Question from Daughter

“Dad, why do dogs and cats get black eye boogers and we get tan ones?”

This is what Daughter asked me this morning as I wiped the black eye boogers out of the eyes of one of the cats.

So of course, I Googled it. Apparently dog and cat tears contain a pigment called porphyrin, which makes them dark.

$afety, of cour$e

Lo$ Angele$ City Controller relea$e$ an audit $aying red light camera$ don’t improve $afety.

You don’t $ay?

$o why do they have the$e camera$ in the fir$t place?

Muscovy Duck Ban

Frequent readers know how muscovy ducks frequent our house. They are not our ducks, but they are a regular part of the neighborhood and we do care for them. Wife and I have discussed when moving out to the country to obtain some muscovy’s and raise them. They’re pretty neat animals, and supposedly their eggs and meat are very tasty. No no… I can’t try any right now. City limits (ordinances) has issues with that, but also well…. the kids have named them and we just can’t butcher a named duck. 😉

But I now read about a Fish & Wildlife regulation, CFR 21.54. Here’s the official FWS document. This effectively puts a kibosh on our desire to raise and farm muscovy ducks.

The interesting thing? While it was put out for public comment, no one knew about it because there was no central group of “muscovy advocacy” for FWS to contact to get the word out. So the regulation is now in effect, but because of the recent outcry they have temporarily suspended enforcement and are taking further comment.

It seems the intent of the rule is to manage feral populations. I have no problem with feral population control — I have no problem with population control in general because you have to keep things in check. However, the wording of the rule basically kills any ability to have muscovy’s as pets, to put them in poultry shows (bye bye 4-H), to privately raise them (e.g. you’re not a commercial farmer, you just want them on your own property for meat and eggs), and so on. This doesn’t help manage feral populations, but does restrict the freedoms of the citizenry.

I know you may not care about muscovy ducks as much as I do, but if you have a few moments give this page a read. It briefly explains the problem and provides people to contact to explain the problem in hopes of getting the rule properly revised to meet the goals of all involved parties.

Thanx.

Updated 9/20/2010: This morning I received a reply email from George T. Allen (that was prompt!):

John:

Thank you for your email.  The proposed regulations changes have already been approved, and I expect that they’ll publish before too long.  You’re welcome to comment on the proposed rule.  I will try to inform you and others who have contacted me about muscovy ducks when the proposed rule is open for comment.

Regards,

George

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

George T.  Allen, Ph.D., C.W.B.
Chief, Branch of Permits and Regulations
Division of Migratory Bird Management
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
4401 North Fairfax Drive, Mail Stop 4107
Arlington, Virginia  22203-1610
703-358-1825     fax 703-358-2272
George_T_Allen@fws.gov

Looking forward to it!

AA SureFire

Check it out!

SureFire just released their first flashlight that runs on AA batteries, and it’s the E2L Outdoorsman!

I carry a SureFire E2L Outdoorsman with me all the time everywhere. It’s amazingly handy and once you start carrying a flashlight, you’ll be amazed at how much you end up using it. While the use of the 123A lithium batteries has never really been a problem for me, being able to standardize on the ubiquitous AA is very appealing (it’s one reason I like the Aimpoint Comp M4). You could use lithium AA’s to get some extra life, but in a pinch you can stick whatever in there.

Comparing the E2L AA specs vs. the E2L specs, they’re the same flashlight save for the power source. Consequently, the AA version is a smidge heavier and longer (and I assume the diameter is a little smaller). I am surprised to see that the max lumens is higher than the 123 version. And of course, runtimes vary.

Anyone want to buy me one so I can test it out the AA version against the 123 version? 🙂

A bunch of random pictures

I’ve been wanting to post a bunch of pictures for a while now. So hey…. let’s just put them all up in a single big post.

All pictures can be clicked upon to see larger versions.

Ducks

A few shots of the various neighborhood ducks. The pictures of the ducklings are actually a few weeks old; the ducklings are all much bigger now, but still just have the downy yellow feathers.

Here’s the one mallard hen and her ducklings:

The mallard ducklings are presently going through an awkward phase, where their legs are much longer compared to the rest of their bodies. It’s rather amusing.

One of the muscovy duck hens and her badelynge:

Another muscovy and her group.

That particular one… when the USDA people came to thin the flock, they took 7 of her ducklings (she had 12, lost one somehow, and now only 4 remain). My understanding is they weren’t supposed to take ducklings….

Now with the muscovy population so drastically reduced, we’ve had more not-muscovy ducks coming around. Just yesterday a new couple showed up:

Unfortunately, that’s the best picture I could get of them. They’re very skittish and constantly moving around. We’re guessing by their behavior that the brown/white one is male and the black/white one is female, tho the black/white one is slightly larger. What gets me is I’ve never seen a duck like the black/white one. The picture does not do her justice. The feathers are gorgeous. Lots of subtle coloring. Likely some sort of mallard hybrid. I do wonder exactly what it is, but despite the beautiful plumage I know it’s not a Norwegian Blue.

Texas DPS Firearms Range

For the range qualification portion of the CHL Instructor course, they held it at the Texas Department of Public Safety’s Firearms Range in Florence, Texas. It was a pretty nice facility. Here’s some pictures of the pistol range that we used.

Here’s a shot of the left part of the range:

And here’s the right:

There are 60 firing positions, 6 groups of 10.  The first 10 yards or so have that rubbery surface, so it’s solid but there’s some cushion; very nice if you have to be there training all day. Then you can see it’s grass with concrete sidewalks that space out other ranges (e.g. 15 yards, 25 yards). All 60 positions have target frames that can be flipped sideways so you can’t see them, and exposed for set amounts of time. The chief range officer had a remote control and a headset with microphone for giving the range commands; the speakers were also remote speakers placed on the ground every so often behind us. That setup worked quite well.

Here’s a shot of the right side, from back at the parking lot:

There’s a small building to the left, the edge of which you can see. That’s the bathrooms, water fountains, etc..

There were other ranges too, for rifle. A skeet range was also there. One thing we got a kick out of? We saw a deer feeder, and when we first arrived in the morning numerous does came out to feed. I did see some BBQ pits up in the pavilion. I guess they have some fun during the winter. *grin*

Dawson Precision

After the CHL shooting test, I visited Dawson Precision.

Now if you really want to see some pictures of their facility, check out their Facebook page.

But one thing I thought was really cool? Their range/testing room.

You see, it’s a wonderful indoor room. It has a fully capable work bench:

This way when they test out a gun, if it needs a tweak they can tweak it right there. Very nice, well thought out. The shelves on the left hold a host of different ammunition, which is all reloaded on a bunch of Dillon Precision 1050’s that are in the room off to the right. Again, all for testing the guns.

See that chair in the bottom-left corner?

That chair lets you sit at this bench:

It’s a bench. There’s a good rest on it. That big contraption on the wall? It’s a brass catcher. There’s a bucket at the bottom of it. Simple enough, you make sure a fresh empty bucket is placed at the bottom before you test. You test, then once completed you empty the bucket. Makes recycling and sorting the cases really easy. It’s really well put together.

Now, you see that window to the left? Well, if you look closely you’ll see there’s a door and hinges along the top edge. Normally it’s closed. But with the press of a button it raises up and opens out to this:

And from your air-conditioned benchrest, you can shoot all that steel. All your brass is caught. If the gun needs work, you just visit the workbench right behind you. If the steel needs to be reset (some are LaRue resetting targets), then there’s a cord/handle just above you that makes it easy to do right from the comfort of the room.

Folks…. this is awesome. 🙂

Now remember I mentioned that the front sight they installed was different from the one I already had?

Take a look:

On the left is the sight that was installed by Springer Precision. I’m not 100% sure which one it is. On the Springer Precision website work order it just says “Dawson Precision Fixed Sight SET (.100 fiber optic front) target rear”.

On the right is the one that Dawson directly sold me and installed. It is the .205 tall x .100 wide Match (used with DP Fixed Rear), item number 021-019.

I pulled out the calipers and measured. Same width, same height, just different bases. I’ll have to ask about that. I ought to be able to shoot the gun with the new sights soon.

Reason #582919

As if I needed another reason to not want to fly any more, Delta Airlines puts kids on the wrong flights.

Kieren and the unnamed Cleveland girl were both traveling as unaccompanied minors on a flight from Spokane, Washington, through Minneapolis-St. Paul, airline spokesman Paul Skrbec told Yahoo!. At Minneapolis they were “inadvertently boarded on incorrect connecting flights as a result of a paperwork swap,” Skrbec said.

Now I admit. We’re human. Shit happens. As a parent, this isn’t the sort of shit I’d want to happen to me. But also consider that many unaccompanied minors fly all the time and shit doesn’t happen. So I grant, this is a rare event.

But what I never understood?

“We apologized to the families, re-accommodated the children to their final destination cities at no cost, arranged full refunds for the children’s tickets, provided credits to the families for future travel, and refunded their unaccompanied minor fees,” Skrbec added.

First, damn right you’re going to refund everything; it’s the least you can do in the face of this PR nightmare. But I never understood why when airlines screw up and give you reasons never to want to fly with them again, what do they do? Give you vouchers towards flying with them again. If you’re such a colossal fuck up the first time around, why would I want to experience your crappiness again?

VBS.tv

No time to write anything. I got sucked into watching things on VBS.tv.

Never heard of the site before, but from another website discovered their Vice Guide to Liberia. Only 3 of 8 parts are up and… it’s riveting documentary.

Also watched their 3 part series on North Korea.

There’s lots of stuff at this site. Just discovered it. Seeing what it’s all about.