Bag of Randomness for Wednesday, June 6, 2016

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  • It has rained every single time I’ve been given or bought an automobile. It’s never planned this way, it just happens. When I put a deposit on a car on Friday morning to reserve it, knowing we wouldn’t be able to pick it up the following week due to traveling schedules, WifeGeeding thought with the current forecast, the streak would have been broken.
  • We’ve been a one-car family for over two years, and since I work from home, it’s worked well for the most part. But as the kids have grown and there are more activities and commitments, we’ve felt the need to get a second vehicle. Our only problem was we didn’t know what we wanted. So I started to figure out what our what our true wants and needs are. Price was a huge factor and functionality which fit our lifestyle was second – car seats had to fit, ability to get backpacks easily in and out, stuff like that. Another big issue was blind spots. Since WifeGeeding is limited to vision in only one eye, it’s important to me that she’s able to get a good view all around her. No sedan seemed to fit those needs, and we didn’t like the price and mileage that came with SUVs that fit our criteria. I thought about buying an old truck just for me to use, especially with all the DIY stuff I like to do, but nothing was really out there. But on a whim, we decided to test drive a Nissan Leaf and was hooked.
  • A Leaf? Some of you think that may perfectly fit me as a tree-hugging liberal, but environmental concerns had very little to do with it. What about range anxiety? Well, I work from home, WifeGeeding works less than a mile away, our church is seven miles away, and we have another car for any long trips. What really got my attention was the price for a used pre-owned one. I could find 2014 models around the 10,000-mile range for $9,000-$13,000. The only thing left to do was a test drive.
  • Going into the test drive, we thought it would be cramped but was surprised that it was roomier than most small SUVs we looked at. Off hand, you’d think acceleration would suck, but since it’s electric it’s already torqued, so it’s surprisingly peppy. It’s really a fun car to drive, and blind spots don’t seem to be an issue. Due to the weight of the battery and it basically being the base or bottom of the car, it feels well centered and handles well.
  • As for charging, it comes with a charger that plugs into your basic 120-volt outlet, but it will take about 21-hours to charge an almost empty battery. A 240-volt option is available which will charge the car in about four hours, and Nissan will sell you the charger for $1,000 and charge you another $1,000 to install it. However, you can find 240-volt chargers on Amazon for $300 to $700 with install prices ranging from $200 to $600. I got my charger off Amazon in two days for about $450 and install is expected to be close to $200, perhaps less. I find out today.
  • On my drive home, the first thing I wanted to hear through the speakers was the same thing I have to listen to on any new car or device, U2. I went with Achtung Baby.
  • The last two or three vehicles we’ve bought had the actual window price sticker in the glove compartment. That’s always a neat find to see what the actual window sticker price was and to see the actual list of options and features included.
  • BoyGeeding loves to charge LeafGeeding when we get home, he’s a one-man pit crew.
  • I’m a bit overwhelmed with all the features, but it’s one of those things where you just have to accept you don’t need to understand them all right away, there’s no time table. But at the same time, it’s fun to have a new toy and see what it can do.
  • Thumbing through the service and maintenance guide, the only thing you need to change is the brake fluid every 7,500 miles and maintain proper tire rotation. Other than that, there’s no other maintenance.
  • In my neck of the woods, a power line fell closing the area around 121 and 635 right before rush hour. It was eerie seeing those roads abandoned, not a single vehicle or person on them. As someone that’s lived around DFW Airport for the last sixteen years, the closest thing to this was when all airplanes were grounded right after 9/11. You’re so used to seeing planes in the air and the slight noise pollution that comes with it, but when it’s gone, it’s eerie.
  • On last night’s ‘Wheel of Fortune’, one of the contestants was a little person, I’m sure he wasn’t even five feet tall. He was allowed to bring a friend to be his wheel spinner. The winner of last night’s show has a father and sister that were also winners of the game show.
  • I usually don’t take using bug spray seriously, but mosquitos with West Nile have been found in traps in three areas within a mile or two of GeedingManor.
  • I don’t understand the law. A 17-year-old Plano Sr. High School baseball player is accused of sexually assaulting two children in his mother’s daycare. His name was in every article I saw. I thought since he’s a minor, that his name would be withheld. If he is innocent, he’s screwed anytime a potential employer or anyone does a Google search on him. I’m guessing that “innocent until proven guilty” isn’t a reality but an ideal?
  • If a man walks into a restroom and doesn’t immediately see a urinal, panic ensues.
  • Largest collection of presidents and cakes ever assembled
  • Watch the real Stephen Colbert tell a beautiful love story
    • Before each episode, the host answers questions from the audience. Asked about his wife, Colbert responded with a six-minute monologue about how he knew, in the moment he first saw her, that she was the one.
  • Today’s Dose of ‘MURICA!
    • Jackie Gervais (Army veteran of two tours in Afghanistan) Galvin of Rush City, Minnesota, said on her Facebook page that the eagle had become entangled in a rope in the tree. It had hung upside down from a branch near the cabin belonging to her and her husband, Jason Galvin, for more than two days, she said. Jason Galvin used a borrowed .22-caliber rifle with a scope to sever the 4-inch (10 cm) rope after firing 150 shots. Galvin never hit the eagle.
Posted in Personal | 4 Comments

Bag of Randomness for Tuesday, July 5, 2016

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  • WifeGeeding and the kids started the holiday weekend in East Texas. As a one car family, I was dependent on a friend to start my the holiday weekend at an emergency animal hospital as OtherDogGeeding took a turn for the worst with a swollen jaw. He was looking and acting fine around lunch time, but this thing came out of nowhere. We spent about three hours at the animal hospital with OtherDogGeeding getting pain meds, antibiotics, and an IV. Their first thought that it was a dental issue, but he had a teeth cleaning and several extractions about two or three months ago. Thankfully, he’s doing much better and almost back to his old self.
  • I felt really bad for my friend. He thought we were only going to have dinner, but when he arrived I asked he if could give us a ride to the animal hospital. I thought we might be there for maybe an hour or an hour-and-a-half, and felt horrible as time went by knowing he hasn’t eaten lunch. But to his credit, he never complained and extended grace the entire time. I told him I’d pay him back by a dinner of his choice the next day and price wasn’t an option, I just wanted to show him my appreciation. The next day we ate at 18th and Vine (a Kansas City BBQ joint that was very sub-par), a first for both of us. When I got the check I reached for my wallet only to realize I’ve forgotten it, I felt like a heal and the worst friend ever. Once again, he didn’t explain and extended grace.
  • At the end of the day, we will no longer be a one-car family. This has been in the works for a while, details will follow later this week.
  • China has put the final piece into position on what will be the world’s biggest radio telescope, designed to explore space and seek out extraterrestrial life. It is cut out of the side of a mountain, the size of 30 football fields, took five years to construct, and will be operational in September. China also plans to put a man on the moon by 2036 and construct a space station. In the next twenty years, I expect NASA’s budget to be increased as a new space race develops, both parties don’t want to be wear in terms of national pride or security.
  • Virginia introduces law to stop 12-year-old girls from getting married
    • Between 2004 and 2013, around 4,500 children under the age of 18 got married in the state of Virginia. Of these girls, more than 200 of them were aged 15 or under.
    • The law, which took effect last Friday, set the minimum marriage age at 18, or 16 if a child is emancipated by court order. It takes parents and pregnancy out of the equation
    • There are currently believed to be six states where girls can get married under the age of 16 with parental consent.
  • Meet the Man Who Ate at 365 Barbecue Restaurants in a Year
    • “My palate kind of changed. I had been a Kansas City barbecue fan, and now I’m a Texas fan,” Fugitt, an officer in the United States Navy Reserve and freelance writer, said.
    • He stuck to a rubric: 40 points available for meat, 20 for sauce, 20 for sides, and 20 left for an “it” factor.
    • Number one was Kerlin BBQ in Austin, Franklin Barbecue came in at seven. I think Pecan Lodge is in the list somewhere.
    • “There’s an old guard that’s been barbecuing for 25 to 50 years, and then a new wave that came in 10 to 15 years ago. Some of that new wave is taking a local, artisan approach, which can be done well, but there are so many places that are just hipster whiskey bars,” he said. “It’s easy to make passable barbecue, but it’s incredibly hard to do on an elite level.”
      • That describes my experience at 18th and Vine and Three Stacks.
    • He actually lost weight doing this.
    • Dang it, I just realized the article is a year old, but I’ve written too much to delete this.
    • SisterGeeding keeps telling me about the greatness of la Barbecue in Austin and wants to do a roadtrip.
  • I often wonder how the Radio City Music Hall Rockettes are still relevant, but after seeing the provocative outfits they were wearing on NBC’s Fourth of July special, I totally understand.
  • WFAA had an Independence Day special called “Fair Park Fourth” but they kept cutting to events at Klyde Warren Park. Pete Delkus’ daughter sang in the special, I hope she doesn’t read her father’s Twitter feed.
  • While watching our city’s fireworks show, I was but wasn’t surprised at the amount of kids playing on their smartphones. Maybe I’m more surprised at the parents for not telling their kids to put those things down for fifteen minutes. Granted, fireworks haven’t changed all that much in decades, but still.
  • Kevin Durrant deciding to play in Golden State makes me appreciate Dirk and our championship even more.
  • Something for my fellow Chromecast users –
    •  Google is rolling out an update to Chrome 51 (the current version) that will allow users to Cast without having to install the Google Cast extension. The update will add native Cast functionality to the browser and put a button in the tool menu. Users will also be able to right click on a page and click Cast, which will be faster for just about everyone.
Posted in Personal | 3 Comments

Today’s Dose of ‘MURICA!

John Cena takes a break between dropping body slams to drop some truth – that patriotism is more than pride of country, it’s love beyond labels.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0MdK8hBkR3s

Posted in Political, Pop Culture, Touching | Comments Off on Today’s Dose of ‘MURICA!