Cold! (or: wimping out from too much time in California?)

I believe that I’ve got motor­cy­cle parts wait­ing for me at my mail­box and I’d like to get some time at my friend’s garage to do some work on the bike this after­noon, so I got up ear­ly this morn­ing and head­ed in to the office before sun­rise. It was a brisk morn­ing and I did­n’t think to bun­dle up with any extra lay­ers, just put my jack­et and rid­ing pants on over my work clothes and got on the … Read the rest

50bookchallenge #6/50: A Twist of the Wrist, Keith Code

I can’t tell you how many peo­ple have told me that I absolute­ly must read this book to learn to become a bet­ter rid­er. It seems to be an almost uni­ver­sal selec­tion for the motor­cy­clist’s bible.

What I did not know before open­ing the cov­er was that it’s entire­ly ded­i­cat­ed to track rac­ing. There­fore I always felt Code was not writ­ing to me. In fact, some of his sug­ges­tions are down­right use­less to a rid­er of my inad­vanced skill lev­el. … Read the rest

Expensive Hobby

Lets see. In the past few days I’ve done quite a bit of shop­ping. Here’s the list:

  • Pro­gres­sive rear shocks
  • Rear fend­er
  • Corbin sad­dle

Today I fin­ished my list by mak­ing a grand tour of the Bay Area. Unfor­tu­nate­ly I did­n’t find any­thing I liked at Road Rid­er in San Jose, but thanks to a series of very humor­ous nav­i­ga­tion­al errors Turnsignal Tim and I end­ed up in Dublin.

“Hey!” I exclaimed, “we could go check out the Arlen Ness store!”

So … Read the rest

50bookchallenge #5/50: The Sound of Waves, Yukio Mishima

I’ve read this one a few times and keep on com­ing back to it. It’s noth­ing but a sweet, well-writ­ten love sto­ry. It holds no sur­pris­es and is frankly a bit pre­dictable, but for­giv­able for so straight­for­ward­ly being exact­ly what it is.

The only thing that sep­a­rates The Sound of Waves from any trashy romance nov­el is Mishi­ma’s thor­ough­ness as a writer. His descrip­tions both of phys­i­cal sur­round­ings and his­tor­i­cal con­text are lush. He’ll spend end­less pages putting the read­er right … Read the rest

50bookchallenge #4/50: Shop Talk, Will Eisner

As a long-time fan and some­times cre­ator of comics, I found this col­lec­tion of inter­views with piv­otal fig­ures in the his­to­ry of the form to be fas­ci­nat­ing. If inter­views with per­son­al heroes of mine like Neal Adams and Joe Kubert wer­ent enough, there were sur­pris­es such as Phil Seul­ing, who for­ev­er changed the dis­tri­b­u­tion sys­tem. To top it all off, each of the inter­views was con­duct­ed by anoth­er of my heroes of the form, Will Eis­ner. Put Eis­ner and Gil … Read the rest

Photos from today

I took the D50 out today to run it through some paces. I’m enjoy­ing shoot­ing with it quite a bit. Today I went and shot tourist pho­tos, basi­cal­ly. I went to Ocean Beach and took pic­tures at a cou­ple of points along the way, then went up above the Cliff House for the sunset.

While I was shoot­ing, I was fas­ci­nat­ed by the waves. They were pret­ty big today. But when I got those pic­tures home and looked at … Read the rest

First Nikon annoyance

I was afraid of this, so I’m real­ly real­ly glad I checked before copy­ing every­thing to my hard drive.

My old Kodak DC120 kept track of the num­ber of pho­tos it had tak­en and num­bered the pho­tos based on the sequence. You could take three pic­tures on one CF card and they’d be named P00001, P00002, and P00003. Swap cards out and take anoth­er pho­to and it’ll be called P00004. This makes … Read the rest