Thursday, February 8, 2024

Morning sort of "off" work despite being called early morning for an issue.

Left home by 7:15 a.m. to get back to Worthington, hoping to get closer to completing the route from Route 9 in Windsor to Liston's on Route 143 in Worthington.

I made it further than I thought possible today, only 2 or so miles from my last connection point south of Hume Road and Notchview Reservation.

11.4-miles of wonderful running on packed snowmobile trail.

Today's Route
So far in 2024...

Old News Department...  this day in 2020...

Nipmuck - Natchaug Marathon - February 8th, 2020
Ashford, Union,  & Eastford, CT
.
I met up with Andy Hillbilliage early to attempt a Nipmuck / Natchaug Marathon.  The Wuzzam was planning to meet up with us to ramble through the last 9 or 10-miles.

The route is fairly easy:
  • Boston Hollow Road, Ashford, north on Nipmuck Trail to Bigelow Hollow (~8-miles).
  • Return via the same route, opposite direction (~8-miles).
  • South from Boston Hollow along the Nipmuck Trail to the turn onto the Natchaug Trail just prior to Ladies Room Rock, down to Moon Road (~4.5-miles).
  • And then return along the same sections (~4.5-miles).
What isn't easy is the trail really rolls up and down.  A lot.  5760' of ascent and descent for the full gps measured 24.6-miles.  It was also somewhat cold (around 22-degrees at the start), but that didn't stop Hillbilliage from going with shorts and a short-sleeve top for the last 9+ miles (where it might have gotten to 32-degrees or so, outside the Hemlock forest).

We completed what we wanted, pretty much averaging 4.1 mph the entire day.  At 2-miles we were at 4.3 mph, at 8 the same, at 16 the same, at 20.5 we dropped to 4.2 mph, which we almost maintained to the end.  Very steady rolling.

Completed in 6:01:00, which I felt pretty good about.  It was really awesome of Wuzzam to meet up with us to help with the company, that I (we) really appreciated, as Andy and I were getting a bit tired by the last sections.  Great day, outstanding mileage builder!

This was my 58th completed marathon all-time.

Wednesday, February 7, 2024

"Black Lizard / Vintage Crime #05 for 2024...

"The Choirboysby Joseph Wambaugh in 1975.



Tuesday, February 6, 2024

What Played in Ed's Head -- 

Music listened to for the time-period January 1st through January 31st, 2024:

Monday, February 5, 2024

After listening to my sister's snowmobile ride from Windsor to Worthington yesterday, I got my mind back to working with my data from Windsor Snowmobile Trails and starting thinking about making that connection to Worthington.

Snowmobile season really helps as the correct paths are busy, with side-paths unbroken. Should be easy, right?

Well, it wasn't.  I parked at Liston's, which looked fantastic from the outside and I'll wait to get inside at another moment.  From there, I crossed the street (Route 143) and thought I was heading north toward Windsor (I was, temporarily).

I made a nice loop, and returned to the opposite side of the trailhead I began on, at Liston's parking lot,

At this point I had around 5 - 5.5 miles, and while much of the loop was great trail some was through open field.  While this works great in the winter, summer can provide some issues (un-mowed, gate closures, access not granted. etc).

I was thinking about calling it a day at the parking area until I saw the correct trail went off in a different direction.  I had some time, and I felt fresh enough.  I heading west and began climbing soon after.  Once leveled out, I figured I would look for a landmark to turn around at.  I kept going and soon was flying downhill.  I also could see on my gps that I might just have to cross Rt 143 again about a mile west of Liston's Parking lot.  My fate was sealed.

Came out at the 143 crossing, and being right around 7-miles, I took the road back to the car.  Completed my run at 7.9-miles, and still feeling pretty strong.

Sunday, February 4, 2024

Travel to visit my folks, pretty great visit including my sister stopping in for a few hours as well. 

Saturday, February 3, 2024

Mid-Morning run from St Andrews Church in Bloomfield up the ridge above T'Ville.

3.7-miles, with a bit of trail I hadn't explored prior.  Tying this network up nicely.

Short day at work, getting a new PC readied after the run.

Friday, February 2, 2024

Sad News today:

Brother Wayne Kramer, a member of the rock band MC5, passed away today at age 75.  


Kramer also co-created the US arm of Billy Bragg’s Jail Guitar Doors initiative, providing musical instruments for prison inmates.


It was MC5's first record, "Kick Out the Jams" that grabbed me.  

My friend Germo loaned it to me somewhere around 1979, and I don't know if I had ever heard such a ferocious recording.  The twin guitars of Wayne Kramer and Fred "Sonic" Smith were wild.

The Record was recorded live, released in 1969, and it simply rocked.  

MC5
            Rob Tyner – vocals
            Wayne Kramer – guitar, vocals
            Fred "Sonic" Smith – guitar, vocals
            Michael Davis – bass
            Dennis Thompson – drums

Each song on this album has remained a favorite of mine since that first listen.

Side one
1. "Ramblin' Rose"                                                         4:15
2. "Kick Out the Jams"                                                      2:52
3. "Come Together"                                                          4:29
4. "Rocket Reducer No. 62 (Rama Lama Fa Fa Fa)" 5:41

Side two
5. "Borderline"                                                                  2:45
6. "Motor City Is Burning"                                                 6:04
7. "I Want You Right Now"                                          5:31
8. "Starship"                                                                         8:15


Rocket Reducer #62 (Rama Lama Fa Fa Fa

You know I got to keep it up 'cause I'm a natural man
I'm a born hell raiser and I don't give a damn

I'm the man for you, baby
Yes, I am for you, baby
Say I'm the man for you, baby
Yes, I am for you, baby
I'm the man for you

The second album, "Back in the USA", didn't exactly grab me the same way as the debut.


Side A
1. "Tutti Frutti"                                                                 1:30
2. "Tonight"                                                                 2:29
3. "Teenage Lust"                                                         2:36
4. "Let Me Try"                                                                 4:16
5. "Looking at You"                                                         3:03

Side B

1. "High School"                                                         2:42
2. "Call Me Animal"                                                         2:06
3. "The American Ruse"                                                 2:31
4. "Shakin' Street"                                                         2:21
5. "The Human Being Lawnmower"                          2:24
6. "Back in the U.S.A."                                                  2:26

Over the years, I realized the record is a great one, just much different than the first one.

This was a studio album, and it did lack the wildness of the live debut.  I also wasn't incredibly wowed by the two cover songs that bookended the record.  But, what was in-between is a great listen.


By the time the third record, "High Time" was released in 1971, it appeared over, the band was no more.  Meanwhile, I fed on these three records daily from 1979 - 1983.


High Time  is a perfect record.  Songs are fantastically memorable, playing is inspired, things stood out and made an impression on me.  I have always loved the lead-track, Sister Anne, especially the ending and fade out with a Salvation Army type outro.

The record just rocks.  From start to finish, it is perfection.  The vocals, guitars, drums and bass are playing as one unit, bringing each epic tune to its peak.  The songs are all well written, with none that are filler or half-effort to fill a side.  Wonderful album.

Side A
1. "Sister Anne"                                             7:23
2. "Baby Won't Ya"                                                     5:32
3. "Miss X"                                                     5:08
4. "Gotta Keep Movin'"                                             3:24

Side B
1. "Future/Now"                                                     6:21
2. "Poison"                                                     3:24
3. "Over and Over"                                             5:13
4. "Skunk (Sonicly Speaking)"                             5:31


From The Guardian website:

At the time of his death, Kramer was preparing to release a long-awaited third studio album from the band (MC5). Explaining why he was returning, Kramer said: “I think it was time to reignite that spirit of 1968, the spirit of my generation, when we were all young people. I think we’re at a very dangerous time in our history. And I think if we don’t all organise, come together, and step up, we could lose it all. Democracy could go away. The forces that we’re up against are not joking. This is not playtime. This is serious.”

A release was being planned for spring 2024.


Obituary from Discogs:

After the MC5, Kramer spent the latter half of the ‘70s in prison for what he described as his career in “illegitimate capitalism.” Upon release, he embarked on a solo career, teamed up with Johnny Thunders, and created custom woodwork and homes on the side. 


In the ‘90s, Kramer signed with Epitaph and released four solo records. 


In the ‘00s, Kramer, Billy Bragg, and Margaret Saadi Kramer founded Jail Guitar Doors. This non-profit, named after the b-side of the Clash’s 1978 single, donates musical instruments to people in prison and supports other prison-reform initiatives. 


“The only way I can militantly oppose [..] nihilism is through taking ethical action in my life,” Kramer said of his charitable work to Flood Magazine in 2018. “Go do something that moves in the direction of human happiness and away from the direction of human suffering.”



I still listen to those three MC5 records regularly.  I will dive into Wayne Kramer's solo work going forward.  We lost a good one on earth today.  RIP Brother Wayne Kramer.

And, from the home-front.....

End of day run in Wilcox Park, Bloomfield, CT.

Managed to run along a trail segment I haven't ever been on, so that was pretty neat.  I also connected more-or-less as I had hoped, for a total of 4.3-miles, so that was great.

Thursday, February 1, 2024

Late afternoon exploratory run in Bloomfield for 3.6-miles.

The route allows me to connect Penwood / Wilcox to Farmington River Park and finally Northwest Park to the far-east.



And on this day in 1998, the 4th Annual Moby Dick Marathons were held over Greylock. I completed my 19th marathon in 6:19:40, with Johnny Bandit.  It was the second time I wore snowshoes for the 28-mile adventure.  It would be the last time I would snowshoe this distance!

Overlooking Ragged Mountain

Memorial Tower


WWI:  227

Wednesday, January 31, 2024

"Black Lizard / Vintage Crime #04 for 2024...

"Dogs of Riga" by Henning Mankell in 1992, the 2nd in his acclaimed Wallander series.

Swedish:  Hundarna i Riga

The English translation by Laurie Thompson was published in 2001.





Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Meeting today with our Financial Advisor, planning our future. 

Monday, January 29, 2024

Found this incredible documentary on the tube:

Sunday, January 28, 2024

Completed a  48-Lecture Series on "The Great Courses" aka Wondrium tonight.

Very in-depth amount of material, it certainly assisted on our recent trip to Uxmal...

 "Maya to Aztec: Ancient Mesoamerica Revealed"


The lectures were taught by Professor Edwin Barnhart, Director of the Maya Exploration Center.

This was the third series of lectures from Dr. Ed Barnhart at Wondrium.  

I've benefited and learned a great deal from these areas of study. Sometimes the material is enough, other-times they act as jumping-off points for additional study.  Regardless, I spent about twenty-four hours watching the lectures, and I enjoyed all of it.

Maya to Aztec: Ancient Mesoamerica Revealed

LECTURE 1:    The Maya, Aztecs, and Mesoamerica

LECTURE 2:    Olmec Civilization Emerges

LECTURE 3:    Olmec Art as the Mother Culture 

LECTURE 4:    Olmec Contemporaries

LECTURE 5:    Mesoamerican Plants, Cuisine, and Medicine

LECTURE 6:    Early Highland Maya—Izapa to Kaminaljuyu

LECTURE 7:    Preclassic Maya Lowlands—El Mirador

LECTURE 8:    The Popol Vuh—Creation and Hero Twins

LECTURE 9:    The Great City of Teotihuacan

LECTURE 10:    How the Maya Mastered Mathematics

LECTURE 11:    The World’s Most Elaborate Calendar

LECTURE 12:    Tikal—Aspiring Capital of the Maya World

LECTURE 13:    Maya Hieroglyphs—Breaking the Code

LECTURE 14:    Maya Astronomy and Building Orientations

LECTURE 15:    The Dresden Codex

LECTURE 16:    Palenque—Jewel in the West

LECTURE 17:    Sacred Geometry in Art and Architecture

LECTURE 18:    Illuminating Works of Maya Art

LECTURE 19:    Copan—Jungle Dynasty of the East

LECTURE 20:    Calakmul—The Mighty Snake Kingdom

LECTURE 21:    The Mesoamerican Ball Game 

LECTURE 22:    Enigmatic West Mexico and Shaft Tombs

LECTURE 23:    Classic Maya Collapse—Cities Abandoned!

LECTURE 24:    New Cities of the Terminal Classic—Uxmal

LECTURE 25:    Monte Alban and Zapotec Rule over Oaxaca

LECTURE 26:    The Mixtec Rise—Gold and Epic Stories

LECTURE 27:    The Great Pyramid of Cholula and El Tajin

LECTURE 28:    Cacaxtla Murals and Xochicalco

LECTURE 29:    The Toltecs—Role Models or Myth?

LECTURE 30:    Chichen Itza—Maya Capital of the Yucatan

LECTURE 31:    League of Mayapan—Maya New World Order

LECTURE 32:    Mesoamerican Religion

LECTURE 33:    Aztec Origins—Arrival and Rise of the Mexica

LECTURE 34:    The Aztec Capital of Tenochtitlan

LECTURE 35:    Life in the Aztec World

LECTURE 36:    How the Aztecs Expanded Their Empire

LECTURE 37:    Independent Tarascans—Desert Warriors

LECTURE 38:    Paquime—Northernmost Mesoamerican City?

LECTURE 39:    Illuminating Works of Aztec Art

LECTURE 40:    Tulum—Aztecs at the Ancient Maya Port City

LECTURE 41:    First Contact with Europe in Mesoamerica

LECTURE 42:    The Siege of Tenochtitlan

LECTURE 43:    Conquest of the Maya and Landa’s Legacy

LECTURE 44:    Fall of the Last Maya Kingdom—The Itza

LECTURE 45:    The Caste Wars of Yucatan

LECTURE 46:    Echoes of the Past in Mexico

LECTURE 47;    Maya Survival and Revival

LECTURE 48:    Frontiers of Mesoamerican Archaeology

Saturday, January 27, 2024

Another rainy day, many in a row it seems.  Hit the Bloomfield Greenway Multi-Use Trail area to make some hopeful connections to Farmington River Park as well as Wilcox and the Metacomet (New England Trail).  It all worked out pretty well, and the sun actually came out for about 15 minutes.

Completed 4.2-miles with some great information as well, for "trail connections".


Friday, January 26, 2024

6th Month Checkup at the Dentists today.  I received an excellent bit of feedback, so cause for a little Celebration is in order!

Historically I have worn out two dentists to retirement since I've been in Connecticut.  Today was my first appointment with another new one since "Dr. R" retired in early fall.  My newest dentists appears young enough that I may not need to worry about another changing of the guard.

Thursday, January 25, 2024

"Black Lizard / Vintage Crime #03 for 2024...

"Widespread Panic"written by James Ellroy, first published in 2021.