Showing posts with label Monday Miscellany. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Monday Miscellany. Show all posts

Monday, June 22, 2009

Dirty lowdown rotten scooter thieves



Update: The scooter has been found and 2 juveniles arrested. That's the good news. The bad news is that it is totally trashed. They ripped off all the custom painted panels, crashed the bike, bent the frame and it is a total loss. What a waste.

A friend had her Vino 125 scooter stolen last night in Vermont. She is absolutely devastated, since she spent many hours customizing it. Since we have readers all over the country, maybe one of you will spot this eye-catching yellow and pink paint job.

Sorry the photo is so small. A much, much larger version is here. The photo hosting service she uses made it tricky for me to figure out how to resize it for our blog.

Sorry, folks. That link produced a photo for me, but apparently creates problems for others. You'll have to make do with the tiny photo.

Update: A real photo is here.

If you see this bike, please call the local police and report it.


Grrrrr! I HATE thieves!

Monday, March 2, 2009

Monday Miscellany: Trawler Fest Edition

Monday is the day for miscellaneous topics

While we were at TrawlerFest last week, I noticed many parallels between the boat and RV worlds. In particular, boats "camp" in very similar ways to RVs.

There are three broad categories of places to stay overnight in a boat. The first is a marina.


Photo by pbo31

Like RV parks, marinas often offer "full hookups." In the boat world, that usually means a shore power electrical connection, a water spigot nearby, and a pumpout station. There is often a fuel dock, restrooms, laundry room, restaurant, and other services within easy walking distance. Prices vary, but usually are charged by the length of the boat.

Marinas can range from rustic to resort-like, just like RV parks. The more touristy the destination, the pricier the dock. Some are membership-only, similar to Outdoor Resorts, and many require advance reservations.

Boat people choose marinas for many of the same reasons RVers like RV parks.
  • Everything needed provided by the facility
  • Feels safe
  • Easy and comfortable to stay for an extended time
  • Conveniently located to a given destination
  • No need for a dingy; can step onto dock and walk
  • No need to be conservative with water, power, food supplies
  • Unable or unwilling to rely solely on boat's systems
The next option for overnighting in a boat is mooring out.


Photo by Leslie Willis

A mooring location is a place that has been designated for boats to tie up. In the photo above, each vessel is tied to a ball that is anchored in place inside the harbor. Moorings can also be stakes, piers, or cleats along a dock. It is usually very clear that others have used that spot before you, and there is sometimes a small fee.

Moorings strike me as similar to rustic campgrounds, such as those in National Parks, National Forests, or many state parks. There are no hookups; the boat must be able to provide its own power and have enough water on board. Depending on the location, there may or may not be services nearby.

The advantages of mooring out are:
  • Less expensive than marinas
  • May be in a more natural setting
  • More separation between boats
  • Near enough to other boats for companionship and "safety in numbers"
  • Clearly marked, no need to hunt for a place or guess if staying is permitted
  • Usually first come, first served
Finally, there is anchoring out.


Photo by storm crypt

Dropping anchor on your own is very similar to boondocking in the RV world. You choose the place, scope out the surrounding area, and are often completely on your own.

Anchoring near a town can be similar to urban dry camping at a WalMart. There are services nearby, but no place to get electricity, water or a place to dump tanks. Anchoring in a remote cove is more like dispersed camping in the backwoods, with quiet and solitude.

Mariners choose anchoring for some of these reasons:
  • It may be the only choice; no marina or moorings
  • Free
  • Access to prime fishing locations
  • Peace and quiet
  • Solitude
  • Unspoiled natural setting
  • Feeling of independence
Our regular readers can easily guess that when we eventually move onto a trawler, we will be eager to explore remote anchorages.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Monday Miscellany: Generosity

Photo by Mindful One 

Monday is the day for miscellaneous topics

I found out on our last Red Cross job that the following companies gave In-Kind donations. This means that they gave goods and services to support our disaster relief work. This type of generosity is rarely seen by the public, so I thought you might like to know what goes on "behind the scenes."

When companies like these donate food, cell phone air time, lodging, toys, books, or medical supplies, it allows the Red Cross to use cash donations for other vital needs. We couldn't do it without our industry partners. When I saw this list, I knew it would influence my purchasing decisions in the future.

3M
Abbott Labs
Academy Sports + Outdoors
Anheuser-Busch
Chevron
Coca-Cola North America
Country Inn & Suites by Carlson
CVS
Dollar General
Energizer
FirStar Fiber
Georgia Pacific Paper
GOJO
Grainger
Hasbro
Kraft
MasterCard
Maersk N.A. Inc.
Mattel
Nestle Waters, North America Inc.
Northern Products
Playtex
Reckitt Beckinser
Rite Aid
Royal Cup Coffee
Scholastic Inc.
Schering-Plough
Target
The Clorox Company
The Home Depot
Verizon
VSP
Walgreens
Wal-Mart
Waterjel
Wyeth

In other good news for the Red Cross, Marathon Oil Corporation donated $1.5 million for the 2008 hurricanes. For many of our disaster relief needs, there's no substitute for cold, hard cash, and Marathon's generosity is welcome, indeed.

This kind of news makes me all warm and fuzzy inside. In difficult economic times, I think it is especially wonderful to read about acts of generosity in the corporate world. It gives me hope!

Monday, June 9, 2008

Monday Miscellany: Routine Edition



Monday is the day for miscellaneous topics


From the archives, a few posts about routines:

Over three years ago, I wrote about a typical day for us. A few things have changed since then, but not much. Opal can't jump up on the bed anymore, sad to say. About a year ago, she tried and failed several times in a row. She won't even try now, poor old thing. We usually shower in the evenings now, to take advantage of water warmed by waste heat from the engine. And our driving days have shortened. We still usually move the bus almost daily, but lately the distance traveled has been about half what it was in the first couple of years.

The way we prepare the bus for daily travel also hasn't changed much. Lately we've been letting the dog ride downstairs with us instead of locked in her carrier upstairs. She lays down at my feet and seems to be calmer this way. As an added bonus, she will occasionally climb several steps up the staircase and then walk directly across onto my lap. She's not much of a leaper anymore and never was a lap dog. She'll stay on my lap for about 10 minutes before we're both tired of it and then return to the floor where it is safer for both of us in case of an accident.




Having routines makes it simpler to get things done and also leads to brilliant ideas like "Put It Where You Use It." It never ceases to amaze me how just rearranging a few things in a cabinet can make so much more sense. You'd think after almost four years living aboard Odyssey that everything would be efficiently arranged for optimal convenience, but I'm still moving stuff around.



Next week: Exactly what optimally-efficient spot did I choose for the pot holders? I haven't seen them in months...

Monday, June 2, 2008

Monday, May 19, 2008

Monday Miscellany: Moving, moving, moving

Today I am a guest blogger over on Unclutterer. I am also on a flight to California to help my Mom move from a 3 bedroom house to a studio apartment. Thanks to the wonder of the Internet, I can do both simultaneously.

I grew up in a military family, and we moved our entire household on average once every 18 months until I left for college. Mom can pack a box like it's nobody's business, but it has been about 15 years since she and my stepfather Bob moved into their home. She's been working for months to downsize and I'm giving her a hand with the final tasks. Within the course of 48 hours she'll need to move into the studio, put most of her furniture into storage and get on an airplane herself to celebrate my niece's high school graduation. At bit frantic even for seasoned movers like ourselves.

If you're in California and I don't get a chance to visit with you on this brief trip, please forgive me.

Monday, May 12, 2008

Monday Miscellany: Goodness Rules


Monday is the day for miscellaneous topics

A recent Dear Abby column really resonated with me. Since I can’t find a permalink for the specific column, here’s the one letter I reacted to:
DEAR ABBY: I have been reading your column most of my adult life, but I don't ever remember seeing any letters from people who are just afraid of life.

The world today is such a scary place. I have a small child who will have to grow up in this world, and sometimes the thought terrifies me. I hear about school shootings, dangerous gangs, religious leaders who are sex offenders, and I recently watched a report of six teenage girls beating another and videotaping it to post online.

How can parents feel safe raising our kids in a world this crazy and scary? I am trying to look for the positive in life, but, honestly, it gets harder and harder. -- MISSING THE OLD DAYS IN ARIZONA CITY

DEAR MISSING THE OLD DAYS: I agree, bad things do sometimes happen to good people. However, you can't live your life as though the Hammer of Thor is about to strike you down, and if you maintain your fearful attitude, you could pass it along to your child.

While I can't guarantee that nothing bad will ever happen to you or anyone else, please allow me to remind you that the news media earn their income from magnifying the tragic, the scary and anything that deviates from the norm -- whether it is a murder, a car wreck or a five-legged cow.

The time has come for you to turn off your television set, tune out talk radio, and take your child to a park, a playground, a zoo or any family outing. It's a sure way to detoxify yourself from the negativity that has poisoned your outlook. Do it for two weeks, and I can almost guarantee you'll feel better than you do today.

I think this is really great advice. So many people live in fear. We hear this fear often when people ask us about our travels. “I heard there are banditos in Mexico!” “Aren’t you afraid of the crazy people living out in the woods when you boondock?” “The Pacific Coast Highway is so narrow and twisty! Don't drive your RV there!” “I only feel safe in an RV park.”

Many of us are inundated with bad news, especially on television. As Abby says, bad news sells. Crime, violence, death and destruction make exciting footage. Thieves, liars, and cheats make us cluck our tongues and shake our heads and wait for the "details at 11PM." Talk radio seems to work people up into their worst selves, encouraging ranting and harsh judgments and even hate. The handful of loudmouth boors who call in are stroked and praised by the host, making them feel important. On the airwaves, it seems that everyone is angry.

Why does this junk sell? I think the reason is very simple: because it is different than the real world. We don’t need to watch or hear about kindness, civility, health, or prosperity, because we see that every day in our real lives. It is familiar and therefore boring! Wow, think about that: goodness is so common it is boring. And when things are boring and common, we don’t focus on them. We don’t pay attention.

Today at work, I’ll bet that your coworkers did their jobs, chatted about their weekends, and ate their lunches. Probably no one screamed at the boss, punched their fist through a wall or embezzled the 401K. No one slid up to you and offered you drugs or implied that your job was at risk if you didn’t date them. Papers were filed, customers were served, product was shipped. How dull. How normal. If a camera crew showed up to film that, you’d be baffled, or laugh out loud. Put my job on TV? You’ve got to be joking! I just sit here and answer the phone/drive the truck/supervise the playground!

Around the country, hundreds of millions of people have days just like yours. It is so rare for something really bad to happen, that when it does, you tell everyone. “Oh my goodness, Jack was fired and he was so upset that he cried! It was shocking! I’ve never seen that before, so sad! He didn’t deserve it!” The bad news becomes conversation, repeated much more often than something good like, “Jill’s article for the annual report was flawless! Not a single grammatical mistake! Her spelling has improved so much, don’t you think?” Boooooooring. We acknowledge the really BIG good news, like weddings and new babies and high school diplomas, but even those simmer down much more quickly than news of small badnesses like the time John broke his nose on a door jamb.

But the truth is that the world is overwhelmingly good and getting better. Life expectancy is up. Infant mortality is down. Cars are safer. Nationally, violent crime is down in the USA. (Don’t believe me? I used to publish a book of government statistics that included yearly crime data. Every year, the numbers per capita were lower. Buy Almanac of the 50 States for yourself.)

This is big picture stuff, though. What about locally, at the neighborhood level? Think about where you live. I assume that if you live there, you probably feel pretty safe. Your neighbors are probably pretty nice and give you a friendly wave. Kids play at the park and folks tend their yards. That’s normal. The norm. Common place. Frequent. Your neighborhood exists all over the country and all over the world. Other than the fact that you live there, it isn’t special in its comfortable safeness.

Are there “bad” neighborhoods? Of course. There are pockets of crime and areas where drugs and violence can be encountered. Even in your upscale middle class town. But those areas are such a small percentage of human habitation, and almost completely nonexistent out in the “boonies.” We hear disproportionally about these “bad” places because they are NOT normal. They are NOT boring. But I think it is fantastic news that they are not the norm! That means the overwhelming majority of places are safe, friendly and good.

Is it lame to read Dear Abby everyday? Yeah, probably. But sometimes her answers are just the sort of straight talk that people need to hear, and I think this is one such case. Stop listening to the doom and gloom, and go out and actually experience the goodness of life. You won't be sorry.

Monday, March 17, 2008

Monday Miscellany: Free For Escapees Only

Monday is the day for miscellaneous topics



I just received the latest edition of the Day's End Directory. (Yes, that means our mail arrived today. Yay!) You may recall that I wrote about our camping reference books last year. This is one of my favorites, listing member-tested boondocking spots all over the country.

Since I now have the latest and greatest edition, I am giving away our well-worn September 2005 version. It is little dirty, the front windshield water leaks have stained it a bit, and a number of pages have my notes scribbled in the margins, but it is chock full of good information.

I will ship this 250-page spiral bound book to you FREE, but you must be an Escapee. I'll even pay the shipping. First commenter gets it. (I'll get your address and SKP number via private email.) If you're not a member, you might check them out; the club has many benefits for RVers beyond the Day's End Directory.

The latest edition is also available for purchase here. Again, you must be a member. It is $20 for a printed copy, $8 for a CD, and $5 to download. While I usually prefer to go paperless as much as possible, I like my camping guides to be on dead trees. Go figure.

Monday, February 25, 2008

Monday Miscellany: Tours?

Monday is the day for miscellaneous topics

I am putting together several short video tours of Odyssey. Is there something in particular you've always been curious to see? Put special tour requests in the comments and George will make sure they get included.



Update: The videos are done, and can be viewed here. Thanks for all your suggestions!

Monday, September 24, 2007

Monday Miscellany: Visiting

Monday is the day for miscellaneous topics

Today we are in Houston, visiting my brother and his family. We just had a nice dinner with them (at Olive Garden, where else?) and we have returned to the bus and they to their house. In the next few days, we will spend more time with them but each evening will retreat to our own home.

The folks we visit on our travels seem to fall into two groups: those who want us to park the bus somewhere and stay in their guest rooms, and those who understand that we would prefer to sleep in our own bed.

I think that most of our friends and family that fall into the "guest room" category are genuinely trying to be hospitable. When out of town guests come to visit, they are used to accommodating those guests. The offer of a long, hot shower often features prominently in the invitation. Some, I fear, simply can't imagine that we are comfortable in the bus at all. "Next time you visit, we'll get you out of that thing," said one. Gee, thanks. In either case, they often seem a bit put-out when we decline.

Our preference, though, is to be in our own space with our little menagerie. As lovely as your house is, we're most relaxed when we can stumble out of bed at our own pace, drink our own coffee and generally be as slobby as we want to be. Then you can talk about us after the day is over, and we can talk about you.

Lately I've been saying this to people who don't quite get it: "Don't think of us as guests, think of us as neighbors." And just as you don't need to offer your neighbor a place to sleep, you can let us go home at the end of the evening, too. It won't hurt our feelings; in fact, we prefer it.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Monday Miscellany: Preoccupied

Monday is the day for miscellaneous topics

I tried to sit down and blog both yesterday and Saturday, but I find I'm too preoccupied about the dog to do anything productive. I've been spending entirely too much time researching dog spleen tumors and those medical websites are pretty intense.

After my stepfather was diagnosed with cancer several years ago, I spent weeks on very similar sites and often upset myself right before going to bed. Sean instituted a rule: No medical research after 8pm. We've had to re-instate the rule.

We are hoping to have the results of her biopsy today to help us decide what the next steps are. We'll probably call the vet we found in Arkansas for recommendations on what facility in the southern states has the best reputation for the appropriate care for Opal. Last time she had major medical problems, a vet in Tennessee recommended that we take her to Texas to one of the A&M campuses. Apparently much state of the art veterinary research happens there.

Monday, September 3, 2007

Monday Miscellany: Gone But Not Forgotten

Monday is the day for miscellaneous topics

One of our readers read about Capt. Ray Gaines, who used to lead RV barge trips:

He would connect as many as seven narrow river barges together and load them up with RV´s, becoming a flotilla RV park traveling the inter coastal waterways of the US! To ensure customer satisfaction, these barges had complete facilities including a 150-seat restaurant, laundry, freshwater to drink and waste disposal facilities. Each RV had their own hookups and enough space between them to put out their awnings.


Reader Bob asked, "Can RV-ers still do this?"

Since Sean knew the answer to the question, I thought I'd share it with the rest of you:
The short answer is "No." At least, not in the US.

The longer answer is that as RV barge trips became more popular, the US Coast Guard began to take notice. And, of course, the inevitable red tape sank RV barge trips here forever. The barges are not USCG certified as passenger-carrying vessels, and lack the appropriate fire-suppression and other life safety equipment, life boats, life vests, all-points alerting systems, and the like -- the sorts of things that make cruise ships sort-of OK places for octogenarians to vacation. The fact that people might be asleep in their quarters on such a contraption while underway was an exacerbating factor.

Too bad, really -- I had always wanted to do one of these. Of course, you'd never get away with loading your RV on a train in this country either, as we did in Mexico. So, who knows, perhaps some enterprising outfit will start barge trips in central America some day.


It really does sound like fun. It's worth a look at here just to see the photos of the "RV Barges."

Monday, August 27, 2007

Monday Miscellany: International Greetings

Monday is the day for miscellaneous topics



Just wanted to welcome our new readers from

Singapore
Enschede, Netherlands
Coventry, UK
Zurich, Switzerland
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

We also had visits from readers in Bermuda, Ireland, Sweden, Poland, and Finland, but I don't know the names of their cities.

It is amazing to me that people visit from these places that Odyssey can't even drive to!

Monday, August 20, 2007

Monday Miscellany: Opal Update

Monday is the day for miscellaneous topics

Using my patented method for finding pet-related service providers, I lucked into a really good vet here in Little Rock, at the Cloverdale Animal Hospital on Baseline Road. This clinic had the distinct advantages of 1) being able to see Opal first thing this morning, and 2) being close enough to take the scooter since Sean was busy dealing with the bus leak.

Dr. Mike Gillum was very knowledgeable and helpful. The tentative diagnosis is Coccidioidomycosis, or "desert flu," a fungal infection that is common in both dogs and people that have recently visited Arizona or New Mexico. This is consistent with the type of cough she has, the time frame of 7-10 days since exposure, the mild lesions on her lung that show up on X-ray, and the fact that her white blood cell count is not elevated (like it would be for a bacterial infection.) It is also possible that she has Bordatella, or kennel cough, although she has been vaccinated against that. He reassured me that Opal most likely does not have lung cancer or heart disease, although in older dogs such things are always a possibility.

The only way to be certain of the fungal infection is to send a blood sample off to the state's testing lab. Dr. Gillum thought we would have those results by Wednesday. In the meantime, he prescribed medication for the coughing and a diuretic to help clear the fluid out of her lungs. We also have an anti-fungal medication, but won't start that until after Wednesday, if necessary.

If the results are inconclusive and/or her symptoms get worse, I will call Dr. Gillum to get his recommendation for a vet in another town. Turns out he is very active in the Southwest Veterinary Symposium and knows many of his colleagues across this part of the country. Of course I can call him anytime about any new symptoms Opal shows in the next week or so. I'm definitely adding this guy to my Rolodex!

No matter how carefully I try to screen vets and kennels for our pets, the truth is that any new vendor can be the wrong choice. Once when they simply needed vaccinations, I found a vet that looked good on paper. We sat on the bench in the exam room with Opal next to us on the floor, in the corner. This guy (I don't remember his name or the clinic; sorry) marched right into the exam room and without so much as a little gentle talking first to draw her out and build some trust, reached down to lift Opal's lip and look at her teeth. She bit him, of course. Wouldn't you? Big tall stranger looming over you in a scary-smelling vet's office? He even stuck his fingers in her mouth to make it more convenient to bite them. But since all we needed was the shots, I didn't worry too much about this guy's bad bedside manner.

Today, Dr. Gillum spoke softly to Opal, approached her slowly and was exceedingly gentle with her. She licked his hand. When she needed to go in the back to have blood drawn twice, the staff let me pick her up to calm her. All good signs. Let's hope that we have a firm diagnosis on Wednesday.

If you're wondering how Opal rides on the scooter, the answer is quite well, thank you very much. We have a mesh backpack dog carrier similar to this one. The handles loop around the scooter's handlebars and the bag sits on the floorboards. The top of the pack has an elastic closure that allows Opal to stick her head out but not escape. She sits comfortably on the floorboards inside the bag and peeks around the front fairing to get her snout out in the wind. I'm thinking about getting her a helmet, too. Next time she rides the scooter, I'll try to get a photo.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Monday Miscellany: Getting Ready to Move

Monday is the day for miscellaneous topics

After a week in Santa Fe, today we are hitting the road. When we move the bus, I prepare the inside for travel while Sean does a “walk around” and checks the outside.

Here is what I do to make sure the interior is ready for travel. I start in the bedroom and work my way forward.

In the bedroom:
  • Turn off and close Fantastic Fan.
  • Lock Opal in her carrier under the bed.
  • Turn on the Engine Heat, which allows the coolant of the engine to heat hot water and (if necessary) run the space heaters.
  • Cold or very hot weather: close the window and close the window shade. Temperate weather: close the window about halfway and open the blind all the way. This allows a nice breeze to flow into the bedroom without damaging the blind. If the window is open all the way, the breeze is strong enough at freeway speeds to blow the pillows off the bed.
  • Prepare the aquarium by bungee-cording the lid down and stuffing a rag into the overflow pan. The tank loses about a cup of water on a typical day’s drive. That water ends up in the pan which is difficult to drain, so I soak it up with rags and wring the rag into the sink later.

In the bathroom:
  • Make sure the toilet is flushed.
  • Open or close the window to match the bedroom window.
  • Close and latch both doors. The two doors in the bathroom have magnetic catches which aren’t strong enough to hold the doors closed in rough driving conditions. After just a few trips where the doors slammed back and forth, we installed sliding latches.
  • Turn off and close the Fantastic Fan.
  • Make sure no loose items are on the counter.

In the kitchen:
  • Turn off and close the Fantastic Fan.
  • In hot weather, turn on the air conditioner. The center a/c will cool both the dog in the back and us in the front. In extremely hot weather, we need to run the front a/c to cool off the big front windows and Opal is allowed to ride in the cockpit with us.
  • Put away all dishes.
  • Secure all loose items. The coffee pot, dish drainer, two metal canisters, and a colander full of fruit stay in place because they have non-skid material underneath. Anything else loose must be put away. That usually includes only dishes and maybe a box of crackers.
  • Place small spacer in dish soap dispenser to keep up and down bus motion from squeezing soap into the sink.*

In the living area:
  • Close the tambour doors over the TV screen.
  • Close all the blinds.
  • Close all the windows.
  • Retract the awnings.
  • Secure all loose items on the counter. Two baskets/bins with small stuff stay in place. Anything else should be put away by now, but can be placed on the couch if necessary.
  • Put my laptop computer on my chair.
  • Push the Miller folding table as far forward between the chairs as it will go. The chairs keep the table from moving or falling sideways and since braking forces are stronger than acceleration forces, the table cannot move any further forward once in place.
  • Grab anything that belongs in the cockpit and head downstairs.
  • Count the cats. There should be two somewhere inside.
  • Open the roof hatch and visually check that the satellite dish has stowed.

In the cockpit:
  • Hang up hats and jackets.
  • Open the electric shades.
  • Stow the Reflectix window cover.
  • Fasten seat belt.


*In response to Robert & Susan's comment below, here is the spacer used in the kitchen soap dispenser. It is made from one of those little foam disks that shoot out of a kid's toy gun, which we use for cat entertainment purposes. We cut a notch through the disk to make it into a "C" shape. This slips over the neck of the soap nozzle and holds it in place.



Monday, August 6, 2007

Monday Miscellany: Introduction

I've been wanting to be more active on the blog as a contributing writer and not just the occasional photographer. Sean's goal is to post every time we move to a new location, although lately it seems more like he posts every time something new goes wrong with Odyssey. Since he takes care of describing our overnight sites and all things related to bus maintenance and repair, I have been at a loss for daily inspiration.

A number of websites that I read regularly have theme days, such as "Quote of the Week" on Saturdays or a product review on Wednesday. Having daily themes seems like a good way to organize my thoughts and give some direction to my writings.

So, here is my first stab at seven categories:

Monday Miscellany
- odds and ends that don't fit into the other categories.

Talkback Tuesday - the strange and wonderful things that people say to us (or behind our backs when they think we can't hear them.)

Website Wednesday - blogs, forums, and other sites that we read.

Thursday Tips - hints and ideas about RVing that we've found work well.

Fuzzy Friday - the life and times of our pets.

Small Space Saturday
- organizing and storing the stuff of life so it doesn't overwhelm the bus.

Super Sunday - what we enjoy most about the fulltiming lifestyle.

Although we don't often say it explicitly, we always welcome feedback from our readers. To comment on any post, click the link at the bottom of that post that says "O comments," "2 comments," etc. Today would be a good time to comment on what you would like to read about here on Our Odyssey.

If you just want to view the comments that others have left, you can click on the title of any post and then scroll to the bottom for comments. For instance, on this post, click on the bold words "Monday Miscellany: Introduction."