A Serious Drinking Problem

Oh dear!Friends,

As you might expect, this story from the Press-Enterprise’s champion of the written word, Mr. John Asbury, is missing some important information. The bones are there though, about a man who may be seeking to make the olfactory crimes you committed after Bean Burrito Night at Taco Bell seem tame in comparison:


Man drinking gopher poison in Hemet becomes chemical risk
By PE News on July 16, 2009 6:40 AM | Comments (0)

A man who drank gopher poison Monday night became a potential health risk to others as well, causing a small section of the Hemet Valley Medical Center and surrounding streets to be closed off, according to hospital and fire officials.

When ingested, two chemicals in the poison, phosphine and malathion, can mix with chemicals produced in the human body to produce toxic out-gassing, Hemet Fire Chief Matt Shobert said Wednesday.

That posed a potential risk to hospital staff and other patients, he said.

Potential? Seems like a great big imminent risk. John found somebody else to talk to though and lays down some science.

Valley Health System spokeswoman Jerri Randrup said no other patients were affected or evacuated. The man was treated in an isolated room with reverse air pressure that ventilated any toxic fumes away from any other areas.

Fire officials are unclear whether the man swallowed the poison intentionally, Shobert said. The man, whose identity was not released, remained hospitalized Wednesday, but he had transferred out of the intensive care unit and was expected to recover.

— John Asbury

So kids, as Fernando Valenzuela would remind us—be smart, stay in school—and consider not drinking gopher poison. Okay?

– bob

R.I.P. Kevin O’Hagan

Good night, Cap'n.Friends,

It saddens me to report the loss of my friend Kevin O’Hagan. Apparently, he passed away last night after suddenly losing control of his motorcycle (UPDATE: See below). He was on his way into Seattle for a little vacation.

It was the Cap’n, who in the early 90s saw promise in an aspiring computer engineer with no formal training and brought him in to his prosthetics practice. I was hired out of a little frame shop on Ocean Beach to build a 3-D imaging system at his practice in Chula Vista because he believed that such a thing could be done inexpensively. We actually built a working prototype back then, proving that his crazy dreams weren’t really that mad after all. If I have only learned one thing from the man, it would be that it’s fine to make wild plans, but you better be willing to put some backbone in to make those plans a reality.

Your pal,

– bob

UPDATE: The news today, Friday the 10th, is that he suffered a heart attack, steered the bike to the shoulder of the highway and passed without endangering anybody else during the busy evening commute. I find this new information stunning while confirming what I already knew about him. As I reflect a bit on his life, my suspicion is that the universe could only tolerate one Kevin O’Hagan at a time. My wish is that another one, an irascible, inscrutable, closet genius, is waiting in the wings. That the next one is ready to make another lasting impression on the lives of untold thousands, the way that Kevin did. I’ll miss you, Cap.

Making The Case For Universal Mental Health Coverage


Friends,

As a rule, I follow the news pretty closely, taking in viewpoints from across the ideological spectrum as much as I can. However, some celebrities croaked a few days ago and the ceaseless rehashing of minute details became very tired, very quickly. I had houseguests for the holiday weekend, after all, so the news could wait.

I was wrong.

Alaska Governor Sarah Palin resigned her office in a masterful speech (video link) last Friday that I completely missed until spotting the story above the fold in the L.A. Times newspaper box on Saturday. Patrick Henry demanded liberty or death, Dr. Martin Luther King had a dream, and Mrs. Palin will steer Alaska in a new direction by no longer holding the highest elected office in that state. Genius!

Her rambling, shambling discourse swaying from paranoid to put-upon to put out may be best remembered as a) oddly timed, b) hastily given and c) just not as good as Richard Nixon’s “you won’t have Nixon to kick around any more” speech. She has eighteen months remaining in her term as governor, leading some to speculate on her motives for resigning. I think I’d like to mix and match. She’s pregnant and nutso, needs to earn some speaking fees to feather the nest before the book tour, then she’ll run for Senate unless she loses. Then she’ll do the talk show on Fox (Huckabee & Friends?).

It’s been a tough week for Republican governors, hasn’t it?

– bob

Good Old Monsoonal Flow, I Knew Her Well

Friends,

The skies above my charming (and enticingly temperate) hamlet seem to be threatening rain. We’ll take that, of course, but the scenes on offer a little after 5:00 have been pretty fantastic as well. As always, click the thumbnails to see a giant version in another window…

Sunrise. From Lake Hemet Store on HWY 74. 30th June 2009
More Sunrise. From Lake Hemet Store on HWY 74. 30th June 2009
Yet More Sunrise. Near Pacific Crest Trail on HWY 74. 30th June 2009

Your pal,

bob

The Horizon Is Inconvenient

Friends,

I’m afraid that this shot in the Sunrise Series just doesn’t capture how grand the view was this morning.

Horizon, Pinyon, CA 25th June 2009
Click on the thumbnail above to open a larger version in a new window.

Cheers!

– bob

Happy Birthday Lindsay Wagner!

The bionic woman and bionic bigfoot before their onscreen relationship turns nasty. It's complicated.
Friends,

Today, Lindsay Wagner turns 60. Eventually it had to happen, but the event still makes me feel ancient…

Somebody is missing the point.…but not stupid. The scene on this lunchbox seems a little daft since the Bionic Woman wasn’t known necessarily for her driving prowess, now was she? Some illustrator who hadn’t seen the show got the assignment and, apparently, went on her own merry way.

“What’s this Bionic Woman, mate?”
“She solves crimes on American telly.”
“Oh? Why’s she called ‘Bionic’ then?”
“Beats me. Here’s the publicity photos. We need your draft by noon.”

And I suppose that was that. Well, happy birthday and enjoy the mattress!

– bob

Another Programming Note

Friends,

My access to this mess from work this morning is pretty broken, so I won’t be able to check in on America’s Favorite Clam for her take on the weather. I’m also embarking on a little road trip this weekend, so posting will either be very light or extremely heavy, depending on whatever these things depend on.

As always, thanks for checking in.

– bob

Special Yellowstone Photo Request!

Friends,

A friend at work (who has refused to drop by the comments – *cough!*) has requested more photos from the trip to convince her son that the nation’s first park might merit a visit. Message to “Sparky”: you must go. It’s a phenomenal place to see.

Rapids for you...

Rapids for me!

Yeah, that flow is surely flowing.

The benevolent protective order of that single elk.

Pronghorn antelope? They never steal away to get married...

Two hundred degrees worth of wading pool...

…just don’t step off the walkway onto the “fragile crust” surrounding the geysers. As a side note, they pull boiled bison out of those pits with truck-mounted winches. Just so you know.

– bob

Yellowstone Lesson For The Day

Yes, I'm recycling.
Friends,

One of the most entertaining parts of the trip was a lesson in the wisdom of the crowds. Once in the park, people feel free to stop their vehicles whenever (and I mean whenever) they see something neat to photograph. The passengers pile out, cameras in hand, and take happy snaps. Then then next car comes and also stops, presuming that the driver of the first car must be on to something. Once the third car arrives, the sighting becomes an event. Now everybody stops to see what all the fuss is about. All of the passengers of the all of the cars begin to mingle “Did you see that? That was amazing!” fills the air.

It’s like a tiny festival on the side of the road that I believe should be recreated more often. I propose that you keep a camera in the car and stop to take a picture whenever you see something interesting. Maybe you’ll attract a crowd…

Couldn’t hurt.

– bob

Yellowstone Photo Blort!

Friends,

We’re back from a little volcano in Wyoming and have some pictures to prove it. See?

Is buffalo or bison?

Oh, a lake?

Where's my kayak?

Here's your postcard.

Above the falls.

Steve, I've got a headache.

Poot!

River.

Glassy Yellowstone Lake

Wait, the ground is steaming!

Kayak? People?

Oooh. The colors.

The giant Lake Lodge. Twenty dollar halibut can be had there.

Stinky steam pot.

The big Yellowstone taxi in front of the Lodge at Old Faithful.

More stinky steam pots.

The Castle geyser.

Interior of the Lodge at Old Faithful. It's a burl, people.

Lusting after these chairs, I found that they're built locally.

These might last a while.

There’s about six hundred and fifty more, but I thought these were pretty good to share right now. There’s a bear somewhere in that pile…

– bob

A Delightful Programming Note

It's a gots-to-go situation.Friends,

I’m headed out on a little vacation today and will return in a week. We’re going to one of the country’s more expensive national parks – the one with the reasonably predictable geyser, if you’re wondering. The plan is to take a ton of pictures, but the weather may not cooperate. Cold and rainy is the prediction for whole week, so we might spend more time enjoying the interior of the rental RV than we’d hoped for.

Let’s go camping!

– bob

The Sunrise Series Is Back For June

Friends,

I have to be honest. The sunrise scenes during my morning commute just haven’t been all that interesting (or easy to grab with my little brick of a camera). Until today…

Sunrise in Garner Valley, 5th June 2009
By the way, you can click on this picture to see the full-resolution version in a new window. It’s reasonably large though, so if you have a slow connection it might take a while.

Enjoy!

– bob