Sunday, 31 July 2016

Workweeks, Writing Worth and Window Women

The word of the week is saccharine.

July 25 – Onwards

It's nearing the end of July, and work on my first novel is still going slowly. Like anything worth doing, you have to have perspective on it.

Late in 2015, I set a deadline of August 31 2016 for completing my third draft, not knowing the fun times I would have facing anxiety and financial frustration in the next long while. Not to mention just having recovered from a serious bacterial illness while trying to finish the first draft of my second novel in the trilogy...

Like I said, fun times.


In any case, completing my first novels fourth draft one month from now might still be attainable, though I don't think I'd be happy with the results if I tried to rush things along in order to meet an arbitrary deadline that I've set.

I want the work to be completed, not just finished: there's a distinct difference.

When I finish my fourth draft, it will be the best and most polished version of the book I can produce without professional help, as I've said before. It will be the version that I will be sending out to publishers as well as agents to represent the best of my writing abilities to the world.

You can rush that, and while I realize that I can sit here and polish things until there's nothing left underneath the shine, I can't just bring myself to quickly buff up a fourth draft to send out.

I'll make it the best draft I can, however long that takes in 2016.


July 26 – A Worthy Sequel???

What great timing!

After watching The Rocketeer this past weekend with my girlfriend, I was pleased as punch to hear today that there's asequel in the making - NOT a reboot, which quite frankly I'm getting tired of hearing since NONE of the movies made to date in such manner have been worthy of the originals.

The hero of the new Rocketeer is an African-American woman.This new version will be set six years after the original film. The first Rocketeer has disappeared fighting the Nazis, so an unlikely pilot takes up the mantle and battles the scientists who are trying to mass produce the rocket technology for the enemy.Writers Max Winkler and Matt Spicer are penning the script and it’s being produced by Brigham Taylor (The Jungle Book) and, weirdly, athletes Blake Griffin of the L.A. Clippers and Ryan Kalil of the Carolina Panthers.

Unfortunately, there's not much more to tell than that, but that's okay for now: movie development is like that and will hear more through the grapevine as soon as it's available.

In the meantime, here's a picture of a great Rocketeer crossover: Bobateer!



July 27 – Whew, Work!

This week's been pretty tiring at work, more so than most.

It's because too many people are on vacation right now and it's the end of the month, which is nothing surprising but I'm still working my butt off every minute of every day this week. Today already feels like I've been working five days in a row yet I still have one more day to go before my week is over tomorrow - thank goodness for EDO's.

Essentially, I'm on the incoming phones all day while keeping on top of our e-mail Inbox too, answering questions and requests to try and keep things within a 24-hour window for responses. It's quite tiring and mentally taxing, though generally stress-free, apart from the occasional Silly Person who wonders why they had to wait 20-30 minutes longer than usual for us to get to them. Hmmm: it's BUSY at the end of the month, perhaps?


I'm also training three new people for our team, which is wonderful: we've been operating understaffed for 3 months now and it's going to be great to get some qualified help who will stick around to get better every day under the tutelage of more experienced Admin  staff such as myself. I put a few of them on the phones today and although they only got a few calls here and there, it was enough to make a significant difference in everyone's stress levels, color and staff both.

Next week should be even better with everyone from our team back from vacation and raring to go. The rest of the office has felt fairly empty as various staffers take their vacations during the summer, which is made many people's jobs more difficult when some staff just aren't there to answer questions that we can't.

But that's all part and parcel of my current workplace. At least I can leave it behind at the end of the day and just dive in again in the morning, without anything being on my mind in between.


July 28 – Another B5er Gone

Why? Sixty is WAY too young!

Actor Jerry Doyle passed away today, taking us to a total of FIVE Babylon 5 alumni who passed away far too early in the last 10 years.

This sucks.


Much like the close family of Star Trek, all of the surviving alumni of B5 are reeling from his loss, which was quite unexpected. When Andreas Katsulas passed away in 2006 he at least was able to say goodbye to many of his friends, as his battle with cancer did not take him suddenly, as did the death of Richard Biggs in 2004: another great loss.

The creator the show, J. Michael Straczynski, was eloquence in his words about the passing of Jerry Doyle today:

So dear sweet universe, if you are paying attention in the vastness of interstellar space, take a moment from plotting the trajectory of comets and designing new DNA in farflung cosmos, and spare a thought for those who you have plucked so untimely from our ranks...and knock it off for a while. 
Because this isn't fair. 
And Jerry Doyle would be the first person to tell you that. Right before he put a fist in your face. Which is what I imagine he's doing right now, on the other side of the veil.

Say hello to the others out there Beyond The Rim, Jerry. RIP.


July 29 – Bang, Bang, on the Window!

Tonight, I had to call 911.

I was out with my girlfriend, as well as her parents and grandfather who were visiting from the states. We'd just finished dinner at Vista18 and were walking in Beacon Hill Park, when my sister called me: the Crazy Window Woman was back!

Last night, a woman started searching around in the bushes outside my bedroom, loudly looking for something that she seemed to have lost. She was only there for a minute or two, then wandered off lamenting her loss( ? )and came back again a few minutes later, at which point I called the police nonemergency number, as she seemed to be in some sort of mental distress. I couldn't see her because of the lack of light outside my window, and by the time the police got there she was gone.


Tonight she was here again, banging on my bedroom window hard enough to rattle the glass bottles I keep on my windowsill, so that my sister heard her down the hall and through the door of her own bedroom. My sister went to my bedroom and loudly told the woman through my locked window that she couldn't just walk up to the wrong  people's windows to bang on them and had to go away now. Then my sister called me, remarkably calm but obviously at a loss what to do...?

So I called 911 from the park, as the police had advised me last night if the woman returned. They dispatched a unit, and this time I was able to give them a description of the woman, who had again by this point left to disappear in the dusk of the street. From the ramblings that my sister heard, it appears that this person was looking for someone in another unit, possibly to perform some kind of illegal transaction, but there's no real way to know that as she vanished so quickly. The police were unable to find her, which was no real surprise... I hope that's the last we see of her.

From what I gather, the woman is probably homeless, staying in the Tent City only two blocks away towards the downtown, making for quite a few more homeless people wandering the neighborhoods in downtown Victoria in the last few months. Given the lushly overgrown nature of many of the landscaped gardens around where I live, it's no surprise that some of the homeless are using the cover for their own purposes, and it's unfortunate that my window area is one such.

I'll be writing up the incident officially for my landlord, to see if some security lights might be able to be installed on the cheap. As Tent City is scheduled to be finally shut down in less than two weeks, I'm not sure anything will happen, but I certainly don't want to be jolted out of bed by some crazed woman smashing on my window while mistaking it for another unit.


July 30 – Ancient CGI

As a lifelong fan of Star Wars, I love the original trilogy in its unaltered format, and oddly enough the design of the Death Star is one of my favorite parts - especially the 3D computer graphics that were revolutionary for the time.


Just announced this week: John Knoll, ILM wizard for the upcoming Rogue One Star Wars movie has done some incredible work in re-creating the CGI graphics of the Death Star as shown in the original Star Wars film, faithfully reproducing them with modern technology:

You can see the entire 1-hour panel from Star Wars Celebration Eurpoe 2016 below, where John Knoll discusses an incredible amount of 'Star Wars Archaeology' to some very lucky people earlier this month:



July 31 – The Sounds Of  Summer

It was another beautiful day to be outside.

My lady and I spent a few hours down at the model boat pond, chatting with the other boaters while running our Haulin' Trawler off the space-backup battery, as the backup LiPo cell decided it was having a bad day and cause the boat to drift into the concrete side of the pond - paint scrape, dang it! Then we spent a few hours enjoying ourselves on the patio at Garrick's Head pub downtown, next to the sunday market there which is perfect for people-watching.

It's actually our favorite spot in Victoria, and we had a glorious time there together.


For dinner, we had a double-header, watching 2 episodes of the original Samurai Jack series( still only on the first season )as well as 2 episodes of the first season of Star Blazers, which were further ahead on( about 8 episodes in )and that I love to watch, especially with such appreciative company. Star Blazers takes me right back to my childhood and never fails to put a smile on my face as I watch. It's always a bonus that it's a great story and a healthy inspiration for my own writing.

As we were both feeling pretty tired, we didn't go to the Victoria Symphony Splash this year, down in the inner harbour area. Trying to find a seat in the shade among 40,000 people just didn't appeal to us, to be honest, despite the allure of a live classical symphony orchestra playing. Maybe we'll rent a pair of kayaks next year and float in front of the stage, though again will have to have some sort of some cover to avoid looking like lobsters by the time we're done.

And so I'm now writing my blog, a few hours later than usual. It's actually easier for me now to write just after dinner on Sunday nights, compared to post to my blog closer to midnight as I did for the last nine years previously. The shift in my bedtime has been fairly profound in going from 12am most nights to around 11pm; it doesn't seem like much, but it's all about when I start to get tired...


Well, it's after 10pm and I'm pretty darn beat, though not as tired as I was Thursday night: that was a LONG day after a long week, despite it being only four days long. I still have another day off tomorrow( BC Day! )and I'll be using the opportunity to get some more work done on my draft, plus just plain ol' relaxing. July's done with, I'm a year older and I've a lot of work still to do...


Sunday, 24 July 2016

Adventure, Adversity and Amazing Automobiles

The word of the week is benign.

July 18 – Adventure!

I spent a good part of today out and about in the lovely weather.

My parents and I ended up unexpectedly driving me quite a few places to do things, which was really great of them to do. Especially where they cut down on a 1.5 hour bus ride to return the costumes my lady and I had rented for this past weekend! It was great to spend so much time with them as I haven't been able to much of late - plus the weather was perfect for just driving around town enjoying each other's company.

Once I was back home in the late afternoon, I spent a few hours relaxing and reading some of the sci-fi that has been accumulating in my place over the last year but I haven't really had all that much inclination to dig into.


In the evening, my sister and I watched The Adventures of Baron Muchausen, a glorious film released in 1988 and set in the Age of Reason. It's a Terry Gilliam film( of Monty Python fame )and it's a fantastical adventure that's a feast for both the mind and the eyes. Much like two of Gilliam's other films that I love( Time Bandits and Brazil )The Adventures of Baron Muchausen delights at every step, when it doesn't drive home the despair of reality's mundaneness. There's also a nicely-done retrospective here if you're not familiar with the film.


If you haven't seen it, I'd recommend watching it on Blu-ray if at all possible as the visuals will blow your mind - even on laserdisc, they're really quite incredible and I may pick up the Blu-Ray one of these days on sale just because of the visuals.


July 19 – Stranger Things

Dang it, another must-watch show I have to watch this year? I still haven't seen the sixth season of Game Of Thrones...!

Well, as shows go, apparently Stranger Things is a true delight, like the old Eerie Indiana ratched up by a factor of ten - that I can take! It also stars Winona Ryder:


Being rather busy this week being on vacation, I had to set this show aside for now, as I think I'll enjoy it even more with an appreciative audience to watch it with - who else but my lady? Though I think my sister will appreciate it too:

A love letter to the supernatural classics of the 80's, Stranger Things is the story of a young boy who vanishes into thin air. As friends, family and local police search for answers, they are drawn into an extraordinary mystery involving top-secret government experiments, terrifying supernatural forces and one very strange little girl.

Now, I loved Super8, which has some of the best 80's set-dressing I've ever seen, even compared to some 80's films! I really dig the nostalgia factor inherent in Stranger Things, and I can't wait to spend a few weekends watching 2-3 episodes in a row: my version of 'binge-watching' that lets my brain process everything. I'm not one to overload myself by trying to watch a whole season all at once, and I also think that's a disservice to the creators: there's a lot of care put into each episode( for most shows, anyway )so why not enjoy them at a more lreisurely pace?

Unless you can't wait until the next episode: that I understand too.


July 20 – D&D in Tinseltown?

Well, well... is Hollywood actually getting smarter these days?

I know, I never thought I'd have said that either, but it seems that while commercial success is the driving force oftentimes for filmmakers, others are turning back to what everyone should realize is the core of entertainment success: Story.


Which is why more and more of those who are in charge of getting things done in Hollywood are playing Dungeons & Dragons: it sharpens their storytelling skills like almost no other activity - as I well know for my own childhood:

It’s easy to see the game’s appeal for Hollywood’s creative class. What is acting, after all, if not a highly tuned form of role-playing? And lots of writers and directors honed their craft as youngsters by pretending to rescue half-naked fairy princesses from the clutches of evil wizards. Pendleton Ward, 34, says D&D was a huge influence in creating Adventure Time, his trippy Cartoon Network fantasy set in the postapocalyptic Land of Ooo (“I like how monsters in D&D are fully realized, with instincts and natural habitats and cultures,” he says). The same goes for David Benioff, 45, Weiss’ fellow Game of Thrones showrunner, who acknowledges how much his teenage D&D adventures taught him about basic storytelling. “I had a regular game with the Feinberg brothers,” he recalls of his adolescence in New York. “The whole campaign must have lasted four years.” During those marathon get-togethers, Benioff developed an ear for hooking audiences. “If the scenarios didn’t work and the Feinbergs got bored, I’d need to recalibrate.”

Could it be that the future movers and shakers of Hollywood might actually be good storytellers and that will translate into better productions?

One can only hope, but if I could wave a magic wand and cast a spell...


July 21 – Aliens Anniversary

Looks like it wasn't game over, after all.

30 years ago today, my 13-year-old self didn't know it but an action-packed science-fiction adventure was awaiting in the theaters for me to see.


The sequel to the tense and atmospheric movie Alien was of course, Aliens, directed by James Cameron of Terminator fame. At the time, I recall thinking that the idea of hunting aliens with anything other than special acid-resistant suits was silly, but after seeing the film I was willing to forgive them this point as it was just so much fun to watch... and re-watch as the years went by.

I own the first three films on laserdisc( the third I'll probably never watch again, as I think the story choices it made really stink )and I'll likely pick up the 30th anniversary edition coming out this September on Blu-ray... just because.


I've also picked up some small memorabilia over the years, such as a die-cast dropship, APC( two, actually ) plus a few action figures, a poster, and even made my own USCM costume which I wore to Comicon earlier this year:


Did I mention I really love this film?

I'm really pleased that so many other people still enjoy it as much as I do, to the point where there's quite a few USCM chapters who kit up and get out to various events to show their enthusiasm for Aliens.

It's not just another bug hunt, y'know.


July 22 – Not Funny

What if Donald Trump's entire campaign was a joke gone bad?

That's the premise of the 9-minute video below, as presented by Cracked.com - a magazine I read back in the 80's right along with Mad, as much for their zany artwork as their humour.

The video's worth a watch in its entirety( thanks for posting it to FBook, Matt L2K! )as it's a satirical journey following a joke gone really, really bad... made all the more poignant by the fact that Trump's now been made the presdential candidate for the US this election year:


If that's not the ultimate bad joke, then I don't know what is.


July 23 – More Adventure!

All I did for much of today( and yesterday )was relax, read my first novel while making notes for the next draft and switch that up with critiquing chapters for this coming week.

In the evening,a few friends took my lady and I out for a belated birthday dinner to John's Place, which was surprisingly empty: it's usually quite crowded, but we didn't complain. We enjoyed their company as well as the scrumptious always-fresh-baked herb bread( I can never get enough! )before dinner was over.

The laserdisc movie tonight? The Rocketeer!


Released 25 years ago this summer, this is a film that I truly love. I have always wondered why it didn't catch on, as it's as a pure adventure film as the Indiana Jones series, which also took their inspiration from the film serials of the 1930's and 1940's. My lady commented repeatedly all the little touches that were layered into the film that made it seem far more relatable and believable a piece than the usual Hollywood adventure film, to which I agreed wholeheartedly. Influenced by such fictional characters as Doc Savage and The Shadow, this film is all about the simple battle of good versus evil, which is always a story worth telling.

Incredibly, a GREAT retrospective essay looking back at The Rocketeer was posted just a month ago at RogerEbert.com and whoa, it's worth a read! I had no idea that the film was based on the Rocketeer comic created in 1982 which caught the imagination of many in Hollywood who gave it the moment I needed to be put into production. Nor did I know that Harlan Ellison himself was a fan, which is a huge endorsement in my books!


As the quote above shows, the Rocketeer was well ahead of its time and it's a shame that it didn't garner the praise that it so well deserved back when it was released in 1991. The success of modern comic-book films such as The Avengers and Ant Man all owe a great deal to The Rocketeer, and I'm grateful that it helps pave the way for the current cornucopia of comic-book films being released.


July 24 – A Thousand Deuces!

Sunshine and classic cars area always a great combination.

After breakfast today, my lady and I went to see Northwest Duece Days, a huge event being held here in Victoria July 22-24th. The weekend weather was perfect for it and we arrived downtown around 10am, the official start of the show.


Holy bleep, but there were a lot of people! Not to mention huge numbers of incredible custom classic vehicles. We did a tour around the Empress Hotel area, seeing a few hundred cars, then headed towards the Parliment buildings, where I got this great shot:


Then we walked, and walked, and walked some more... to the point where both our sets of feet hurt, as we'd covered nearly 10,000 steps / 5 miles in the hot sun. We got to see most of the rest of the cars, but after a few hours we were pretty much done and the crowds hadn't become much thicker in the interim: estimates put the numbers at around 100,000 people in the downtown core, which doesn't sound so bad unless you're trying to make your way through them all. Fortunately, the 1100+ cars were spread out enough that it wasn't particularly mad at anyone area, but we got out of there all the same after seeing our fill.

After lunch, I got home around 2 PM and basically cooled off for the rest of afternoon, as I had definitely absorbed a little bit too much solar heat despite my hat and sunscreen. I am pleased that I'm able to figure out nowadays why my heart rate is often times higher than normal: one solid reason is always when I'm slightly overheated and while there's no quick fix to that, cool drinks, rest and fans did the trick today. I also kept falling asleep while trying to critique several pieces for this Tuesday night's group session, but that was no reflection on the quality of the work... just the time spent walking all over the place today in the hot sun.


Today's the last day of my vacation and I'm taking it easy, after writing the blog in stages on and off in the evening. It's been a good vacation in that I'm feeling relaxed and balanced mentally, ready to head back to the day job this week while keeping in mind that my REAL work still awaits in the evenings: finishing the edits on my novel's fourth draft, then getting back to writing the rest of the second novel AND getting geared up for all the other related things to do to get my writing in the hands of those people who can Make It Happen.

Sunday, 17 July 2016

Balance, Birthday Bashes and Being Back

The word of the week is  persevere.

July 11 - What are you playing?

Everyone's obsessed, it seems, with a game: Pokemon Go.

Except me, as I have too much else to do.

Seems like a smart concept though: using AR( Augmented Reality )technology, creatures from the Pokémon universe are overlaid on real-time camera images from a cell phone. As people move around geographically in their neighborhoods, various creatures appear to be captured if possible by playing the game.

I think it's pretty cool to integrate portable technology with AR software to create a game like this, as it gets people out and into the real world rather than sitting inside in one spot all day. I know the value of getting out to see the city that I live in, as there's always something fascinating in new to be observed if you're only paying attention.

Mind you, I think I'd be far more tempted to play the game if it was like this:




July 12 - GARTHIM!!!!

It's finished! The most amazing Dark Crystal costume ever!

Well, I mean, compared to the ones from the original movie back in the 80s, but those were made of fiberglass and weighed close to 100 pounds. Which would preclude their being worn anywhere outside of film set due to the need for a crew to get the actors in and out of the suits, not to mention the heat and fatigue of wearing them.

Have a look:

Ryan Wells Cosplay - look him up!

You can also watch a short video of the cost of inaction, complete with sound effects and glowing eyes here - it looks and sounds amazing!

Ever since I saw The Dark Crystal as a young boy, I wanted to create a Garthim costume, but lacked the skills to do so in a satisfying fashion. Amazingly, someone else has completed that dream and shared it with the world, for which I'm extraordinarily grateful. You can find Ryan Wells Cosplay here.

It's also really, really cool.


July 13 - Whisper

Living near a main road sucks, most days: it's noisy. Real noisy.

Passing traffic can include the rumble of trucks, the throaty shouting of motorcycles or the blair of sirens of all kinds at all times a day( one woke me this morning at 5 AM as a matter of fact )on top of the noise of regular traffic at all hours a day.

Apart from moving or begging the landlord's in the petition for better windows, what's one to do?

Enter the Whisper noise-canceling system, designed for entire living spaces.

Similar to my Parrot Zik headphones, the Whisper samples the noise levels in the local environment and produce soundwaves designed to cancel those same sounds completely. It's comprised of two parts, and exterior sound sampler and interior speaker in their system, which can be placed on any flat surface but it works best on a window as it's in 2 parts:


I like the concept, and it seems ideally suited to a small apartment like mine by a busy road. I'm also impressed with the low cost of the device, which would be around $300 for the initial units to be produced. This is the first product of its kind that I'm aware of that can cancel noise inside an entire living space actively, rather than depending on less effective and far costlier methods such as window insulation.

Unfortunately, the New Zealand-based company is nowhere close to realizing their production goal of $785,00( $720K CAN )with merely $15K raised so far and only 37 days to go in the Kickstarter campaign. If it were up to me, I would fund this product in a heartbeat, as I would put it to immediate use in my current apartment...


July 14 - Jack's Back!!

Whoa... there's going to be a new season of Samurai Jack!

For those of you who aren't familiar with this amazing animated series, Samurai Jack debuted on The Cartoon Network in 2001 and ran for four seasons. The writing and art were simply incredible for an animated series at the time and in my opinion have not been surpassed since. If you'd never seen Samurai Jack, I urge you to look through the clips available on YouTube or pick up the first season on DVD which is widely available. I hope that eventually it will make its way to Netflix as well and so gain an even wider audience.

Here's the lowdown on the new season, which looks like it will break new ground yet again in terms of art and storytelling for animation:



July 15 - Heavy Thoughts

Many thoughts been running through my head this week, with more than a few related to finance and how my future for the next five years might take shape.

House? Nope. Car? Unlikely. Kids? Probably not.

So what is normal for me now?


In terms of a place to live, that seems to be a rental for the foreseeable future, as Victoria is only getting more expensive by the year with properties running well above $500,00 on average for a small two-bedroom detached home. Even small apartments are going for around a quarter million dollars and quite honestly I'll need to make twice as much as I do a year in order to even think about a mortgage. Hence my interest in the lower-cost tiny home movement, but I will go into that here, as I've discussed it at length before in my blog.

It's been frustrating to me that I'm still dragging along too much financial burden from my past currently and not managing to be picked for a better government position despite the applications of them putting in. Many others in my office have moved on to better things and this is been weighing heavily on my mind as you might imagine. I'm extremely well-qualified in terms of experience and I have a university degree, yet to date none of my applications have had anything more than a 'Thanks for applying' response to the positions I've been looking at in Victoria. It's frustrating and depressing at times, but I tell myself that I've had a good job for two years now that hasn't stressed me out nearly as much is any of my previous jobs - plus I get to work with some wonderful people and go home on time at the end of every day.

Going on about it at length here isn't going to do me any good, so I won't.

I just have to hang in there and see what the rest of 2016 brings me.


July 16 - My Regency Birthday!

What a great birthday today was! Even Google got in on the act:


My lady and I spent the morning getting ready for the Regency Drama Garden Party at 11am:

You are one of the assembled cast of a Regency Era Live-Action Role Play. You have a secret you must guard, a secret about another guest you may use to your advantage, and an objective. Do you want to regain the family fortune? Find out who your real father is? Make an advantageous marriage for your daughter? Find a suitable husband?
Come play in your own Jane Austen tale of intrigue, secrets, reputation and genteel manners.This event will be a potluck picnic with croquet, cards and tea party.

Early in the week, we had visited VictoriaCostumes and picked out costumes for ourselves to wear and today was the day that we got to get into character! After getting dressed, we packed up some light snacks of some crackers and cheese for lunch along with water, then headed to the Gorge Park.

It was the perfect day to be outside, with the occasional clouds keeping the heat down. We were located behind three immense trees that provided shade for the entire afternoon's activities and the breezes were perfect in the Park area next to the Gorge Waterway.

The event itself gathered steam and was soon in full swing, with everyone interacting with one another in character. I played Nathaniel Hayward, a man of passion, education and breeding, who served a commission in the King's Navy but was now newly retired toenjoy other pursuits on my estate . In order to 'win' my own part in the game, I was tasked with finding out how my sister Juliet's brother had died recently, as it seemed that it was under mysterious circumstances. My lady played Amelia Cluett: a servant, the maid to Belle Nightengale and also her bosom friend. She was said to have a beau but did not want to lose her position by becoming a wife.

Here's a shot of the entire group, in their gorgeous costume finery:

That's me in the front with the cane, and my lady's in the back

It was a blast being in character, though I chose not to affect a British accent as there were several people there who were either English or who could do far better accents than I could consistently put on. I spent much of my afternoon the company of two bravos in particular, part of my social group( as noted in my dossier ). The first was Isaac Fortescue, a retired soldier who loved to go on about the great wars in India in service to crown and country( peeking out from the back the top hat with the huge moustache in the pic above ). The second was Henry Hawkins, a dashing soldier recently returned to town between postings to visit a few friends and charm this season's ladies( the soldier on the far right, kneeling ). Both men play their characters to the hilt, with Henry giving a perfect rendition of the charming gentleman soldier the entire afternoon: I was left agog and did my best to give as good as I got to his performance. What an incredible time I had creating stories with these two fellows and the others that I interacted with during the course of the afternoon!

By days end, I had married off my sister, discovered who had poisoned her husband( she did! )and even won at a game of croquet! My lady had also succeeded with her game and we both felt that the day was a rousing success. There were smiles all around and everyone involved thought it was simply the best time they've had been a long, long time.

In the evening, my lady and I dined at Il Terrazo, an Italian restaurant that is a hidden gem of Victoria and one I've not yet visited in my nearly 10 years here. What an incredibly delicious meal we each had! We were seated by the door, so that the benefit of the cool breezes and the bright light made how crowded the restaurant was much easier to take:


My birthday ended with our viewing of Romancing The Stone, a 1984 action classic on laserdisc that my lady has never seen in full, which surprised me. The movie looked spectacular on laserdisc, with the new( to me )Pioneer V4400 putting in this stellar performance of a perfect picture the entire time, though I did have to flip the disc halfway through as it's not a double-sided player like my two defunct CLD-79 Elite units.

What a glorious birthday!


July 17 - Balance

I took it easy today, more or less, as I was tired. But happy!

Yesterday and today I didn't get a whole lot of good rest, as I fell asleep around midnight and woke up around 5 AM both nights - not my usual pattern. That's been happening more and more of late, as I've mentioned before and I'm going to be taking some herbal sleep aids to try and ensure that I can get back to at least six hours of uninterrupted sleep at night.

After leisurely morning, my lady and I met my parents for lunch at Mo:Lé. The conversation turned to memories of past trips for the family and my lady was treated to many of our fondest memories of our time spent in Florida, especially Disneyland. One thing I'd not known at the time was that storyline for the Spaceship Earth attraction was created by none other than Ray Bradbury, who was good friends with Walt Disney:


I've always admired Ray Bradbury for both his storytelling chops and the fact that he never lost touch with his inner child, which I've also somehow managed myself as most people who know me will attest to. While I don't remember much about the details of the Spaceship Earth ride, I'm going to see if I can find some footage somewhere to refresh my memory as it's one more bit of Ray Bradbury's creative genius that I can enjoy.

I also got a belated birthday present today:

This will go FAST and look GOOD on the water!

Admittedly, I purchased it for myself from a local model boat club member( the president, actually )as it was just sitting on a shelf gathering dust and is a helluva lot better than anything I can get online or make myself( yet ). Unlike our Haulin Trawler, which does a pretty good clip in the water as it is, this boat is designed for speed just like it's full-size counterpart which could do up to 40 knots on the open ocean! I do have to tidy it up a little as well as waterproof a few parts just to be safe, but it's a magnificent model and I'm really looking forward to taking it out for a drive next week down at the yacht pond.

I spent the rest of the late afternoon at home cooling off, as I found of late that my heart rate tends to be quite elevated the warmer I get. As matter of fact, my lady and I went for a evening walk last night to cool off after the movie, which proved to be quite effective so I'll be sure to keep that method in mind in the future when my heart rate tends to get a bit too high.

It's been a great weekend and I'm off all this coming week on vacation.

I plan to put it to good use each day by writing a good chunk of the fourth draft of my first book. My notes are ready and I'm eager to get the concepts edited into the manuscript. My book won't do me any good if it's still sitting on my computer instead of making its way to a publisher who might just decide it's the exact thing they were looking for all along.

BONUS: this was in the parkade today:

Magnum PI's Ferrari 306 - what a car!!!!

I'm immensely happy with how the first few days of my vacation have gone, despite my spiraling into stupid finance-related thoughts on Friday: no sense in spoiling my downtime this week thinking negatively about things. As you may imagine, I had a GREAT birthday, one of the best ever, and I am going to let that feeling of euphoria carry me through the week!