Monday, July 6, 2015

Monday Musings - July 6, 2015

1. It is back to the grind after the holiday weekend!

2. The Orioles have been playing less than spectacular baseball, but with the signature win yesterday they are only one game out of first place. Ready to make a run.
U.S. Womens Soccer Team
FIFA World Cup Champions

3. Congrats to the U.S. Women's Soccer Team for bringing home the World Cup!

4. It is July and vacation time--I wish I was headed off on vacation today.

Callaway Razr XF Hybrids and Irons
5. My new golf iron set arrived three days early--they still haven't been broken in yet. The Callway Razr XF's are ready to take to the links. Someone remarked, "Oh that's too bad, they're backwards." Maybe that's why I got such a good deal on them. 

6. How about the Greeks--they are going to send the entire world economy into a tailspin!

7. In response to the furor over the Confederate Flag, it was reported that Bubba Watson, a two time golf Master's winner will paint over the flag on the General Lee--one of the original cars for the Dukes of Hazard TV series. 

8. Have a great first full week of July! I wish I was in Florida.

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Sunday, July 5, 2015

Stifling Celebrations

Baltimore Fireworks
Having survived the fourth, and the celebrations that are associated with it--I was reminded that it isn't really a party unless the police show up.

Last evening Howard County decided that it was more important to send police officers around to neighborhoods and visit with homeowners in their backyards enjoying a celebratory 4th of July rather than doing crowd control at the huge displays or ensuring that the highways are safe from inebriated drivers.
Baltimore's Fireworks

Think about it. Small family groups  staying away from the crowds, not having to drive, secure in their neighborhood backyards with family and friends, and not burdening the public safety system drew a response that progressively caused the multitude of private fireworks displays visible around my house to disappear. It was sad and misplaced. A definite damper on the celebration of our nation's independence.

According to an article about the history of fireworks titled, The Rockets' Red, White, and Blue Glare, they have been used since 1777 to celebrate Independence Day and by 1783 a large variety of fireworks were available to the public. 

Private citizens can own a firearms but cannot celebrate our nation's independence with fireworks in their own backyards.

This needs to be changed.

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Saturday, July 4, 2015

Happy Independence Day

The Spirit of Independence lives still, I am sure.


Every holiday season the articles appear reminding us that the stories and anecdotes that we use to characterize our holiday experience are not true.

The Washington Post published Five things you think you know about July 4th that are wrong this morning. 

I knew most of them and I have always been a little amazed that we don't celebrate Independence Day on July 2nd, but the Declaration of Independence does say July 4th and I guess it just makes it a bit easier.


Then there are the 9 Things you may not know doubt the Declaration of Independence provided by the History.Com. 

It is good to take a few minutes to review history and remember the heroic deeds of our forefathers. We should celebrate that the American Experiment, as it has been called, continues to live and thrive. 

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Friday, July 3, 2015

Friday holidays

Yay! It is the weekend and it is only Friday!

Many of my coworkers look forward to Fridays, I am a big fan of Saturdays. It is great when Friday is actually a holiday.

Let the weekend begin! 

I am golfing this morning and hopefully will begin the holiday weekend with a good score. It will be my first outing at this course, and so it should be interesting.

I have been trying to tune in my driver--it is an adjustable one, but have not seen much improvement. I'm still pretty bad off the tee.

Whatever the outcome, it should be a great beginning to the Independence Day weekend. 

Please secure your seat belts and ensure your tray tables are in the upright and locked position. We are cleared for the weekend!

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Independence Day Weekend

Cue the fireworks. 

Rev up the engines for incredible traffic in the interstates.

Bring on the celebrations.

Independence Day is upon us and the weekend is already alive with activity although it is only Thursday!

Tomorrow is Independence Day Observed--for those who don't normally work on Saturday, and so a three-day weekend is in store that will begin a day early this evening as people stream away from the cities and into the countryside to relax and enjoy the summer.

With all of the chaos of the weekend, take a few minutes to remember the reason for the celebration. We live in the best country in the world, bar none! We enjoy freedoms that others only dream of and many are jealous of and would like to find ways to deprive us of. 

That written, we must be careful not one become extreme or small-minded. Just because we don't agree with something, does not automatically make it wrong, it is just different.

We are a diverse land with many cultures incorporated into the fabric of our society. That makes us stronger when we acknowledge it and weaker when we refuse to employ it.

Our responsibility is to remember that freedom comes with a price tag and we must protect and defend it so that future generations my experience its benefits.

The cement of this union is the heart-blood of every American.  ~Thomas Jefferson

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD


Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Surviving Leap Second


The world stood still for a second last evening at 8PM EDT. 

Leap Second happened.

Dire outcomes had been postulated had the computers of the world not synched properly. 

But this morning I hear aircraft flying and my computer seems to be working without any lingering after effects. I assess that leap second came and went largely unnoticed by the overwhelming majority of the people on the planet. 

That the leap second passed largely unnoticed means that many other people were successful in doing their jobs to ensure that our computer-based society could survive the threat of widespread computer shutdowns that in a worst case scenario could have shut down everything from traffic lights to power generation to every form of navigation--even our trusty handheld GPS.


I spent my leap second watching the Orioles lose their second game in a row to the Texas Rangers. 

I was more disappointed about not being able to view the once every two thousand year conjunction of Jupiter and Venus in the evening sky due to cloud cover.

And then it was over. Probably not to be remembered until the next time a leap second is added to the clocks to keep everything aligned.

Thank you to everyone who made the leap second a non-event. Let's keep it that way.

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

My Take - I Don't have to Like it


The issues of the day have become emotionally charged and draw all sorts of rude responses from immature people seeking to ensure their voices are heard.

Too often in our country one group of people are working hard to reduce or minimize the freedoms enjoyed by another group of people even though we live in the same state and country under the same Constitution!

Founding Fathers
I used to believe that as a society, we were better than that. But recent issued thrust into the national spotlight, have made it clear that the petty desire to impose one belief set at someone else's expense is still resident in our country.

The gay marriage issue became a hot button issue for many people. But don't forget other similarly divisive issues that are in the news: marijuana legalization, gun control, Confederate banners, immigration, and the death penalty. Each of these topics were in the news this morning and our nation is becoming polarized by the emotional nature of these issues.
Supreme Court

The Founding Fathers got it right when they established the Supreme Court to protect our freedoms. Whether I agree with the rulings of the Supreme Court on a personal and emotional basis, I am comforted that nine detached judges hear both sides of the emotional cases that divide us and review the Constitution to determine whether something should or should not be allowed.

I don't have to like the ruling, but I have to abide by it. 

The Constitution and the Supreme Court are the last line of defense against the erosion of our personal freedoms and our civil rights. Sometimes, they point out that we are denying others of their civil rights through the imposition of our personal or religious beliefs--and that protects us all from the abuse of power.

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Monday, June 29, 2015

Monday Musings - June 29, 2015

Buck Showalter Garden Gnome
1. It is the last Monday in June. The transition month is almost complete with July poised to assume its rightful place.

2. The Orioles ascended to the top of the American League East Division over the weekend. During early June they were 5 and a half games out of first and now they possess first place by percentage points. I'm not cheering too loudly, however, four teams are bunched at the top of the division separated by one game.

3. Garden gnomes, who would have thought so many people would get excited about getting a garden gnome made in the image of the Orioles' manager.


Turtles at Timbers
4. I was amazed yesterday, on the 12 hole of Timbers at Troy golf course to see two turtles. I won't tell what I think they were doing when before I could get my camera ready to image them.

5. Trouble in space? There have been three major failures, two of them American, during the past few months in trying to resupply the International Space Station. Perhaps the idea of commercializing space is still a dream and not a reality?

Pre-game Shopping
6. I am glad they finally captured the second prison escapee in Upstate New York. People can finally sleep well again. I was reminded of how secure people live in that area when on a news report one resident was quoted as saying they had to start locking their doors.

7. How small the world has become. The Greek financial crisis is affecting all of us.

8. Don't forget ISIL. Their forces recently murdered about 150 civilians in a Syrian town.

9. What do you do before a baseball game? Shop, of course! 

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Toaster Cookoff

Replacing a toaster is no small task. 

It turns out that $$ doesn't mean better. 
The Lesser

As we replaced our beloved toaster of some decades, we realized that the first toaster we purchased as a replacement, although a recognizable name brand, it was slow and cooked unevenly. 

I like my toast evenly cooked--on both sides. 

Being unhappy with the expensive toaster, we bought a competitor and decided to conduct a "toast" off.
The winner

The results were clear.

The Black & Decker cooked faster and more evenly. The almost twice as expensive KitchenAid did not cook evenly and it took almost one minute longer to toast bread to the same level.

We used some scientific rigor in the test: the same bread and set the toasters to the same cooking level--medium, and pushed the levers to begin toasting at precisely the same time.

In the end, the more expensive toaster was returned in favor of the less expensive toaster which had fewer bells and whistles. 

And in the end, we had four pieces of toast for breakfast!

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Saturday, June 27, 2015

June, Rain and Baseball

Garden Gnome
The rain is falling again this morning. It is supposed to rain all day long--even during the Orioles game for which I have tickets this evening. And I am excited about getting the Buck Showalter garden gnome! Is that the only reason to go to a game? No--but I did change my tickets from Friday night to get the gnome!

Rain can be very depressing, especially when it fall all day during one of the precious weekend days. Weekends are those most precious of days, especially during the summer, when I plan outdoor activities.

June is such an important month. It is the official transition from springtime to summer--just a short week ago. I already feel the summer slipping away.

The rain just makes it a bit worse.

Indoors projects are for the wintertime, not the summer.

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

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