Addendum: I was blown away to discover that the team, Just one at Lucy's, was born nearly 26 years ago by a group of lawyers one of which, Mike K., is still on the current evolution of the roster. amazing!
Friday, August 22, 2008
We are the Champions, my friend... (Take 2)
Addendum: I was blown away to discover that the team, Just one at Lucy's, was born nearly 26 years ago by a group of lawyers one of which, Mike K., is still on the current evolution of the roster. amazing!
Thursday, August 07, 2008
The Update
The Solarez Incident

Day 1 (Monday at lunch): with all the advice in hand, I thoroughly examined the tail breach, prodding & poking, and assessed whether I was going to really be able to pull this off without F-ing it up. That evening, an Ace hardware run is made to purchase sand paper 50/200 grit.
Day 2 (Tuesday at lunch): Nerves are taking over. It is unclear whether I should walk down this road and not be able to turn back, my lunch time evaporates into an hour of standing and staring. Maybe tomorrow I'll have the cajones.
Day 3 (Wednesday at lunch): It's go time. I bite the bullet, and with trepidation and a razor blade in hand, I begin some sanding, afterwards making incisions around the wound. I'm surprised. This is pretty easy. The 50 grit works quite well, turning the glass resin into dust (goggles and a face mask would be handy, even with limited sanding)... an amazing amount of dust. After the dust settled, the wound was clean, I thought so anyway. It really looked pretty good. the cracked resin had been sanded away with the foam openly exposed. A little Goo-gone to anesthetize the area, and the prep is complete. Now all in, I made the trip to the local surf shop to buy the Solarez. This was going to have to work. With confidence that tomorrow was the day, I opened up to Crystal, and revealed my lunch goings earlier in the week, and my plan for a successful DIY repair the following day. She says, "Just don't get that Sh*t everywhere and make a mess."... an omen for sure, but I didn't see it.
Day 4 (Thursday at lunch): On the drive from TSRI to my mom's place, I attempt to re-visualize the Youtube lesson, as well as any other applicable skills I had downloaded in the last 3-4 days. I was going to work quickly, not letting doubt set in for a second, if it arose. If something went wrong... I'd fix it. Simple. In the garage, with all my supplies laid out on the work bench, I begin to "knead" the tube of Solarez (as per the YT video...right?). The tube felt warm. It had been in my car all morning, and it was a pretty sunny day from the get go at the coast. I should have been leery. There just didn't seem to be enough resistance from the tube. Something wasn'.....dooohhh! SH***T! And I'm not wearing gloves!
The Fire drill: The tube just opened right up at the bottom. A huge glob of resin flew out. Most went right by me and on to the garage floor. Some on the work bench. Some on my hand, both hands! (how do you get this crap off skin?!) I sort of began to panic a bit. This stuff cures hard in the sun in ~ 3 min. Is that all the time I have to get this stuff off me... and it stinks to high heaven. I holding my breath intermittently, I run inside, past our housekeeper who was there finishing up. "Oh... uhh, hi Josepha... you good? uhh... gotta run, take care." Soap and water just doesn't get it done. Keep in mind, I didn't have a ton of this stuff on me. Just little spews here and there, mainly on one hand. But... I'm hairy. My arms are hairy, trust me when I say... It was a mess. This stuff isn't coming off (how nasty is this stuff?). To the computer, Solarez.com, contact info, call #. No answer, right to Vmail, of course. Any other #'s? emergency hotline? It's like the only other #. F it, call. The guy answers. He almost seems confused, super laid back. "Is this the # for Solarez?" The guy says back, "Uhh... Oh yeah, I work with the stuff." I proceed to inquire how might one remove a small amount from one's skin, trying not to reveal my hand completely. Acetone works, ie. nail polish remover,... ok, makes sense. I'm sure mom has some upstairs. "But oh, by the way, acetone can disolve the stuff into your pores, if your not careful.... or. You can stick the affected areas in the sun for,... 30-54 secs., and partially cure the resin, then peal it off. But don't cure it completely, or you might take some skin with that resin... haha hehe. Wonderful. Plan B it was, the partial cure & peal. It sorta worked.
I'm now sweating like a F-ing pig. Agitated, with only 30 mins. left of my lunch. Unbelievable. The DIY was supposed to be a quick surgical strike, say 15 min... now I'm going to be late getting back to work for sure... but I'll be damned if I'm not gonna finish this thing, especially now.
The Repair: Using my Vespa as board horse, I laid the ellington on the seat, balanced, and laid a SH*Tload of newspaper under the potential drip zone. Ahh... I'm learning. I put on some larex gloves... key, and were needed. FYI for the next repair. I cordoned off the resin zone with masking tape, and with a putty knife, scooped some solarez out of the back! of the tube, and proceeded to fill & cover the wound I had so meticulously prepared the day before. It's going well. Not to hard to work with the solarez. The tricky part, laying a piece of saran wrap over the affected area. If your piece is too big, it sort of flops everywhere, and if you get any rogue rez on your fingers, the saran wrap becomes even harder to work with. Really though, you just sort of flatten it out by pulling at the edges, removing wrinkes, and smooth out bubbles if any... there were a couple. Take the board outside the garage in the sun, and literally 3 mins. later... resins hard. peel off the saran, easy. Don't remove the masking tape just yet, for sanding. The tail is a bit tricky, and a glob of resin had settled towards the bottom, but the masking tape stopped it and kept the integrity of the flat bottom of the board. A razor easily removed the unsightly glob, and the 50 grit sanded the excess right down to the tape. After removing the masking tape, the fine grit sanding sponge that comes with the solarez worked like a charm for polishing up the repaired area.
DONE! Wow! After all that hoopla, the stuff worked like a charm. I did use the whole lunch hour, and my shirt would have gave you the impression that I had just finished a 5 setter against Nadal. But,... there's a silver lining.
Bonus: I took the Vespa to go back to the origin of purchase, and successfully exchanged the bunk tube with a new one... and, aired out my wet shirt on the Vespa in the process. Life can be sweet! (especially when your boss is out of town and a 1hr 30min lunch goes unnoticed)
Friday, May 09, 2008
We are the Champions, my friend...
A quick recap. I was approached by some friends to play league ball. I was apprehensive at first, only because the last time I played any basketball had been close to a year ago. Recently, I have been playing tennis consistently, in an attempt to stay in shape. FYI, tennis shape doesn't carry over what so ever to basketball shape. I'll admit, my play was ugly the first several weeks. My cardio conditioning was absolutely dreadful, and saying that the physical skills basketball requires were rusty, would be kind. Mentally, the basketball IQ was still there. It's funny how your brain never forgets how you used to perform, while your body has the short term memory of... say, Bob Marley. Amazingly, all it takes is a few months of inactivity of sports specific skills, to reset your ability in that arena to an astonishing ZERO. Patience is required, not all hope is lost, the skills do come back... for the most part.
We had a solid team. balanced. Every teammate could fill a role you would need for success in hoops. After the cardio came back (~week 5-ish), there were some growing pains in learning to play with new teammates. Some weeks, we were missing a player or 2, and had to adjust, which wasn't always easy. In a six team league, we finished the regular season 3rd. Playing each team twice, the 2 top teams beat us both times, and we finished 6-4. All 6 teams make the playoffs. Top 2 with a bye, 3 v. 6 & 4 v. 5 etc. With the goal of getting 3 wins for the title, we summarily dispatched the Defeated (0-10) 6th seed in round 1. Our next foe was the 2 seed, who in the regular season beat us twice with buzzer beaters. We won, but the victory was bittersweet. There star player, a 6'8" Mehmet Okur wanna be, jumped ship & took a job back east the week before... it made a difference. We were feeling a bit empty sneaking into the finals, beating one of our 2 nemeses at less than full strength. To win it all though, we were to face a NY Giants v. NE Pats situation, and have to defeat the 11-0, 1 seed. This team had destroyed us by ~ 30 pts. in our first meeting, when we were at far less than full strength. In our 2nd encounter, we were still short a critical player in our rotation, but fared much better. We were able to hold there star player (6'4" , 220 Deron Williams prototype) in check. And... we now felt we had a recipe for success, if there was to be a 3rd match up in "The Finals". Our date with destiny materialized, and this time, our gun was fully loaded. We had no excuses to fall back on. We got off to a quick start, matching them point for point, while keeping their D-Will stud quiet. I'll take a bow for hitting several big shots early, keeping the margin close and team confidence high. A miracle bank 3 pointer at the half buzzer by our 5 man, put us up 5 pts. I think they were stunned, and their frustration level was approaching a red line. They came out of the 2nd half gates quickly, and managed to tie the game, but our defensive intensity was stifling. Our lead quickly grew to 10 pts. and held them off for most of the second half. Some shaky freethrow shooting late (I'll bow here too), let them creep back in and get a sniff of a possible OT, but like Shaq says (not this year), we made the one's we needed to and held on for the victory. And victory was sweet. We kept with team tradition and had a beer at Trophy's after the game, trading a few war stories. I'm glad I got the chance to revive the sleeping baller in me, and look forward to keeping the train rolling into the next season.
We had a solid team. balanced. Every teammate could fill a role you would need for success in hoops. After the cardio came back (~week 5-ish), there were some growing pains in learning to play with new teammates. Some weeks, we were missing a player or 2, and had to adjust, which wasn't always easy. In a six team league, we finished the regular season 3rd. Playing each team twice, the 2 top teams beat us both times, and we finished 6-4. All 6 teams make the playoffs. Top 2 with a bye, 3 v. 6 & 4 v. 5 etc. With the goal of getting 3 wins for the title, we summarily dispatched the Defeated (0-10) 6th seed in round 1. Our next foe was the 2 seed, who in the regular season beat us twice with buzzer beaters. We won, but the victory was bittersweet. There star player, a 6'8" Mehmet Okur wanna be, jumped ship & took a job back east the week before... it made a difference. We were feeling a bit empty sneaking into the finals, beating one of our 2 nemeses at less than full strength. To win it all though, we were to face a NY Giants v. NE Pats situation, and have to defeat the 11-0, 1 seed. This team had destroyed us by ~ 30 pts. in our first meeting, when we were at far less than full strength. In our 2nd encounter, we were still short a critical player in our rotation, but fared much better. We were able to hold there star player (6'4" , 220 Deron Williams prototype) in check. And... we now felt we had a recipe for success, if there was to be a 3rd match up in "The Finals". Our date with destiny materialized, and this time, our gun was fully loaded. We had no excuses to fall back on. We got off to a quick start, matching them point for point, while keeping their D-Will stud quiet. I'll take a bow for hitting several big shots early, keeping the margin close and team confidence high. A miracle bank 3 pointer at the half buzzer by our 5 man, put us up 5 pts. I think they were stunned, and their frustration level was approaching a red line. They came out of the 2nd half gates quickly, and managed to tie the game, but our defensive intensity was stifling. Our lead quickly grew to 10 pts. and held them off for most of the second half. Some shaky freethrow shooting late (I'll bow here too), let them creep back in and get a sniff of a possible OT, but like Shaq says (not this year), we made the one's we needed to and held on for the victory. And victory was sweet. We kept with team tradition and had a beer at Trophy's after the game, trading a few war stories. I'm glad I got the chance to revive the sleeping baller in me, and look forward to keeping the train rolling into the next season.
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Walking the walk...

Back to the car. I discovered that Crystal and I

As a side note: Get involved in activism, even if it is just taking a stand against something in your daily life. Shit has to change, and it won't unless we start revolting against corporate control. It's hard to break out of routines, but I'm trying, and it really isn't that hard.
Suggestion: Don't buy disposable plastic water bottles. Don't do it, & pass it on to someone else. You'll be fine. Just buy a reusable bottle (BPA free) that you can refill. Surfrider quotes estimates that only 20% of them get recycled... which leaves 80%, either floating somewhere in the ocean, or NOT bio-degrading in a land fill.
Addendum: Jae Lee is responsible for discovering the 411 on the Hybrid tax credit, which was critical to the purchase of this car. Thanks Jae!
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
A Jaw Dropper, and...

And now... the JAW Dropper. My dad and I were

chatting at lunch last week. He was watching the History Channel and was made aware that an average Boeing 747 carries a mind boggling 50,000 gallons of fuel. Its range on that amount of fuel is approximately 6000 miles which is roughly the equivalent of a 12 hour trans-atlantic flight from Houston, TX. to Paris, France. After doing some quick math with rounded #'s, let's put this into perspective. Say the average car has a 20 gallon tank, and say that car fills up on average, 1 tank/week = 50 tanks/year. In 1 year, that average car will use ~ 1,000 gallons of gas. So... 1 transatlantic flight traveling a distance of 6000 miles in 12 hours, using 50,000 gallons of gas, could fuel the average car for... 50 YEARS!!! ONE FLIGHT. Think about how many of these planes fly every day. To add some more "fuel" to the fire, The smaller Boeing 737 as a fuel capacity roughly 10X less than its big brother the 747. So say one 737 flight at maximum distance = 5 years of gas for the average car. Since 1967, over 5,000 737's have been delivered and currently, it is estimated that there are as many as 1,250 airborne at any given moment. On average, a 737 departs or lands somewhere every five seconds. Obviously, all 1250 planes aren't exhausting there fuel on a given flight, but that size jet my make several flights in a day that may exhaust all of its fuel, so... Without considering the 747's use of fuel, if 1250 737's exhaust there fuel supply/day, that would fuel ~ 6250 average cars for 1 year. In case you were unaware, there are roughly 250 million cars in the U.S. (maybe even more).
More math: 250 M cars x avg car gas/yr (1000 gal.) = 250 B gal/yr
250 B total car gal/yr / 50 K gal/747 flt = 5 M flights = 13,500 747 flights/day
1250 737 tanks/day x 5000 gal = 6.25 M gal/day = 2.25 B 737 gal/yr
Math is funny,... and #'s don't lie. Initially, I was headed down a path that might reveal the apparent gluttony of airline travel, but in reality, the shear volume of cars in this country and the volume of gas that is consumed IS what is truly mind boggling. Even if you subtract the 2 B gallons, that my estimate of 737 travel consumes from 250 B, 747 sized planes would still need to log nearly 5 Million flights to catch up to annual car consumption. F! Wow!
I'm buying a hybrid.
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
I'm smiling on the inside...

The whole thing blows my mind. But why should I be surprised. You think when you have a child, the way they will develop is some sort of crap shoot. The things they will like, and the way they will act will just materialize from... somewhere, and they will become this completely unique person. The reality is, that while a unique mix of 2 people, they watch you, what YOU say, what YOU do, how YOU act. They like things you like... at least for the most part. You really do get what you pay for, and if you put in the work, you seem to get the reward. It's not all hollywood, and there is definitely rebellion at times.

Enjoy the recent photos, AA 2008.

Monday, February 11, 2008
Doing something about it...
I re-open Life can be sweet with a quick take on activism. In light of the pending election, I have used the recently induced political shot of adrenaline, to take part in the political process, and attempt to make a difference at the local level.
Not too long ago, The Surfrider Foundation sent me an email that invited me to attend an CCC (CA Coastal Commission) meeting and voice opposition of a proposed project to build a toll road that could potentially ruin Trestles, a world renown surf spot. My friend at work, Diana and I went down to the Del Mar Fairgrounds at 9 am to attend the CCC meeting to show our support. About 3000 people showed up to the meeting. I would estimate that the toll road opposition outnumbered the supporters around 2 - 3 to 1. We were there about 3 hours, and at that time, they were nowhere near reaching a decision. After all the proceedings and deliberation by the commitee, a decision was reached just before midnight. Amazingly there were still people there. Thanks to Surfrider, people's inner activist was tapped to put together a well organized picketing event. I believe it is important to protect our environment at the expense of convenience. Nobody likes traffic, but if places like San Onofre State Beach can't be preserved, than all hope is lost. Whether or not the strength of the opposition embolden the commission's decision to reject the toll road is debatable, but it did feel good to be on the ethically responsible side of things.... and win!
The moral of the story? It is important to fight for what is important to you. As cliche and idealistic as it sounds, we can make a difference. We as people really need to loosen the grip that corporate America has around our necks. Life can be sweet! Vote! picket! protect something. Viva la writers!
For more pictures at the actual event, check out my friends web album.
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