this thing out last October, tried to install everything at once, and immediately broke it.

Not just crashed.  I mean BROKE it.  Couldn’t even get to a logon prompt.  Spent a few days at AT&T (remember, I was getting paid to look for a new job at the time) trying to get things working – even found an external DVD drive and tried to do a fresh install from there – but I had absolutely no luck.  So I put it back into its little bag, brought it home, put in on top of my piano, and basically forgot about it until today.

This morning, I caught a commercial for a USB-stick-based emergency repair product (FixMe or FixIt or something like that), and wondered how big of a scam it was.  So I started reading up on it.  It appears that it’s a legitimate safety net for computers that have been compromised by malware, so that’s nice.  I wasn’t going to buy the thing anyway – just wondered if it was a complete rip-off.  Anyway, while reading up on it, I learned that it was running a Linux distro on the stick (no surprise there), and it inspired me to see if I could revive my Surface Pro in a similar fashion.  So I downloaded an Ubuntu .iso, set it up to boot off of a flash drive, plugged it in, and booted off of it.  Used it to check the drive on the Surface Pro (seemed to be fine), but decided against trying to repair the existing Windows installation and went straight to “Install Ubuntu.”

Half an hour later, I had a working Surface Pro again.  Running Ubuntu.

At some point, I’ll probably reinstall Windows on it, but it seems to be working very well with Linux.  So maybe I’ll just leave it as it is.  It’s not like it’s my primary laptop or anything, and it works fine for checking email, reading the news…updating this blog.  Still working on getting a Citrix client to work on it, so that I can use it for work stuff if necessary.

I managed to get the front lawns mowed last week, and also pulled out the stupid bricks that have surrounded my mailbox since I bought the house.  At some point, the bricks outlined a little square around the mailbox for flowers and crap, but I’ve just let grass grow there, and the bricks dinged up my mower blades.

They won’t any more.

Considered doing some mowing in the back yards this morning, and maybe cutting down the ivy and other creepy stuff surrounding my desk, but it’s incredibly hot and muggy.  So I’ve been cleaning my bathroom this morning, and I may decide to call that my big project when I’m done and go have a beer or 11.   Also need to get my hair cut.

I’ve volunteered to do a project in Annapolis, MD, on the week of August 8th.  Supposedly, I’ll be trained on what that entails before I actually do it, but I haven’t heard a peep about that.  Beginning to wonder how the X company gets anything accomplished.

Guess that’s enough for now.  My proof-of-concept Ubuntu Surface Pro is a success!

Dammit

Another couple of weeks have passed, and – while I’m still not and never will be a fan of AT&T – this has been one of those periods causing me to really miss that paycheck.

We have had rain every day for about the last 10, although “rain” probably isn’t the best word to describe the amount of water that’s been dropped two or three times daily.  Downpour. Deluge.  Monsoon. Frog strangler.  It had gotten bad enough by a week ago that I finally decided that I needed to get one of my two gasoline-powered lawn mowers running again.  My battery-powered mower does a fantastic job on the lawns if they’re dry and if the grass isn’t too tall.  If both of those conditions aren’t met, I’m lucky to get 30 minutes out of the battery.  I managed to stay ahead of the curve in the front lawn over the wetness, but with the grass growing like crazy and the rain every day, the back of the house has turned into a veritable jungle.  It’s time to fire up the Briggs & Stratton.

In the past, I would’ve just take the mower(s) up to Corley Small Engine in Duluth and gotten a fix for $50-$70, but I decided to save some money and learn a bit about my mowers.  Purchased a carburetor rebuild kit online for $13, brought the newer mower into the garage, and – with the help of a few videos – took the old carb off one night after work while the storm raged outside.  Noticed as I was doing this that some water was leaking through the top of my (internal) garage door.

Great.

Finished disassembling the carb, threw away all of the old gaskets, dropped the parts into a carb wash bucket, and went to bed.  This was on Monday, I believe.  By Tuesday morning, I could barely open the garage door.  The frame had swollen or warped.  Also saw water damage at the corner of the ceiling above the door and in the drywall around it.  Still raining.

Tuesday after work, I climbed up on the garage roof (oh, joy), cleaned out all of the gutters (disgusting) and a pile of leaves and other crap in the corner of the roof above the garage door where it was most likely that the leak was.  Didn’t see any obvious place for the leak, but didn’t spend a lot of time looking, as another storm was on the way.

Received my carb rebuild kit and was ready to put everything back together on Wednesday.  Unfortunately, the kit didn’t contain a float gasket.  Just, you know, the most important gasket in the whole friggin’ thing.  So I put everything back together without the gasket and set it aside.   The garage door remained very sticky, but the leaking seemed to have stopped.

Went to Corey’s yesterday, got the float gasket that I needed – and also picked up the same rebuild kit (for $13) from them so I could fix the other mower at some point.  As expected, it contained ALL of the  gaskets I needed.  Somebody screwed up the online order.

Got home, put the carb back together, put it back into the mower, hooked up the fuel line, and released the grip that had been crimping the fuel.  Gasoline immediately started pouring out the bottom of the carburetor.

Fantastic.

I re-crimped the fuel line, took the carb back off, checked all the gaskets.  One of them, on the nut on the bottom of the carb, looked suspect, so I took that gasket out of the new kit that I’d purchased and replaced it again.  Put everything back together, released the fuel line clamp….gasoline leaking out of the carb.

Crimp back in place.  I’ll take the mower to Corey next week.  The bigger problem now is that gasoline was spilled on the mower, and the mower  was in the garage…so my garage smells like gasoline.  Got up this morning with a plan to move the mower back to the shed in the backyard.  Pulled on the doorknob to open the garage door.

Doorknob broke off in my hand, leaving, as you might expect, a hole in the door.  Gasoline vapors found it very quickly.  Now my entire downstairs smells like gas.

After some trial and error, I managed to get the garage door open without a knob, completely took out all of the knob, covered the hole with some painter’s tape.  Off to Home Depot this morning for a new knob.  Also spoke to a contractor friend of mine about fixing the drywall and the door frame in the next couple of weeks.  Also bought some spray sealant which I’ll put on the garage roof today – more ladder climbing, more time on the roof, more joy.

It has become apparent that, insurance or not, I’m going to have to replace my roof.  Yes, I can afford it by raiding my savings.  I just really didn’t want to do that.  At this time last year, I could absorb the expense and be back on top within a month or two.  These days, I’ll probably end up financing it and locking myself into the stupid job for another three years.

Maybe the gasoline smell will be gone by then.

A Day Off!

Today’s featured image is of Josh and Chamberlain patiently waiting for their checkups at the vet sometime last year.  They’re currently overdue for this year’s, but I’ve been a bad dad and haven’t bothered to make an appointment for them.  Possibly because I haven’t had a day that I can take them.   Today, for instance, is my first actual day of vacation since I took a week off last October.  I don’t have the faintest idea at this point of how many days I actually get to take off now that I’m with The X Company, but I’m supposedly earning 15 hours off per month or something like that.  Not sure if I can take them before I’ve earned them.

Today, however, I’m getting a comp day because I worked on Good Friday, which apparently is a paid holiday at The X Company.  Since tax season was still going strong last week, most people worked.  I worked because I had no idea it was a holiday – though traffic was remarkably light!

I took today largely because the brass band is launching our “tour” this evening in Jacksonville, AL.  We’ll play at Jax State U. tonight, then in Huntsville, AL, tomorrow, and will close things out in Chattanooga on Sunday.  It will mark, I think, the 4th weekend in a row that I’ve had to do something.  I’d planned on taking a hike in the mountains next weekend, but realized on Tuesday night that I’ve got another concert next Saturday.  So…maybe the weekend after that.  Unless that’s when Riley is getting hitched.  Sigh.  As much as I hate them, there are times when I really miss how good I had things at ATT.

Speaking of “them,” I’m coming closer to firing ATT.  I got an email last week informing me that I’d paid my DirecTV bill, which – with my employee discount – had remained at $11.  I knew that the discount would end eventually, and I knew that the price would probably shoot up to $50-$60.

I was not at all prepared for it to shoot to $211, and I cancelled the service that night.

To replace it, I invested in an HD antenna and a Tablo 4-stream DVR device.  Using those, plus a 3-TB external hard drive and the Roku boxes that Mary and I already had, I’m able to get and record about 30 local channels, plus 42 other Roku “channels,” such as Netflix and Amazon Prime (for which I pay a whopping $150 a year or so – for both) and other free channels that may or may not include commercials – though not nearly as many as regular TV included when I had it.

It is, to put it mildly, fantastic.  News, sports, movies, soap operas, sitcoms….you name it, I get it.  For (basically) free.

I looked into changing my phone service from ATT to Verizon, but the Verizon dude ticked me off – and I’m not sure that they can support my phone – so I’m still with the big T for that.  My internet service, though….shopping around for that one.  I’ve got a pretty good deal with ATT still, but I’m not sure if/when that’s going to get jacked up (I’m sure that they’re discounting it because I had DTV and phone).  When it goes up – or even if it doesn’t – I’ll find somebody like Comcast, who can give me higher speeds even if it costs more.  Basically, I’m still really pissed off at ATT (as is most of the rapidly-growing pool of ex-Digital Life employees), and I don’t want to give them a dime if I can avoid it.

Work has gotten incredibly boring since the end of tax season, and “meeting the metrics” (8 hours on the phone, 7 hours of billable time, 10 tickets closed) each day is nearly impossible.  I’ve been having some text conversations with the area manager of the call center that I supported – his last day is today, I believe – and we’re trying to put together some sort of business plan to be our own bosses and work together.  Top of the list right now are starting a courier company or a home inspection company.  I’m also still trying to learn a bit more about the inner workings of WordPress (which this blog runs on), as part of a vague idea about creating/maintaining websites for people.  A friend of mine from Canada has been doing this for years, and I think it’s something I’d really enjoy (and, hopefully, be pretty good at).

Must get packed for this tour, so I’ll stop here.

Messing Around

ContextGeneration

So I’m sitting at work with very little to do. During the last couple weeks of tax season, accountants are more focused on actually doing taxes than on complaining about their software, so they don’t call in or open tickets unless they’re really stuck.

Figured I’d play around with a desktop blog editor (called BlogDesk) to see what kind of a job it does. There are some things that seem to be missing….I can’t set a featured photo for the top of an entry, but I can live with that if that’s the only drawback. The image that (hopefully) appears inline in this entry is just one that I had sitting on my work laptop. It’s part of one of the event logs that I was looking at a few days ago on a machine that was having one of those “really stuck” times. I don’t remember how I fixed it. Probably just reinstalled the Citrix receiver, which seems to fix about 90% of the problems that arise with cloud-based software.

Supposedly, we had nasty/dangerous storms in the Atlanta area yesterday. I did not notice them. It was breezy (as it is today), but the rain, thunder, lightning, etc., was not all that apparent to me. I’m told that it really uncorked itself overnight, but I slept very well last night. That in itself is kind of amazing, as I generally do not sleep well. Got nearly 4 hours of “good” sleep last night, according to my fancy-dancy sleep-tracking watch. Normally, I’m good for about 2 hours of deep sleep and 5-6 of light (or being awake).

Vodka. It does a body good.

The latest work-related affront to my dignity is scheduled to take place on (I think) Wednesday, April 19. Dubbed “The Annual Kickoff,” this apparently is something that this company does each year at the close of tax season and the beginning of a sales push to get new clients before the next tax season starts. It is a time of fellowship and relaxation – which, for a bunch of 20-somethings, means a picnic in the park featuring a kickball game.

Okay.

I’m 51 years old and haven’t played kickball since I was in 3rd grade. I don’t like to run. I wear five-finger shoes. Ain’t no way I’m getting involved in a kickball game with these people. I will eat a lot of hot dogs and drink whatever beer is provided. I’m told that an ice cream truck was also made available last year, so I’ll eat ice cream.

The office recently had a shuffleboard table installed in the break room. No kidding. I guess it’s for the people who are bored with ping pong, video games, and miniature billiards (I can’t make this stuff up). Someone has proposed (on our in-company Facebook-type website) that we have a shuffleboard tournament. Greg, the only person in this office anywhere near my age (he’ll be 52 in September), immediately came over to my desk and determined that he and I will enter this tournament as a team called “The Old Farts.”

That, I will do. Shuffleboard tokens, after all, are simply darts that are not affected by gravity.

I am still totally jonesing for some time in the woods. Thought I might be able to get out this weekend, but Jenny took a spontaneous trip to Greece, so I need to stay in town and take care of her cats. Next weekend is Easter (got a gig – not complaining about that), and the weekend after that is the GBB’s mini-tour through Alabama and Tennessee. Maybe I’ll be able to get out on the weekend of the 29th. I’ve decided that the worst part about losing the gig at AT&T is the fact that I’m starting over on the vacation scale. I’ve always been someone who works more for time off than for money, and I got very comfortable having 38 days a year off. Going back to 10 or 15 (and not having access to even THAT for another month) is making me a bit stir crazy.

I guess I’ve written enough now to test out how this BlogDesk things actually works when it comes to publishing entries. Here goes nothing….

February

That title just looks weird.  That’s really the way to spell February?  Who came up with that?

I just talked to my big sister on the phone for about 20 minutes and doing so made me very happy.  That’s a good thing, because the rest of my life isn’t doing so.  My commute SUCKS –  about an hour each way (10 miles) and I think I might gain 50 pounds before too long because I’m stopping at McDonald’s nearly every day for breakfast.  Don’t have time to eat anything at home if I’m going to continue to take my morning walks.  Lunch?  That’s at Chik-fil-A.  Yeah.  Daddy needs his sugar.

The job is still amazingly stupid, although I did take my first ticket today.  I had to ask about 4 people if it was okay for me to do so, but I finally got an OK from the boss – provided that I included another level 1, who’s been there a while, as an alternate.  Having seen this alternate work tickets for the last 10 days, I’m not entirely sure that including him in MY work is a good thing, but whatever.  I will say again: this ain’t my dream job.

Mary – and Princess – are set to move in in about three weeks. After I expressed some concern about Princess’s health a couple of days ago, Mary informed me that she’s taking the little one to the vet tomorrow, which is nice.  I really don’t want to deal with feline AIDS or anything after they come here.  I will admit that I’m looking forward to both of them coming in – for the money and because I like them.  It’ll be nice to have a woman’s touch around the place, though I think Mary has this idea that I have limitless funds for home improvements.  She’ll learn.

Have been listening to yet another book about somebody who through-hiked the Appalachian Trail, and I’m getting really antsy about doing that. If the job pushes me too far, don’t be surprised if I decide to do it.  Five or six months in the woods could change my life much more than a so-so paycheck….although I still haven’t gotten the severance check from AT&T that would make it possible.

Another friend of mine recently bought a few acres near Pickens, SC, and she’s planning to build a tiny cottage there and live out her life, basically, off the grid.  I must admit that I’m incredibly jealous – but she’s got 10 years on me and she can, apparently, afford to do it.  She keeps telling me that I can, too.  If only I didn’t lose half of my 401 just by asking for it.

So, for now, I’ll just keep on doing what I’m doing.  Working at a boring job for a peanuts pay check and figuring out what to do next.  And hopefully going to Canada in late June.  One day at a time and all that.

 

Come on…

No picture today….mainly because I couldn’t find anything that wasn’t stupid, given my mood.

I’ve started the new job.  It’s still not my dream.  Lots of things that suck about it.

And in politics…come on.  He’s an idiot.  I didn’t know the definition of kakistocracy before today, but it fits.

I’ve been patriotic for my entire life, but now I’m looking into moving to Canada.  This is just dumb.