Adorable Cat Journalists, Silly Olympics Links and a Tornado Map

A few totally frivolous links, plus a few more thought-provoking ones for you folks today:

These 40 things will make you feel old, apparently. Many kids today have never seen a floppy disk, nor have they heard the sound of the wild modem, howling in the night for the blood of your MIDI sound files. Or whatever it is modems howl for; I never did figure that one out.

Mystery Flowers and Tenacious B.G.

Mystery Flowers!

Mystery Flowers!

Someone sent me flowers last week!

I’d love to pretend it was a secret admirer, but I’m not the sort of person who gets flowers from secret admirers.

I do get flowers from my parents, and sometimes I get flowers from interviewees.

So maybe it was the lovely ladies of the Jamestown Area Grief Support Team. I interviewed them on Wednesday, and as always, they were a hoot and a half. Or maybe it was my parents, who would know that I collect teacups. (Note the lovely teacup flowerpot, which is not only supercute but allows drainage as well.)

Thank you, flower-givers! They were much appreciated and they made my whole day a shiny day.

In other news, as you can see, B.G. survived his transition into the red pot, and his children have stayed at home in the blue B.G. pot. They look a lot happier now that they’re not all stuffed together in one tiny little space, don’t you think?

I hope I don’t kill them.

Drag Racing in Jamestown

View at the Start of a Drag Race

View at the Start of a Drag Race. July 29, 2012, in Jamestown, North Dakota.

This is what it looks like to be part of a drag race.

Today, I got to experience a little bit of the adrenaline rush and speed of a real drag race when Bob Baumann of Jamestown took me for a ride-along in his 1933 Ford Victoria. This, by the way, is the most beautiful car ever, and I would have been thrilled to ride in it under any circumstances whatsoever, even just for a zip around the block.

Bob Baumann and 1933 Ford Victoria

Bob Baumann and 1933 Ford Victoria

As you can see, the interior is pretty small. There was a sort of double-seat-belt harness thingy in there for safety, and I had to wear a helmet as well. It felt pretty tight, but not uncomfortably so, considering I have a ginormous head. Seriously. I’m sort of surprised it hasn’t got satellites.

1933 Ford Victoria Interior

1933 Ford Victoria Interior

As you can see from the picture, it’s got crash bar thingies and so forth in there too, so it actually felt pretty safe. Or maybe I just have no sense of self-preservation. Could be that.

What was it like? Well, it was awesome. The car rumbled and roared like a lion chasing down a gazelle, and although we didn’t get up to positively ludicrous speeds, it was fast enough to feel quite a bit like being on a rollercoaster. I think I went “Eeee!” but not too loud, because I didn’t want Mr. Baumann to think I was insane or possibly a chipmunk.

And one more thing: drag racers may well be the nicest people ever. Everyone I talked to at the Jamestown Regional Airport today was super, super nice and helpful above and beyond the call of duty. Leon Westerhausen, president of the Jamestown Drag Racing Association, took time to answer all my newbie-questions about drag racing, even though he was pretty busy. Daine Flieth, a volunteer at the event, drove me from place to place in a golf cart for interviews, which sped up the process considerably.

And other people helped arrange my ride in the car, and of course, Mr. Baumann let me set foot in his lovely car, let alone took me for a race in it.

I’m totally nerding out over it, actually! Many thanks to the folks who helped me out with the article, from the interviewees, JDRA and drivers to the editor and writer who read the thing after it was done.

And now, since all of you already know I’m a. insane and b. possibly a chipmunk:

EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Crowd, Drag Races, Jamestown Regional Airport, July 29, 2012

Things I Learned from the Family Reunion

I learned all kinds of crazy things about my family from my family reunion. Somebody made a disc of pictures from my great-grandmother, and that was pretty instructive too.

1. My ancestors on my mother’s side came from Norway, where they probably farmed rocks. Or maybe they herded rocks. Every single picture taken in Norway features rocks. Sometimes there are also people, but they are always outnumbered by rocks. (By the way, Norway is famous for having many beautiful fjords, a term which means “big rocks.”)

2. My mother is a clone. Seriously! As anyone can see from the family pictures, she looks exactly like her aunt Christine, a magnificent lady who taught me how to crochet. I wasn’t very good at it, though, and so all I ever managed was a string of single loops. My mom, on the other hand, may have been the one to teach me how to tie my shoes. Coincidence? I think not.

3. Three of my grandfather’s sisters died young.

Esther Marie

Esther Marie

All three of the girls who died were beautiful, of course, but Esther Marie (left), was most often shown in pictures with a big mischievous grin, mouth wide open as if she were just about to say something hilarious. I really wish I’d gotten to hear what she was going to say.

4. The boys (and some of the girls) in my family generally spend part of their lives as stringbeans. Seriously, you could thread a needle with these kids between the time they can walk and the time they go to college, and sometimes even after that.

5. I don’t look much like anybody from that side of the family. I have never been a stringbean. My brother, however, shares a nose with several people and freckles with a lot of other people, and seems to be spending a prolonged period in the stringbean stage. We’re a very thrifty family–we recycle faces over the generations. Nothing goes to waste! (Waist, maybe, but not waste.)

6. A lot of us don’t hear too well anymore. Quite a few of my conversations consisted of “What?” “What?!” “Pardon?” “Hmm?” “What?” Do they have group rates for hearing aids? What if you buy them 30 or 40 at a time?

7. Some old people are young, and some young people are old.

Temperatures at the reunion climbed way up into the mid-90s and it was hotter than heck out there, or maybe even the other place that starts with H. I pretty much sat still and tried to think cold thoughts, wilting as my brain melted into mush. My dad gave up, too, and retreated into the hotel and its air-conditioning.

Meanwhile, my great-aunt Clara, who has reached the exalted age of 97, was tromping around and talking to everyone as if there were no such thing as heat advisories.

I don’t wish that I will have that much energy when I am 97. I wish I had that much energy now.

Review: The Idler Wheel Is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw…

Fiona Apple may produce albums with ridiculously long titles, but I wish she would also make longer albums.

Don’t get me wrong. Her latest effort, which came out earlier this year, is wonderful. I just wish there were more than 10 songs.

“The Idler Wheel Is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords Will Serve You More Than Ropes Will Ever Do” is the title of the album. Yes, all of that.

That’s actually pretty short for Apple, considering her second album was entitled “When the Pawn Hits the Conflicts He Thinks Like a King What He Knows Throws the Blows When He Goes to the Fight and He’ll Win the Whole Thing ‘Fore He Enters the Ring There’s No Body to Batter When Your Mind Is Your Might So When You Go Solo, You Hold Your Own Hand and Remember That Depth Is the Greatest of Heights and If You Know Where You Stand, Then You Know Where to Land and If You Fall It Won’t Matter, Cuz You’ll Know That You’re Right.”

I pasted that in from Wikipedia. Most people shorthand the title as “When the Pawn,” because by the time you finish saying the whole title you’ve forgotten what you were going to say anyway.

But I digress. “Idler Wheel” is a great album, with plenty of that raw-sounding vocal work Apple has become famous for.

What I love about it is, of course, the percussion. There’s plenty of fantastic marimba work, a rumbly timpani and then there’s the celeste, which most people wouldn’t even recognize by name. Apple plays the piano and a lot of the percussion herself.

My liner notes for “Idler Wheel” came in a notebook-looking thing that includes the whimsical credit “Thighs,” for the song “Daredevil,” which I’m pretty sure means they’re using their thighs as percussion. It’s pretty awesome, and you have to admit it adds a certain meaty texture to the thing.

The standout tune, though, is “Hot Knife,” an incredibly simple song featuring just two verses and a bridge in a sort of round. It’s a little like Beck’s “Nicotine and Gravy,” with the two separate, very simple verses, each catchy in its own right, layering on top of each other over and over and cascading into a single complex song. It’s wonderful.

Happy Birthday, White Cloud!

I’ve said it before, but Jamestown is the only city I know where you go to a birthday party and eat the relatives of the honoree.

The party, of course, was in honor of White Cloud, Jamestown’s very famous white buffalo, and yes, buffalo burgers were served. Nothin’ wrong with that!

I opted for a fry bread taco and a cinnamon-drenched elephant ear instead, when I went to the Frontier Village/Buffalo Museum on Saturday to scope out the celebration. It was pretty hopping down there, with lots of people from Jamestown as well as the surrounding area and points further abroad, and Buffalo Museum staff were serving up delicious birthday cake as part of the festival. Very tasty stuff!

I didn’t get a look at White Cloud, but far off in the distance I did catch a glimpse of some of the other buffalo, just hanging out. Guessing the sun was a little too bright and shiny for the albino buffalo, who have sensitive eyes and generally stick to the shade on days like Saturday. Hopefully White Cloud had a nice birthday celebration wandering around out there, just bein’ a buffalo.

On the way out I bought some N.D.-made honey and rhubarb jam.

I also caught the fireworks display Saturday night. They started a bit late–scheduled for 10:30 but they started closer to 11 p.m. — but they really were pretty spectacular.

I noticed there were a couple of “shaped” fireworks–a heart, and a flower–which I don’t recall ever having seen before. Cute stuff! There were also some noise-making fireworks, which I hadn’t heard before, possibly because I’m not usually close enough.

Personally, I like the big golden bursts that fall like the branches of a weeping willow.