I’ve been trying for three days to get the next bike ride in. So, needing the content and having been cheated out of bike photographs, I stood on the porch, and in the rain and in the driveway, and did …
… that.
Not as good as a bike ride. But the grass is nice and green!
I also updated the images on the front page. You’ll want to check those out; there are a dozen amazing new shots to enjoy. (See all 12! Then let them recycle and count each one, to make sure you’ve seen all 12!)
Otherwise, I’m just explaining things to the cats.
“Don’t worry, Poseidon, that’s just electrons coming to the ground, heating the air to about 50,000° Farhenheit, then cooling, leaving a resonating partial vacuum behind. Air nearby expands and shrinks, vibrating, echoing and reverberating, making the sound we call thunder.” pic.twitter.com/SL72idEu9s
I should have shared the weather radio one, too. But that would have just read like crazy talk.
More tomorrow. Until then, did you know that Phoebe and Poseidon have an Instagram account? Phoebe and Poe have an Instagram account. And don’t forget my Instagram. Leep up with me on Twitter, too.
We haven’t read any old newspapers recently. Let’s go back 61 years, to northwest Alabama. This is The Florence Herald, which we have examined here from time-to-time in the past. Some of my family would have read this paper. Indeed, there’s a brief mention of my great-great grandfather here in a legal notice. And some of the family names appear in some of the local correspondence. But let’s look at the really fun stuff from the weekly, which was published on Thursday, May 18, 1961.
There’s a fair amount to get through over your second coffee. Let’s dive in. This is the lead local story, in a paper that was helping its community celebrate the centennial of the Civil War.
The Reynolds Metals Company, founded in Kentucky in 1919, was a big, big deal. They originally supplied the wrappers for cigarette and candy companies and in the 1920s took over Eskimo Pies because of the foil. They were growing quickly, and in a few more years a few more acquisitions the original U.S. Foil Company became Reynolds. They moved HQ to New York, and then to Richmond. Soon they were mining bauxite, and they opened the plant mentioned here in 1941.
Just before the United States entered the war, R.S. Reynolds ramped up production. He was in aluminum, after all, and he saw a need. Now the second largest producer of basic aluminum in the U.S., Reynolds was key in aircraft production, among other things. A lot of that was rolled out right there. They kept growing after the war, indeed they snatched up six government defense plants that were up for disposal. Reynolds later expanded into non aluminum products such as plastics and precious metals, introducing Reynolds Plastic Wrap in 1982. Odds are you’ve got some of their product in your kitchen cabinets.
The company took out a full page ad in this same issue of The Florence Herald thanking their employees and the community. “Surely the only thing which can surpass our first 20 years at Listerhill will be our next 20 years,” was the last line over R.S. Reynolds’ name. Indeed, they put 37 more years into the area.
When they sold to Wise Metals in 1998-99, there were 1,600 people working at the plant. A global concern picked up Wise in 2015, it was an eight-figure deal. The company is still in operation there, still employing more than 1,200. They recycle and make aluminum cans.
I don’t know if you noticed that story about “Viet Nam” that was set just below the Reynolds piece, and the English standalone photo It’s 1961, and there’s so much patriotic optimism in that story.
Below the fold on the front page …
So it is an interesting time in local and national politics. I shared with you one of the bullet points from Harold S. May’s front page column.
Dude.
May wrote in this same format every week. I looked ahead. “What has Mr. Average Citizen done to deserve it? All of us will suffer alike,” wrote the columnist in the next issue. The columnist — who had served on the Florence Housing Authority and was the chairman of the local board of education — made another, terrible convoluted mention two weeks out, until, finally, he moved back to his local observations and recycled bon mots.
“The wife with plenty of hose sense never becomes a nag,” was one of the lines just above the condemnation above.
It’s a fascinating column in its own way, if you can overlook the regrettable parts.
Finally, according to the search function, he ran this same ad the next three weeks. And then, apparently, never again. There’s a story behind this.
Ten years ago I took this photograph, and published it on my Tumblr site. (Remember those?) This is the agapanthus, the African lily. From the Greek agape (love) + anthos (flower).
The plant is believed to have a hemolytic poison and can cause ulceration of the mouth. It does have other medicinal properties, however. There are about 10 species in the genus.
(Haven’t put anything on that Tumblr since November 2014. I wonder why? Probably just rightly remembered I should put everything here.)
Nine years ago I was at a baseball game, and the good guys won. We found our friend watching from a nearby parking deck.
(Happy times!)
Eight years ago we ran a triathlon in the morning, and watched a baseball game in the afternoon. (Good guys lost.) And I got Aubie to take a selfie on my camera.
(Happy times!)
Seven years ago we ran a 10K. I did it in brand new shoes.
This was a fundraiser in London, and on part of the route we ran around Wembley Stadium. The guy that won the race was an Egyptian Olympian. He lapped us. It was amazing to watch him run. He could not stick around to get his medal, they said, because he ran off to run another race. Long distance runners, man.
But look at this awesome bling!
(The next day we were in Paris. It was a whirlwind.)
Six years ago, plus one day …
No. My granddaddy, knife and salt shaker in his pocket, taught me how to eat it: warm and fresh out of his garden. https://t.co/g68wf9MMBM
I’ve never been able to eat watermelon without thinking about that. And I can’t eat watermelon without being a bit sad. Had some this morning, in fact.
Five years ago, boy, I was right about this one.
It is a problem of precedent-setting historical accumulation, you see … https://t.co/dIccvY9XNJ
Four years ago, we were in Tuscany, specifically, Siena, and just one of the beautiful things we visited that day was the Duomo di Siena. In the 12th century the earliest version of this building starting hosting services, but there’d been a church on this spot for centuries by then. The oldest bell in the church was cast in 1149! These beautiful facades started appearing in the 1200s.
That was a grand trip. We’d do that one again, I’m sure.
Three years ago, the 17th was a Saturday, and we went on an easy bike ride.
Two years ago I apparently sat around and thought of little more than Covid. Remember the pandemic?
And last year at this time I was recovering from my first long drive in a year. We’d just come back from visiting my vaccinated family members. It had been my first drive out of the county in more than a year. It took a day or two to recover.
I did have a reason to re-use this gif, however.
This is a gif from November 2019, and it is one of my favorite spontaneous gifs. @CalCoff and @TilkaMichael are just so perfect in it.
The guy on the left is a sports director at a television station in Illinois now. The guy on the right is a 2L at a Washington D.C. law school. (We’re all going to work for one of them one day, I’m sure.)
So a bit of everything on this day in the last decade.
I’m leading with the cats, because they’re the big draw, but stick around for the books, which will come along in just a bit.
Phoebe felt like doing a bit of posing this week. Here she is, mid-belly rub.
And just sitting as pretty as you please in the hallway.
Poseidon is also doing well, but he has decided to play it coy. He’s in this photo, somewhere, I assure you. But he knows you can’t see him.
Sometimes being relaxed involves letting gravity take over and just sprawling wherever.
So they are both doing well and enjoying the beginning of their summer. Aren’t we all? I love the mental shift, and now I’m beginning to think that maybe the cats can sense it, too.
This must be the longest daffodil stem I’ve ever seen. It is in an almost perfect spot, removed from the lawn mower blades, reaching out for maximum sun. Just close enough to where we would walk to notice how it is showing off.
I wonder how much it will continue to grow before it gets the attention of a passing critter or bug.
We had a punchy little bike ride this evening. Good legs, good lungs, comfortable in the cockpit, and just a little droopy up one little roller. Everywhere else I could produce good power. Here, The Yankee had finally caught up to me and surged out a little ahead. She was pouring on the coals while I was fiddling with a jersey pocket. She pulled out a small gap, but I was able to shut it down. It was one of those days when most anything seemed possible.
It makes riding fun.
That makes you want to ride all the time. So tomorrow, maybe?
I finished Brilliant Beacons Saturday night. I bought this in April 2021.
I was not aware that our first lighthouses dated to colonial times. But, like many people who have visited any surviving lighthouses, I knew that automation and GPS and other technologies have improved a sailor’s circumstance such that most of the bright old lights are well beyond obsolete. This book covers much that took place between 1716 and the mid 20th century and does so in an easy, approachable manner. Not every lighthouse is dissected, but you’ll gain a terrific appreciation for some of the engineering involved at the most demanding locations. You’ll get a sense of the people that worked in the lighthouses, their steadfastness and their heroism and, sometimes, the crazed things that took place beneath the big, beaming lights. You’ll learn about the brilliant Fresnel lens (most of you have the same technology in your headlights) and you’ll come to know the different parts of the government that made lighthouses a practical fixture, long before they became a photographic fixation. Lighthouses are one of those things that, over the course of time, we got right. And if you’re at all interested in the subject matter, this book gets it right, too.
In addition to a massively overflowing bookshelf, I have too many books in my Kindle app. There were 52 books waiting there last night, all of them, of course, are of an interest to me. I bought them, after all. But which one to read next? I suppose there’s chronology. I’d probably be reading about Jamestown or the Holy See. But what about books that cover broad swaths of time? Or these other books about wood or food? So I could go with purchase date, then. No idea. Alphabetical? Reasonable enough. That’d probably create a little variation, which is desirable. But would that be alphabetical based on titles or the authors’ names?
So I did what anyone would do: I counted all the books and ran a random number generator until one number showed up a third time. And that number leads us to Last of the Doughboys, which I purchased in February last year.
Starting in 2003, reporter Richard Rubin started interviewing surviving members of the U.S. military and auxiliary services that took part in the Great War. Everyone here is more than 100 years old, because time marches on. I’ve read two chapters so far. The first was about his inspiration and the process to finding these centenarians. The second chapter was a summary of an all-but forgotten memoir of WW1, Over the Top, by Arthur Guy Empey. He wrote three other books, none as popular as the wildly successful first. He also penned a handful of popular songs, and a few silent films, acting in some of them, before the talkies drove him out. He had a bunch of magazine, pulp stories under his belt, as well.
In 1935, then in his early 50s, he helped organize a paramilitary organization in Hollywood.
It’s always been a weird place, basically.
None of this last part, the part about the rest of Empey’s life, has figured into Rubin’s Doughboys book. If you read about Empey, it’s clear he made a living on interest in the Great War right up until the public zeitgeist shifted in the mid 1930s. He had a good run of it, though, and himself lived into his 70s, dying in 1963. The rest of Rubin’s book, though, will see his peers having lived decades on.
Time and soldiers, they all know about marching. And in time we lose details. Did the right face happen here or there? Either way, we know we pivoted on this foot, because that’s the concept of the movement. The details might be forgotten, but the fundament is still there, we pivot on the ball of this foot. The non-historian remembers little of the Great War. The thoughtful person might be able to point to some of its many lasting, and continuing legacies. Most of us, at least, recall that it happened. It hardly seems enough to remember, considering the cost. But, then again, this was a century ago. Next month, it’s 105 years, in fact, since Gen. John Pershing arrived in France.
That’s history for you. Vital today, heroic tomorrow, then reunions the next week, and the mists of time after that. Before too long, the original media turns digital or dust.
This footage is the Wikipedia of newsreels, and there’s a heck of a downshift in the final quarter of the footage.
Pershing died in ’48. I bet his name gets mentioned a few times in this book, though. So far, it’s one you want to keep getting back to, eager to see who you’ll meet next.
I wonder how much of it I’ll read tonight.
cycling / Friday / photo — Comments Off on Just a fast little bike ride13 May 22
A weird thing happened on the way to my bike ride today. The Yankee is doing a sprint tri tomorrow, so she had a short ride planned. I was going to ride longer, but she got hers in early, which freed me up to do whatever.
Whatever is a thing I seldom do on the bicycle anymore, which is a shame and something to remedy. So I was looking forward to riding that, and my legs felt good and I thought it would be a grand, fast ride. I could go hard where I wanted to, not have to chase to catch back up at other moments, and so on.
So I left the neighborhood and went into the next neighborhood and thinking about the basic, familiar route I would take. There’s a hard stop sign at a hill just up ahead and that slows things down, but after that long little hill you take another stop sign and, from there, start to build some momentum over the next four rollers. Then comes a right hander onto one of those roads that has low commercial buildings — a dentist, an orthodontist and a funeral home — on one side and the back yards of houses on the other side.
Earlier this week I sprinted out that road and set the third fastest time on Strava, three seconds behind the leader.
This was to be my first sprint today, but my legs felt like solid stone. So, I thought, it’ll just be a pleasant and easy ride the rest of the way, for however long that feels rewarding. Freed up to do whatever.
Whatever turned into something pretty interesting as started feeling stronger with each passing little hill. Strava counted 24 timed segments on the route I chose today, one of our standards, and I had my second-best time on one of them, my third-best on five of them and set a new personal record on the longest segment, a 5.67-mile romp where I was trying to improve my overall speed. Usually I can add .2 mph over that portion, but today I did better, still.
I don’t have any photos of this, so that’s an archival photo of my shadow, because I was thinking about peddling and trying to remember how to breathe and recollect how gears work on my bicycle. It was the fastest outdoor ride of the year, so far, and for 28 miles it also somehow felt like the first ride of the year.
I see this as encouraging. And I see it as a reinforcement to do more of whatever on the bike. And now to start adding on to it.