Changes A-Coming
September 30, 2009
In some ways, I’m looking forward to Autumn. I love the color changes and the crispness of the cooler air, and even the smell of the coming rains.
I just don’t know if I’m ready for the huge change that is right now occurring, though. I’m talking about the fact that the high today (Tuesday) was about 85 degrees, yet the high tomorrow (Wednesday) is supposed to be 52 degrees.
It’s just too quick. I would probably be able to handle it a little better if we weren’t experiencing 30 – 40 mile per hour wind gusts right now. The wind makes it impossible for me to keep the windows open tonight, so I am unable to enjoy the comfort and splendor that come from curling up beneath a down comforter, while all around you is chilled by the natural cool of an Autumn night.
Perhaps if tomorrow night isn’t as cold as they say it’s going to be (39 degrees), I can do it then.
Memory – Twenty Six Plus One
August 24, 2009
It was the summer of 1992 (or was it 1991?), and I, David, Mark, Visiting David, and Kimball were all up to no good. Well, I guess it wasn’t so much “no good,” as it was having fun with no real regard for any possible cares in the world. We were in San Francisco, though it was not for any particular reason other than to just be there. We were listening to “I LIke Chinese” by Monty Python while driving through Chinatown, when we came across the Holiday Inn Hotel. I don’t know who came up with the idea, but one of us was a genius. Or something.
We decided to take the elevator to the roof of the hotel, where crazy people could go swimming, if they so desired. I say “crazy people” because I can’t imagine that there are many days during the year when the weather in San Francisco would be conducive to swimming in a pool twenty six floors up. While up there, I remember coming out of the door onto the roof, then turning to the left, where I saw a waist-high chain link fence. I sauntered (you know, saunter – “a walk with a leisurely gait; a stroll” – duh) over to the fence and immediately became fearful of heights. Never before had I never had such a phobia, but the view of the ground from twenty six floors up, with nothing to keep me from falling that distance apart from a waist-high chain link fence. My hands immediately went into “death grip” mode as they latched onto the fence, releasing only so I could inch away from the edge.
Anyways, now we get on to the “genius” plan that somebody (I’m sure it wasn’t me – I think) came up with. I’m sure it went something like this: “Hey, why not have a race down all twenty six flights of stairs?” What could go wrong, right? For some reason, we all thought this was a good idea, so we lined up and started the race. One member of our entourage, David (not to be confused with Visiting David), was pretty ingenious and came up with the idea of leaving the stairway somewhere around the twentieth floor, hopping in the elevator, then riding it down to the second or third floor before rejoining the race.
Did you know that when you run down twenty six flights of stairs, your legs become accustomed to going down many flights of stairs, and become incapable of going up even one flight of them? Yeah, that’s what happened. We noticed because, when we got to the bottom, we realized that we were in the basement, and the door was locked. We had to walk up one flight to the first floor just so we could get out.
I’m sure that cheating helped David (once again, not Visiting David) to not suffer to the same degree as the rest of us, but he still had to deal with getting all the way back to the car, which was a few blocks away. I remember that walking on even the slightest incline was tedious, and I was surprised at how difficult it had become, simply because I had participated in this little contest.
It had been years since I’d thought of this event, but tonight I was chatting with Visiting David via Facebook, and it got me thinking about some fun experiences from Yesteryear (or Yesterdecade). Thanks, Visiting David.
NOTE: I’m sure that there are editing and flow issues with this post. That’s what happens when you write at midnight.
More Gluttony
August 22, 2009
I finished the countertop, sink, and faucet replacement today. Here is a breakdown of what I did and how much I spent for the materials.
2 x 4 foot sheet of plywood for countertop substrate: $13
8 square feet of HardiBacker to go on the plywood substrate: $0.00 (it was left over sections from the bathroom flooring I replaced last week, so there was no additional cost)
Thinset: $0.00 (more leftovers from the flooring job)
4 x 4 inch porcelain tiles for countertop: 68 @ $0.28 each – about $20.00
3 x 12 inch tiles for the backsplash: 7 @ 3.27 each – about $23.00
2 x 6 V cap tiles for edges of countertop: 13 @ 4.50 – about $68.00
Kohler sink: $10.00 (it was on the clearance shelf ten months ago when I bought it, knowing I’d need it eventually)
moen faucet: $74.00
All told, I’m into it about $230, which isn’t bad when you consider how much nicer it really is!
Glutton for Punishment
August 21, 2009
As the title of this post indicates, I’m a glutton for punishment. Not even one day had passed since the completion of the work I was doing in one our bathrooms upstairs, when I decided that I should probably redo the whole countertop, backsplash, sink, and faucet. Well, I started last night.
I have included some “in progress” photos, though uploading and formatting with an iPhone doesn’t really work so well. Please forgive the ugliness of this post.
More (S)tiling
August 17, 2009
It’s time for a follow-up on my last post about tiling the bathroom floor. I did the groutwork on Sunday, and it looks fantastic. A little caulking and everything is done!
(S)tile Points
August 16, 2009
My body hurts. From the tips of my fingers, through my hands, up my arms to my shoulders, and all throughout my back, the ache alternates between pointed and dull. After eleven hours of working on my kids’ bathroom Saturday, I feel like my body really has given up.
It started on a whim. I had been at Lowe’s picking out some grout for the tile that I’ve been laying in the basement laundry room when, believe it or not, I found some more tile. Not only did I find more tile, but I found tile that I liked that I could actually afford!
Well, I bought 30 pieces of 13×13″ “Desert Beige” and 45 square feet of HardiBacker (I guess it’s now HardieBacker), along with a bunch of mortar, and was off the redo the bathroom.
First I had to rip up the old nasty vinyl flooring, which also required the removal of the toilet. I hate working with toilets, by the way. Gross.
So, I got all of flooring ripped up and got the Hardi(e)Backer, and then I was time to start the tile. Wifey, at this point, told me that she would be impressed if I got most of the tile laid before she got home at 1:00 in the morning, which sounded like some sort of challenge to me.
I laid most all of the tile out to see how everything would line up and it all looked good, so it was time to start.
Nine hours later, the tile was all installed, the baseboard was reinstalled, and the toilet was back in place. I even got some of the caulking done. The only things left to do are the grout and the caulking around the toilet (after the grout, of course).
My whole body aches.
Blowing up a Laptop
July 17, 2009
We had an old dead HP laptop and decided that it needed to go out in a blaze of glory. I’d already shot three holes through the display and it just didn’t seem like it had sustained enough damage, so we all agreed that a 1/8 lb charge of tannerite would be most sufficient. We opened the laptop and taped a little prescription bottle filled with the explosive to the trackpad area of the laptop. We then closed the laptop as best we could, then set it top of an old burned and rusted out computer case which we had found at the “shooting range.” From a distance of about 60 yards, I put some rounds through the laptop before finally finding my mark. Oh, and 60 yards wasn’t enough distance, as one of the participants was struck by shrapnel, though it didn’t do any damage to him.
The video doesn’t show up in the facebook notes but you can view it through my blog at http://blog.ausborne.net.
Blowing up a Printer
July 17, 2009
First we tried a 1/8 lb charge of tannerite, but it only inflicted a small amount of damage to the printer. We next decided to use a 1/2 lb charge and tucked it in behind the toner cartridge, which had come loose in the first blast. When it came time to shoot at it, I couldn’t remember exactly where it was behind the toner cartridge, so I just had to keep guessing until I found it. You can’t help but know when you find it.
Spidey Senses
May 28, 2009
It was 1995 and I had been home from my mission for about three months. Summer had just begun and it was beginning to get hot in the South Bay. As I was in the mood for a drive in my shiny black Acura Integra, I decided to go someplace I’d never been before. Today I was going to drive Mt. Hamilton Road up toward Lick Observatory in the east foothills of San Jose.
The Diablo Range of mountains are pretty dry and are relatively (compared with the Santa Cruz mountains a little to the west) sparsely vegetated, resulting in a lot of dusty landscape.
As I was driving up Mt. Hamilton Road on this fine warm day, I came around an uphill curve to the left and was surprised to see all sorts of life moving across the road. I couldn’t believe my eyes as I came upon 20 to 30 different tarantulas running across the road, from right to left, as if it were some mass migration.
I drove through the herd and started thinking, “Man, I wonder if I can catch one of those suckers!”
I flipped a U-turn and headed back down the hill a little ways, driving in a manner that I hoped would not frighten the buggers. After I had passed by where the swarm was, I flipped another U-turn and pulled over to the side of the road.
Getting out of my car, I looked and spotted about five more of the beasts in the road. I grabbed a stick and proceeded in my quest to capture a tarantula.
The closest spider to me knew I was there. He stopped and performed the fastest 180 degree turn I’ve ever seen. He was looking right at me as I extended my stick toward him in a most non-threatening manner, I assure you. As I inched toward him with stick outstretched, he raised himself up and lifted his front two legs in an effort to frighten me a way. Yeah, I was frightened, though my curiosity outweighed my fear.
I backed up and thought to myself, “Self, if we’re going to catch this thing, we’re going to need some sort of container in which to put it.” Hmm, to the trunk of the car!
I popped the trunk and found virtually nothing in which I could keep the animal. In fact, the trunk was almost completely empty, only containing a set of scriptures in a black case.
“I wonder,” I wondered. Would it be possible to catch this thing in my scripture case? With a flash, I emptied the case of its contents and had the thing opened up and ready to do battle. Instantly, I had resumed the oustretching of the stick and the spider had resumed the whole “lifing up its front legs” thing. I approached it with the aforementioned stick in one hand and the open scripture case in the other, hoping that it wouldn’t bite too hard when my attempts at controlling it failed.
In one quick motion, I had it pinned to the ground (relatively gently) beneath the scripture case and was hastily closing the case around it.
I had done it.
For the longest time, I had forgotten about this story. As I started piecing together the remembrances of it, I realized that I’d never seen the spider again after that. I never did release it. I seem to recall overnighting it via FedEx to a friend of mine, Adam Jones, who was still a missionary back in Texas. I wonder if he ever received it.
Hmm.
School Update
April 13, 2009
You know, I’ve got an A in each of the two classes I’m taking right now. I don’t think I got two A’s the whole time I was in high school. It’s amazing how much different school is when you’re paying for it yourself, and when you are doing it for a specific reason. Having a goal is exceptionally helpful. It helps me to see past all of the work and stress that I’m dealing with in school right now. I am in the process of writing anywhere from 20 to 25 pages in papers (at a minimum) between now and the May 4th, and it’s a lot of work. It’s also stressful knowing that I have people depending on me to get our group paper edited, a conclusion written, and the bibliography done. There are five other people in my class that are depending on me.
Hey, it’s still better than some of the stuff I have to deal with at work, though, so I’ll take it.







