Domestic archeological expedition

My more recent endeavors in life are amassing lots of stuff. What happens when you acquire stuff? You need a place to put that stuff. Thank you George Carlin:

But instead of going and finding a place to put more stuff, I’m just getting rid of some old shit so I can reuse that storage space for my new stuff. So into the closet I go, figuring out what’s there…. boxes that haven’t been unpacked since moving into the house many years ago, things you can’t remember the last time you looked at. It’s a trip down nostalgia lane.

It’s always an interesting education for my wife and especially my kids when things like this happen. It gives them a peek into the past. For instance, I got to show the kids what a cassette tape is. Even found a player and was able to play some of them… you know, the mixed tapes you’d make, recording your favorite songs off the radio, or when you were really cool and had one of those dual cassette stereo/boom-boxes that could allow you to dub your friend’s purchased album onto a blank tape? or better, the dub of the dub of the dub of the dub such that the tape hiss was the dominant sound you actually heard? Yeah, good times.

Found a lot of old pictures. It’s a shame my scanner died years ago. I need to collect them all and take them somewhere and spend an afternoon just scanning them all in, sending them to old friends and having a good laugh at the memories. Y’know, I think that broken scanner is actually buried in the closet… well, something else to toss (yes, this would go to Goodwill’s electronics disposal center, not the landfill).

Other things I found:

  • tons of 3.5″ floppy disks. It’s been years since I had a computer that could even read one of these.
  • tons of CD’s… old CodeWarrior CDs (gazillions of these, from my past life), lots of old Mac software, things that you think for a second might be worth keeping but then you see it requires a 680×0 processor and these new Mac-Intel boxen running Leopard will never grok them
  • a set of KISS McFarlane Series 1 action figures, new in box
  • tons of old cassette tapes, from my earliest heavy metal years. Man, I need a way to convert them to MP3’s… too many good and rare albums here.
  • lots of old computer books
  • a lot of old vinyl and some neat things too:
    • Sepultura “Arise” picture disc
    • Monster Magnet “Superjudge” red vinyl
    • White Zombie “La Sexercisto” in glow-in-the-dark vinyl
    • tons of old and rare Red Decibel 7″ stuff from The Coup de Grace, Drop Hammer, Walt Mink, Libido Boyz, Last Crack
    • The Journey “Raised on Radio” album I won from Power 105 WAVA. I remember waking up, getting ready for my paper route, 5th caller wins, I called in and won not just the album but a key to the “Power Porsche”… a key that could start up a Porsche and if it did it was yours! Sadly, the weekend of the event I had to go on some youth group retreat so I didn’t actually get to try it… I think my Dad and younger sister and cousin went instead. Didn’t win, of course.
    • Autographed copies of albums from Treponem Pal and Malevolent Creation 
    • Lots of other stuff
  • Stuff from my old radio days
  • Promotional materials
  • band promo pictures
  • air checks from all the various stations I worked at
  • carts with my show bumpers on them
  • posters (many autographed)
  • A couple boxes of old things from growing up
    • My 8th grade English class journal
    • All my homework and papers from Drivers Ed class
    • An old model kit of an SR-71 Blackbird, and lots of Testors model paint jars
    • some old t-shirts
    • a couple cool pencil boxes from Korea, which my kids quickly usurped
    • A bunch of old birthday cards and letters, a couple of which included hand-written letters from my paternal grandmother… cards I tossed, the letters I kept.
    • A ton of my old Boy Scouts stuff… from the little advancement/achievement cards for merit badges and rank; certificates of youth leadership training, Patrol Leader, and Senior Patrol Leader; Patrol Leader Handbook; a cool leather “50 mile canoe trip” patch; a bunch of useful handouts and other reading material, good for camping or other outings today (Scouts or otherwise)
    • 8 to 10 (lost count) glasses cases.
    • One pair of old glasses… plastic frames, huge lenses (to go with the onion on my belt). Put them on, the wife and kids had a good laugh.
    • Yearbooks from middle school and high school, and a couple from undergrad
    • band trip pictures
    • autographed picture of me meeting President Ronald Reagan in The Oval Office
    • More things that I can remember
  • A bunch of my old Magic: The Gathering cards. I saw some kid with Magic cards a few weeks ago and I realized that I used to play that game… 15-ish years ago. 
  • And there’s still more stuff to be discovered I’m sure. It’s going to take the rest of today, at least, to get things fully cleaned and reorganized in there.
  • It’s quite a trip down memory lane. A lot of stuff was junk that was no problem to throw away, but there’s no question some stuff your heart just won’t let you toss. And I know if I really had the gumption there’s a fair lot of stuff I could put on eBay and could make some money with.

    So, blogging will be light until this is done.

     

    Updated: added more stuff that I’m uncovering.

    Updated 2: Been working at it all day. Donated a LOT of stuff to Goodwill. Threw out a lot of stuff… had to get over the nostalgia of things because if I haven’t looked at it in this many years, do I really need to care and keep it? Many things cleared out. And while I moved a bunch of new things into the closet, in the end there’s a lot more room in there now. So sum total of it all puts me in the negative which is good! Got rid of far more stuff… things are better organized and located now. Big win for all the work done in the last 24 hours. Got some tax deductions from all the donations. Uncluttered. Things are good.

    Of course now…. I guess Carlin would say it’s time for me to buy more stuff. 😉

    Sword training

    At the dojang today, all I did was sword training.

    I don’t care for sword.

    I know some people are totally enamoured with swords. There’s a Romantic notion about it. There’s great fantasy in it. But for me? I couldn’t care less. I’m practical. A sword is not practical. Sure it’s better than nothing, but it’s just not a practical weapon for the 21st century urban dweller. In my traditional martial arts training I prefer more practical weapons, such as a staff (especially short staff called “dan bong”); I’m looking forward to studying cane.

    But for today. Sword.

    So I look at it this way: it’s training, it’s discipline. I have a heavy (relatively-speaking) steel sword. Most people don’t like to use my sword because, while a gorgeous and well-balanced sword, it’s long and heavy: arms tire out. That’s why I like it, because it works out my shoulders, my arms, and most of all — my grip. It’s not just strength, it’s endurance.

    And I care about grip for other areas of martial study. 🙂

     

    Updated: I should clarify. I only have so much time and energy in a day to study and practice something. So with limited time and energy, I’d prefer to spend my finite resources on the things I find most productive and useful. Thus why I prefer to study things like staff or cane or firearms. But if I must study sword, and to progress in my martial art yes I must from time to time, then I might as well utilize that time towards productive ends. Maybe I’ll never be a master at wielding a sword, but if it’ll strengthen my grip, well, I found something useful to focus on.

    A little financial lesson I learned

    Like most people, the past some months in my household have involved a lot of belt tightening and reexamination of financial situation. I’ve done my best to be responsible with the money I earn, currently having no debt other than the home mortgage, which is a reasonable mortgage at that. Live within your means; in fact, try to live well below your means. Still, I kept feeling a crunch. I had spent a bit beyond our means the past some months to stock up on various things, dipping into savings and such. I’m wanting to recover from that but was having a bit of a time digging out. It hit me what was going on and I wanted to try it. It’s only been a couple months so it’s a bit early to tell, but so far the results are promising so I thought I’d share.

    What was going on was that I was paying too much towards credit cards every month. I use credit cards because of purchase protections, extended warranties, rewards, and other such side benefits. I pay them off in full every month. But that was the problem. When it came time for me to pay the bills, I always paid the full amount. For example, the billing cycle ends with a $500 balance, but between the end of the billing cycle and the time I get the bill in the mail then sit down to pay bills, I might have charged a few more things and might have $700 on the card. I always figured that I’ve already used the money, send it now or send it later didn’t matter I still had to send it, so I might as well zero out the card. Thus I’d write a check for $700 and zero out the card. Technically that’s a good thing to do, but it was having a subtle side-effect on me. I would look in Quicken and see that we had a zero balance so I would think to myself “ok, we can spend X amount”, but in reality, I had kinda robbed Peter to pay Paul. I try to shave off a good portion of my paycheck every pay period to put into savings, but to pay that credit card bill down to zero I might have to reduce or eliminate that savings. Thus I’d have a zero card balance, but I didn’t get to save as much as I wanted to. And so, I was treading water, paying bills, but not rebuilding my savings.

    So instead what I decided to do was just pay the required amount. Bill comes for $500, I pay $500. Sure that might mean at the time of the bill paying I leave $200 (going with the above example) on the card, but that’s fine. It does a few things. First, when I look in Quicken I see there’s already some sort of balance on the card, thus I’m reluctant to put more charges on the card thus spending less. Second, when I do my bill paying now I am saving in full or might be able to save a little more. And so far, that has really been paying off. It’s helped me curtail spending and keep my savings on a good pace.

    Yeah, it’s a bit of slight-of-hand, it’s just mentally fooling myself. In the end it’s all about budgeting and such and keeping within your means. But for me, this change helped. I keep bills paid in full, no revolving balances on the cards, but I keep the monthly spending correct for the pay periods and don’t “overspend” because I miscalcuated. My savings is rebuilding at a good click, my spending is reigned in more.

    Man… wish I had realized this years ago. 🙂

    First impressions from the other side

    I receive much of my firearms training through KR Training. After obtaining my NRA Instructors Certification, I figured I ought to get some “internship” experience, so on March 7th I volunteered to assist with classes. There were three classes being held: first was Basic Pistol 1, then Defensive Pistol Skills, and finally AT-1A Low Light Shooting. I’ve taken all of these classes as a student, but yesterday was my first time as an instructor. It’s certainly different being on “the other side”, and not just in the obvious “not a student but a teacher” sort of way.

    What I’d like to talk about tho are not just my personal impressions and feeling from during and after the day’s events, but also some tips for folks that take classes (at KR Training or anywhere, and not even just firearms) and how they can get the most out of the classes.

    First, let me state that overall the classes weren’t too bad. The students were of a wide variety: men and women, young and old, racially diverse, various walks of life (I say this for those that believe gun folks are only white male rednecks), and certainly different levels of knowledge, skills, and experience. People came to learn, and I’d like to believe they walked out of there all a little smarter and a little wiser. Hopefully they’ll take whatever they got from the courses they took and practice those skills, work to master them, and then come back for further training. Learning never stops.

    Gear

    Before you come to class, make sure you know what gear you need for the class. If the class description talks about drawing from a holster, it’s reasonable to assume you’ll need a holster. If it’s talking about drawing from concealment, it’s reasonable to assume the holster ought to be one that can be concealed. You also should make sure you have a way to conceal (e.g. large shirt, vest, coat, etc.). If you have a concealed handgun license and are coming to work more within that paradigm, it’s best to come equiped and dressed in the manner in which you carry. If you’re not sure what’s right or if what you have is right or if you need to get something else, ask well before the class starts (maybe when you first sign up). Certainly class time can be used to help you learn about gear and such things, and likely you will learn through your own choices, what the instructor teaches, observing the gear of others and how well it works for them, and so on. But if class time has to be taken to get gear right, that takes time away from the class, which is time away from you learning about other things.

    If you must obtain (new) gear prior to the start of class, ensure you are familiar with it and that it’s set up and working right for you before you come to class. This would include your firearm. Ensure it’s running and working well and you know how to operate it. This of course doesn’t hold for beginner classes, like Basic Pistol 1. But if you’re beyond BP1 then you likely own your own gun and some gear to go with it, thus you’ll be better served if you know how to use it correctly. All firearms and most all gear come with some sort of instruction manual — read it. If it didn’t come with one, contact the manufacturer and ask for one, then read it.

    Class is certainly an appropriate place to learn about gear, and you may even find that your choice of gear isn’t working out. If this is the case, don’t consider it an ego-blow but a learning experience. I mean, if you’re coming to these classes to learn how to use a firearm to defend your life, while yes equipment is last on the priorities of survival, it’s still important. Don’t use crappy gear. Be willing to seek out good gear. If the instructor is opinionated about what gear is good and what isn’t good, realize that there’s a lot of experience and knowledge behind that. For me, just watching the wide variety of guns at the various classes I’ve attended and seeing how many “fancy” guns just don’t run well, jam, malfunction, slow down the class, cause problems, inhibit the operator from learning (well, they learn something just not necessarily the class curriculum)…. realize that the instructor knowledge on gear tends to be informed. 

    Take time to do your homework before class. Ask questions of those who know.

    During Class

    Hopefully you brought lots of magazines and something to carry them in on the line (e.g. magazine holsters). If you’re not on the line, be refilling those magazines. Filling magazines was the single most time-consuming part of class, so the more you use your downtime to keep magazines filled, the less overall downtime there is, the more time for learning useful stuff.

    Take it slow and easy. You’re going to have nerves. I remember how nervous I was when I took these classes, and I saw numerous people that were nervous. Realize it’s natural, you’re not the only one, and if you’re nervous that’s generally a good sign because it likely means that you care about your performance and want to do well. But don’t let your nerves get the best of you. Yes, often the drills need to be run fast, but don’t run so fast that speed is your primary concern. You’re here to learn new things, no one expects you to be mastering those drills right out the gate. Go faster than a snail’s pace, but don’t just go for blazing speed. Slow is smooth, smooth is fast. Work to be smooth, even if you only go 75% speed. Work to be correct and learn the techniques correctly. Speed will come later.

    There will be information overload. If you want to bring a little notepad and pen to keep in your back pocket to jot brief notes down, feel free to do this if it helps you retain information. Do check with the range officer(s) before you do this, in case there might be any safety policy to mind. Don’t worry if you forget something. You’ll retain more than you think, and if on the drive home you go over it in your head, if you get up the next day and practice and run through it, and work on it all in the days following, that will help with retention. If you forget something or aren’t clear, drop an email to the instructors and ask. And nothing says you can’t take the class again if you think that would help.

    Safety

    For me, this was the biggest thing. I’ve never had a loaded gun pointed at me so many times. It’s an experience. No one did it out of malice, it was usually out of a lack of awareness, a brief lapse, or flat out negligence. Now the total beginners you can’t blame because they don’t know any better — they are beginners, they are learning. But anyone else….

    The only time your gun should be out and/or your hands touching it is because an instructor called you up to the line and told you to do so. Otherwise, the gun should remain in whatever safe manner and location, e.g. a holster. 

    I don’t care what version of gun safety rules you want to follow, such as Jeff Cooper’s:

    1. All guns are always loaded. Even if they are not, treat them as if they are.
    2. Never let the muzzle cover anything you are not willing to destroy. For those that insist this particular gun is unloaded, see Rule 1.
    3. Keep your finger off the trigger until your sights are on target. This is the Golden Rule. Its violation is directly responsible for about 60% of inadvertent discharges.
    4. Identify your target and what is behind it. Never shoot at anything you have not postively identified.

    Or the NRA’s version:

    1. Always keep the gun pointed in a safe direction.
    2. Always keep your finger off the trigger until ready to shoot.
    3. Always keep the gun unloaded until ready to use.

    I don’t care which is your mantra, make it your mantra. Anyone can pick up a gun and shoot it, but what separates the skilled gun handler from the rest is what they do when they are not shooting. It’s that “off the line” gun handling skill that will take you further. I mean, all the “tacti-cool” knowledge in the world doesn’t mean squat if you end up shooting someone innocent (including yourself) due to negligent gun handling.

     

    Overall, I enjoyed the day. I’ve come to realize one of my gifts is teaching, so this works well for me. I’ll be back… both as a teacher, and a student.

     

    Updated: A gun safety rant.

    Lack of stuff

    Hi folks.

    Sorry for the lack of stuff. It’s been a very busy past few days topped off today by the ceiling fan in the master bedroom peeding out (Youngest turned on the light and said sparks came down). A few back and forths to Home Depot, and we’ve got ourselves a nice new and very pretty ceiling fan… goes with the fixtures from the master bathroom renovation we did a little while back. So… I’ve just been away from the keyboard and have much to catch up on.

    More later….

    Mantis blocks

    Some time ago in my training I made a point to always keep my hands up. That is, I see all too often when people are doing kicking drills that they focus only on the kicking and their feet/legs… the rest of the body tends to be ignored, and this is most evident to observe in how they hold their hands or more typically how they aren’t holding their hands at all. I resolved to not do this, that even if I was focusing on something else that my hands must remain up in a proper defensive/blocking position: hands more or less guarding the sides of the face, forearms more or less vertical, elbows pulled in close so you’re not leaving your gut unprotected. Of course going with this, doing things like shrugging the shoulders, chin tucked, but that’s not the focus of my discussion today. The point of ensuring I always kept my hands up was to turn that positioning into my habit, that that’s just the place my hands naturally go — and stay. The stay is an important part. I see people might start with their hands up, but eventually the hands migrate somewhere else. Maybe their arms are getting tired (keep them up there, they’ll get stronger). Maybe they just forget (keep doing it, be aware of it, make it habit). Or many times they’re doing something dynamic and their arms leave their center so they can keep their balance. To that I say, you have to fight to keep your hands in. First, if with every kick your hands fly out so you can keep your balance that tells me (fighting/sparring you) that you’re not very balanced and I’ll either take advantage of that aspect or take advantage of the fact you’re not guarding yourself and attack those areas. Second, when you flail your arms you’re creating more movement, which will lead to further balance disruption, not to mention you’re wasting energy working all those muscles that don’t need to be worked. Keep your hands in, force yourself to do this. You’ll find that your balance will come along just fine.

    One thing about keeping your hands up is what to do with your hands themselves. Should you make tight fists? Should you have a fist but just not clenched? Hands in a natural and relaxed but curved but not a full fist looseness? Or maybe have the hands fully straight, fingers extended, palm flat? I have been taking the relaxed approach, a semi-fist, if you will. A few days ago I started to play with keeping my hands flat. I’m going to experiment with this for a while and see where it goes. Here’s my thoughts.

    1. With my hands flat there is now more stuff guarding me. Measure from the tip of my elbow up the forearm to the end of my closed fist, then measure from the elbow to the tip of my extended fingers and you’ll find a few more inches there. That’s a few more inches of protection for myself. Granted it’s fingers, not someting that can absorb a lot of damage (nor do you want them to), plus having the fingers out there leaves them open to finger grabs/locks. Still, I’d like to play with this to see if it really does add any more guarding effectiveness.
    2. It’s good to use natural weapons, parts of our body that are naturally tougher, such as the palm heel. While fists are your traditional “fightin’ man’s” weapon, punching someone in the head with your bare fist is more likely to hurt you than them. Which would you rather do? punch a brick wall with your fist? or punch a brick wall with your palm heel?  I’ll take the palm  heel. The further implication is you’ll be more willing to put more power behind the palm strike because you’re not as worried about getting hurt. Keeping your fingers functioning is important, be you looking to further trap or manipulate your opponent, or perhaps transitioning to say a sidearm. So by keeping my hands open when up in the guard, I’m more apt and open to use palm strikes than closed fist attacks.
    3. One technique in Kuk Sool is the Sa Ma Gui MakGi (사마귀막기) or Praying Mantis Block. This is a trapping and control technique, one that I’ve dabbled with a bit in the past, but I think I’d like to take the time to more seriously study and experiment with practical application. Starting from my hands-up guarding position, with open palms, a block can lead directly into a mantis block and trap. 
    4. I think my desire to explore the mantis block/trap more actually started in earnest about a month ago. I was flipping through my copy of Dr. YANG, Jwing-Ming’s Analysis of Shaolin Chin Na book because he has a lot of exercises for wrist strength and I’ve been looking to improve my wrist/grip strength for other activities. I was reading over his exercises for trapping, twisting, gripping, but especially the coiling training. So it got me thinking about mantis blocking/trapping again.

    As I was preparing to write this blog entry, I Googled around for more information on Chinese praying mantis kung fu. I found a video that was most interesting.

    I admit, I don’t have a lot of direct exposure to any flavor of Chinese Praying Mantis Kung Fu, and most of what I do see is the performance of forms.  But this video is the sort of thing I wanted to see: 2 man fighting techniques/drills, application. Here’s what stood out to me.

    1. Notice the attacker/defender (person performing the techniques) has their hands up, in the guard position. That’s the position they fight from, which is efficient and deceptive.
    2. I like how both arms are always doing something. One arm blocks the other attacks, then they switch roles. Watch the exchange that starts at 0:30 to really see this.
    3. Notice the use of natural weapons: palm heels, elbows, hammer-fists. Big strong meat of the forearms provides the block, the palm and the elbows provide the attack.

    Very cool stuff. Something for me to focus my study on for a while.

     

    Updated: All of yesterday I was involved in helping teach a different sort of combative art. One of the movements done is that you start out with your hands put up in front of you, open palms, palms facing out, hands more or less in front of your face. It’s not hands above your head in an “I surrender” position. It’s not hands pulled back so your arms are fully bent, elbows down by your hipbones and hands up at your shoulders, which isn’t quite “I surrender” but is a very submissive position. It’s not hands pushed out in front of you, arms fully or almost fully extended, as if to push a person in front of you back; this is a very aggressive position. No, it’s more that your hands are just out in front of you, just enough, palms open and facing forward, which is an assertive stance that could say “Hey man, I don’t want any trouble. Just stay cool. This is a very reasonable position to start from, especially in a self-defense situation. If you do some things like avert your eyes just slightly, it provides a little more submissiveness to the position, which can be good towards helping diffuse a situation (but that doesn’t mean you are being submissive, perhaps just manipulative of the situation).

    When you look at this posture, what is it? It’s the same posture I’m describing above. That guarding stance, hands open, arms up.  Look at the non-verbal message it sends to an attacker. It’s not taking an aggressive and obvious fighting stance (clench your fists or even loosely ball them). It’s not putting you in a negative position such hands above your head, or at your side, out of position to attack or defend. It leaves you guarded, defended, but sending a good message to an attacker. You can combine it with verbal commands “STOP, DON’T MOVE!” “BACK OFF NOW!” or perhaps just less assertive spoken words such as “Hey man, I don’t want any trouble.” or whatever is clear and appropriate for the situation. From this posture you can then transition to whatever may be necessary. You’ve got your hands in close, you can shoot your body inside his for takedowns. You can defend against strikes. You can do as I’m exploring above and be able to perform mantis-based traps and locks. You could transition to your sidearm. You could just transition to other non-verbals as needed, e.g. maybe you have to push your hands out further to be more aggressive and sending a stronger message.

    The more I consider this sort of open handed guard position, the more potential I see within it.

    25 Albums That Rocked My World

    So here we are, with another Interent meme.

    “Think of 25 albums, CDs, LPs (if you’re over 40) that had such a profound effect on you they changed your life. Dug into your soul. Music that brought you to life when you heard it. Royally affected you, kicked you in the ass, literally socked you in the gut, is what I mean. Optional: when you finish, tag a bunch of others, including me. Make sure you copy and paste this part so they know the drill. Get the idea now? Good. Tag, you’re it!”

    Yes, the list is numbered, but only to keep track and provide easy reference. This is truly in no particular order.

    1. Twisted Sister: “Stay Hungry” – the first album (LP) that I ever had. Was a Christmas present from my little sister.
    2. Anthrax: “I’m The Man” – high school buddy of mine played it for me and it started my journey into heavier metal.
    3. Nirvana: “Nevermind” – I remember when this album came into the college radio station. We put on the first single, “Smells Like Teen Spirit”, and all thought it was pretty jammin’. We had no idea at the time how revolutionary it would be, but I guess we did our part by playing the hell out of it.
    4. Gary Moore: “Still Got The Blues” – One of the most amazing blues guitar players ever. Period. The first time I heard the song, “Still Got The Blues” I was floored at how Gary could truly make a guitar sound like it was crying. Amazing.
    5. Saigon Kick: “S/T” – One of the few albums I think is strong end-to-end.
    6. Corrosion of Conformity: “In The Arms of God” — A masterpiece. Gives me chills when I listen to it.
    7. Corrosion of Conformity: “Deliverance” — Second only to “In The Arms of God”. It was no big loss, fly on albatross.
    8. ZZ Top: “Eliminator” — Listened to this tape in my Walkman every morning while delivering papers on my paper route.
    9. Dark Angel: “Leaves Scars” — One of the fastest and most complex albums I’ve ever heard. From song arrangements to the lyrics. Heck, you need a dictionary to understand the lyrics.
    10. Johnny Cash: “American V: A Hundred Highways” — It just resonates with me. It’s moved me to tears.
    11. Led Zeppelin: “S/T” — One amazing blues album. Powerful, both Page’s guitar and Plant’s vocals.
    12. Monster Magnet: “Superjudge” — One of the best from the mind of Dave Wyndorf. I’m suckin’ up more karma than I need, so have a supernova on me!
    13. AC/DC: “Highway to Hell” — Everyone goes on about “Back in Black”, which is a good album, but I think Highway is stronger, more raw.
    14. Slayer: “God Hates Us All” — While “Reign in Blood” is a seminal work, “God Hates Us All” is just angry and errily prophetic.
    15. Ted Nugent: “Out of Control” — Yes, a “best of” double-album, but such a great profiling of the Motor City Madman’s career. This is pure attitude, soul, and rock-and-roll swagger.
    16. Ozzy Osbourne: “Blizzard of Ozz” — For some it was Eddie Van Halen. For others, myself included, it was Randy Rhodes. He made me want to play guitar.
    17. Suicidal Tendencies: “Lights, Camera, Revolution” — No, you can’t bring me down. When this album came out, how it coincided with what was going on in my life….
    18. Sepultura: “Arise” — I worked in college radio at the time and was fortunate to gain a lot of exposure to Sepultura then. I wore a leather biker jacket at the time, and liked the band so much that I got a guy to airbrush the “tribal S” on the shoulder/sleeve of the jacket. At the time, that was the closest I’d get to a tattoo.
    19. Pantera: “Vulgar Display of Power” — The groove, the power. Walk on home, boy.
    20. Motörhead: “Iron Fist” — It’s Motörhead. ’nuff said.
    21. Little Caesar: “Influence” — Down and dirty (cliché alert!) rock and roll. “So Damn Tired” isn’t on this album, but man… what a great song. Ron Young has such an amazing voice.
    22. Lenny Kravitz: “5” — Incredible talent. This album has songs that remind me of 3 important women in my life: my daughter, my wife, and my mother.
    23. Judas Priest: “Painkiller” — From the opening drum riff through to the end of the album, this is what metal is all about.
    24. Harry Connick, Jr.: “Blue Light Red Light” — I love singing the songs on this album. “We Are In Love” is great for that too.
    25. The soundtrack from the movie “Grease” — I think this is what introduced me, as a kid, to do-wap and other 50’s era music. I still love singing “Those Magic Changes” and “Tears On My Pillow”.
    26. dead horse: “Peaceful Death and Pretty Flowers” — There’s no one like dead horse. When I was listening to them in Virginia, I didn’t know they were from Texas. When I moved to Texas (dead horse was from Houston) and wear their t-shirt out in public, it moves other people like no other band I’ve experienced. Not everyone knows about them, but all who do, well… we’re after the same thing.
    27. The Coup de Grace: “S/T” — I flew to NYC on my birthday just to see these guys. Again, college radio daze and I promoted these guys all I could. Partied with the band after the show. Nicest bunch of guys. Daylight is dawning for me.

    So it’s more than 25… eh.

    81st Annual Zilker Kite Festival

    Today the family went to the 81st Annual Zilker Kite Festival.

    I have wanted to attend this for some years and for some reason or other it never happened, so I was determined to attend this year. And attend we did!

    We took the shuttle to Austin’s famous Zilker Park, and in a way, the shuttle was an event unto itself. The city provided free shuttles to/from the event, and they used school buses for it. This was the first time my kids got to ride a school bus (I rode them all the time when I was growing up), so now they sorta know what it’s like… minus the loud kids, bullying, and other assorted mayhem that comes with the school bus. 🙂  It brought back memories of being on the bus Safety Patrol!

    After arriving at the park we went to the “build-a-kite” workshop. It was a free workshop sponsored by HEB and others and you could build a basic kite. Middle child and Youngest child opted to build a kite, and they flew just fine. The wind today was ample for kite flying, but it would die down at times and many kites would be crashing to the ground. Yesterday the winds in Austin were 25-35 MPH steady and gusty, so that would have been some very interesting kite flying weather.

    We walked around, checked out many of the kites. All sorts of kites of all shapes, sizes, designs, colors, and variety. It’s almost impossible to describe or even capture on film just how cool it was to look up in the sky and see hundreds of kites flying together. It’s just something you have to experience.

    We ate “fair food”, from corn dogs to sausage on a stick to snow cones to cotton candy to funnel cakes. Yes… I can’t pass up a funnel cake, tho the one we had was very oily (I suspect they didn’t let it drain enough). Oh yes, and roasted corn. Mmm. Everything was rather expensive, but all proceeds after expenses are benefiting charities and worthy causes so it’s all good. I think I’m going to have a very light salad for dinner tho. 😉

    After watching many kites, flying our free kites, and walking around and seeing all there was to see, we ended up buying our own kite. A nice nylon “triangle-style” (I don’t know what the proper term is). It flew quite well, and I had a lot of fun flying it. It was tough flying tho, with so many kites in the air, so many people around, you didn’t have the total freedom to roam where and how needed to keep the kite aloft. Thus, the most often heard thing today was: *thud* “Sorry!!” “No problem!” as kites would dive down, hit someone in the head, strings tangle around you, tails whipping in your face. But no one got mad; everyone expected to get hit sooner or later. It was a day filled with laughter, smiles, and fun. Good times.

    If you haven’t been to the Kite Festival, you need to try it. And do like we did, go in the morning, leave in the afternoon. The lines for the shuttle were unreal, but since we’re early birds well… we were in and out no problem.

    Range Report

    As I mentioned previously, I got my XD-9 back so of course I had to go to the range to try it out. Took Oldest Child with me.

    The range was rather busy today (one reason I prefer to go on mid-week mornings), so consequently I couldn’t do the things I wanted to do to really try things out. Brought the 10/22 for Oldest, set him up at 25 yards and let him go to town. You can see his results (no, the picture isn’t upside down, I stapled the target upside down since I was in a hurry). Overall, not bad. He’s certainly improving.

    One issue we were up against is the scope was loose; actually, the base is loose. So, I’m going to have to fix that. I was having him work on fundamentals: body position, focusing on the crosshairs (since there’s no front sight), good trigger press, and good follow-through. That’s the toughest thing, getting him to follow-through and not go “bangdidihitit?”. As you can see from the grouping, he’s off to the left. This could be a bit of trigger slap (I did work with him a bit on a better trigger press, looking for the “surprise break”), but given how very consistent he was on this and other targets, I’m presently going to chalk it up to the scope being loose and thus off zero. I know it was frustrating for him to not “aim middle of red dot, hit middle of red dot”, but it was a good lesson in learning that it’s more about the grouping than always hitting the middle of the dot (tho yes, that’s important). The wiggly scope gave a good and digestible excuse for today, and this allows to lead into a greater discussion of things like trajectory, zeroing sights, height-over-bore, and so on. Stuff for later. Right now, my main focus is for him to work on the fundamentals, see success, see himself improving, and enjoy what he’s doing. So far, so good. I’m happy with his progress.

     

    As for me, again because the range was rather busy I just set up 2 target stands and put 5 6″ paper plates on each stand. No defensive or other “real” shooting, this was to be nothing more than a basic running of the gun to see how she now is. I set them up at 15 yards, which was good because I need to work on 15-25 yard (i.e. greater than 7 yards) shooting, and with these new sights I knew I could get the accuracy I couldn’t get with the XS Sights (the paper plates would disappear completely behind the big front dot). Plus given the way the range was set up, for Oldest to shoot at 25 yards and for me to be next to him, I had to then shoot at 15 yards… so really, it all worked out.

    How did the gun do? Better than me. 🙂 The trigger is really tight, in the good way. I will have to do a lot of dry-fire practice to get used to the trigger. My “muscle memory” wanted to have a normal XD trigger, travelling and feeling like a stock XD trigger does, so things felt odd and I wasn’t shooting as well as I normally do, but that’s to expected. I couldn’t help but be impressed with the trigger; again, it’s so tight, and yes I’d like to try it side-by-side with a good 1911 trigger to compare. Bottom line? I just need a lot of dry-fire with it and get used to it before I expend any more ammo at the range.

    The Dawson Sights. You have to realize, while it’s February, the temperature today is in the high-80’s. It’s bright, sunny, I put on sunscreen before going to the range. This is an abnormal day weather-wise, but still a great one. And with all that sunlight, the fiber optic front sight just shined like a beacon. You couldn’t help but see it. Thinking back on it, the fact I couldn’t “see” the rear sight is testimony to a cleaner sight picture. As well, the wider notch (well at least the combination of the front and rear made the rear notch wide) well… everything just lines up. Your eye gets pulled to that front sight, which is what you want to focus on, and there’s nothing else to clutter the sight picture. But the other parts that must be in the sight picture are there and are there only enough for you to do what you need to do with them. The greater “whitespace” on either side of the front post might just be thousandths of an inch wider than stock, but it makes such a difference to my eyes in terms of picking up the sight picture and knowing what it is and thus what may need to be corrected to have an ideal sight picture. It’s hard to explain, but this sight picture feels like the sight picture I want. There’s nothing to distract me, my eyes go where they should go and not where they shouldn’t. And my accuracy is far far better than they were with the XS Sights. Again, I’ll need more dry-fire practice with them, but so far I really like them. 

    One thing I want to do is head to the local indoor range to get a better feel for the sights. The indoor range has the targets on a track so it’s very easy to adjust distance from 0 to 100 yards, and to do so without having to get the entire firing line to stop while you dance around with targets. This way I can get a better idea how the sights are zeroed and how they perform at various distances.

    All in all, I’m pleased with how the custom work turned out. The gun itself seems good, it’s now just me that needs some work.

    In related news, I ordered a SmartCarry and it came in the mail today. Can’t wait to try it out.

    Updated: Talking about the day over supper with the family, I remembered a few things:

    1. Oldest got to learn about malfunctions! He had at least one stovepipe, 3 duds. 
    2. I kept working on that Todd Jarrett “grip 20% harder” technique. Man, that works. But I still have problems with my grip: one I know what to do about, one I don’t. The one I know what to do about is to just get a stronger grip… building those muscles up. The one I don’t know what to do about… it’s getting my left (non-shooting) hand to really hang on. Eventually my right (shooting) hand just works its way out of the left. I have felt that I need to thicken the grip up a bit so my big hands can better fit, leaves a little more “empty space” on the grip so the heel of my left hand can rest more “meat” on the grip (shooting an M&P with the big backstrap was great in this regard). Or maybe it’s just a matter of grip strength. 🙂

    Back from Springer Precision

    I sent a Springfield XD-9 to Springer Precision to get some custom work done. FedEx man just came by and dropped off my package. I’m happy!

    The trigger job is fantastic. The trigger is now is about as efficient as one can get. It feels amazing in dry fire. I’d like to try it out side-by-side with my buddy’s Wilson 1911 to see how the triggers compare. I’m sure the 1911’s will be better, but this feels like it’ll be about as close as one can get.

    The Dawson Precision sights. I got the front fight as a red fiber optic 0.100″. It’s a little narrower than I expected, but the red dot still shines brightly. I also like the slightly wider notch on the all-black fixed rear sight (I think it’s 0.125″ but I could be wrong… I’ll have to ask). The front/rear combination lets in a lot of light around the front sight (compared to the stock sights) and again in dry fire my eyes seem to like that a lot more. Heck, even taking my glasses off (and my eyesight is horribly near-sighted) I can roughly make out the sight picture because I can see that light coming in. This’ll be interesting to experiment with.

    And then, got a factory cleanup. I’m not sure all the little details that were done, but I can see a lot of polished pieces, gun oil everywhere. Slide even felt different to me first time I racked it out of the box. Working the gun felt smoother.

    Now I just need to get to the range to try it out…. 

    I will say I’m glad I got a lot of work done at once. The shipping costs were ridiculous (you must ship overnight priority), but you can contact Scott ahead of time and he’s able to give a discount, which helps but still overnight for such a “heavy” package is crazy. If you’re thinking of doing this, just make sure you spend more on the work than on shipping!

    Also, turnaround was pretty good. I dropped it off at a shipping facility on the 17th, and I have it back today (10 days end to end).

    More later….

     

    Updated: Got to the range.