
Thursday, December 18, 2008
Thursday, December 11, 2008
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Woman Becomes First Pilot With No Arms
Friday, November 28, 2008
Time disappears
http://www.davidwygant.com/blog/lost-in-time/
That is so how I've felt about my three "serious" boyfriends. If I don't have this feeling, I don't want to date the person. = )
Related links: Online dating tips for women and Online dating tips for men.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Funny excerpts from Online Dating tips
3. List your exact body type. It seems like on the Internet EVERYBODY is "athletic and toned," "petite" or "fit and trim." He will find out what you look like!
4. List your real age. In the world of Internet dating, it seems like there's an abundance of 29- and 39-year-old women.
5. I'm really glad you had a great time on your vacation, but you don't need to post 10 photos of your trip to Italy WITHOUT you in them. This is a dating site, not a trip advisor.
6. Keep your profile short and to the point. Make your paragraphs very short. I've seen too many women's profiles that look like romance novels. Take a look at Yahoo! Sports and read an article in the sports section. All paragraphs are short so men can digest that information in short bursts.
8. Don't list your financial desires like you're posting a want ad. I've seen too many women write, "I'm looking for a man who will spoil me, buy me great things, and take me on great trips." You come across as a gold digger. Instead say, "I like the finer things in life to share with somebody," so you don't come across so harsh.
9. No baby talk! Even if the number one priority in your life is to be a mother, nothing scares a man off more than if you write in your profile about how badly you want kids. He may feel the same way, but he is going to think, "This woman will marry ANYBODY to have kids."
14 Fatel Online Dating Errors Single Women Make
10 Fatel Online Dating Errors Men Make
Thursday, November 20, 2008
What a difference
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Sylmar Fire (LA Fires ) 11/14/08 - ?
Lanciero, the $75k dressage horse, had to be evacuated at 6am Saturday morning. Carin, the trainer, was loading horses up while the roof of the stable was on fire! There was a miniature pony at the stable and 5 firefighters put him in the back of the pickup truck. Carin is really pissed that the owner of the farm never called her to tell her to evacuate. Carin does not live on the property and went to bed before 10pm Friday night so she did not know about the fire that started at 10:30 in Sylmar. Very Scary!
Vikki's new shoes
When I walked her back to her paddock, it was feeding time and she trotted a few steps in her eagerness to get to her food. I haven't seen her attempt to trot in weeks! That's a good sign. I feel much better already knowing that she will be hurting less!!
Dr Cox, the foot specialist, also recommended Natural Vitamin E (vs synthetic) and they are shipping it to me today. He likes the way it helps muscle development in older horses. Her weight is low but has been stable since the switch to the low-starch food. Once we are completely switched over to Wellsolve, I'll up her feed some and see if that helps. He's not a fan of the Isoxsuprine because of the inconclusive evidence so I'm not going to give it.
For all you wine drinkers
You like the taste of wine because you have lots of mouth bacteria.......Ewwww! I'm so glad I can't stand the taste of wine.... I HAVE A CLEAN MOUTH!
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,451906,00.htmlVikki's feet (hooves...whatEVer)
We only looked at the front feet because they are causing the most pain right now (and we have X-rays already). Once the front feet improve, we will evaluate again.
The attached pictures show:
Front/back view of the hoof
1. Medial/lateral hoof/coffin bone imbalance.
Side view of the hoof
2. An excessively high coffin bone palmar angle.
3. Coffin bone resorption at the tip.
4. Lack of solar concavity.
Problems #1,2 and 4 can definitely be improved with more appropriate hoof care. Problem #3 can often be halted when 1,2 and 4 are taken care of.
Problem 1: Have farrier trim to correct medial/lateral imbalance.
Problems 2,3,4: Use a 3 degree wedge with the thick portion at the toe to reduce the pressure(pain) at the top of the sole where the coffin bone has very little cushioning. This should help with coffin bone inflammation which leads to the coffin bone resorption. Essentially this acts as her hoof wall while it regrows. And continue with 1 gram 2x/day to reduce said inflammation along with soft bedding.
The farrier for the horse we trailered met us for the appointments and received specific advice from Dr Cox on how to proceed with trimming and shoeing.
I believe the new farrier I used in LA was responsible for trimming the walls level to the sole (why??). And possible trimming the toe too short. I had never seen her soles that flat, almost convex looking in SF. However, for the past 9 months, we were trying to get the heels off the ground more since she has a tendency to have a very low heel. She didn't seem to have a problem in SF but maybe 9 months was still too fast to raise the heel...
Poor Vikki had to be off the bute for the examination and was really sore by the end of it. So I loaded her up on 2 grams of bute before hopping in the trailer for the ride home. By the time we got back to the ranch, she was much more comfortable = )
Friday, October 3, 2008
$*%$%# LA is making me FAT
Plus, I got into a great enjoyable routine of riding the exercise bike during lunch at Leapfrog's tiny on-campus gym. Current company doesn't have any sort of gym and it takes away so much time to drive to the gym at lunch. I only get 30min on the bike and that just doesn't cut it weight loss or maintenance.
And now I'm flying off to school 3 night per week and don't have time. Plus I've noticed exercising earlier in the day takes off more weight then after work, weird. I get a massive headache if I exercise before work or outside in the sun during lunch.
(The school and horse have pushed me off my Eat to Live diet but I'm starting to get back on it and plan to completely once the horse is better.)
Grrrrr.
Classes, finally
I told myself that I would stop catering and take college classes when I achieved in-state status in CA. I didn't have enough time to get the paperwork done in SF before the Spring 2008 semester which is a big bummer since I was laid off 1 week into the semester and would have had plenty of time.
CA has a good community college system with cheap classes ($20/credit) and most are offered in the evening. SF did seem to have a better offering of classes (anyone surprised there) but LA does have some that I want/need. My plan is to take all the lower level Computer Science classes I did not have (Math Major) in college. The I will proceed to take Graduate classes.
Unfortunately they are M and T/R evenings. That's a lot but I couldn't find a second class that met just once a week ; ( So between classes, working 9 hrs a day, and a sick horse I'm completely underwater. I haven't cooked, cleaned, etc for the last two weeks. I did do laundry but haven't put it away.
Sick Horsey
The vet said the soreness appeared to be in her hip and prescribed bute and light exercise for a couple of weeks. She took some blood-work to check for an ulcer since Vikki is a cribber and has had a lot of stressful changes the last couple of months (boyfriend moved, bully horse, moved to another pasture for protection from bully, move to LA). She also said Vikki is starting to get some points on her teeth but they are not bad enough to bother her (we do have a call into the horsey dentist for several horses at the farm). She prescribed bute, pain and anti-inflammatory medication, and light work for a couple of weeks.
The vet also mentioned that Vikki seemed pretty sore in several joints and she may be suffering from osteo-arthritis due to age, etc. That was a strange statement to me. Vikki has only been slightly off in the right hock and left knee before. She's very athletic and I certainly wouldn't put her in training if she couldn't handle it physically.
I relayed the vet's words to the farm owner, who is a nurse, and she stopped me and said "you said Vikki had a tic sore recently...did the muscle atrophy start before or after the tic...?". Right then I knew where her mind was...Lyme disease. The main symptom of Lyme disease is joint pain. The muscle imbalance did indeed happen after the tic sore but I assumed it was from not being worked (sore was at the girth). So I called the vet and asked if she could test for Lyme with the blood sample. I looked up Lyme disease on the Internet and in both horses and people the main symptom is
According to the Internet, the bacteria from a tic is transmitted 12-24 hours after latching on (and staying on). "A clinical case of Lyme disease occurs when a person is infected by a tick bite. Symptoms follow after an incubation period that may last between two and thirty days. However, on some occasions, the bacteria do not cause disease straight away. The bacteria can enter a phase in which they do not cause symptoms but are still present. They may still have the potential to cause active disease at a later stage."
Vikki's test came back positive on Wednesday but a positive test is not a definitive diagnosis in horses. Lots of horses test positive due to the antibodies in their system. Usually horses are exposed but develop immunity without getting the clinical symptoms. Vikki was under a lot of stress the last 3 months and that may have weakened her immune system enough for the Lyme disease to take hold. If it is indeed Lyme causing her symptoms, they should greatly improve after 2-5 days on the meds. The treatment is a course of antibiotics (Doxycycline) and/or immune system boosting treatments. So we'll see!
Ummm, did I mention I don't like SoCal??

Decorative Wrought Iron
Olympic protest in SF (realized I never put on blog)
Wednesday, October 1, 2008
Thursday, September 4, 2008
Brain activities make you hungry
http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20080904/sc_livescience/thinkingmakesuspigout
I am totally in agreement with this article. In college, I found I did best on morning exams if I ate chocolate chip cookies and milk for breakfast!
This picture makes me very dizzy...
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
Dolly's mouse

Thursday, August 28, 2008
Eat to Live - 2 weeks on
Since I've moved to LA I've been eating comfort food like mad! Lots of cheese, cheese products/food, peanut butter, and ice cream treats. And I know I was gaining some weight. I wanted to eat healthier but in the last 6mo my stomache has ached when ever I eat veggies & some fruits. I went through a battery of test around Christmas last year to find out some answers, however all tests were normal.For 3mo I actually cut out veggies from my diet and my stomach stopped hurting. But I knew this wasn't the healthy way to live.After seeing a couple of articles recently, I looked into and started the "Eat to Live" concept by Fuhrman (book).The premiss is by eating a high nutrient diet, regardless of calorie count, you will consume all needed vitamens/fiber/carbs/protein that your body needs and loose any excess weight until your body archive's it's ideal weight. Another benefit of a high nutrient (no/little bad foods) diet is many conditions improve: hypoglycemic symptoms, autoimmune disorder symptoms, cholesterol/blood pressure, etc. Dr Furhman is a practicing doctor who treats patients who need to loose weight and get healthy fast! And unlike Atkins, this diet seems very plausible from a healthy standpoint. (I never could wrap my head around eating only meat & fat is good for you)
The goal is to eat 1lb each of raw veggies, cooked veggies, & fruit per day. After eating 3 lbs of fruits & veggies there is not much room in your stomach left for bad foods! He recommends a 90/10 for most people. 90% of the time you "Eat To Live", 10% you indulge. I'm probably at 80/20. He discourages snacking between meals which I do not follow but I don't eat as much per meal as his book recommends. I prefer splitting it up into 4 meals & 1 snack. There are
After 3 days my cravings almost completely dissapeared. (Very weird since I'm so craving prone & don't have the will power to stick with a restricted diet.) Haven't even wanted meat once! I have lost a few lbs (2-3) according to the scale but I look thinner and my measurements have decreased. Best of all, after 2 days my stomach no longer aches when I eat fruits & veggies!! According to his formula(Women: 5ft = 98lbs, 4lbs for every additional inch), I should be 116 lbs. We'll see if I get there. If I do everyone is getting this book for Christmas = )
Practice Practice Practice (more horsey stuff)
Anyway, I forgot my shoulder harness so I really had to concentrate on keeping my upper back straight. Keeping my hand on the cantle at the trot helped my back and once I felt like I had the correct position on her, I went back to both reigns. Poor Vikki was a little confused and wasn't consistent in her gates with my odd behaviour ; )
Back with both reigns, I started to feel when I was sitting right and when I wasn't. I tried to keep the reins fairly loose and soft on her mouth so as not to balance off her as much. She seemed to even out with her balance and gaits as well. She slowed down and I got the feeling that me sitting back was making her use her back more...or it could just be my imagination. I did notice a big difference in out canter departs by sitting back! And I think I did better on her cantering then on Garfield two days before.
Interestingly, my saddle didn't hurt me so much when I was sitting back more. Still had the gel pad on. Maybe it's mostly me seat and Vikki's thinness right now? That means I won't have to drop $1-2k on a new saddle soon!
I'm so excited! After my several year hiatus from riding due to allergies, I'll finally advance and become a better rider!
1st Lunge Lesson (non horsy people may just want to skip this)
My longe lesson went really well. I rode a 6yr, 17h, warmblood gelding named Garfield ; )
First, I've found it helps so much to wear my shoulder harness while riding. If I don't I just can't keep my back straight and sometimes even try to absorb the motion with my shoulders !?!?
The trainer really explained the dynamics of the seat really well. I had quite a few misconceptions about the leg/heel/knee/seat position. I'd hear phrases people would say during lessons and emulate that but the phrases by themselves w/o a detailed breakdown caused the wrong assumptions to be made.
Misconceptions:
Heels down heels down heels down heels down. So I'd jam them down. Turns out, a visibly down heel is a hunter thing. Jamming heels down tightens the leg and causes the toes to jack out. And heels down in dressage means "don't have your heels up" ie. relax your heel and put a little weight in your stirrup and your heel will be parallel to the ground or slightly down.
Don't have any weight in the stirrups. Which came from the statements: you should be able to post w/o stirrups & don't stand in the stirrup, weight in your heels. Which I took to be: how can you post w/o stirrups if you have weight on them... and weight in your heels means not on your toes. So I ended up tightening my legs and pinching with my thighs.
Keep your abdominal muscle relaxed not tense. So to achieve that I think I start leaning forward to balance w/o using my stomach muscles. Actually you use a lot of your upper 6 pack to maintain you balance. The lower muscles also are engage to maintain balance but not as much and tighten up in a different way to "ride the horse your seat".
Carin had me post with outside hand on the pommel and inside on the cantle. This put my upper body in the correct position which of course felt like I was totally leaning back too far. Then she had me sit two strides/post one. Once that improved we incremented to sit 3 strides/post one...etc. We also did some canter departs and I found that holding the cantle/sitting back really helped my canter depart! (I've known I've had a bad canter seat forever) I understand much better now how my canter seat is supposed to work I just need a lot more practice!
More practice and strength! Wow, the amount of pressure need to make Garfield go! I now understand when SF trainer said something like Thoroughbreds don't really need a gas pedal just brakes, warmbloods need a constant pressure on the "gas pedal".
Now I have to build up strength to hold my leg on the hair & post/sit with my leg in an unnatural twist to hug the horses belly. Sounds Easy! No Problem! (kind of reminds me of the Chinese binding feet...)
I miss my morning commute & carpoolers!
I miss my morning commute! In SF, I had a 50min (rush hour traffic) commute to LeapFrog. Only 17 miles but half through the city with 35 mph speed limit.I also picked up carpoolers that were on my direct route to the Highway.
The longer drive combined with chatting with carpoolers apparently was an excellent "brain wake-up" activity. Plus I learned about places/events in SF, gossip about the company, and other factoids from my carpoolers. (Not to mention the gay talk show on the radio - Sassy Sports, "If they're playing with balls...I'm all over it!")
Now living so close to work I thought, Oh it will be nice to have that time back. Wrong! Just getting out of bed and ready in the morning doesn't get me out of that post-wakeup fog. After only a 10min drive I arrive at work feeling like I'm sleepwalking. It reminds me a lot of how I felt at Lexmark. It takes me 2-3 hrs to really come out of "the fog". It doesn't effect my work if I have a lot of programming to do. However if I'm just planning or documenting or have a little less work due to product cycle,I'm dead in the water. It feels like I'm treading water in the ocean, surrounded by islands, but I don't know which Island to swim to. So I keep spinning around looking at the islands and trying to discern which one it is. Very frustrating.
It's funny because in Lexington I thought I could never commute. Giving up my freedom of arrive/leave times at work. I didn't think I would like having people in my car... etc. When I was approached about morning carpool I didn't think I would like it but I thought I'd give it a try. Now being the driver and having the car probably makes a big difference. But then again, if I were to try to be just a rider, I may end up liking that too.
Moral of this story is: keep an open mind and try it! You may or may not like it but you can't know until you try! AND MOVE BACK TO SAN FRANCISCO!
I'm buying a $75k Dressage Horse...
...vicariously through a friend at the SF stable, also named Sharon. Actually $75k is a little over her budget but it got your attention ; p
Lanciero is a $75k, 9yr, 17h, Hanoverian training in Prix St George level (Dressage). He is in Burbank so I went to check him out before Sharon and our trainer came down to LA.
He has a very calm & sweet temperament. When I rode him I didn't feel like he was testing me and he didn't seem aggravated while trying to figure out my very novice commands. Interestingly, when sitting on him I didn't feel like I was on a 17H horse. (5'8" at the withers, where the back meets the mane, for the non-horse people) That's freakin huge! Although quite common in the dressage/warm-blood world. But compared to my little 15.3h thoroughbred mare (5'3") that's big. Plus, it's not just the height, they aren't just tall and skinny, the taller they are the bigger all over they are. Yikes!
Anyway, he was a sweety and Sharon & my trainer are planning on coming down to see him in September. They will stay with me and give me a few lessons with Vikki = )
I liked the trainer who was selling Lanciero and she has higher
level horses to give lessons on. I've been wanting to take lessons on a higher trained horse to work on my skills. On Vikki I have to train her and learn which takes longer and it would be nice to learn the skills first before having to teach her. I signed up for lessons and we are going to do a lot of work on my seat on the longe line.More pictures & video clips on Flickr (click on play button at bottom of pics)
http://www.flickr.com/photos/picturesofsharon/sets/72157606898273911/
And two videos on YouTube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9nWMGVmPTzU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ExGPwNceic
Outback Copycat Recipies
I toss the salad and dressing together in a large mixing bowl before packaging or eating. This action coats each piece of lettuce so there is more flavor per piece of lettuce and you end up needing far less dressing to get the same taste.I also love the taste of canned garbanzo beans with this dressing. Very Yummy!
Outback Ranch dressing
Ingredients
1 tablespoon hidden valley ranch dressing mix
1 cup mayonnaise (the real stuff - lowfat)
1/2 cup milk
1/4 teaspoon coarse black pepper
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/8 teaspoon garlic powder
1) Mix all of the ingredients in a medium bowl.
2) Chill at least 1/2 hour before serving which is the key step to maximize flavor.
Outback Bushman Bread (bread machine)
Dough
1 1/2 cups warm water
2 tablespoons butter, softened
1/2 cup honey2 cups bread flour
1 2/3 cups wheat flour
1 tablespoon cocoa
1 tablespoon granulated sugar
2 teaspoons instant coffee
1 teaspoon salt
2 1/4 teaspoons yeast
Monday, August 25, 2008
Vikki is in LA!
Monday/Tuesday she was quietly curious about her new surroundings. Wednesday/Thursday she was very depressed : ( I felt so bad for her. She seemed kind of pissed at me too.
Friday and Saturday she perked up. We went on a trail ride with some ladies from the barn. They are a pretty active group and trailer off the farm quite frequently. I want to get in good with them so we can go fun places!
The dogs are loving it out there...they are allowed off leash and at night there are a lot of bunnies to chase ; p
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Long anticipated Beach Trail Ride
This was our (Vikki & me) first trail ride off the farm. Pierre & his horse Enzo took us to Limantour Beach in Point Reyes National Park. I wasn't sure how Vikki would do trail riding off the farm more or less the ocean & crashing waves.
She was great! She was definitely curious but calm and not freaked out. The crashing waves & noise didn't scare her but she wasn't so sure about the water flowing towards her toes = ) She would try and dance away from the waves. I made her stand in a few but when the water flowed back out she'd walk sideways with the water. It was pretty funny to see and feel!
We galloped about a mile of beach (which tired poor Vikki out!), then walked out and back on the coastal trail, then galloped/walked the mile on the beach back to the trailer. By that time we had quite an audience of beach goers and they got a kick out of us. We had pictures taken of us, questions about the horses, and many horsey pettings. Vikki handled her celebrity status very well ; )
We untacked the horses and took them back to the beach to roll in the sand. The beach gave a collective Aaaaaaawww when the horses rolled. It was pretty funny!
No pictures because my trainer had a sick baby and couldn't come. Next time!
Sucks that I finally have horse buddies & trail riding partner that won't accept gas money!
Vikki's new LA home



But they feed hay not the dangerous(cheaper) cubes. The only a-la-cart option they have is turn-out, which is 15+ minutes in one of the arenas ( I so don't get the SoCal mentality). I do have the option of turn-out with another horse as long as they get along... Any other services are free: graining, blanket removal, medicating, etc. That is pretty cool.
So far all I have found for pasture board is 24x36 or 48x48 paddocks with shelters for shade for one horse or 1/2 acre paddock with up to 4 horses it in. People just don't fence in
larger areas. It's very old west feeling to me...horses in corrals. Anyway, my main concern is what would be best for Vikki for a permanent farm? a 24x36 paddock with horses on either side or a larger paddock with several horses in it? I don't like the idea of her being alone in a paddock but I'm uneasy about several horses in such a small area (
Java...what happened to embedded/firmware??
Rental Car Upgrade
Vikki's boyfriend Cato
EeaarrrrrrthQuuuuaaaakkkkeeeee !!!
Link
It lasted a long time for an earthquake. It started out shaking a little and I though Oooh Earthquake, then it kept going and I thought "when's it gonna end", Then it got stronger and I thought "Is this the big one?!?. It kept shaking but lessened in intensity and then stopped.
Jon and Kate plus 8 (kids) reality show
Eye opening show and surprisingly addicting! This and the Baby Borrowers are excellent show for birth control education for Anyone!
http://tlc.discovery.com/tv/jon-and-kate/jon-and-kate.html
http://www.sixgosselins.com/
http://www.nbc.com/The_Baby_Borrowers/
Here it is again The 4th Annual Smallest Coolest Apartment Contest
http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/contests/2008/small-cool/
Garlic truck
Grasshopper on steroids?!?
LA is too damn bright!

I really really miss the SF fog!!!! Not that I want it overcast (I grew up with that in MI and I hated it). The fog is not overcast...it's a cool entity of it's own and fun to watch roll in. When you drive past the GG bridge (pictured on the right) you drive up a hill and into a tunnel. On days like this, where it's sunny and the fog starts to roll in, the fog comes tumbling off a cliff above the tunnel entrance and it looks like it's raining cotton balls & stuffing.
I just want nice sunny days (not glaring sun) with an occasional day of fog here and there. Is that too much to ask!!!!
Sunday, June 29, 2008
CoolMedics - cooling products/clothing
http://www.coolmedics.com/
I bought the vest and beanie(under riding helmet) for me...Large 56"x36" blanket for the dogs, the neck scarf for Ari, and I'll probably end up buying something for Vikki. Top options are poll-cap, hock coolers, and neck wrap or 1/4 sheet. The cooling saddle pad also looks intriguing. And I may end
up buying a lot of gifts here for friends/family.I wore the vest at the show on the 2nd day and it really helped! Ari is already enjoying it but Lady hasn't made up her mind yet. I'm sure she will like it once it's past 90 degrees again ; ( Dolly is actually laying on it too, surprising since it is slightly damp. I plan on getting small cooler beds for the cats. They sound cool but there is a quality issue and they tend to rupture at the seams after about a year. But they are not damp to the touch and I think the cats would like them better. Plus cats are much lighter then the dogs and the seams might last longer.
Canine Cooler Pet Beds
http://www.chillow.com/cc.html
http://www.chillow.com/chillow.html
I love Algorithms!!!!!!!
Anyway, I still want to pursue embedded work and classes, because it will be good for future employment, but I'm also going to look into classes & career paths that include lots of algorithm programming. Who knows...maybe I'll end up back in Image processing !?!
There is tons of Digital Signal Processing in the Radar so I plan on checking that out. However, I didn't really like DSP in school so I'm not sure if I'll like it now.
Much anticipated Vikki swimming video clip
Links to the other Vikki videos:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HucyWL0Ph-0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gLP8VoOmtao
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PjCfMWJgoBE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ePlL__G4Aw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9u4hem4FSs (above video link)
Street Racing in LA
It was actually really neat looking yet terrifying in case they caused a big pile-up right in front of me. It only lasted 20 seconds or so before they were out of sight and I believe they exited soon after. I'm assuming you can't go to far on the Hwy like that before someone calls the cops...
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Orphan Trains
The Orphan Trains took homeless children from large eastern cities by train to small rural towns where they were adopted. Straight off the train station platform or in the largest building in town, usually a church or city hall.
http://www.orphantraindepot.com/
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/orphan/
Coolest thing EVER!!!

except this is the exception! Vikki and I went swimming! In this tiny swimming hole on the farm. She only swims a few strides before her feet hit ground. Plus it was my first time and I didn't really know how to guide her or where the deeper part was ; )
Look close...her tongue is sticking out. Silly horsey.First Impressions of Los Angeles
2) Baskin Robbins! They are on every corner. (Probably 'cause it's hotter then hell here...)
3) Car Incidents: car fires, car chases, bad wrecks on suburb streets, car chases on the news, etc.
4) Psychic (Palm) Readers. Lots of houses with the sign Psychic readers on them. Is that now code for brothel instead of good old Massage Parlors?
Thursday, May 29, 2008
My new Digs in Sherman Oaks, LA
Ummm....Yeah...Ouch
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article1221513.ece
My Question: Squatting by the road...In my limited experience...don't most men pee standing up???
Friday, May 16, 2008
BIG NEWS
I've accepted a job as an embedded software engineer in Los Angeles, CA at ITT Corporation in the Radar Systems Division. I will be working on a Coastal Radar for Sweden. Sounds pretty cool.
I was also interviewing for Microsoft(Xbox) in Mountain View CA and Covedien in Boulder, CO. The Covedien position, software engineer for medical devices, sounded pretty good but I just didn't want to move that far this soon. I will consider them in the future though. Microsoft was more of an embedded/operating system/chip test position and I just think that the other two positions were better suited for my career path.
The new job is in Van Nuyes, which is close to Burbank, and I'm thinking of living around Calabasas, Woodland Hills, or Topenga. These areas are actually pretty which cannot be said for most of LA. I do hope there is a dog park beach somewhere close though. That is one thing the dogs and I will really miss. SF is just sooooo dog friendly... you can take your dogs anywhere off leash here. Don't think LA will be the same : (
There is really good horse country around Agoura, Thousand Oaks, Moorpark, and Simi Valley. I've heard there are lots of open spaces and state/national parks located close to the stables to trail ride.
Tentative start date is June 2nd YIKES! That's 2 weeks away!!! I'm now packing like mad and will hopefully find a place by then.
The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report ??!???!??
Oh, and you can get Podcasts! Yeah, who wants to be depressed! Why not have a screen saver of all the 9-11, Katrina, Tsunami, Cyclone, Earthquake victims while you are at it!! I feel violated and I'm not even sure why.
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/index.html
Monday, March 17, 2008
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Does your dog have Convulsive Fits...I mean dreams??
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Cool Rock Sculptures
Really Really Windy
(from the winter months)As you can see...it was a really windy day at the beach. It was lightly raining but it was soooo windy that the sand only stuck to the dogs faces... The girls were embarrassed and didn't want to pose for the picture = ) (They know when they are dirty and sulk, thinking they will get a bath upon arriving home!)
Friday, February 22, 2008
Cat Tree

The cats, or more importantly !SuzyQ!, really like their new-to-them Cat Tree. SuzyQ has been keeping me up at night knocking over stuff - all night long! So I figured she needed some stimulation.
Enter Freecycle and a nice woman who had a 6' cat tree she was willing to give away.
Here are the kitties on their new tree. SuzyQ has been on it most of the time since I brought it home = )
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
My Fav "Definitions for Horse Lovers"

1)Pinto: Green coat pattern found on freshly washed light colored horses left unattended for 2 minutes.
2)Well Mannered: Hasn't stepped on, bitten, or kicked anyone for a week.
3)Nicely Started: Lunges, but not enough health insurance to even think about riding him.
4)Easy to Load: Only takes 3 hours, 4 men, a 50lb bag of oats, and a tractor with loader.
5)Easy Rider: Rides good in a trailer; not to be confused with "ride-able".
6)Feed: Expensive substance used to manufacture manure.
7)Light Cribber: We can't afford to build anymore fencing or box stalls for this buzz saw on four legs.
8)Three Gaited Horse: A horse that. 1) trips, 2)stumbles, 3) falls.
9)To induce labor in a mare? Take a nap.
10)To cure equine constipation? Load them in a clean trailer.
11)To get a mare in foal the first cover? Let the wrong stallion get out of his stall.
12)To cure equine insomnia? Take him in a halter class.
Dark Kabaret (Nov 2007)



This was a blast. I didn't know it was a costume show until that day. Next year I will have a more burlesque outfit with a corset and fishnet stockings ; ) I really enjoyed Eric McFadden and band. I downloaded some of his music off of iTunes.
The "Lady" in the pink dress is the male clown (with mustache) in a costume on huge stilts. The exaggerated boobs and butt were just hysterical!
The best part was actually a puppet show. When they set up the puppet stage I thought, "What!?! are you kidding a puppet show?" Then I was blown away on how amazing it was! The three skits were: an artist and an art critic, turtle and the rabbit race (the best), and duck vs. snake. Unfortunately, I can't find any information on the puppeteer ; ( I would love to see him again!
This YouTube video is just a promo and has clips from past shows. Website.


























