Archive for the ‘Random’ Category

Bust A Knuckle

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

Hard Work & Carelessness, Two of My Good Friends

Everyone who knows me understands I’m a hard worker and I seem to consistently injure myself. Well, recently I’ve found myself injured again from my willingness to fix something. Before I tell you my story, I must preface myself.

For those who don’t know me well, I’m that guy that comes to your party and falls off your deck. Actually, I’ve done it several times, of course at different parties. After a fall you can generally find me on the ground with my entire drink intact—not a drop split. My might think, “He must drink too much”. Maybe sometimes, but generally that is not the case. Falling off decks—is usually caused by someone placing chair legs next to the edge of a deck, not my drunken clumsiness. In fact, my accidents generally happen when I’m working at fixing something.

My good friend Brent has witnessed this many times. Whether it’s getting completely covered head to toe with Chiggers, from trying to fix a bed on the ground—on a island in the middle of a swamp, or loading gear for one of our Burnabout group camp trips, and walking my shin into his extended trailer hitch on his Black Betty Land Cruiser. Nether fond memories, but ones I’ll never forget. The list goes on and on. I’ll refrain for boring you about my past injuries, because I prefer living in the present.

The Culprit

This is my pool pump. Notice how close to the wall foundation it is? Last Saturday, excited for a day off, I woke up to get my day started early. With coffee in hand I headed to the backyard to sip some coffee and listen to morning birds wake. Then I heard the pool pump come on, and then, a few seconds later it shut off. I figured it must have blown a breaker. Sure enough it did, so I flipped the breaker back on and then the pump again. Pop! I heard a electrical short, and it kicked the breaker off again. My stomach cringed since I had just replaced the motor, and it was $350 and hours of no fun.

Where's that smoke coming from?

I thought I’d call the pump shop and see what they thought. It’s been running fine since last summer, so I can’t imagine what’s wrong with my new pump. In the mean time, I need to run my kids somewhere—pause—another day in the life of Todd. When I return, I started pondering over it again and came to the conclusion that calling someone to tell me I have a wire shorting out seemed ignorant all of a sudden. I’ll just find the short. I installed it, so it must be something I did. I remembered the ends of the wires where loosing their insulated cover and I wrapped them with electrical wire to be safe. Well, looking back that’s definitely the opposite of safe. No problem, it’s something to fix. The pool is turning green quick so there’s no time to loose. The first major obstacle was I didn’t want to take the entire pump housing off. It was no fun putting it on, and a repeat didn’t sound any better. On the other hand, the end cap for the motor was merely two inches from the concrete foundation. That will be tricky.

Problem Solving

Here was my chance. If I could find the right tool for the job, I could maybe expose the problem and possibly fix it. After a good 30 minutes of sifting through my toolbox I found the right socket, adapter and ratchet. I loosened the two bolts and the end-cap cover barely had enough distance to slide off. Problem solved—now to find the next problem. I used a small mirror and started looking around. Sure enough, there were those wires I had rigged with electrical tape—reasonably I assumed that’s it. All I had to do was rewire the motor with a mirror, ratchet and pliers, and the run the wires to the power source!

Not much space!

With the problem identified, all that’s required is three 10 gauge wires. Off to the local hardware store and I’m only set back $9, and of course fixing something with little or no money is super sexy to me. It sounded simpler than reality. Unfortunately, it requires 3 hands. One for the mirror, one for the socket, and one to push the wire in place with needle nose pliers. And, during the process, I noticed my knuckles were looking a bit red from scraping against the wall. Oh well, a few scrapes never worried me much. With a great deal of patience, and many attempts, I secured the wires and was ready for the big test. To my delight it worked, and the pool pump motor was back to its purring self.

The Aftermath

After a few hours my hand started showing signs of abuse and irritation. That night it worsened. The next morning it was even worse with frequent reminders of my mishap every time I reached into my pocket for my phone. As I sipped my coffee in the backyard the next morning and starred at my injury and pondered—justifying to myself—injury typically equals reward. In the end, whatever I was doing to injure myself was most likely worth it. When I was a kid it was jumping bicycles over trashcans for the neighborhood record, or trying to conquer the next skateboard trick. When I think back on the hundreds of injuries I’ve experienced in my life, I can’t help to think about how much I have learned and grown from those experiences. Unpleasant as they may have been, hard work and carelessness are my good friends.

The Result

So here’s to not playing it safe. Don’t be afraid to get dirty, break a leg doing something important to you. You’ll certainly have a lot of stories to tell, and most likely, have a lifetime of experiences to draw knowledge and wisdom from.

Ra(t)ccoon Attack

Sunday, March 11th, 2012

I have a fondness for Buddhism and its teachings. Whenever I get too off my spiritual center, I sometimes remind myself of Buddhist principals, especially that of having true compassion for all living things. I’m not Buddhist, I’ve only read a few books a buddy of mine loaned me when my ex-wife left me for a spiritual quest in the name of Mountain, actually his name was Matthew, and he was far from a mountain in reality. I relied on my lessons of compassion when I finally met him—not to kill him. And, most recently here in my own backyard, I’ve had to rely on my Buddhist teachings once more. No, Mountain didn’t show up. He’s been gone for a long time now, and good riddance. It was those pesky Ra(t)ccoons!

The Shed

Those that know me, know that I love my garden, bonsai trees, pond, swimming pool and all the trimmings. And, that over the years I’ve feuded with all kinds of critters that can’t seem to live harmoniously with me. Squirrels, Possums, Night Herons, Ra(t)ccoons, Rats, and other rouge creatures. Typically, we’re all good. Until they start destroying bonsai trees in minutes that I’ve nurtured for years, eating my friendly fish, or simply covering my deck in bird shit. I always turn a cheek, and reason that if you build an awesome micro paradise you have to deal with these kinds of things. Sometimes months on end will pass, and the world in my backyard seems as a paradise of co-habitation.

Two days ago, I was going to do the morning fish feeding. It’s pretty cool, that 10 years ago I made a small pond in the yard and threw some .10¢ gold fish in it and they’re still alive and well. They’ve even produced three offspring. Needless to say these guys, and girls are my fish friends. When I arrive at the ponds edge, they greet me, of course knowing that they’re getting fed. Still, I find it comforting that they can pick me out from other humans, and especially animals that want to eat them. On this day, as I arrived at the shed to retrieve the fish food I discovered that the squirrels had attacked. Two of my maple bonsai trees were half dug up. I pondered for an instant, “It’s been too long, they’re back, those sons of a bitches, where’s my gun, I’m gonna kill me something.” Then, I remembered, or that little Buddha on my shoulder said, “awe man, or maybe it was, dude be kind. This hasn’t happened in a long time, they only dug up some dirt the trees aren’t dead, roots are still in tack. No worries…” I scooped the dirt back into the pots, covered them with rocks to stop them in their return, and went into the shed for the fish food.

The Bird Seed Mess

Once in the shed, I stopped to scan a 280 degree view of my ransacked shed. Camping gear knocked down, fly fishing equipment, cords, bottles, car racks, and a big pile of bird seed scattered over gear tubs. Instantly, I thought, critter attack and how could that happen with the door shut. Then it dawned on me that the night before, the dogs, despite their tiny size had chased down a raccoon to that corner of the yard. Typically, they run over the fence, but apparently this raccoon took a different approach and hid in the little building with the door open. Maybe knowingly tricking the dogs, which aren’t the smartest. Let’s say that no one is going to copy their homework. I happened to notice the door was left open and shut it for the night—apparently with a ra(t)ccoon inside. Then the thought occurred, it’s still in there, and I’m going to have to confront him. So, with flash light in hand I start looking.

The Ra(t)ccoon Culprit

First I cautiously look on all the shelving, behind gear, buckets, lawn tools, etc. Thinking, I sure hope I don’t startle it and it charges me like in some Hollywood B flick. Well no sign, but he could not have gotten out with the door shut, so he has to be in here some where. But where? Not in attic part I hope. It’s a small hole that you have to crawl into and pull yourself up. Not a good position to find yourself in, when a raccoon is charging you. It reminded me of the time I had to reach my arm up into the chimney, through the chimney flue, to pull a dead, rotting, raccoon carcass off a ledge. It took a few minutes to get the guts to do it, wondering whether it was still partially alive and whether it could still bite me. Repeat—I had the same feeling. “Todd climb up there. Don’t be a pussy. You can do it. It won’t attack you.” And sure enough, a few minutes later I head up with flash light. Left corner, look’s good. Right corner, look’s good, no coons. Back right corner, nothing. Last corner, yikes it’s a 30 pound coon. So, I start talking to it. “Hey, dammit, what the f@#k are you doing in here? You can’t stay, time to go.” It looked at me while I spoke and then simply turned its head and burrowed into the corner, with ass facing me. Well, what to do. It’s morning, raccoons are nocturnal, he’s not coming out until later tonight. I’ll just leave the door open, go to work and he’ll be gone when I get home.

Ra(t)ccoon Doodo

After work, I go straight to the shed to see if he’s gone. Once again I have to climb into the attic hole, but this time I don’t hesitate. I must have surprised him, he wasn’t going anywhere, and was sprawled out on a duffel of sleeping bags. He must of been thinking, “this is pretty nice dry place to sleep off the 2 pounds off bird seed he feed me last night, this place is great.” Once again, I start talking to him, and I quickly get his attention and he darts to the corner. “You can stay, the train’s leaving, get the f*%k out.” No response, I leave the shed, door open, hoping he comes out once it gets dark and neighbors put out cat food.

The next morning, I had to crawl up there again. At this point, I’m thinking pitchfork—he better be gone. Sure enough he split, but not with out finishing off that pile of bird seed, and leaving a pile of shit (literally) for me to clean up.

Fair ridden.

Ideabox and IKEA team up: IKEA Pre-Fab House for $86,500

Thursday, March 1st, 2012

Go IKEA! Apparently IKEA isn’t happy with dominating their market segment. Now, they’re selling houses in a box called Aktiv. And, not bad looking for the price. Check out more images at Idea Box.

UBU.com Serves Up Avant-Garde

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011

I simply get lost every time I visit UBU.com. If you haven’t been there before, visit it, but make sure you’ve got some extra time, because it’s easy to get lost in his treasure trove.

ABOUT UBUWEB

Concrete poetry’s utopian pan-internationalist bent was clearly articulated by Max Bense in 1965 when he stated, “…concrete poetry does not separate languages; it unites them; it combines them. It is this part of its linguistic intention that makes concrete poetry the first international poetical movement.” Its ideogrammatic self-contained, exportable, universally accessible content mirrors the utopian pan-linguistic dreams of cross-platform efforts on today’s Internet; Adobe’s PDF (portable document format) and Sun System’s Java programming language each strive for similarly universal comprehension. The pioneers of concrete poetry could only dream of the now-standard tools used to make language move and morph, stream and scream, distributed worldwide instantaneously at little cost.

Essentially a gift economy, poetry is the perfect space to practice utopian politics. Freed from profit-making constraints or cumbersome fabrication considerations, information can literally “be free”: on UbuWeb, we give it away and have been doing so since 1996. We publish in full color for pennies. We receive submissions Monday morning and publish them Monday afternoon. UbuWeb’s work never goes “out of print.” UbuWeb is a never-ending work in progress: many hands are continually building it on many platforms.

UbuWeb has no need for money, funding or backers. Our web space is provided by an alliance of interests sympathetic to our vision. Donors with an excess of bandwidth contribute to our cause. All labour and editorial work is voluntary; no money changes hands. Totally independent from institutional support, UbuWeb is free from academic bureaucracy and its attendant infighting, which often results in compromised solutions; we have no one to please but ourselves.

UbuWeb posts much of its content without permission; we rip out-of-print LPs into sound files; we scan as many old books as we can get our hands on; we post essays as fast as we can OCR them. UbuWeb is an unlimited resource with unlimited space to fill. It is in this way that the site has grown to encompass hundreds of artists, hundreds of gigabytes of sound files, books, texts and videos.

Sounds like a marginal situation? Hardly. We’ve won many prestigious internet awards and are acknowledged web-wide as the definitive source for Visual, Concrete + Sound Poetry. UbuWeb is on the syllabus of countless schools; we’ve gotten queries from Ph.D. candidates seeking information to third-graders researching a paper on concrete poetry. UbuWeb embodies an unstable community, neither vertical nor horizontal but rather a Deleuzian nomadic model: a 4-dimensional space simultaneously expanding and contracting in every direction, growing “rhizomatically” with ever-increasing unpredictability and uncanniness.

25 Random Things About Me

Friday, April 1st, 2011

Loving the Desert

This is something I participated in with some friends a while back. I ran across it again and thought I’d share it. Here’s a little more about me, for you.

1. Chain mail makes me feel ill.
2. My left ear is lower than my right.
3. I like cherry pie, and NOT cake.
4. Fashion is for the masses.
5. My shoe size is 11.625″.
6. People that live in Texas and bitch about it makes me sorry for them.
7. Computers are my friends.
8. Typography is my mistress.
9. Graphic Design is my bitch.
9. Dana is my lover.
10. My kids are my reality.
11. Snowboarding is my old friend, I miss her.
12. City driving is something I avoid.
13. My fingernails need trimming.
14. My toenails are not painted.
15. I dig all things Asian.
16. I did not get a astrophysics degree.
17. My truck has a 9000 pound towing capacity.
18. I’m reading Wind-Up Bird Chronicle.
19. I trust my friends with my life.
20. I don’t trust my clients, unless they’re my friends.
21. I prefer BC Powder.
22. I’ve broke over 15 wine glasses last year.
23. I fall off my friend’s deck regularly.
24. I think pixels are sexy.
25. When I grow up, I plan to save the world from Extinction.

Down with Dilution – League of Honest Coffee Lovers

Friday, April 1st, 2011

I love coffee. So when I stumbled onto this Life Magazine ad from April 1960, I couldn’t help but to pause for observation. “Down with Dilution” Hell yeah, I’m all about that. I assumed the quality of coffee in 60′ sucked. Then after a closer look, this ad seemed like the perfect mantra for the birth of Starbucks. Maybe the founder actually read this. My guess is people didn’t care much about proper measurement, consistent timing and NEVER letting the coffee boil. They were too worried youth of America becoming hippies.

Thanks Pan-American Coffee Bureau.

Flaming Lips 12 Part Mix

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

Valentine’s was crazy for me, so I didn’t get to play with Wayne Coyne and Steven Drozd (2 of my favorite Flamers). So if you haven’t seen this check it out. Here’s the instructional video straight from their flaming lips. Flaming Lips – Two Blobs Fucking – Instructional Video . And if you’re too lazy, or don’t know enough peps with iPhones, then here’s the 12 part mix flaming cocktail ready for you to consume.

Terlingua Abajo Sunrise Video

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

Terlingua Abajo Sunrise Video
Get your cup of coffee, take 5 minutes and watch the sunrise from Terlingua Abajo camp ground in Big Bend National Park. What? Sweet Dana and I having coffee, iPhone video leaned against a rock, 60 frames per second, enjoy.

Snowed In: Help Me Surya!

Friday, February 4th, 2011

After 1.5″ of sleet and ice, we woke up to 5-6 inches of snow this morning. Sure not that much, although I’m in Texas. Errr. My kids are ready to pull each others limbs off. Please Surya, help me!

Todd’s Spicy Texas Mango Chutney

Friday, February 4th, 2011

I like cooking. For me, it’s an exciting form of expression. And, like graphic design, an audience will experience your creation. Not just visually, or conceptually, but physically as well. Culinary art touches many senses. So, what a great canvas to create with, food.

For the holidays this year, I decided to create some food gifts for friends and family. Sure, there’s nothing original about giving home-made food, but more than ever in this age of gift cards, I find the tradition of giving food for the holiday’s very appealing.

Something I’ve been perfecting over the last year or so, is Chutney. We visited our good friend Brent a few years back and he served a dish with chutney on the side. My sweetheart Dana, was quick to find out what this incredible sauce was. Brent explained it was Chutney, and it was reasonably expensive for the size jar he bought. Dana and I looked at each other and said, “Let’s make it”.

So I researched recipes I found online and modified ingredients for a few batches, until I was pleased. The result? Todd’s Spicy Texas Mango Chutney. And of course I had to package it and design a label that was easy to produce.

Here’s my recipe for those who want to take a stab at it. I’d recommend serving with premium pork dish, or as an appetizer with cream cheese and cracker.

Enjoy.

Mango Chutney 80 Servings

1 cup distilled white vinegar
2 cups white sugar
2 cups brown sugar
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
3/4 teaspoon ground ginger
1-1/4 teaspoons ground allspice
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
3/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
2-4 peppers, seeded and chopped (choose peeper depending on your spice pallet)
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
2/3 large onions, chopped
1 clove garlic, chopped
1/3 cup golden raisins
1/3 cup raisins
2 tablespoons and 2 teaspoons fresh ginger root, chopped
5-1/3 cups sliced, semi-ripe mangos
2 tablespoons and 2 teaspoons sliced almonds (optional)

DIRECTIONS
In a large saucepan combine vinegar, white sugar, brown sugar, cinnamon, ground ginger, allspice, cloves, nutmeg, peppers and salt. Bring to a boil; boil for 1/2 hour.

Stir in onions, garlic, golden raisins, raisins and ginger and boil for another 1/2 hour.

Stir in mangos (and almonds if using), reduce heat to low and simmer for 1/2 hour. Pour mixture into sterilized jars, to 1/2 inch below lid level, and seal.