Sunday, September 9, 2012

Day Two

The Saints played a big game on Saturday night, so New Orleans is alive and well after Hurricane Isaac's visit last week. On the way into town, we saw a great deal of damage, but as usual, the French Quarter made it through all right.

We arrived at the Andrew Jackson Hotel early and our room was not ready yet. I had reserved a quiet queen room on the court yard. After wandering the city for a while, we stopped in to see if the room was ready. The gentleman at the desk informed us that we had been upgraded and apologized for the inconvenience. He told us that we'd be staying in the king suite located at the front of the hotel over looking Royal Street. We went up the long narrow staircase, turned the corner down the extremely narrow hall, to find our room. As we opened the door, we realized, we'd just scored the best room in the hotel!
The coveted room with the balcony right on the street.

I'll post pictures when I have more time and a better internet connection. Until then, I'm off to enjoy all that Bourbon Street and the French Quarter have to offer.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Day One

After sixteen hours in the car driving through pouring rain all night long, we arrived in Picayune, Mississippi where it is in the 80's and very humid. After last weeks hurricane, you can see some damage to the surrounding area. But for the most part, things are starting to dry out.

Tomorrow, we'll drive the remaining hour to New Orleans where we have reserved a suit at the Andrew Jackson Hotel in the French Quarter. We'll spend the remainder of the weekend there before heading into South Texas where my best friend Jonathan moved to several years ago.

Hopefully, I'll have a better connection and be able to share some of the fun with you all.


Saturday, September 1, 2012

Blue Moon and Missing Hell


 
It seems rather appropriate to me with the loss of Neil Armstrong, that last night we were able to witness the blue moon.  Was it a sad moon? No, I don't think so. I believe it was a proud moon. Shining brightly trying desperately to show those historic footprints for us all to see.

The term blue moon actually is something of a misnomer. There's no reason for the moon to appear any bluer than any other full moon. Instead it has to do with the extra occurrence of a full moon in a given calendar cycle. Since the number of times the moon revolves around the earth has nothing to do with how many times the earth revolves around the sun, our calendar system seems a little flawed. And that flaw brought us a full moon back on the first of the month and now again on the last day of the same month. Various cultures have used different terms to describe this phenomenon. And many previous versions of the calendar added extra months. The Maine Farmer's Almanac once used the term "blue moon" to descibe an extra moon in a particular quarter of the year.

Then, in 1946, an amateur astronomer named James Pruett wrote about the phenomenon for Sky & Telescope Magazine, in the context of the of saying that a rare occurence happened only "once in a blue moon". 

Only problem was, he got it wrong. Pruett described the blue moon  phenomenon as the second full moon in a calendar month. The magazine went with it and it stuck. People have been calling it a blue moon ever since.

Another Neil, Neil DeGrasse Tyson, Astrophysicist, tweeter a few days ago "A month's second full moon is the blue moon. Not rare. More frequent than a presidential election, yet nobody calls them rare."

The remnants of Hurricane Isaac haven't reached Michigan just yet and we enjoyed this second full moon in all it's glory with no cloud cover.

Speaking of Isaac, New Orleans took another direct hit from a hurricane almost 7 years to the day from Hurricane Katrina.
 Last year, we visited a remote part of Mexico just days after a hurricane hit it. And now, this year it seems we are going to experience a little more aftermath. You see.....



The 11th annual Hearse ride to Hell will have to go on without us this year on Sept.15th, 2012.

We are excited to reveal that we will be taking a little trip to what some may refer to as Hell, simply because of the temperatures there. But since several of our friends have moved there recently, it can't be Hell at all. It must be heaven to contain so many wonderful people that have gone on before us to the wonderful land they call Texas.

We'll be stopping first in New Orleans to take care of some unfinished business from last years trip. (I believe there is a hurricane of a different type waiting for me at LaFitte's Blacksmith Shop.) Then continuing over to the Houston area. Then on to Waco and rounding out our whirlwind visit in Dallas in time for the Dallas Pride festival. (Where we are proud to take a friend's son to his first pride event) I also want to visit Arkansas and see my Grandfather's grave. I've not returned to my father's home state since my Grandfather died in 1981. Looking at Google earth, I see that not much has changed in North Little Rock and I'm excited to peek into my history a little and see if there are any good memories that I may have forgotten.

All in all, we will be putting a few miles (about 3000) on the new car of ours and trying out some of those kewl features that it comes with.

This year we'll be operating the business from the road and hopefully making post updating you on all the fun. So you won't even know that we've left.