Sunday, October 31, 2010

People are difficult

Oct 31
I think something has shifted for me.  One of the reasons I was drawn to engineering was that, relative to interactions with humans, engineering was deterministic.  With a significant time investment engineered systems are ultimately understandable.   People, and systems of people, just aren’t that way.  Even economics is shifting to deal with the messiness that is humanity with behavioral economics.  I am currently reading “The myth of the rational voter” which deals with the subject.  “Influence” by Cialdini and “Stumbling on happiness” by Gilbert were a good insights as well.  For a glimpse at some of the pop psychology relative to the topic, there are some good TED lectures at: 

Perhaps I will make more progress on my willingness to deal with things I don’t have much hope of ever fully understanding.  I consider the world of people I interact with.  The world I live in is full of engineers and businessmen and rather rational, honest, intelligent people.  It is easy to forget that there is a world of people that don’t occupy that sphere in character-space.  I consider how inept I am when people lie to me, or try to manipulate me or intimidate me or otherwise take advantage.  Most of my strategy thus far has been to work to not have to interact with such people.  I must say I think it has worked well. 
At times you meet people that live in a different sphere, tutoring at the jail, or playing bar gigs in a bad part of Denver at 2 in the morning.  Beyond dealing with those people, there are occasions where you wish you could help them.  Give them some advice on a tricky situation or how to deal with difficult people in their life.  I don’t have much to offer.  But if I want to understand the messy thing that is humanity, it seems like you need t understand the other half better.  Aside from limited forays like tutoring at the jail, or being in bars late on the sad side of town, I suppose reading pop psychology is an easy way to try to get a better understanding of the interactions of people.  I still don’t really have a desire to have any additional drama in my own life, but I am interested in understanding.  People are fascinating beings.
It has been fun to try to discuss politics and economics and psychology with people from Argentina, France, Japan, Guatemala, and Mexico over the last few months despite the language issues.   In fact, it has more value than the diving or language lessons that drew me to those places.  It is a tough vantage point to get to, but I would really like to understand how Americans and America is viewed around the world.  The educated people I talk with shade their stereotypes and motivations as we both attempt to present ourselves as rational people. 
I get that people resent the rich powerful country.  I get that people would like their country to be more rich and powerful.  I get that people who perceive problems in their country would like to believe they are attributable not to problems with their own culture but to a culpable outside force.  And it is true… the dates and types of revolutions each country undergoes shapes them.  The American government has played an opaque and disturbing role in some of these countries.  However, most of the non-Americans I am apt to meet have talked to more than one American and see us as individuals.  Many people are willing to separate the people from the government of a people’s country.  Although I think that may be part of their lens in Latin America where there have been dictators until relatively recently.  By comparison, the American government represents the people much more closely.
I see that people bring the history of their country and culture as a lens with which to view America and Americans and but so far, I haven’t been able to get a better sense of the astigmatism I know exists in my own lens.  (See the ego blog entry)  I can feel it coming on though.  Perhaps there will be more insights here to come.
I also am hoping that writing will be a larger part of what I do going forward.  This blog is something of a practice field.   Constructive comments are welcome either here or by email.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Math and Measures

Oct 30
Last night I went to a student party.  I wound up sitting next to a Swiss Journalist.  She seemed to claim that anything could be interesting.  So I explained my idea that it might be possible to describe the optima of the female form using surface integrals.  She was duly polite, but I suppose not everything can be made interesting to everybody.  Perhaps someday I will get to do the research and write the paper.
I encountered another good freshman calculus problem.  There is one knob on the shower here.  An electric heater adds a fixed maximum amount of watts so after a point you begin to compromise between flow and temperature.  And students always asked me why would I ever need calculus.  If you were living in Guatemala and had to save one or two weeks’ pay to buy a heating element that you needed to size for your desired minimum flow and temperature of course.
Warm showers are good, but there is another nice thing about Guatemala-  The average height.  I have brothers that have frames that are 6’ 1” and 6’ 3” and shaped in a way that you could hang a lot of muscle from them.  They choose to hang another tissue type, but that is another matter.  I always felt cheated being 5’ 10”.  Here, for a few weeks, except when I pass tourists from Scandinavia, I get to be the big tall guy.    

I had to take the banano out of my pocket for this statue

Richard de Ingletera


Straight if not Tall


Making a mess of the sheets

Oct 29
I suppose I will wash my own sheets again with my laundry.  In Buenos Aires I felt compelled to manage my own sheets and towels.  The family here is more on the fastidious side.  But, I roll over so much I make a mess of them in a hurry.  They should probably attach a generator to me at night to capture all that spinning energy. 

Friday, October 29, 2010

First day of class

 Oct 28
I am actually getting a routine going for Spanish school.  Find the Laundromat and note the hours.  Get a gym membership.  Stock up at the pharmacia.  Locate the school.  My instructor is Julia and she has what I need- patience… and enough English to give me instructions too complex for me to understand in Spanish.   So far, I definitely like the Spanish academy of Antigua http://spanishacademyantiguena.com/
I have also noticed the traditional carrying of baskets on the head by women here.   It seems to do wonders for ones posture.  I don’t know what it does for ones spine.  I have a suspicion that the women here are going old school with basket carrying largely for the tourists benefit.  Men also use their heads to carry a load.  Imagine a backpack where you unhook the straps and attach them in front around your forehead.  This seems to work less well for ones posture.
Below is a pic of Rebecca, Olga’s mother.  She is an excellent cook which is good since I eat breakfast, lunch and dinner here.

Arriving in Guatemala

Oct 27

I rode in from the airport with another student, Dominick.  He was a fiftyish guy from in Hong Kong who has been running businesses in the states for some time.  We had a lot to agree on.  We talked about culture and economics and politics.  But not in Spanish.  Hopefully I will get to that point.  When I got to the house I met Olga, her mom Rebecca, and her sister Irma.  For a while I thought Irma was her daughter.  She seems like a giggly teenager, but, she is 30 and has 4 kids.  With the family, I talked about hair, and my house and the weather and food.  And that was a stretch.  Time to hit the books again.
My bedroom has somewhat more ambiance than a prison cell and perhaps another foot in length.  The walls and floor are painted.  However, I get the sense that this room was a garage or storage area that was absorbed into the house.  It has a distinct cement smell I don’t detect in the rest of the house.  They offered to let me use the other bedroom upstairs in a few days if I prefer.  It currently has a young woman in it who was born and raised in Montreal.  However, I have been advised by the young Brit, Richard, not to refer to her as Canadian in her presence.  It is important to her that she is French.  I guess one just can’t escape the French while traveling.

Dolphins Video

This vid is thanks to Naoko, as are the rest of the underwater pics here.

Diving Pics




Diving Pics

Isaac Plays with sea lions


The Ship Don Jose

Thursday, October 28, 2010

You know the routine

 Oct 28
I am actually getting a routine going for Spanish school.  Find the Laundromat and note the hours.  Get a gym membership.  Stock up at the pharmacia.  Locate the school.  My instructor is Julia and she has what I need- patience… and enough English to give me instructions too complex for me to understand in Spanish. 
I have also noticed the traditional carrying of baskets on the head by women here.   It seems to do wonders for ones posture.  I don’t know what it does for ones spine.  I have a suspicion that the women here are going old school with basket carrying largely for the tourists benefit.  Men also use their heads to carry a load.  Imagine a backpack where you unhook the straps and attach them in front around your forehead.  This seems to work less well for ones posture.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Diving in Baja / Espiritu Santo

The trip to La Paz was arduous.  I drove 4 hours to Atlanta, flew to Dallas, Flew to Cabo San Lucas, rented a car and drove from Cabo to La Paz.  After running around in La Paz trying to figure out where I should be, I wound up on the ship Don Jose.  Valerie, the dive master, showed me around.  Her first language is French and I found that so are most of the divers.  So much for Spanish practice in Mexico.
My bunk mate is a Frenchman named Alain.  I was a bit worried at first that I would have the French experience where he knows 10 words of English but will only use 2.  He went to bed early without a word and I stumbled around in the dark trying to do my normal compulsive organization thing. 
However, in the morning he gave me the full story.  I suppose he is like me, he doesn’t come across as overly friendly just by looking at him, but is willing to share stories and opinions about anything and everything.  His English is certainly better than my French so he deserves credit for that as well.  I guess if we get papas fritas, I won’t refer to them as freedom fries.  It turns out this is his first recreational dive since retiring as a commercial diver.  He laid pipeline under freshwater and did underwater welding and repairs.  -Fascinating work. 
He gave that up and works for the water and sewage dept. near Paris now.  He repairs big 12’ pipelines that come into the water plant.  He says they won’t drain them for repairs to diverters and other equipment, but they do lower the level a few feet so there is air in the top.  I wasn’t sure if he was working on the inlet side pipes to the treatment plant or the outlet side or both.  I have to find a way of asking that won’t offend him.   The stereotype for for divers is that they are friendly with strangers.  The stereotype of the French is the opposite.  It feels like things are pulling in the friendly direction.
Oddly enough the other English speaker, who won’t get the dive briefings in French, is a Japanese woman my age named Naoko.  I hung out with a Japanese woman my age on my last solo dive trip to Mexico.  Murray definitely didn’t like that. I think fear of me meeting other women is a driver for Murray to go with me on trips, so there is an upside.    Too bad I couldn’t get her here to Baja, the weather is great and the scenery is amazing.  It reminds me of Colorado except the mountains are shorter and green with shrubbery.   
It is going to be odd being unplugged for a whole week!  My cell phone is now only good for taking pictures, I don’t need my wallet, and my computer is now an over glorified typewriter. 

Monday
We started the day by diving a large open wreck.  I love the 3D movement aspect of diving, but being somewhat uncoordinated in two dimensions, it does give you many more ways to bump into people.  This is especially true when you are all concentrated around one small boat wreck.  Looking up at the surface of the water is like being in a children’s book where everything is upside down.  As I spun around inside the wreck, I could look up and see a big puddle of air on the ceiling from the other divers who had been through.  It shimmered and flowed like Mercury.
On the second dive of the first day, I couldn’t get below 15 feet.  I skipped out on the third dive of the first day and the first dive the second day.  At least on a Scuba trip, even if you can’t dive you are still on a boat in a beautiful place and can watch the see the sea lions and hang out with people.  
I also have one other piece of common ground with the French.  We both prefer Speedos.  You don’t know much trouble I got in thinking I could wear my Speedo to swim at the beach in FL with Murray’s family.  I had to buy a pair of full length trunks at the expensive beach front shop.   I grew up on swim team.  As a swimmer, you wore speedos.  Of course Murray’s nieces wore dental floss, but apparently that is beside the point.  You could have cut bikini bottoms for both of them from the fabric used to make my speedo.  But the French know better than to let shame get in ones way.  I am here with 5 men and 7 women and over half the guys are in Speedos despite their having a gut that advertises “Hey I’m in my fifties”.

Tuesday
My ears bothered me today and it took me longer than the others to get down on the first dive.  On the second dive, I couldn’t get below 15 feet.  But the dive was shallow so I followed our group from above and watched the sea lions and the larger fish hunting the smaller. 
Towards the end of the dive we saw what appeared to be a river of fish.  It was perhaps ten meters in diameter and so dense that it appeared to be more fish than water.  The river extended below the water for as far as we could see in either direction.  It is fascinating enough to see a school of fish that all seem to move together, synchronized by something we can’t detect.  The reflective eyes and portions of the fins all turn at once creating giant semaphores beneath the water.  I detect no propagation delay as they flip left then right.   They truly seem to move as one.  Near us the river develops a branch and plumes of synchronized fish ebb and flow around us like smoke plumes.  I almost worry about getting lost, you can no longer see the other divers as a mass of fish changes course and blocks your view as a moving silver wall.  We are in the last ascent phase of the dive and watch the fish river below us as we slowly rise and decompress until they become a barely visible fog below us.
The food here reminds me of things I would cook were I Mexican.  We get lots of chopped vegetables and meats.  Everything is simple without too many spices.  The soup relies almost solely on cilantro to taste delicious.  At one point we had pressed chicken seared in olive oil.  Sometimes the onions are big enough to pick out and sometimes they are not.  It gives me something to do while listening to the others formulate their sentences in English.
In the evening I found that two of the French contingent, Jean Claude and Anne, had never met the rest prior to the dive.   The couple was happy to practice their English with Naoko and me.  They managed to not talk a word of work.  We talked about the US and Japanese propensity for talking about work.  We discussed the differences in nations at length.  We all conceded that we have trouble telling the ages, and sometimes the individual faces of other races apart.  It appears that it is true that all of us white people kind of look the same to the Japanese. 
There would be no mistaking the face of our captain.  He has long, wizened, white hair atop a weathered, broad face.  It is though someone gave him a script for the archetypical sea captain.  He is a mystery.  He doesn’t avoid the passengers completely, he engages enough with his few words of English to get you wondering, and then he disappears. 

Wednesday
I am sleeping amazingly well on this trip.  Perhaps the gentle rocking of the boat in the wind protected alcoves at night take me back to some infantile cradle experience.  Or perhaps the thin, high density foam over plywood bunks provides the kind of firmness I need in a bed.  Or, perhaps it takes being this far away and this unplugged from my regularly scheduled program to relax.
After the first dive, one of the Frenchman, Phillip I think, became visibly upset about how the dives were run.  Apparently we weren’t optimizing our air use or groups size.  He was one of the more gregarious in the dining room so perhaps he just wears his emotions on his sleeve more than others.  Everyone else was thrilled to see all the hammer head shark and it didn’t look like he could get anyone to take part in his anger.  Hopefully his venting is done.  I get emotionally drained before others do.  So, watching people vent is never my favorite pastime and I get even more uncomfortable when I don’t know what they are venting about.
I went on all four dives today.  We saw an amazing array of life, manta rays, sea lions and hammerhead sharks.  I think of all the times Murray wanted me to stop swimming at the beach for fear of sharks, and here I am with a group of people seeking them out at El Bajo.  When we took a short power boat tour around Los Islotes, the juvenile sea lions followed us like a pack of puppies.  We then went for a night dive.  The sea lions were still there under the waves and still very curious about us.  The mollusks and sea cucumbers were amorphous, slow moving animals that seem like they must belong to another universe.  Or perhaps they are what we will evolve into after a million generations of watching reality TV and eating McDonalds. 
At dinner I began to notice something that I think of as American about the French contingent.  Most of the guys seemed to have wives that were 10-20 years younger than themselves.  This was true for Jean Claude and Anne whom Naoko and I have been diving with as well as several of the other couples.  If you are diving in the sea of cortez you probably aren’t poor and I suppose this phenomena of trophy wives tends towards the affluent in both societies.  Only Phillip, the hothead, seemed to still have his original factory installed spouse.  I don’t think the age difference is a bad thing in and of itself, being a toy boy as I am.  But it makes me sad to ponder all the failed marriages not just in the states, but France and elsewhere.
Friday
If you want to know what is “in” when it comes to underwater fashion, you don’t have to look far.  From fifteen foot whale sharks to one inch juvenile puffers it seems like everyone is sporting polka dots these days.  Even the frumpy Moray Eel is putting on spots to rock the reef.
Sawanee reef is a great dive.  We have done it a few times now.  In fact we have done most of the better dives at least a couple of times now.  The divemaster says her preference is do re-dive the best dives rather than to head towards more mediocre dive sites.  On many of the dives the visibility has only been 30-50 feet or so.  As you descend and head towards the reef you hear it before you see it.  The coral look like underwater bushes but they don’t have the same flexibility as wood.  They are of more a ceramic consistency and they clink together in the currents and sound like a million pebbles raining down. 
I have noticed, here and in Cozumel, that the dive masters are as interested in the micro-life as they are in the big game.  Those of us that do this once or twice a year tend to be focused in on sea lions, sharks, or at the least a big eel.  But there are a fascinating collection of life forms smaller than your thumb to consider. 
My favorite so far would lend itself to a neat parlor trick, if anyone you know has a parlor on a reef.  There is a certain worm that lives in a hole.  It has a feeding a gill end that sticks out of the hole.  When you move your hand a few inches from it and snap your fingers, it disappears into the hole.  This is cool for at least two reasons.  The first is the movement is fast.  You don’t think about worms moving faster than you can see, but when you snap your fingers, they are gone.  You don’t even see them move, they just disappear.  Perhaps creatures that small exist on shorter time constants, but it looks like magic.  The second awesome thing about this is that I can’t hear me snap my fingers under water.  I feel that same friction and release feeling you get when you snap your fingers on land, but for me there is no sound.  Apparently for the worm it comes across like thunder. 
Murray would be jealous of our dive just outside the city of la paz.  The whale sharks were incredible.  They aren’t too intimidating as they don’t eat anything larger than plankton as do whales.  But, they must be 15 feet long and weigh a thousand pounds.  On our second trip out, we got an extra treat when the dolphins showed up.  There were three and they buzzed us a number of times coming tantalizingly close, almost to where you could touch one and then they would zip out of site.  If you gave chase, they would go slow enough to keep just ahead of you. 
The dolphins are truly players; they play you the whole way.  Somehow they know you are interested in touching them and they play that and stay just out of reach.  It reminds me of my complete teenage experience with girls.  For those who get frustrated enough by never quite being able to catch and touch a dolphin, you can pay to go get in the tank with the ones in captivity.  I suppose that is kind of like the topless bar of the dolphin world.  A paid outlet for those who are frustrated that they can’t get close.
They weren’t quite topless, but a third variety of oceanic wildlife showed up: Mexican twenty-somethings in bikinis.  In this part of the water there is no scuba so we were just skin diving.  The bikini girls were fun to look at for a while as well.  They both had cameras and lots of tats.  After a little while they got annoying as well, they seemed very willing to muscle in between you and the whale sharks and to get close enough to risk spooking the whale sharks into diving.  It made me wonder if there is a correlation between amount of tats and poor manners.  It would be interesting to see if anyone has done a study on that.
I found out today that Anne and Jean Claude are both Rheumatologists.  So even though she is attractive and younger than Jean Claude, perhaps she doesn’t qualify as a trophy wife.

Saturday
I am back at my hotel and after an hour of staring into my email client, I had the sensation that the room was gently rocking.  I need the horizon in my peripheral vision as an anchor after a week on the boat.  Funny how a computer screen has provided an anchor all my life and only after a week away does my head require a piece of the real world to keep my bearings and balance.  There is a metaphor in there somewhere but I refuse to torture it further.

Sunday
My flight was 2 hours behind and I was not going to make my connection so the airline put me up in a hotel.  The place is actually exceptionally nice.  It is right on the beach and has the largest pool I have ever been in.  And yes- I wore my speedo to do laps as newlywed Mexican couples played in the water.  The place is called the Barcelo in San Jose, just down from Cabo San Lucas.  It is very American centric.  Beyond having everything labeled in English and Spanish and the staff speaning English, you notice things like the mariachi music piped into the high end buffet area.  I heard mariachi muzak versions of Lou Reed and Meatloaf.  Now there is some cognitive dissonance. 
The beach here is pretty amazing.  I haven’t been on a beach so clean and free of shells and sea weed.  I expect the groom it somehow.  It was great for running on.  I love that barefoot running on wet sand feeling.  However, here the sand was strangely soft and your feet sink in, even where the sand is wet.  It gave me flashbacks to a recurring nightmare I had as a teenager where I was running from an assailant with a gun in soft sand and the sand caused me to run in slow motion.
Despite the luxury surroundings, I was bummed out not to see Murray.  We only had two days before I leave for Guatemala.  Now we just have one.
 

I just missed the funeral

It is an odd vantage point on the fringes of a community going through the loss of its center.  Many were overwhelmed with grief but several of the old ladies had acquired a poise of resignation.  I actually heard one complain about becoming proficient at the funeral routine.  There is also an expectation that there will be an outpouring of support and food.  Murray was wondering about the food situation when we started hunting for breakfast Saturday morning, but it quickly started rolling in. 
As we sat there in the kitchen with the mounting piles of food, I noticed a cookbook on the shelf.  “Being dead is no excuse”  “A southern ladies guide to hosting an exquisite funeral”.  We all had a laugh about that one.  There is much to be said for a group of people that can maintain a sense of humor in the midst of grief. 
I had an odd experience of manning the house as all of Carolyn Senior’s kids, were out doing preparations.  My task was to man the phones and answer the door as people came by.  I must say that people in South Georgia have a very polite way of asking “who the hell are you?” when surprised in an emotionally fraught situation.  I also took on a few gardening duties while I was there.  Murray asked one of her mom’s friends if there was anything Carolyn would have wanted to have done as people started to show up.  The old lady mentioned that Carolyn would certainly disapprove of company with the long, non-flowering chutes overpowering the flowers.  The woman had a point so I found some scissors and cleaned things up.

Friday, October 15, 2010

His ego goes up to eleven

Today I left work shortly after I got there.  I received a brief and shaky call from Murray saying her mom had passed away.  It worked out well that we car pooled today.  It gave me a chance to drive her home.  I suspect most people, but especially Murray, appreciate having someone else who can take charge and deal with details at difficult times.  So I got the flights for us and her sister, got a rental car lined up, got the luggage out of the attic so we could pack and drove us to the airport. 

As I was planning things, it became apparent that the service would be on Sunday.  Sunday I was supposed to fly to Cabo San Lucas for a reservation on a boat to dive for a week.  I offered to cancel.  She said that her mom wouldn’t have wanted that.  Which was true.  So I am flying down to drive the newly orphaned sisters from Atlanta to the GA/FL line where they are from.  I will spend Saturday with them and then drive 4 hours back to Atlanta to catch a flight to Dallas to intercept my Baja arrangements. 

I do things like this because I care about Murray, and in turn it causes Murray to believe I am the greatest thing since sliced bread.  This in turn keeps the pressure up on my over-inflated ego.  Sometimes I wonder if there is an objective measure of ego.   What would the units for such a measurement be?  Egons?   I suppose somewhere in some psychology PhD thesis there is a survey for quantifying ego with questions like “How many years has it been since someone made a comment about you that hurt your feelings?” or “What percentage of your friends are smarter than you are?”

Murray sometimes seems in need of a larger ego.  Perhaps someday they will have a pharmaceutical enhancer like Viagra for your ego.  Or perhaps that is what cocaine is.  I suppose there are pros and cons of having a large ego.

PROS                                                                    
Your best friend is always with you.        
You are never “really” wrong                     
You may succeed at things others won’t attempt
You don’t often suffer hurt feelings                                                       


CONS
You may get tired of being with yourself and not have many options
It is possible that you are a horrible person and don’t know it
You may kill or otherwise ruin yourself attempting normal people know you shouldn’t
Others get put off when you wear a large ego in public, like wearing a paisley or a merkin to event that doesn’t call for it.

Perhaps the upside of ego isn’t as good relative to the downside.  Perhaps that is why you don’t have guys in the locker room bragging about the size of their ego.  Perhaps it is best that one keep it in their shorts…

Monday, October 11, 2010

Bed, Breakfast, Wildlife, and Cousins

Murray and I took a long weekend in Yellowstone.  We flew into Bozeman and stayed at the Voss Inn Friday night.  We toured the strip in Bozeman.  Everyone says it is like Boulder used to be 20 years ago and I can see that.  The most memorable part of the evening was at the adult toy store.  There are completely pedestrian reasons that Isaac and Murray might find themselves in such an establishment after the local Walgreens has closed.  Even if I am not at liberty to disclose such boring details. 

What we found that we weren’t looking for was hand blown glass dildos.  Murray had a glass blowing studio for a while.  I helped her build it and knew something about glass blowing so I was curious if they used normal techniques that leave punte marks on the bottom.  When you are blowing glass, you transfer from the blow pipe to a punte to shape the blown end of the final product.  It leaves a separation mark on the bottom.  Most glass you buy at Wal-Mart isn’t hand blown and lacks this little imperfection on the bottom. 

Apparently the dildo selection wasn’t made in large enough quantities to warrant full mechanized production techniques and did have punte marks.  Murray couldn’t imagine anyone putting something glass, that might crack, in their… crack.  The woman at the counter told us they were pyrex to reduce the risk.  Pyrex uses somewhat different processes.  As we went around the corner of the display case, we found they had hand blown butt plugs as well.  It is funny you add hand blown to the phrase and it actually sounds less lewd. 

We were curious about the prices.  Apparently these were objects de’ art and came with commensurate prices.  Things got exceptionally surreal, like a scene from the book Bonk, as Murray and the woman at the counter got into a discussion about whether you would actually spend that kind of money on a toy and then just leave it on the shelf as a display item.  Their consensus was that this was functional art.  I suppose there is wildlife all the way from Bozeman to Yellowstone… 

The husband that made breakfast for us, had grown up in what was then Rhodesia now Zimbabwe.  It was interesting to hear firsthand about things I only read of in the Economist.  He had worked as a tour guide in Zimbabwe and then Botswana after his family was forced off their farm.  He met his wife when she came out on a trip.  I have actually known a couple other people that have met spouses while being a tour guide.  I suppose being a young guy in a position of authority in a fun environment goes a long ways.  I hadn’t really considered that there is more than just the mating ritual of the Rhinoceros going on in such tours.

We also met another traveler at the table.  Murray asked him what he did for a living.  When he said “Solid State Physicist” she replied “Well that kind of ends a conversation.”  The old gent nodded and then he and I talked for 20 minutes about solid state physics while Murray pretended to listen.  He was working with halfnium at a Penn State lab and was in Bozeman to give a lecture. 

So the Voss Inn of Bozeman was good, but we liked the uncluttered clean feel of the West Yellowstone Bed and Breakfast.  We arrived during Sky’s 7th birthday party.  We headed off four our afternoon guided kayak tour.  My cousin arrived while we were out with her boyfriend and teenage son.  We went for dinner and back to the B+B and discussed schools, spirituality, relationships and family.  She is a new grade school principal which comes with its own book of drama that can be entertaining.

The next day the five of us piled into the suburban we rented and went through the lower loop of the park.  Our guide Dave from Yellowstone Alpen Guides was great, literally a fountain of information (pun intended). 

I think the only wildlife in the park we didn’t see were bobcat, moose and lynx.  We saw coyote, grizzly, wolf attacking bison, eagles, duck, swan, elk and on and on.  But the image of boiling pits of acidic gray mud gurgling out of the rock with plumes of sulfur steam in the air at dragon’s mouth will probably stay with me longer.  I should have saved the Hades references I used on the Teatro Colon for the thermal activity in Yellowstone.  I don’t know how many hellish things I can see that are so cool.  My sense is that if I see something hellish in Guatemala it won’t be nearly so good.  Something to look forward to I suppose. 


Sunday, October 10, 2010

Yellowstone

We saw an amazing array of animals this trip.



Travis, Scotty, Heidi, Murray, Isaac, taking in the sulphur air


The one pic where we were caught laughing and it is out of focus.  Oh well, Murray likes "soft"focus.

It is hard to see, but this is a grizzly bear picking through the plants.


This is a wolf stalking a sick bison.  It was amazing the large amount of sitting time, and the small amounts of fighting.  This nature program needed some editing.  But it was a spectacular thing to see!

Progress

Just to recap the adventure so far.

8-21 to 8-29  Biking UT to CO
9-3 to 9-6 Caving in UT
9-8 to 9-30 Spanish School in Argentina
10-1 to 10-4 Fly Fishing MT
10-8 to 10-11 Yellowstone
10-17 to 10-24 Scuba in Baja
10-28 to 11-19 Spanish School in Guatemala
11-19 to 11-27 Costa Rica

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Back in town

It is amazing what you can get done when you have a weekday all to yourself.  I renewed my driver’s license.  The wait wasn't actually that long but I still found myself thinking as I sat there-  "What do I really need a drivers license for?".  I don't drink.

I went by the park and took my leftover coins from Argentina and put them in the sand box and tapped them under the surface.  I recall how cool it was to find coins as a small child.  When you are 11 you are just bummed that you can’t spend an Argentine coin, but when you are 6, finding a coin from half way around the world is pretty cool.  So I figure that crowd is likely the sandbox crowd.

Fly fishing

Well, I got wiped out the second night of poker.  I got more interested in playing than winning.  You have to sit out a lot to win.  But I am still well ahead for the weekend.  It was kind of a bummer not to be able to clean and eat any of my own fish.  The Madison River is all catch and release.  Scott, the chef, did get some farm raised trout from down the road, but it isn't quite the same.
They say that stereotypes come into being typically based on some grain of truth.  I think there is more than a grain of truth to the stereotypes about salespeople’s personalities.   I know there is a significant statistical trend for Engineer’s personality traits.  I must say, sales guys are fun.  I also should say that I am glad I hang out with the sales guys on this trip once a year and work with engineers every day.
This trip was strange, my voice started going hoarse and then just about disappeared the second day.  It has been getting steadily better since.  I didn’t have swollen tonsils or aches or soreness or anything else other than my normal allergies to make me think I was sick.  It would be strange if allergies causing me to breathe through my nose at night were enough to make me that hoarse.
I would try to talk and sometimes wind up sounding like the Elk outside, just not as loud.  This actually happened to Murray when she and I went to her high school reunion a couple years ago.  I suppose I am not allowed to say which high school reunion.   Perhaps it is some perverse punishment not being able to talk when you get up with people you haven’t seen in a long time.  I suppose she and I might have been terrible listeners in a past life.
One guy brought his dad who had been a narcotics officer in NYC for 20 years before moving on to open a store.  I asked him if we had a shot at winning the war on drugs.  Very quickly he said no.  He mentioned it pained him to say that after all that work, but that he thought the only way to get rid of the crime was to legalize it.  One more data point I can use to further entrench myself in the Libertarian echo chamber.
Oh yes, and I suppose I should mention fishing.  I caught a 19” brown trout on the second day.  One day I caught 13 fish: rainbows, browns, and whitefish.  This is my best haul yet.  I would like to think I am getting better, but I doubt it.  I also caught a lot of bottom.  This is fly fisher slang for snagging.  Normally I dig a bit bottom, but on the river it just meant lots of sitting waiting for the guide to put a new fly on my line.



Friday, October 1, 2010

How to be a winner

I actually managed to squeeze a few hours in at the office Thursday afternoon and Friday morning in the 24 hours I was in Denver before heading to Montana for fly fishing.  The Madison Valley Ranch is a great place.  The food is gourmet and the accommodations are deluxe for fly fishing.  The food is prepared for everyone in a real time complex staging process by the chef, so you can’t get desert first.  You can’t win em all.  But here, I can win at poker.  I just play conservatively and spend some brain power thinking about odds calculations.  Perhaps that is unfair amongst a bunch of guys that are just having fun.  But I only play once a year, with them.