Monday, October 18, 2010

Chloe's a unique personality

Our recent adoptee Chloe has a unique personality, and so many people are interested when I tell a Chloe story I thought I would tell a few here.

On the day we brought her home Chloe astounded us...she leaped over our 5-foot high fence from a sitting position. Pam saw it the first time, but we both saw it the second time. Simply amazing. Luckily for us, Chloe's fence leaping was limited to the first day and she was easy to get back.

While her fence-leaping ability was curtailed she proved her agility again when she leaped through the window of a screen door from a sitting position on our new covered, screened-in porch and deck combination. Luckily, the screen guy had not yet gotten there.

The funny thing about this wonderful dog that in spite of her agility, she refuses to leap into my truck...she wants to be lifted. She has leaped into the truck in the past, so we know she can do it, but I think she just enjoys the contact with us. When she gets fed, she insists on a couple of minutes of good, solid petting before she begins to eat.

What raises most people's eyebrows, however, is that this Tennessee Treeing Brindle will go to our bedroom and get her "bed"  (a large brown pillow beside our bed) and pull it to the living room, where the family congregates after dinner. Once on the bed she quickly falls asleep and only hell and high water will get her up. Now I just have to train her to bring it back to the bedroom at the end of the evening.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Where's the beef?

60 Hikes Within 60 Miles: Atlanta: Including Marietta, Lawrenceville, and Peachtree CityI stopped by a favorite fast food chain to try their Salad 2.0 the other day. As I waited behind another car, I heard a loud voice from the customer at the drive-up window. Interested in what was happening, I turned down my Itunes just in time to hear the guy in front of me turn down his radio, and I had a pretty clear sound. I was stunned when the guy let loose with a ten-letter curse word.

An elementary school graduate I thought to myself! The conversation (probably very one-sided continued), but then the car with the angry guy pulled away and the car that turned down its radio to hear pulled forward. As he received his food I pondered what could make the first guy that angry. The only conclusion I could come to was they must be out of his favorite salad dressing!

As radio man pulled out from the drive-up window in record time I noticed angry car had circled in an attempt to further express his dissatisfaction with the level of service gotten from a minimum wage employee. Letting loose with an uncharacteristic 12-letter curse (eighth grade) the car sped off as I received my order, again in an uncharacteristically short time.

What could make the guy that mad at a hamburger place? No ketchup? Maybe he had ordered a burger with no pickles, but there were pickles on it. I just can't imagine what could happen that would make somebody that mad.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Southern Rock

Fifteen years ago I wrote an article on Southern Rock for a regional magazine. In it I made the claim that "all rock is Southern Rock" because the roots of rock and roll were truly southern, and its something of which the South should be proud. Little did I know that this would be one of the most controversial statements I ever made.

Well, I am not a musician or involved in music in any way other than being an avid listener and consumer, as my Apple Itunes account will testify. After our CD player broke in our car at the time, my wife realized that the one thing worse than listening to me sing-along with a song was listening to me sing a capella.

Anyway, back to the origin of rock and roll in the South. Later known simply as rock or rock music, rock and roll evolved from a combination of country (mostly honky-tonk), blues (boogie-woogie) and jazz (be-bop and rhythm and blues) music. John Lennon once said "If you tried to give rock and roll another name, you might call it Chuck Berry." Berry, although closely associated with Chess Records in Chicago, spent time in New Orleans (jazz), Memphis (blues), and St. Louis (where he awed crowds playing an occasional country song). If you prefer Bill Haley and the Comets as the originator of the genre, they were a western swing (a form of country music) band that occasionally added blues to the line-up. Think it was Elvis? He was born in Tupelo (MS) and moved to Memphis. Elvis combined his country upbringing with Beale Street Blues to get his early sound, but also added an element of gospel which the other performers didn't. Fats Domino? New Orleans with a heavy jazz and boogie-woogie influence.

The name Rock and Roll as it applies to music predates the formation of the genre and dates back to the 1920's, but the music it referred to was significantly different than rock and roll of the 1950's. At the time it was normally known as "race music," graciously renamed by Billboard in 1948 to rhythm and blues. Earlier references appear, but they tend to be a euphemism for sex.

Another element of rock and roll that is rarely mentioned is the invention of the solid-body electric guitar in California in 1946 (commercially available in 1950, the date frequently given). Before this, electric guitars were acoustic guitars amplified  to the point where they could be heard when combined with drums and a piano in jazz.

Don't let the term rockabilly fool you. A Memphis sound that combined elements of rock and roll with country music it is distinct from early rock and roll.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Extend the Blue Ridge Parkway!

As you enter the Smoky Mountains on U.S. Highway 441 just past Cherokee, North Carolina, the Blue Ridge Parkway comes off to the right. From here it travels 469 miles to Front Royal, Virginia, through some of the prettiest land on the eastern seaboard. About every 10 years my wife and I decide to revisit the Blue Ridge, for a good hike and to take some scenic pictures. The names stay with you...a memorable night in the Peaks of Otter Lodge (milepost 86) after camping for a week, a stop a Brineger Cabin (milepost 239), a preserved piece of Blue Ridge history.

Guide to the Blue Ridge Parkway
The biggest problem with the Blue Ridge Parkway is that it takes 4 hours to get there from our house in Cherokee County, Georgia and the Blue Ridge Mountains are just minutes away. I think that extending the Blue Ridge Parkway further south, through the remote area west of Murphy, crossing into Tennessee above Farner, then picking up the "Cohutta Loop" west of Ducktown. Now in Georgia, the loop represents old Georgia Highway 2 as it travels through remote sections of wilderness, packed with scenic views and unusual names (Hell, Potatopatch Mountain), like the current Blue Ridge Parkway.

I would think that this road would end in Eton, coming down from the Cohuttas on the old CCC Road to Eton (just north of Chatsworth if your looking for it on a map).

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

What a great North Georgia spring

Because of the unusually cold North Georgia winter, our springtime is shaping up to be one of the most beautiful in years. Jonquils (okay, daisies anywhere outside the state), which during warm winters bloom in mid-February, have been delayed until mid-March. Forsythia, which recently have been blooming in the third or fourth week of February started to bloom during the ides of March (ides is the 15th day of March, May, July, and October, and the 13th day of other months).

Delayed only a couple of days, the Bradford pears are already covered in white and the ornamental cherries that are so popular in Macon and Conyers have those distinctive pink flowers. Now on the first day of spring Pam and I are anxiously awaiting the azaleas of many colors, white and pink dogwood, and the yellow pine pollen that endears itself to no one.

Spring is a time of renewal. Pam and I renew our love of the north Georgia mountains which we don't get to visit as much as we like during the winter. We renew our love of hiking, not only in the mountains, but on distant battlefields like Chickamauga or closer ones like Allatoona Pass. We check on new exhibits at attractions like the Georgia Aquarium and Rome Area History Museum. We also reach out to old friends simply to say "How ya doing."

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Where in the world is Waynesboro, Georgia

Okay, I don't expect the average American to know where the town of Waynesboro, Georgia is, but I would think that the New York Times and Time magazine should, or at least be able to find it on Google maps. On Tuesday, President Obama made news by announcing a multi-billion dollar loan to the Southern Company to help build two new reactors a the Vogtle plant in Waynesboro, 25 miles south of Augusta. The Georgia location made sense for many reasons, mostly because Georgians are willing to accept the plants and need the jobs.

The New York Times simply referred to Plant Vogtle as being in the Augusta vicinity. Okay, I'll buy that, but they could have been a little more clear in my mind. Time Magazine, however, identified Plant Vogtle as being outside Atlanta. Well, Waynesboro is about 175 miles from Atlanta, so I don't think of it as "outside Atlanta." I have to give them a little cred, however, since they did correctly identify the plant as The Alvin W. Vogtle nuclear power plant.

Vogtle, an Auburn alumni, joined the Army Air Force during World War II and served with the Mighty Eighth. He was shot down over North Africa and spent most of his time trying to escape from various German POW camps. After the war he continued his education, joining Alabama Power after it had formed the Southern Company with 3 other Southeastern power companies. He worked his way through the ranks to become President and eventually, CEO of the Atlanta-based company. Vogtle's claim to fame may elude most people. He was the inspiration for Capt. Hilts "The Cooler King," Steve McQueen's in the movie The Great Escape.

When Forsyth County, Georgia became nationally known for two marches led by Hosea Williams, some people flew to their maps, then erroneously identified the central Georgia city of Forsyth as the location of the marches, not aware that the state had both a city and a county of the same name. All I would say to the people that can't get the geography right is that we are the State of Georgia, not the foreign country, and you really should know better.

A simple "by the way" to Time and the New York Times. Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue has absolutely nothing to do with chickens, except as part of his vet practice.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Global warming? - not in north Georgia


When global warming was a hot topic, the announcement of average annual temperatures was a heralded event. So when the National Climatic Data Center announced the 2009 average temp. for the United States on Friday, January 8, 2010, one might think that the interest would at least be piqued. Key "annual average temperature" into Mr. Google news and the first article that actually deals with this subject is from London and is focused on the high cost of "warmists." When global warming proponents (I do like the term warmists) beat us over the head with 14 years of warming (1995-2008) they should also be glad to tell us that the last two years have been so close to normal that the difference is a statistical one (in other words, you probably don't feel it).

North Georgia folks probably don't have a problem telling you its colder because we didn't see normal temps - we were 4 degrees Fahrenheit below normal in December, 2009, and that's a little more than statistically significant. A large portion of the center of the country was 8 degrees Fahrenheit below normal last month. In Atlanta, this has been the coldest start to January since 1869, when records were first kept.

I do believe that global warming is occurring. I just have never been sure why, I don't know if its a short-term or long term change, and nobody has proven to my satisfaction that the CO2 theories of the warmists are scientifically sound. Remeber the "ozone hole" whose growth could destroy mankind? Guess what - it reached its peak in September, 2006 and has been shrinking since. Right now its about the size it was in 1992.

The warmists have arguments that sound logical, but are they really reasonable? One example Al uses is the melting of the icebergs in Alaska. Thunder Bay (now Glacier Bay National Park), has receded some 20 miles since the start of the 20th century (a fact Mr. Gore presented in his book. Well, the ice levels in Glacier Bay have been receding since it was explored in 1790, a half-century before the advent of fossil fuel and a 100 years before its use could be considered common.

In November, 2009 160mb of emails from the Climatic Research Unit of the University of East Anglia that showed the CRUs efforts to disseminate information that only supported the CO2 theory of global warming. The emails were then uploaded to Realclimate.org, where the file stayed for about 2 hours until it was removed. Researcher and author Kim Cobb wrote "CRU e-mails are an embarrassment to climate science in general." In America, only FoxNews seized on reporting the event and ran multiple stories on "Climategate." Furthermore, the results reported by the CRU can not be duplicated from the raw data available and the CRU has refused to release the "climategate code." (code is programming).

My wife and I have lived in Cherokee County for 17 years and have always been able to get out after a snow storm until we got 2 inches of the white stuff on Thursday, January 7, 2010. Because of the extended cold, when the rain from the start of the storm froze, it made our road impassible until the county salted it on Saturday. Now one storm doesn't mean global warming is history, but 24 months is a significant statistical anomaly that may force the warmists to rethink their claims.