Sunday, December 31, 2023

2023 Wrap-Up


With this year's Greatest Hits already out of the way, let's launch right into the year-end wrap-up.  These may not be the most popular, but they're the ones that I think are the best.  Also for bonus & Honorable Mentions, there are Winter Field Day, FT-70DR, & New Orleans post series at the end.  Enjoy!
Bonus Series
Winter Field Day: At the Corner | Back From | Review | Results
New Orleans: Streetcar Pic | Passage | EVERYTHING  Almost.

And that about does it for this year.  One more parting  pic, then see you again soon in 2024.

Live & Panoramic from Wright's Lake Trail!  Seriously y'all, go hiking.

Saturday, December 30, 2023

Mounting Biking: Stereotypes & Reality


I laughed so hard I choked.  Been there, done that, got the x-rays; I've either done or seen done a lot of what's here (excluding those big flip-jumps, no just no).  Horrifying, but funny in a you-can't-look-away vein.  OK, now back to reality.

This is more my speed.  Think "hiking on wheels, enjoying the woods."  Way more fun.  Pretty much if it's a built-up stunt jump or a skinny-ass bridge over some perfectly good riding dirt, I don't want anything to do with it.

Onward to the new year.

Friday, December 29, 2023

Ghost: Can't Really Recommend It


After long ago reading Tam's take on John Ringo's novel Ghost and the rest of the Paladin of Shadows series, I just stayed away for a decade or so.  Finally though, after finishing two of Ringo and Mike Massa's tactical-badasses-meet-zombies books (thoughts here), I jumped in anyway.  At least the first novel in the PoS series, and just on kindle – so it was really cheap and doesn't take up any space.  BLUF: Not my cup of coffee.  Ringo wrote this and its sequels to get this stuff out of his head so that he could go on to more productive work, then got badgered into publishing it.  Frankly, he shoulda left the money on the table.

If  all that sounds cryptic, here, read the way-too-sunny blurb at 'zon, and read a much-too-long review at this moribund blog.  The book was a popcorn-muncher to be sure, but life's too short for guilty pleasures like this one.  Too damn sickeningly gooey, like a jar of Nutella and a spoon at 3am, but not sweet in any way.  No, just... no.

Monday, December 25, 2023

Christmas Comet!


I mean, what's Christmas without a spectacular comet?  From a 2021 APOD post:


Merry Christmas, all!

Sunday, December 24, 2023

The Shiny Gold-Plated Dozen



If this stuff doesn't make you sit up in wonder, check your wrist for a pulse.

Just getting the sunshield to open up correctly on this thing still makes my jaw drop in amazement.


Friday, December 22, 2023

Raise One for Joe Strummer!


... for he died 21 years ago today, so Death is now drinking-legal age.  Medium-longish article at LouderSound, mostly a post-Clash biography.  Go & read over this long Christmas weekend.  In the meantime, have a listen:

All I've got for the day.

Tuesday, December 19, 2023

Sun Cycle 25 Update & Media Hype Over Recent Flare


In response to a question last weekend from The Darling Daughter about "one of the largest solar flares ever recorded" (to which my reply was, "huh, barely noticed"), here's a recent post discussing the matter over at Silicon Graybeard.   TLDR: Yes, it was a big flare for the last decade, but not even close to record-setting over the last half-century, so don't believe the hype.  Anyway, go read the article, there's a lot of informative interpretation and discussion of what's up and what to expect in the next few years.  Here's a gratuitous graphic swiped from the above-linked post, which in turn was copy-pasted from NOAA's site.

Things are already pretty good, and the next couple of years are going to be even more radio-fun.

I used to dabble in radio condition fore/now-casting, but these days I just look at the band summaries here.  Much less trouble, and generally more accurate than what I was coming up with.

Sunday, December 17, 2023

You'd Better Watch Out


Trying to have grown-up talk at those holiday parties, I mean.  Especially when the holiday cheer is flowing.  Article at NPR about how to avoid family fights at the Christmas table, well worth your 5 minutes' read.

Saturday, December 16, 2023

Top Five Posts for 2023


I keep wanting to type "2024" already.  Usually I have the opposite problem after the first of each year.  Anyway, spurred on by K0NR's Top Five Posts for 2023 published yesterday, and figuring that the 12-month stats aren't going to change much in this last 1/24th of the year, here we go:
  1. Yaesu FT-70DR Quick Start Programming (2020).  It's a simple list of steps.  Print a few out, put one in your station manual, one in your backpack.  You are going backpacking with your '70, right?  ps: You can program it with chirp too, but it's kinda weird.
  2. Programming a Yaesu FT-60 Radio using Chirp (2017).  An oldy moldy goldy.
  3. Yaesu FTM-7250D Quick Start Programming (2019).  An excellent if no longer produced radio.  I picked up one for the vehicles on the used market this year, and only paid 25% over what I'd paid for the first one new.  Yaesu, take note.  People love these things.
  4. Shortwave Antenna: Vertical or Horizontal? (2020).  Practical advice on how to use a relatively short random wire receive antenna for... practically everybody.
  5. Osprey Synchro 5 Hydration Pack review (2019).  No longer made either, sadly.  Despite its many quirks, that suspended mesh back was a real innovation.  A quick look over at the Osprey packs site shows that they've gone to the same mesh-over-foam-grid as many of their daypacks, which is still pretty darned good and probably enough for anything short of summer dirt biking in the Deep South.  Anyway, I'm glad that this list wasn't all radio stuff and that the one item was bike-related.
There'll still be best-of end-of-year month-by-month wrap-up (with extra-hyphens) toward the end of the month.  These are just the posts getting all the hits in 2023.  Back to K0NR's list, the the first item is Choose Your 2m Frequency Wisely.  I very much agree.  In 2024 we should all beware of choosing... poorly.

Thursday, December 14, 2023

50 Years Ago Today


We left the Moon for the last time, at least in the 20th Century.  A day to mark.



Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Mountain Biking 101. Er, make that even a little lower.


Here's a great video on why now is the time to get started in mountain biking, how to find a good deal on a used one, what to look for, what's currently so weird (but good for your wallet!) about the MTB market, how to bargain and still be a nice person, etc.  He even added "buy a helmet."  Yes, buy a helmet.  Gloves too, with full fingers for off-road, he didn't mention those.  The only other thing I can think of to add is to also look on Craigslist.  11 minutes, well worth your time.


Monday, December 11, 2023

David Drake, RIP



Articles at SFE, Wikipedia, and yet another essay at Tor.

I'm a big fan of his Hammer's Slammers series, plus a few other bits and pieces.  Someday I'll get to some of his other universe series.  Hate to see the man go.

Thursday, December 7, 2023

High Bluff Trail & Yaesu FT-70d


In the gap two weeks between the opening few days taste of deer season and the For Reals Months Long Deer Season, I grabbed a quick hike today on the High Bluff Trail between Eastpoint & Carrabelle.  It was kind of impromptu: load the 22L pack with the day's supplies & go.  Beautiful weather, topping out around 60F under bright blue skies.  The trail was a little wet, maybe 3" at most, so I just bulled through and have my boots in front of a fan drying now.  The foliage was... well, it's what we've got here in NW FL.  Beautiful fall colors, no not really, but at least the turkey oaks can show a change of season.

I took along the FT-70 HT.  I'm getting used to it, and really starting to like it.  I kept it scanning the 2m & 70cm calling channels, the sports talk channel (the real one), and the local 70cm SARNET repeater.  Here's a short list of observations re the '70:
  • The stock rubber duck antenna is convenient.  With the '70 on the pack strap (belt clip in a too-small cell phone pocket), it rides at the right height and the stock antenna doesn't poke my face or bang against my hat brim.  Perfect.  If only it performed better; more on this below.
  • It was set up to scan the first three of the channels, but I wanted SARNET in there as well.  It's simple enough that I figured out without a manual.  Button's right there on the bottom row.
  • Receive from the repeater – being 20 miles away – was patchy in the dips, but very steady on the hilltops.
  • Transmit was somewhere between "no way" and "scratchy but useable" depending upon elevation.  This is no real surprise, as the repeater puts out about 10 dB more power.
  • Solutions: (A) use the 16" long Comet whip antenna, gain maybe 6 dB, and live with it banging on hat brim; (B) previous, plus an 18" tiger tail ground wire, and gain maybe another 3 dB; (C) rock on with the rubber duck antenna for listening, then stop & hang the N9TAX antenna in a tree if I need to transmit.  Personally, I like Option C.  Also, when hiking Wright's Lake trail the duck'll do fine, being only 2 miles from the repeater.  Convenience for the win.
  • A couple of feet of paracord (pictured) makes a first-class leash in case the clip fails.
  • In real-world practice on the trail, I had to turn the speaker volume down and the mic gain up.
  • The battery was already low, so I brought along a spare.  Didn't need it, but it was good to have along.  Li batts are light, too.  Remember, when not in use, pop a 70's battery out to keep it from running down.  Works great, these will hold a nearly full charge for... I haven't found out yet.  At least six months.
  • The FT-70d has all but replaced the FT-60 as my go-to trail radio.  Still keeping the '60 though, because I'm thinking about branching off into satcoms.
  • More on the FT-70d: manual programming, chirp programming, splits, battery management.
  • As always: Do and Learn.
All for today.  Got to go finish unpacking, cleaning, & stowing gear.

You Know What Today Is



More from the air side of things at This Day in Aviation.

Monday, December 4, 2023

In Which Many of the Humans are Even Worse Than the Zombies


I'm referring of course to the Mike Massa & John Ringo Black Tide Rising series follow-on novels, The Valley of Shadows and River of Night.  Holy smokes, are these books ever grim.

OK, here goes:  Start with a weaponized rabies virus.  Then, taking off with one of the side-characters from the first book, Under a Graveyard Sky, this tells the story of what went on at top levels in NYC as the zombies took over.  A live attenuated virus vaccine is developed by a clandestine in-house lab at "Bank of the Americas."  (Hm, kind of a thin literary disguise there, but I suppose it's enough to fend off lawsuits.)  Of course a ready source of viruses to attenuate is needed, and there are all these damn zombies full of it just wandering around attacking people, so why not use what's at hand?  Ethical questions aside, of course.   However, the bank security team doesn't have the manpower needed to collect enough zombie bodies, but hey, the local mafia's pretty good about delivering bodies when times are good, so they cut a deal.  Then the police and NYC emergency management want in on the vaccines, so now everybody's in cahoots.  It's shaping up to be the start of a beautiful (if shady) relationship, but you just know that somebody's got to get greedy and sour the arrangement.

In the second book, the NYC survivors (ultimate badasses all, plus a mafia moll along for the road trip) are on the run to a series of safe houses and ultimately to a BotA refuge / alternate financial headquarters site, where they hope to help reboot civilization.  Unfortunately, some of the double-crossers from NYC have gotten there first.  Along the way it devolves into a Mad Max-style race against a warlord and his scavenger gang en route to the BotA refuge and a nearby TVA dam site.  Meanwhile back at the dam site, just imagine how much of an anti-zombie and anti-raider defense a team of demented engineers can muster with the electrical output from a giant hydropower dam.  Bad guys behind, some really bad people ahead, and something called the "Big Bad" – what's bunch of zombie-killers gonna do?  Yep.

Bad, bad people.  Some really good, good people in the story too.  As with the original four books, these read like eating tasty spiced potato chips, but they leave an even worse aftertaste.  It's all mostly leavened by the grim humor – the "Russian lesson" in the last chapter is, um, to die for.  Then there's an epilogue recap in a few pages from a new-minted E-4 character's notebook that's pretty funny.  Little touches like those finish out the whole thing on a good note.  Be warned though, these two books make the original four book series seem upbeat in comparison.

So, read, or don't read?  I dunno.  If you can laugh at awful situations and even worse people, maybe.  The Valley of Shadows has enjoyable elements of a detective/police/crime drama, watching them circle around and learn to work with each other against the zombie threat.  River of Night is more down and dirty, think Road Warrior kind of stuff.  Again and as with the original series, it reads like eating spicy potato chips: hard to put down and possibly sickening.  Your call.

ps: Don't forget the four follow-on anthologies.  Those are definitely less grim, possibly more fun.