The Piratical Epoch continues….

Roger talks about baseball. I used to love baseball — maybe even more than I loved football. I loved the game’s slower pace, the way a game unfolded rather than took place. I loved how long the thrilling moments of tension would last, and the way that in the hands of skilled spostscasters, those moments would almost seem cinematic in a way that the tense moments in football often are not. In a football game, when your team is trying to drive for a winning score in the final moments, it’s still Come to the line, set, snap the ball. But when watching a baseball game, in a tight spot in the 9th inning — well, let’s say your team is holding a one-run lead with one out in the 9th. Your team’s closer is on the mound, and he’s a pretty good closer as closers go, but he’s got one run already on base and the next two batters up are the best hitters the other team’s got. The way this might unfold on teevee? Instead of football’s “Watch the guys come to the line and snap the ball, always from the same angle”, in baseball you’ll often get a series of shots:

Closeup on the pitcher as he leans forward to see the signs.

Long shot so we can see the catcher.

Quick cut to the guy at first, getting a good jump.

Back to the pitcher, who takes his stance.

Cut to the batter, who taps the plate with the bat and readies for his swing.

Back to the pitcher, who glances over his shoulder at the guy at first.

Back to the long shot. The catcher readies for the pitch.

The pitcher stands there, ready. Glances at first again. Seems about to wind up.

He winds up, and finally, when the tension’s greatest and the crowd is screaming wildly, here’s the pitch.

The batter swings.

Makes contact.

The ball goes…somewhere. Where? Well, that determines the next moment.

That’s what it’s like when baseball is really good. When it’s bad, though — well, this parody (from Buffalo’s own WGR Sports Radio) isn’t as far off as you might think. (“Greg Buck” is a character they use in fake “authentic” broadcasts which are often utterly hilarious.) Baseball’s problems are well-established — the games take way too long, the big post-season games start so late that they often end well after midnight, the game’s lack of real revenue-sharing hampers small-market teams to a point, and of course, the steroid issue which makes a lot of it just seem fake, anyway.

It would be easy to me to say that those reasons are the main factors in my not really paying much attention to baseball anymore, but the truth is…that photo up there. That’s Sid Bream, beating a throw from Barry Bonds in Game Seven of the 1992 National League Series. Bream’s run was the winning run, which put the Atlanta Braves in the World Series for the second year in a row. (They’d lose the Series to Toronto, in what was the first of Toronto’s back-to-back Series wins. Neat baseball factoid: Joe Carter made the final out of the 1992 World Series, and then the next year, scored the final walk-off run of the 1993 Series. Two consecutive series ended on Joe Carter doing something.)

That NLCS was one of the most nauseating experiences I’ve ever had as a sports fan. The Pirates had fallen behind in the NLCS, 3 games to 1, and their loss seemed a foregone conclusion. But then they won Game 5, and after that, they won Game 6 in a big way, with their big bats finally exploding for a bunch of runs. In Game 7, they took a 2-0 lead into the bottom of the 9th. All they had to do was record three outs…but instead, the Braves scored three runs, with the final two coming on a single from a backup catcher named Francisco Cabrera whom no one had ever heard of before (and no one’s heard from since). Cabrera’s hit is burned on my brain: the pitch from Stan Belinda, and Cabrera’s swing in which he just kind of flailed the bat out there, seeming to have zero idea of where the pitch actually was — until he’d smacked it over shortstop Jay Bell’s head into left field.

And Barry Bonds couldn’t throw out Sid Bream, who is legendary for being one of the slowest guys on the basepaths in baseball history.

My love of baseball didn’t end that night, obviously. I’d watch it for some years afterward, loyally and faithfully. But what did end that night was the last season in which my team didn’t suck. The Pirates have posted a losing record every year since that one. Eighteen of ’em. Nobody has ever done that, in any sport. They’ve had at least five distinct “rebuilding efforts” since then, and another is supposedly underway right now. But hope for Pirates fans does not spring eternal, as we’ve seen kids born the last time the Pirates were a winning team first turn old enough to drive…and then old enough to vote. Just three more, and they’re old enough to drink.

When you favorite team sucks for that long, it’s no surprise that your enthusiasm for the sport in general flags a bit.

Just seeing what’s happened in baseball in general since 1992 is amazing. Players have played entire long careers in that span, and never encountered a good Pirates team. The game’s hallowed records have fallen (owing to drugs, of course). The Boston Red Sox won the World Series twice, finally ending their curse; the Chicago White Sox won the Series once, ending their own long drought. Major League Baseball expanded twice, adding four teams (Colorado, Florida, Tampa, and Arizona); each of those teams has been to the World Series since entering MLB, and two have won it (Florida twice and Arizona once). When last the Pirates were good, the Yankees were fourteen years removed from their last Series win; since then, they’ve won five and appeared in two more. When the Pirates were good, the Angels, Astros and Rangers were all known for not being good very often. Since then, the Angels have won a Series, the Astros have been to their first, and the Rangers are about to go to their first.

Wow. A lot of water under the baseball bridge. And the Pirates still stink.

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Hello weekend!


Gimme beer!!!, originally uploaded by Jaquandor.

It sure strikes me as odd that science is doing no inquiry that I know of into the odd phenomenon that beer tastes better on Friday than it does on Tuesday. How does the beer know what day it is?!

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A Vacation Report (or, Recent Adventures in Overalls)

A couple of weeks back, I took a short vacation. OK, it was actually a five-day weekend, but I called it a vacation, because that’s what it felt like. Below is a really long recitation of stuff I did on that vacation, complete with lots of photos, so it’s after the break.

:: I went for several walks in the woods, one alone and one with The Wife.

Burchfield Art and Nature Center III: Still walking

The one I undertook solo was a visit to one of my favorite Western New York spots, the Charles Burchfield Nature and Art Center, located in West Seneca, NY. I’ve blogged about this place before, but it’s just a fantastic area. It’s a small park tucked into a forest beside Buffalo Creek as it runs through one of Buffalo’s larger suburbs. It’s right next to one of the busier roads around here (Union Rd.), and yet, once you venture away from the park area and the playground into the woods proper, it becomes surprisingly serene and quiet. Trails lead away from a nice playground in several directions, a few going to the creekside, and a few going into the woods. The Burchfield Nature and Art Center (“BNAC” for short, the rest of the way in this post) always seems bigger to me than it really is. There’s a lot packed into a small space here.

Anyhow, I hadn’t visited the BNAC before in the fall, so I decided to throw on a pair of overalls, grab my camera and little tripod thingie, and head on out. And yet another plug for the utility of overalls, as my camera and tripod thingie tucked nicely into the rule pocket on the right leg!

Burchfield Art and Nature Center IV: Another use for overalls!

As this was late September, the turning of the leaves was just starting to hit its stride:

Burchfield Art and Nature Center V: Trees across the water

I was there on an overcast fall day, but it never rained, and the light was still bright enough for the emergent fall colors to pop. The view above looks across Buffalo Creek to the other side (Clinton St. runs atop that embankment). The creek here is very shallow, not very rocky, and the water moves pleasantly quickly, which makes for a lovely wading stream during the warmer months. This time of year, though, the water is starting to chill down a bit.

These signs must be fairly new; I don’t recall seeing them there before:

Burchfield Art and Nature Center VI: Poison ivy, oh noes!

There are a couple of interesting features in the midst of the walking trails, aside from the Leaves o’Three and the rushing waters of Buffalo Creek. For one thing, there is a beautiful, and big, gazebo.

Burchfield Art and Nature Center VII: The gazebo

There’s a picnic table there, which is covered with the usual extracurricular writings:

Burchfield Art and Nature Center XI: Mixed Messages

I thought it funny to note the juxtaposition of a Bible quote with “Smoke Weed!” But then, I’m an overgrown hippie to begin with.

More walking, then, and exploring the wooden walkways of the BNAC (which are elevated two or three feet above the ground):

Burchfield Art and Nature Center XII: Another railing

Burchfield Art and Nature Center XIII: Walking

Burchfield Art and Nature Center XVII: Sitting on the rail

The BNAC, at one point, is next to a graveyard. That enhances the peacefulness, I suppose.

Burchfield Art and Nature Center XV: Over to the graves

Another odd structure on the BNAC grounds is an apparent “meditation temple” or something like that:

Burchfield Art and Nature Center XIX: The Meditation thing

Burchfield Art and Nature Center XXI: Another angle of the meditation center

Of course, I had to oblige my Buddhist overlords:

Burchfield Art and Nature Center XXII: Meditating

Burchfield Art and Nature Center XXIII: Triumph!

(No, I have no idea if there’s anything Buddhist at all about the meditation thing, or about the goofy poses I struck for the camera. Sheesh!)

I spent a lot of time looking up:

Burchfield Art and Nature Center XXV: Looking up

At what, I don’t know.

The BNAC stands, as I understand it, on the site of a number of former settlements, some of the infrastructure of which are still visible, at least in part. In the middle of the park, I came across a fenced area that is the site of a graveyard that is so old that it’s completely overgrown by now.

Burchfield Art and Nature Center XXVI: Graveyard

In the time I was there, I only saw two other people. One was a woman who must have been a volunteer; she was sweeping leaves from the paths as her little dog followed along behind. The other was just some guy, walking through. Other than that, I had the whole place to myself. How wonderful!

:: I still had some time that day before The Daughter got home from school, so I went to visit one of my favorite places in the hometown, the old Orchard Park train station.

OPRR V: Toward points south

The place was pretty magical when I visited last winter, but this time, I wanted to see what it was like in the warmer months. Naturally, I waited until the warmer months were almost completely over, but I got there!

Most striking are the well-tended flowerbeds:

OPRR XV: Flowers again

OPRR XIV: Flower beds

I spotted this sign this time, and I have no idea what it means:

OPRR IV: W

Even though the day was pretty cloudy, for some reason the light in these two photos came out really striking:

OPRR XI: Looking across the tracks

OPRR IX: Posts

Walking past the window, I noticed that the mannequin inside was wearing a hickory-striped cap and a burgundy shirt. And I was wearing hickory-striped overalls over a burgundy shirt. Whoa….

OPRR XVII: Hickory stripe hat!

:: Walk-in-the-woods #2 was with The Wife to Chestnut Ridge Park.

Chestnut Ridge: Hiking

Don’t ask me why I seem to be scowling so much! I really don’t know why my default facial expression seems to be a scowl, but there’s not much I can do about it at this point.

Anyway, we were trying to hike to the Eternal Flame Falls in the park. This is a waterfall whose main distinction, other than sheer beauty for being a waterfall, is the fact that natural gas seeps from the ground here, so behind the waterfall itself you can see a small “eternal flame” burning. (Or if it’s out, you can light it.) We didn’t get there, unfortunately; we took a wrong turn and ended up following the wrong trail, which was disappointing. We’ll get back there eventually, and see that flame, but it was still a lovely day of forest walking.

Chestnut Ridge: Sky through trees

Chestnut Ridge: In the forest

:: Later that day we left for on overnight jaunt to Ithaca, NY, and the annual Apple Harvest Festival therein. The Apple Fest is a typical outdoor festival, with lots of crafts tents, lots of food, lots of entertainment, and lots of people.

The Apple Festival

Among other things, we ate bratwurst:

Bratwurst!

And we bemoaned the fact that we discovered this joint after we were already full:

A waffle bar. OMG!

There’s a wonderful toy store there, where we always drop in for a bit of kid shopping. This year they seemed to have a lot more “odd” toys than in past years, such as this Stir Fry Set for kids!

Odd toys!

And Ithaca is known for having lots and lots of bookstores, including my favorite used bookstore ever, Autumn Leaves Books:

Perusing the Wares

Here I am, a few days later, after we got home, with the books I bought on this trip:

I don't have a book problem!

I should probably start looking into some kind of support group.

The books, from top down:

The Sardonyx Net, Elizabeth Lynn. Used. Bought because…the cover was cool. (You can do that, you know.)

Zoe’s Tale, John Scalzi. New. Bought because I haven’t given Scalzi any money lately.

The Name of the Wind, Patrick Rothfuss. New. I’ve heard good things about this one.

Hyperion Cantos, Dan Simmons. Used. This was on a rack labeled “Everything for a buck” at Autumn Leaves. When I plunked in down on the counter, the guy did a spit-take and said, “Geez, this wasn’t supposed to be out there!” Oh well! My gain.

Star Wars: The Thrawn Trilogy, Timothy Zahn. Adapted to graphic novel. New. I bought this because I had a coupon that knocked the price down quite a lot.

RASL, Jeff Smith. I like Jeff Smith a lot. I wasn’t blown away by the first few issues of this, but maybe it gets better.

The Hobbit, JRRT. Used. This is the Annotated edition, though, which is what got me to grab it. Plus it has a ton of artwork. I’m planning to re-read LOTR this winter, so here’s my copy of The Hobbit for that project.

Treasury of the Lost Litterbox, Darby Conley. New. Because I love me some Get Fuzzy!

And that’s about it. What I did on my Fall Vacation, 2010. Next stop: a tentative Winter Vacation in January!

(More photos available on my Flickr photostream. I didn’t use them all here.)

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Ch-ch-changes!

I’m doing a small bit of tinkering underneath the hood. Very small. But I’ve finally gotten up off of me arse and figured how to implement expandable posts here on Byzantium’s Shores, so I’ll be able to conceal longer posts (and posts in which I use lots of photos) by hiding the rest of the content behind a link. Which is something that lots of blogs have been able to do since, oh, 2003 or so, but hey, I am quick on the draw!

See, this here is an example. Woo-hoo!!!

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Help me, Readers!

An old friend of mine e-mailed me thusly:

Hey, I was wondering if you would know which older movie featured a battle scene wherein the protagonist and antagonist morphed into various creatures…but since it was well before morph technology, the screen showed neon-like outlines of the animals (in electric blue and neon red, as I recall). Was it Clash of the Titans ’81? A Conan movie? Something else entirely? I saw that little bit of the movie as a kid, and it has stuck in my memory ever since. Do you have any idea what I’m writing about?

And I can kinda picture a scene in my head like what he’s talking about, but nothing specific enough that adds up to a memory. I know I have a number of readers who ought to be right up on their late 70s/early 80s F&SF flicks, so can anyone shed some light on what Mark’s movie might have been?

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Make…it…stop….

So. Glee.

A well-done high-school show is a great thing. So is a well-done musical. Glee‘s popularity seems to imply that it is both of those things. So why is it that whenever I watch it, I’m astonished by the degree to which it is not?

Glee is awful. I hate it. Hate hate hate it. It is so, so, so bad. Here’s a partial list of things I would rather do than watch Glee:

Watch Phyllis Diller torture puppies
Eat broccoli
Sit through The Usual Suspects again
Attend an all-Hindemith concert music program
Work my way through the entire discography of Ace of Base
Venture out in public with no shirt on beneath my overalls
Get hit with a pecan pie
Peel 50 lbs of potatoes
Vote Republican
Discuss the Star Wars Prequel trilogy with anybody at Ain’t It Cool News
Eat medium-rare chicken
Visit the Creation Museum
Drink a glass of vegetable oil

Yeah, you get the idea.

(Light blogging for another few days, by the way. I’m trying to clear the decks on several things at home and get up some momentum on a few others.)

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Sentential Links #224

Annnnnnnnnnnnnnnd away we go!

:: This is the year of Republican Revenge and all they want is to bring the temple crashing down around their ears in order to enjoy the sight of their enemies being crushed in the rubble.

:: Whew. Scary story. Fortunately, it is only a “what if.” Good thing we voted for change.

:: Snark is easier than describing something delicious.

:: So I have decided to disconnect one day a week to be “alone” without a thousand tweets, comments, status messages, replies, and emails. I will spend one full day a week alone with my thoughts.

:: Kirk and Spock still mean a great deal to me, but I just sort of moved on to other interests.

:: I don’t get you, sign-carriers. I mean, setting aside all kinds of other things we could argue about, I’ll tell you straight up that the whole “justification by faith” thing makes no flipping sense to me whatsoever. It makes my head hurt. (I’ll never, ever understand that, either.)

:: FLAPJACKS: We totally need to set up a D&D game.
ME: There is never a time when that sentence is true.

:: And I’m still trying to wrap my head around Ravelry. I love the whole thing, but its HUGE. Like a secret cult – of fiber folks – that I can’t quite figure out – I love getting lost in the site! (Isn’t that the truth! I’ve watched The Wife spend long periods of time over there.)

:: When I was working full time (from the time I was 18 until I was 59 this year), my life was very structured. Structured to the point of making me crazy, stressed and irritable because of lack of down time. All of a sudden, it’s not structured at all. This new loosey-goosey life makes me feel exuberant, worrisome, productive and lazy all at the same time.

More next week!

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Sunday Stealing

Continuing the quiz I began last week from Sunday Stealing:

26. Do you like someone?

There’s this girl from Iowa I’m rather fond of. Luckily I’m already married to her.

27. The last song you listened to?

“Happy Together” was on the radio when I drove home from work.

28. What time of day were you born?

I think it was between 10:00 and 11:00 pm, if I remember right. (That is to say, if I remember what my parents once told me. It’s not like I remember that night itself!)

29. What’s your favorite number?

You know, I’ve never much understood the idea of a favorite number. Different numbers for different contexts, says I.

30. Where did you live in 1987?

Allegany, NY. That’s when I was in 10th and 11th grades.

31. Are you jealous of anyone?

I’m jealous of Joss Whedon.

32. Is anyone jealous of you?

Doubtful, but that just mean’s they’re stupid.

33. Where were you when 9/11 happened?

I was on my way to work when I first heard of the first crash. The second crash, the Pentagon, and the downing of United 93 happened once I was already at work. It was a terrifying day, and it just felt to me the height of absurdity to be making sales calls on that day.

34. What do you do when vending machines steal your money?

If there’s a service desk at the business where it’s located, I say, “Hey, that machine stole my money.” If not, then I walk away, grumbling. I don’t often use vending machines, though. I don’t really trust them and find them overpriced and unnecessary, in this day and age when convenience stores are everywhere.

35. Do you consider yourself kind?

Yes, but what kind? Hmmmmm!

36. If you had to get a tattoo, where would it be?

Shoulder, or ankle. Someplace that doesn’t show too much. (You wouldn’t see a shoulder tattoo on me, as I never wear tanktops.)

37. If you could be fluent in any other language, what would it be?

Russian. Or French.

38. Would you move for the person you loved?

I have, and so has she.

39. Are you touchy feely?

No.

40. What’s your life motto?

“Keep smiling, because you never know what life is going to throw in your face next!”

41. Name three things that you have on you at all times?

There’s nothing that I have on me at all times. When I go out, I try to always have my wallet, my cellphone, and my keys. I like to have my pocket knife too, but that’s dependent on me remembering to transfer it from one jacket to another.

42. What’s your favourite town/city?

BUFFALO, NY!

43. What was the last thing you paid for with cash?

Some drinks on the way home from Pumpkinville yesterday.

44. When was the last time you wrote a letter to someone on paper and mailed it?

Wrote a letter? Several years, I think.

45. Can you change the oil on a car?

Yes.

46. Your first love: what is the last thing you heard about him/her?

Let’s see, who do I consider my “first love”? I’m Facebook-friends with a girl on whom I had a wicked crush early in my high school career; luckily that faded reasonably quickly and she and I became good friends after that, then lost track after we both graduated (she a year before me), and then reconnected via FB a couple of years back. The first girl I dated in college? She turned out to be crazy at the time, and I was crazy too, so that just wasn’t a terribly good match, but wow, did it sure suck at the time. (It was one of those “I’m really into you! And…now I’m not.” kinds of breakups.) As I understand it, she remained crazy for a while, then became sane, and eventually ended up with a guy to whom she’s been married and had kids with ever since.

Funny thing? My experience with her took place the first semester of our Freshman year. One day when we were both Seniors, I went with my roommate to get some lunch at Subway. She waited on us…and I didn’t even recognize that it was her. It was only when we were walking back to campus that my roommate said something like, “Wow, you let _____ make your sub and you didn’t bat an eye!” To which I said, “Wait, that was her? Wow, I guess I’m over that one now! Hooray!”

47. How far back do you know about your ancestry?

My grandparents. That’s it. I always feel like I should know more about my genealogy…but I just don’t care that much.

48. The last time you dressed fancy, what did you wear and why did you dress fancy?

Define “fancy”. I wore a nice sweater and pants to go see Mary Poppins the other night. I haven’t put a necktie on since a job interview I had in 2003 (good thing, too, as the company with which I interviewed no longer even exists). I’m not sure I even remember how to tie a tie at this point, and I’m fine with this, as I regard ties as utterly goofy and idiotic. (Bow ties with tuxedos excepted; I do like and admire super formal wear, but occasions for that sort of attire are few and far between. And speaking of which, I do prefer bow ties with tuxes. Not the regular ties.)

49. Does anything hurt on your body right now?

Well, when I stick this needle in my eye, it gives a nice sharp pain! Otherwise, no.

50. Have you been burned by love?

See above! And once more after that. The next one, though? To paraphrase Monty Python, for me the next one was the castle that did not sink into the swamp!

And that’s that.

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