Archive for October, 2006

Crumbelievable!

MapCruncher
from MS Research is pretty cool. It lets you very easily specify an
input file and create a VirtualEarth (local.live.com) overlay showing
that map. Here is the
park by my house. I’ve certainly seen cooler Google Maps mashups but
I bet most of them take more than 5 minutes to go from 0 to “done”
(although “done” usually has a higher gloss).

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Cash in, Miss Smith

IMG_5514

IMG_5514,
originally uploaded by Peru Tha Damaja.

I organized a big group trip to Mount Saint Helens this weekend - it
was awesome.

Mount St. Helens is about a three and a half hour drive from Seattle
if you head for the southern entrance and toward Climber’s Bivouac,
the point from which most summiters take off. In the interest of
mountain restoration, only 100 passes are issued a day through
November. Passes are available online and cost about $22 per person
which includes parking permits for the parking area near Climber’s
Bivouac. Most of the other administrative details are available from
the Forest Service website so I won’t go into them here…

We left pretty early Saturday morning. The boarding place that looked
after Io came to pick him up in the morning and then Tanya and I
planned on driving our friends, Eva and Adam, to the mountain.
But when they got to our place and we looked at our collective pile of
junk, it was obvious we wouldn’t be able to cram it all into our car
so they graciously agreed to pick up driving honors. Note to self:
neither an ~20 gallon cooler nor a 5 gallon water jug are probably
necessary for an overnight camping trip. But then we were on the road
close to 11.

On the way to Mount St. Helens, Adam recommended we stop for lunch at
a place named “Burgerville.” As a 12 year vegetarian, I wasn’t too
keen about this but I didn’t want to rock the boat since they were
driving, rocking the boat is usually just a hassle for everybody, and
I have reasonable faith in my friends’ judgment — unless the topic is
href="http://subversion.tigris.org/faq.html#single-file-checkout">single
file href="http://www.perforce.com/perforce/doc.042/manuals/cmdref/edit.html">checkouts :) — so Burgerville it was. The place turned out to be hugely and
pleasantly surprising. Most of the characteristic fast food trappings
were there: unhealthy, calorie dense foods with a menu consisting of
variations of burgers and fries. But the food was served to our table
via numbers and it was mostly made with sustainably produced, local
ingredients. Their burgers are made with Oregon Country beef which is
what my smaller local co-op has offered for years and which I almost
decided to start eating a couple years ago (it’s rbgh-free, vegetarian
fed beef). But then I decided there’s no really important reason to
reintroduce red meat into my diet, regardless of whether I agree with
how it’s raised. But the point is that it’s amazing that it was on a
fast food menu at all. They offer two types of veggie burgers, too,
which is a huge concession to vegetarians at a fast food
place. Lastly, their cheese is Tillamook, which is locally produced
and (generally) rennetless. Oh - and their kids’ meals feature a
medley of animals who seem to interact with a ranger and one of the
animals wears a shirt proudly proclaiming “Science Rules”. The
message is really pro-environment which is certainly one I agree with,
but it’s great to see the more general plug for science as long as the
flat earth society is
constantly trying to take us back to a simpler time.

But wasn’t this supposed to be about Mount St. Helens? So we started
heading toward Climber’s Bivouac. On the way there we had a brief
stop at Jack’s to pick up our climbing permits and parking passes.
When we got to the campsite, Jason, Alicia, Beth, Taylor, and Dan were
already there and had started scoping out the spots to pitch our
tents. John, Heather, Jim and Jayme showed up shortly afterward and
we all had out camp sites set up in pretty short order and with plenty
of daylight to spare. The campsite was really pretty nice with a
number of fairly small and private individual camps with nice, flat
sleeping areas marked out and tons of grills. There is no water
available (the person I spoke with on the phone indicated they have
tried drilling but they kept finding e. coli in the water!) but there
are surprisingly nice bathrooms. Our group was spread between two
grills for dinner: a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277599554/in/set-72157594341834312/">more
primitive camp on the outer ring and the href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277600767/in/set-72157594341834312/">Belleview
Estates on the inner parking area. We learned John and his crew
know how to camp without making it a full on granola experience.

I forgot to mention the weather - it was incredible. There wasn’t a
cloud in the sky on Saturday. It was windy and chilly but it really
could have been much, much worse. It got pretty cold by the time the
sun went down, but it was just fine in our tent and sleeping bag.
It’s a great experience to get away and look up at the clear night sky
seeing constellations and the Milky Way. I should definitely try to
do this at least once a year.

We got up at about 5:45 Sunday morning to take down our tents and get
an early start on the hike. Everyone was ready to go by about 7 and
we href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277608177/in/set-72157594341834312/">hit
the trail. The first two miles of the hike gradually gains about
1100′ from the campsite under tall evergreen trees with href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277608952/in/set-72157594341834312/">occasional
views of the surrounding cascades until you get to the href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277610213/in/set-72157594341834312/">treeline
at about 4800′. Climbing permits are required from here on up the
mountain to aid in its rehabilitation. From here, it’s about 3 miles
and 3500′ of rough climbing and bouldering to reach the crater rim.
The view is awesome, though, with href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277610857/in/set-72157594341834312/">Mt. Adams,
Hood, and Bachelor all visible on a clear day like we had. Adams is
the closest so it’s the only one I really have as a backdrop in my
pictures but in the full sized version of the href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277615896/in/set-72157594341834312/">360
degree panorama from the crater rim, you can see Hood and,
faintly, Bachelor.

There is snow in the shadow of boulders much of the way up and
considerably more snow at the exterior crater rim. Incredibly, when
we got to the rim we saw two golden retrievers that had been roaming
the campsite the night before! They seemed to be part of a project to
clean the snow off the rim since they were eating up a lot of it. I
was amazed to see these guys at the rim and that they beat us! They
were super friendly and href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277614009/in/set-72157594341834312/">Tanya
made a new friend with one of them.

The rim itself is awesome. As you look down into the crater you can
very clearly see the new dome that has been forming since the eruption
in 1980. We saw steam rising from about three or four spots inside
the crater. The eruption blew off the north section of the crater
rim, so from our vantage on the tip of the south crater we had a great
view of the href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277611949/in/set-72157594341834312/">blast
area, crater, new dome and further in the distance href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277620183/in/set-72157594341834312/">Spirit
Lake and Mount Rainier. We posed at the top for some href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277630236/in/set-72157594341834312/">group
pictures with href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277614740/in/set-72157594341834312/">Rainier,
href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277616568/in/set-72157594341834312/">Adams,
and the href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277631949/in/set-72157594341834312/">crater
in the background before href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277625055/in/set-72157594341834312/">following
the dogs href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277627421/in/set-72157594341834312/">back
down.

On the way back to the campsite, I paid closer attention to the
landscape including the href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277632828/in/set-72157594341834312/">rocks,
the href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277641621/in/set-72157594341834312/">views
through the sloughs, the href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277645712/in/set-72157594341834312/">beautiful
transition between treeline and the rocks and the two main types
of fauna: a kind of href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277640103/in/set-72157594341834312/">heather
and a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277644342/in/set-72157594341834312/">white
wildflower. It wasn’t easy to pay super close attention to any
details other than where to step on the href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277636559/in/set-72157594341834312/">next
boulder, though.

We stopped for one last picture href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipperyp/277649055/in/set-72157594341834312/">looking
up at the crater rim from the campsite before heading back to
Seattle. I don’t know if I’d take the chance in the future to book in
August for a weekend in late October, but we really had awesome luck
for our trip and I’d definitely do this again. Next time I’d probably
try to go some time from June or July through September since Tanya
noticed there is also a summer route to the summit and it would be
nice to give that a try. But this was a really great experience and
even with all the caveats (only about 10 miles round trip with 4500′
of non-technical elevation gain that you can do in one day), it’s
still really exciting to have climbed to the top of a mountain.


Comments (6)

Mobile wget

Mobile wget

Mobile wget,
originally uploaded by Peru Tha Damaja.

I’m super excited about this. I got wget rolling again on my phone. wget is a utility that can slurp a web site with most of the flexibility you’d want to make it really powerful: link traversal with a custom link depth, control over whether it leaves the host site or only traverses links within that site, control to force it to only traverse links within some certain path or to exclude links within some other path, have it do link conversion (so that they work after you download), AND MORE!!!

On a Windows Mobile device it’s a lot trickier to get this rolling. First, it doesn’t come with a console so you need to get a console application. Microsoft’s CMD doesn’t seem to work for me any more but SymbolicTools’ PocketConsole does. But to get that to work, you need to tweak a reg key so that console applications work at all (Total Commander is a great tool with shell exploring, registry editing, and file viewing neatly integrated). Now that you’ve got a working console, you need Rainer Keuchel’s wget port. To use that port (as with all of his ports) you need a couple compatibility dll’s. Once you’ve got the console working and his port harness dll’s, you need a couple more tweaks to make wget and his other ports function properly since all these utilities rely on environment variables, which doesn’t exist in Windows Mobile. The shim is pretty straightforward - set up some more reg keys in HKLM/Environment which the port respects just like a regular environment. Now you can modify your _wgetrc in %home%, tell it http_proxy=http://216.155.165.50:8080 (the tzones proxy) and use_proxy=on and you’re ready to go to town!

Which would make anyone ask “why would I want to go to impossibly-difficult-ville?” Well, you probably wouldn’t if you’re asking, but if you’re like me, you subscribe to the New York Review of Books electronic edition and you think it’s the bees-knees to be able to read this on the go. But there is no convenient RSS format of this (yet) so with a little jiggery pokery, you should be able to run this command to retrieve the most recent issue to your device: “wget -nH -k -r -l1 -I /contents/,/articles/ http://www.nybooks.com/current-issue”.

In our next installment: since I haven’t done this yet and I suspect wget won’t know how to consume my cookies, I’ll try covering that.


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Steelworker

I’d like to officially thank href="http://streamofwhiskey.livejournal.com/">Rizzo and href="http://www.tcob.com/">Frenchy for href="http://www.psoul.com/index.cgi/living/cold.writeback">raking me
over the coals after my perfectly natural response to Olde Man
Schaefbauer’s Cure-All for What Ailes Ye. Seriously, can you tell me
“peaty” whisky tastes all that different from Copenhagen? If it does
then surely I can chalk up my response to the fact that I wasn’t well.
Or maybe what I was href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/eszter/272452209/">drinking it out
of?

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Whisky you’re the devil

Sunday night at dinner before Yo La Tengo’s show in Seattle we were out with some friends for dinner. It came up that our friend Lisa’s dad swears that the onset of illness should be treated immediately with whisky. Coincidentally, the next day (yesterday) I started feeling a cold come on so I walked down the hall to raid Meredith’s liquor supply. I wound up with a small cup of some old scotch whisky which I’ve since learned is “peaty”. I can now say that “peaty” whisky is almost unimaginably gross - “almost” because I know what Copenhagen tastes like.

So the question is this - why would anyone pay for 15 year scotch when you could spend $4 on a tin of Copenhagen and about as much on a 6-pack of Schlitz (for a chaser) and get the same effect? Do I just not get liquor?

On the bright side - no cold today!

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Unexpected question…

I got a call a couple days ago from my sister that caught me a little off-guard:

Me: Hello?
My sister: Do you know what KY Jelly is?
Me: Ex-cuse me??

The only thing that surprised me even more is what prompted her to ask
me about this. Evidently the substance came up in some
conversation she was having with someone and the person was surprised
she had never heard about it. Confident that her colleague was quite
mistaken and that the lube wasn’t part of pop culture’s collective
consciousness, she told the person she was going to “ask her little
brother” if he’d ever heard about it.

In an effort to keep her prepared for the next conversation where she
might need to refer to her source for what mainstream society is and
isn’t aware of (which for some completely baffling reason seems to be
me), I recommended she href="http://www.google.com/search?q=santorum">google santorum
(little “s”).

Comments (3)

“Retired S1Ws Recalled To Active Duty”

Things like
this
make me think I’m really missing out by not reading The Onion
any more…

With recruitment down sharply, and the prospect of being held back by
the nation of millions appearing once again likely, top-ranking Public
Enemy officials issued an order Monday for all retired Security Of The
First World personnel to return to active duty.

“I got a letter from the P.E. the other day,” said James Bomb, 46,
also a former S1W. “I opened it, and read it, and said they were
suckers. They want me for their army or whatever? Picture me giving a
damn.I said ‘Never.’”

“Then again, I could use the money,” Bomb added.

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Pimp my adsense

Yowza - I hooked up Google Adsense like a week ago and now I’m the #3 hit for Patrick Niemeyer, which is up from about 90 a while ago. That seems a little fishy to me.

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