Wednesday, January 19, 2022

Not Everything on the Beach is Friendly

 

Portuguese man o' war
Jupiter Island Beach, Jupiter, FL
January 5, 2022
Life lessons come from beaches. 

Take for instance the morning beach walk to improve my cardio--a good thing. But, hidden among the sargassum one morning was a Portuguese man o' war--definitely not a good thing to blindly stumble upon while walking barefoot on the beach. 

There are, likewise, many things lurking in the world which can cause pain if we are not careful and observant. Take for instance yesterday, I was reviewing the monthly statements and found erroneous charges. One from a closed account, one from something that I didn't even know about, and then one from a company that apparently likes to slide in an annual membership hidden in the fine print when groceries are delivered--which we took advantage on once in Florida. These charges were lurking in the statements like a Portuguese man o' war hiding in the sargassum. Perhaps one sting will just hurt, but over time they become a larger problem.

Lesson? Like the sargassum on a beach--you need to dig through things it carefully to ensure nothing harmful is hiding. Not everything on the beach is friendly!


-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD 

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

Holiday Again

 

White Christmas Celebration
Elkridge, MD
January 16, 2022
I crawled out of bed this morning at 6:30 AM. Coming to consciousness I realized that this was the first workday since I retired that I have been in Maryland and therefore would normally been up at 5 AM to go to work. So I guess it is real, this retirement gig. But, I want to reflect upon the weekend Christmas celebration do-over. 

As I wrote previously, the family celebrated Christmas on Sunday since we could not gather on the actual holiday due to COVID concerns. It was good to have the entire family together for the first time in months to enjoy some holiday cheer and to exchange gifts--in person.

Riordin Enjoying the Fireplace
Elkridge, MD
January 16, 2022
The winter weather held off until the afternoon, but we were treated to a White Christmas with snow falling and covering the lawns and streets. There was a roaring fire in the fireplace and we had allowed the Christmas decorations to remain until the family completed it celebration. Alexa even treated us to Christmas music as gifts were exchanged. 

What did we learn from the experience? Holidays are for family and the actual date is less important than the gathering. 

The tree and decorations are now down and put away for another season, but the memories of Christmas 2021, completed during 2022, remain.


-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD


Monday, January 17, 2022

Monday Musings - January 17, 2021

 


1. The third Monday of January 2022 has arrived. It is cold and snowy. There are 49 Mondays remaining in the year. 

2. Baseball Spring Training tickets are on sale. It makes me wish of warmer days, bright sun, and the crack of the bat.

3. Family NFL Scores. Only two family teams made it to the playoffs and they suffered defeat during the the Wild Card round.

    Cowboys lost to 49ers, 17-23

    Steelers were crushed by Chiefs, 21-42

The House Ready for the Christmas Do-over
Elkridge, MD
January 16, 2022
4. The Christmas do-over was a lot of fun. The original Christmas gathering was postponed due to positive COVID tests. The family gathered yesterday to complete Christmas and, in a turn of good fortune, it became a White Christmas. While the originally planned dinner was not offered, the decorations remained on the tree and the Christmas spirit was present. And then the football games began.

5. I would like to say that I am enjoying the snow and cold, but the truth is that I am NOT enjoying any of it. And it appears that a developing N'oreaster may delay my return to warmer weather. Time will tell.

6. It is Martin Luther King Day. It is a Federal holiday as is observed by most schools as well, unlike some other holidays like President's Day. There are 11 Federal holidays and 8 of them occur during the 6 month period from September through February. 

7. Today in History. On January 17, 1950, 11 men steal more than $2 million ($29 million today) from the Brink's Armored Car depot in Boston, Massachusetts. It was the perfect crime—almost—as the culprits weren’t caught until January 1956, just days before the statute of limitations for the theft expired.

The robbery’s mastermind was Anthony “Fats” Pino, a career criminal who recruited a group of 10 other men to stake out the depot for 18 months to figure out when it held the most money. Pino’s men then managed to steal plans for the depot’s alarm system, returning them before anyone noticed they were gone.





Omicron fallout, tough labor talks likely to rattle supply chains and fuel inflation - The Washington Post

How the Tonga volcano generated a shock wave around the world - The Washington Post

A messy winter storm is charging up the East Coast - The Washington Post

To Sway Unvaccinated, New Tactics Are Tried at Funeral Homes, on Radio Shows - The Wall Street Journal

Team USA Advises Athletes Heading to Beijing Olympics to Leave Their Phones at Home - The Wall Street Journal

Truckers Fret Over Pending Covid-19 Rules at U.S.-Canada Border - The Wall Street Journal

China's birth rate drops to record low in 2021 - Reuters

U.S. FAA clears 45% of commercial plane fleet after 5G deployed - Reuters

N.Korea fires two ballistic missiles from Pyongyang airport, S.Korea says - Reuters


-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Sunday, January 16, 2022

12 Degrees

 

Between the Cloud Decks at Sunset
Somewhere over West Virginia
Taken by Chris
January 15, 2022
12 degrees was the temperature this morning when I awakened in Elkridge.

I came back to 12 degrees?

Why on earth would I do that?

Wait, I did it because it was the travel plan.

Fortunately, yesterday's flight from Houston was uneventful. We had expected turbulence as we flew above the storm that is coming later today to our region, but the ride was generally smooth. It was fascinating to watch the clouds below us change as we traversed the levels of the storm.

Descending into Baltimore, as we flew in between the layers of clouds, we were able to enjoy the sunset behind the aircraft and watch the reflection off the cloud tops of the lower level. It was something that I have not enjoyed many times before. Chris snapped a great image. 

And we are back--for a short while in the frigid temperatures of the mid-Atlantic Region. 

Today is Christmas! We had delayed it due to positive COVID tests in the family and our travel schedule.

There definitely will not be any outdoor football today, unlike many Christmases past.


-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Saturday, January 15, 2022

A Different Friday Happy Hour

 

The Boys Watching a Video
Cinco Ranch, TX
January 14, 2022
It almost escaped me that yesterday was Friday--but it was! 

The family gathered for Happy Hour and a meal. The day concluded with some quality time around a fire pit. The family, as it gathers, is a fun mix of children and adults. 

Friday was generally uneventful as I spent most of the day with Dad. I enjoyed his company, one-on-one; it is something we do not get to do often. It was very different having an entire afternoon with him. We watched a few movies, but most importantly just spent time together. 

I enjoyed watching the kids interact after the family had gathered. There were 5 of them, 2 girls and 3 boys. They spent time together as a group, other times split off into gender specific groups and at some times in family groups or alone. I enjoyed dinner with almost all of them as they cycled through the table at which I was dining. 

It is clear to me that I am still getting used to the retirement gig. Today is a travel day and we head back to Maryland. I am not looking forward to the cold weather there. Were it not for our pets which we need to retrieve, we would head back to the warmth of Florida. But Chris and I will be back in Maryland, hopefully, by the end of the day weather permitting with good memories of our visit to Texas and looking ahead to our Florida return.


-- Bob Doan, writing from Weston Lakes, TX

Friday, January 14, 2022

Messina Hof - Texas Winery & Kitchen

 

It has been a busy week of travel and visiting with family. 

Last evening we had the opportunity to visit a local winery for dinner. The Messina Hof provided a great dinner menu highlighting Texas wines. We specifically visited the Messina Hof Harvest Green Winery & Kitchen in Richmond, Texas.

I had read that Texas wines were becoming very good and I was not disappointed by the wines we chose with dinner. The GSM was the spectacular wine of the night. Very deep with a great nose. The winemaker describes it as follows: GSM is for the sophisticatedly-curious. Upon first taste, this medium-bodied wine leaves the palate with a blended synergy of rich flavors like blackberry, dark cherry, and plum with a hint of spice. Enjoy this hearty blend with savory meats like pork or lamb complemented with blends of herbs and peppery spices. The wine has an excellent price point of $25.

I also enjoyed the Paulo Tempranillo with my dinner which was an elegantly served and tasteful pork dish called The Cactus & Pig. Duroc pork chop, grilled Texas peach and cactus flower agrodolce with Blushing Angel and smoked potato hash cake and arugula. The Tempranillo is described as: a full-bodied wine with nuances of dark cherry, vanilla, and dried cloves. It is masterfully oak aged giving it a wonderful tannin structure and long, refined finish. It has a price point of $60 and the wine was perfect for the dinner.

The final wine of the evening, which was enjoyed sitting around a fire pit, was the HG Abounding. It was very enjoyable with earthy aromas of rich Texas terroir and flavors of blackberry that reach out from the depths of the glass. Oak aging adds balanced layers of black tea and leather. Its lingering finish, when savored, evokes the lifecycle of the grapevine from soil to press. A great bottle of wine with a $25 price point.

The service at the restaurant was excellent and friendly. The wines and courses were serves promptly and the servers and manager were eager to showcase their wines for non-Texans. And I was very impressed.

A great Texas meal highlighted with Texas wines!


-- Bob Doan, writing from Weston Lakes, TX


Thursday, January 13, 2022

As the Sun Rises

 

Winter Trees
Weston Lakes, TX
January 13, 2022
The trees of Winter were standing tall this morning as the Sun slowly rose over Texas. The trees had that eerie look that trees possess when silhouetted, yet they were standing tall as the morning light grew stronger. 

It was the start of another day in Texas and I look forward to spending more time with my Dad. He is doing remarkably well and it was very good to see him yesterday.

Traveling to begin the new year has been very different. I have also been keeping one eye on the news and monitoring developments in the areas that I used to work. It has been an exciting time, to say the least.

As the sun rises on a new day and I am in my second state of the new year looking forward to returning Maryland on Saturday to enjoy (or not) a possible winter weather event on Sunday! What a way to spend a three-day weekend. Wait! every weekend is a three-day weekend for me.

Still trying to get used to that concept.


-- Bob Doan, writing from Weston Lakes, TX


Wednesday, January 12, 2022

Question of the Day

Baggage Handlers at Work
Jackson, MS
January 11, 2022
I survived the travel day and made it to Hump Day. Not that I am trying to get through the week or anything, but I am clinging to some of the ways I used to identify days of the week. 

Question of the Day:

What do you do when you are a through passenger with over an hour stuck in the aircraft on the ground before continuing the trip?

Answer:

I experienced this very situation yesterday. I did three things.

1. Watched the baggage handlers load luggage.

2. Wrote my blog.

3. Vowed never to let this happen again!

And then I really explored how this happened. Houston does not seem to be that strange a destination when traveling from West Palm Beach, yet the flights mostly pass through connecting cities and multiple stops. At least on Southwest. I did find one direct flight on another airline. According to Expedia, that is the only nonstop. I guess I may be flying that airline next time.

Travel can be frustrating. I also have to confess, wearing a mask for almost seven hours is not a lot of fun. I wonder how people on trans-Pacific flights survive. The bands of the mask really began to cut into my ears.

-- Bob Doan, writing from Fulshear, TX

Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Fly-Away Travel Day

Jupiter Lighthouse at Sunset

 It is a travel day. We are taking what seems like the most circuitous route possible from West Palm Beach to Houston on Southwest. There were no direct flights and so we have visited Atlanta at sunrise and are now trapped on a plane in Jackson, Mississippi, waiting to load and then head off to Houston. Ugh.

It was kinda cool to land in Atlanta at sunrise and see the rising sun kissing the tops of the tall trees. We had departed Palm Beach under the cover of darkness. The blessing has been very empty flights and Chris and I have enjoyed a middle season both legs of the journey thus far. Hopefully we will end the trip three for three in that department. 

I am looking forward to seeing Dad and the Houston part of the family for a couple of days before heading back to frozen Maryland. I am hopeful of keeping the turnaround time in Maryland short. I long to see the Jupiter Lighthouse again and enjoy the shorts, sandals, and tee-shirt weather. I have very much enjoyed starting my retirement in a warm climate.

Despite missing my morning beach walk, the day has been going fairly well. Getting up at 4 AM to catch a 6:25 AM flight was not a lot of fun, but that is how it is sometimes.

Another fly-away day partially complete.


— Bob Doan, writing from Jackson, MS


Monday, January 10, 2022

Monday Musings - January 10, 2022

 


1. Give a big greeting to the second Monday of January 2022. There are 50 more Mondays, or chances to get it right remaining this year.

Squadron of Pelicans
Jupiter Island Beach, Florida
January 9, 2020
2. Sitting on the beach last evening for happy hour, I was treated to a very large squadron of pelicans flying overhead. They were amazing in the way they maintained their spacing and formation.  

3. Family Sports Report

   NFL

      Ravens (8-9) lose to Steelers (9-7-1), 13-16

      Cowboys (12-5) defeat Eagles (9-8), 51-26

      Washington (7-10) defeat Giants (4-13), 22-7

   NHL

      Penguins (20-9-5) lose to Stars (17-12-2), 2-3

4. I enjoyed a drive to the Port of Miami yesterday to retrieve family members from the cruise which I was unable to enjoy. The drive gave me some perspective on how long of a drive it actually is to get to Miami!

5. I am shocked by the amount of misinformation regarding COVID. vaccines, and COVID testing. Apparently people want to intentionally harm other people by providing bad information.

6. Busy week ahead. More traveling and then finally back to Maryland. It is hard to believe that I have started the year in Florida and will be leaving for a bit but will return to enjoy my first long-term residence since I was in college.

7. Today in History. On January 10, 1901, a drilling derrick at Spindletop Hill near Beaumont, Texas, produces an enormous gusher of crude oil, coating the landscape for hundreds of feet and signaling the advent of the American oil industry. The geyser was discovered at a depth of over 1,000 feet, flowed at an initial rate of approximately 100,000 barrels a day and took nine days to cap. Following the discovery, petroleum, which until that time had been used in the U.S. primarily as a lubricant and in kerosene for lamps, would become the main fuel source for new inventions such as cars and airplanes; coal-powered forms of transportation including ships and trains would also convert to the liquid fuel.




Ahead of talks, U.S. again warns Putin of ‘massive consequences’ if Russia invades Ukraine - The Washington Post

Threat of omicron keeps China walled off, as the country’s scientists search for better vaccines - The Washington Post

As Afghanistan’s harsh winter sets in, many are forced to choose between food and warmth - The Washington Post

Hospitals Cut Beds as Nurses Call In Sick With Covid-19 - The Wall Street Journal

Are Musk’s Starlink Satellites Overcrowding Space? Why China, Rivals Say So - The Wall Street Journal

Taliban Detain Prominent Critic, Intensifying Crackdown on Dissent - The Wall Street Journal

Tennis star Djokovic wins court battle to stay in Australia - Reuters

Putin claims victory in defending Kazakhstan from revolt - Reuters

Israel not bound by any nuclear deal with Iran, Bennett says - Reuters


-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, FL

Sunday, January 9, 2022

What is a Weekend?

 

I have had many people tell me that once retired, weekends are hard to distinguish from weekdays.

That may be true, but as I have just experienced my first true retired weekend I noticed one thing that sets it apart from weekdays: local activities. Yesterday, for instance, Chris and I found two artisan gatherings to visit and enjoy. These are weekend occurrences and I realized that I need to do a better job scouring the internet for local weekend activities. 

I have to admit, I am looking forward to playing golf during the week--which may also be a big difference from when I used to have to golf on weekends. Hopefully, before the end of January Chris and I will be on the golf course again smacking the little white, or brightly colored, balls around to either increase or decrease our frustration. 

And so, weekends still exist--just differently. At least that is my observation from week one of retirement.


-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, FL

Saturday, January 8, 2022

A Flamboyance

A Flamboyance of Flamingos
A surprise arrived yesterday inside of a small package left by the UPS driver.

Upon opening the package I was surprised and excited as I discovered that it contained a flamboyance of flamingos! All jumbled together.

Single Flamingo Light
They were flamingo lights to adorn the patio of our condo.

It is amazing how something like these can make me smile. Now I just need to find the perfect spot for the flamboyance to occupy. I have them temporarily installed along a wall on the patio.

It took about five minutes to get them untangled and strung out. 

But it was worth it. They are cute. 


-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, FL


Friday, January 7, 2022

Day 4 - Maybe it is Real

 

Day 4 - Retirement
Jupiter Beach, Florida
January 6, 2022
Retirement Day 4 started like most days--I wrote a blog, enjoyed breakfast, checked the weather back in Maryland and was happy not to be there. There is way too much snow and cold.

I am still adjusting to the idea that I don't have to go to work when my vacation is over--wait, I'm not on vacation. I am sure that the permanence of my situation will hit me when I get back to Maryland in just over a week. 

I do miss work, or at least the thought of work. I miss the people I worked with and from reading the news I have a sense of what they are dealing with. I remember that when I retired from the Air Force a couple decades ago that it took me a while to disconnect from the military, I am sure that will be the case again--but I do not want to lose touch with the friends I've made and the people I've worked with these past 20 plus years. 

The great part about yesterday was the couple afternoon hours on the beach. It was cool, only 75 degrees, I think the weather was warmer than that, but the sun shone brightly and made it feel warmer. And then there was the beach and the ocean. The surf was rough and enjoyable to watch. It was very loud, except for short moments when everything fell silent. It was my first afternoon sojourn to the beach, we have been walking the beach in the morning, but until yesterday had not actually taken chairs and a cooler of refreshments to enjoy actual "sun time" on the sand. 

Day 5 is at hand and I have a new ceiling fan to install. 


-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, FL


Thursday, January 6, 2022

Flamingos to Enjoy

  

Flamingos
Flamingo Gardens
Ft Lauderdale, FL
January 4, 2022

Question.

What is my favorite bird? 

Answer:

Flamingo! 

Spoonbill
Flamingo Gardens
Ft Lauderdale, FL
January 4, 2022
Chris and I found a small piece of paradise called Flamingo Gardens Botanical Gardens and Wildlife Sanctuary close-by in Fort Lauderdale. 


We spent a relaxing afternoon touring the gardens and enjoying the wildlife most of which roams freely around the grounds. 

The variety of waterbirds and local animals is fun to enjoy as well as seeing multiple tropical plants and trees that we might never enjoy in person. The history of the area is engaging and I found out that originally the farm was planted as an orange grove and the clementine and tangelo were both developed on-site. 

The tour of the original house constructed by the owners, which is now a museum, was very interesting and enjoyable as it is furnished in original and period furniture and accessories. It provides a snapshot of a working farmhouse of the 1930's. I was most impressed with the correspondence from President Eisenhower upon the receipt of a case of oranges for his personal use. 

And the multitude of botanical plantings on the property are not to be ignored. It is not often that I see a real coffee tree with beans and a huge grove of banana plants and I had never driven through a mango grove before. 

Flamingo
Flamingo Gardens
Ft Lauderdale, FL
January 4, 2022
But it was the birds, the huge flock of ibis and the roaming peafowl, that were the stars of the show. The display of flamingos really stole my heart and time and became the subject of a large number of images. 

As might be expected, this spot  is now on my visitor tour list. It is a long-ish drive from Jupiter, about one-hour-and-a-quarter, but definitely worth the time investment. 

-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, FL

Wednesday, January 5, 2022

Coincidence? I Think Not!

Jupiter Lighthouse
Jupiter, Florida
April 2, 2018
There are some weird similarities between my northern and southern homes in terms of locations and landmarks. 

I never really thought about it until the other day when I realized that my favorite Florida landmark, which is less than a mile for my condo, the Jupiter Lighthouse was designed and constructed by one each General George G. Meade

In Maryland, I live close to a military installation named for the same General George G. Meade. While the installation is not as nice to look at as the Jupiter Lighthouse, it is a significant landmark in the area. 

But wait---there's more!

My Maryland home is situated between I-95 and US 1. Of course in Maryland where I live two roads are fairly close together, about 4,000 feet. My Florida home is similarly situated between I-95 and US 1, but the roads are roughly 4 miles apart. 

Still--how weird is it that I am situated between the two roads and near landmarks built or named for General George G. Meade? 

Coincidences? 

I'm not sure, but life can be a series of coincidences that turn into great outcomes. 


-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, Florida

Tuesday, January 4, 2022

Bookending my First Day

 

Jupiter Lighthouse
Jupiter, Florida
January 3, 2022
Yesterday was a great day to be in Florida! It was my official first day of retirement and while the mid-Atlantic region was getting hammered by a winter storm, I was walking on an ocean beach and enjoying outside activities in shorts and a Tee-shirt. 

The day began with a two-mile beach walk along the Atlantic Ocean. The beach was beautiful, but a storm was gathering inland which drove the sky almost black. As we neared the halfway point of the walk approaching the jetty, the Jupiter Lighthouse came into view. The black sky behind the lighthouse which was illuminated in the sunshine made a stunning image.

Jupiter Lighthouse
Jupiter Island, Jupiter, Florida
January 3, 2022
Chris made an insightful comment during the walk, she noted that "we are not on vacation, this is our life now." I have to admit, being my first real day of retirement the comment really resonated with me. 

Since the day was so nice we decided to bookend it by watching the sunset from the Intracoastal Waterway as we enjoyed Happy Hour together. As the sun set on my first day of retirement it was enjoyable to be sitting on a sandy spit of beach looking out at the lighthouse in a completely different setting. The sunset itself was not a hugely awe inspiring moment, but it was memorable and I, of course, captured it to document the ending of my first day of retirement. 

Sitting on a small beach, along the Intracoastal Waterway watching the sun set at the end of my first workday of retirement--wow, and to think, my alternative would be struggling in a major regional snowstorm. 


-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, Florida

Monday, January 3, 2022

Monday Musings - January 3, 2022

 


1. Congratulations, the first Monday of 2022 has arrived. There are 51 Mondays remaining in the year.

Blowing Rocks
Jupiter Island, Jupiter, Florida
January 2, 2022
2. I am in Florida, not on a cruise as originally planned, but missing the first snowstorm of the season in Baltimore. What could possibly be bad about that?

3. Family Sports Weekend Results

    NFL

        Ravens (8-8) lose to Rams (12-4), 19-20

        Cowboys (11-5) lose to Cardinals (11-5), 22-25

        Washington (6-10) lose to Eagles (9-7), 16-20

        Steelers (7-7-1) play Browns (7-8) tonight

    NHL

        Penguins (18-8-5) defeat Sharks (17-15-1), 8-5

    Premier League

        Arsenal (11-2-7) lost to Manchester City (17-2-2), 1-2

4. I can hear trains from my condo. They pass multiple times per day and remind me that goods and services are still moving around the country.

5. This is the first actual workday of my retired life. While it is not exactly what I had planned, I think I am going to get used to it. 

6. It is going to be cooler here today with highs in the upper 70s. I can definitely enjoy not being farther north. 

7. Today in History. On January 3, 1990, Panama’s General Manuel Antonio Noriega, after holing up for 10 days at the Vatican embassy in Panama City, surrenders to U.S. military troops to face charges of drug trafficking. Noriega was flown to Miami the following day and crowds of citizens on the streets of Panama City rejoiced. On July 10, 1992, the former dictator was convicted of drug trafficking, money laundering and racketeering and sentenced to 40 years in prison.




Omicron’s impact better measured by rising hospitalizations than cases, Fauci says - The Washington Post

Heavy snow in the D.C. area this morning, with roads turning hazardous - The Washington Post

Twitter permanently suspends Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s personal account over covid-19 misinformation - The Washington Post

Stock Futures Rise, But Investors See Rocky Year Ahead - The Wall Street Journal

Omicron Takes Toll on Businesses, From Airports to Supermarkets - The Wall Street Journal

China and Russia Military Cooperation Raises Prospect of New Challenge to U.S. Power8 min read - The Wall Street Journal

Omicron-related disruptions cause over 4,000 flight cancellations to kick off 2022 - Reuters

South Korean crosses armed border in rare defection to North - Reuters

Daily COVID cases in Saudi Arabia above 1,000, continue to climb in UAE - Reuters



-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, Florida

Sunday, January 2, 2022

New Year Sun

 

Hope Sound National Preserve
Hope Sound, Florida
January 1, 2022
Celebrating the New Year holiday with blue skies and sun was fabulous yesterday. I read that it was foggy and gloomy in Maryland.

It was not here. We enjoyed an idyllic start to the new year. 

Chris and I spent the day enjoying the quiet and solitude. We are getting our condo ready for full-time occupancy. There is a process in changing it over from a vacation home to a full-time residence. Little tweaks here and there. 

And so the new year begins with a lot of promise and some disappointment. Due to developing COVID issues, we are not sailing on the cruise that we had planned for so many months. It just seems the prudent thing to do. I am retired and we can reschedule for a different and better time. This will be the second major vacation canceled due to COVID. But, I firmly believe that the end is in sight for this virus.

The new year dawned bright and exciting. We had a great day. 


-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, Florida

Saturday, January 1, 2022

Happy New Year 2022

Jupiter Beach
Jupiter, Florida
December 31, 2021


I have to get used to writing 2022. I remember it took me almost until May last year to finally get comfortable with the date change.

Happy New Year.

I snapped the image used for the greeting while accomplishing a beach walk on Jupiter Island yesterday. The palm tree just stood there calling out to me surrounded by the blue sky. It was the beginning of quite a day in Florida and even as write this I am still a few hours short of exceeding my previous 38-hour abbreviated Florida trip, but remaining hopeful and having no plans for a sudden departure.

US 1
Tequesta, Florida
December 31, 2021

It was a different scene that we found last evening along US 1 in Tequesta as we were watching people set off fireworks to ring in the New Year. We walked, under the cover of darkness, from our condo to the US 1 to watch the fireworks that we could  barely see rising over the building in front of us and spied the forest of light wrapped palm trees along the road side. I have to admit, nothing says Christmas to me more that palm trees with their trunks wrapped in lights!

And now 2022 is underway, I wonder if this is the year we will finally beat COVID? WE can hope. It would be nice to be able to go play es again without showing proof of vaccination or worrying about contracting the virus. I can almost remember life during 2019, BC (before COVID).

One day at a time I guess.


-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, Florida

Friday, December 31, 2021

Headlong Journey

 

Palm Tree in the Morning Light
Tequesta, Florida
December 31, 2021
Yesterday began as unnumbered days before had begun: I woke up, wrote my blog, went to work and that is where it all changed. When I departed my place of employment for the past decades, I was no longer employed anymore; I had been promoted to a new status: retired.

The good-byes were hard and at times awkward, but sincere. I felt kind of like I did when my family dropped me off at college and we said our good-byes and they drove away. I will miss everyone and the relationships that have developed as we worked together. I do not want to lose touch, but I know that life gets in the way of good intentions too many times.

It was very weird driving away from the facility for the very last time, but I had so much to do to be on an evening flight to my Florida home that it kept me fairly occupied for the afternoon.

Note to self--no more late flights. We were delayed over an hour taking off because of baggage handling. Baltimore remains the worst airport that I traverse for baggage. I cannot fully understand how other airports can get bags off aircraft efficiently, but Baltimore cannot seem to manage the effort. 

It was exciting when the Lyft dropped us off in front of our condo and we walked through the door. I was home, again and beginning a new chapter of my life. 

I think I will go walk on the beach.


-- Bob Doan, Tequesta, FL


Thursday, December 30, 2021

It has Arrived

The last work day of the year has arrived! Tomorrow is a Holiday Observed, because New Year's Day is a Saturday, and is technically not a work day. 

I have been anxiously anticipating today with excitement, but now with some trepidation, as it the day is my last workday as I head off into retirement and away from the daily grind.

Being unemployed, or in my case retired, is a strange and very different concept for me. I have been fortunate to have been actively employed my entire adult life with the exception of Columbus Day weekend 1998. I had left my contractor job the Friday prior and did not start my government job until the Tuesday after the holiday. So I was unemployed for a weekend and a holiday. That is until Saturday, January 1st, when I will be officially retired at the stroke of midnight concurrent with the start of the new year. 

The off ramp, therefore, is in sight and the new highway is just ahead. Today is, hopefully, my last in a series of lasts and tomorrow begins my first in a series of new firsts and adventures.


-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Sliding through the last Week


Amazingly, Hump Day has arrived for both the last week of the year and the last week of my full-time employment. 

I am so busy getting ready for the end of the year and the beginning of the new year that I almost did not notice that Hump Day had arrived. 

It is amazing that, as my headlong rush towards retirement continues, the days do not seem to be getting longer, but rather each day is racing past so quickly that I barely can keep up. There is so much to do and the world keeps turning with new excitement at every turn. 

I had begun counting down the hours, but gave up because the hours were spinning past too fast. 

The year is coming to a conclusion. The book of 2021 will soon be complete and it will be another in a long series of years that I have enjoyed. I am staring the COVID monster straight in the eye preparing to go on a cruise with parts of my family. Other parts of the family are slogging through the COVID wastelands of Disney trying to enjoy total escapism while keeping a wary eye on infection rates. 

And so the year draws to a close. Hour by hour. 

Hold fast to the memories before they slip away and are too soon gone. 


-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Ending as it Began

 The year, is ending the way it began with the news being about COVID. 

It seems that the country continues to blame the government when the citizens are unwilling to do what they are asked to do to stem the infection. It is kinda f like the experts are saying do this--and the uninformed are saying No, we don't want to and then complaining that COVID is running out of control. 

That, friends is a no win situation. Until people do what they are asked to do there is no reason to blame the government for not having a plan. There is a plan--follow it and get vaccinated. 

And the continued stream of misinformation is actually killing people. 

For instance, I came across this insightful article about interpreting death rates.

How do death rates from COVID-19 differ between people who are vaccinated and those who are not?

From the article comes this example:

Why we need to compare the rates of death between vaccinated and unvaccinated



During a pandemic, you might see headlines like “Half of those who died from the virus were vaccinated”.

It would be wrong to draw any conclusions about whether the vaccines are protecting people from the virus based on this headline. The headline is not providing enough information to draw any conclusions.

Let’s think through an example to see this.

Imagine we live in a place with a population of 60 people.





Then we learn that 10 people died. And we learn that 50% of them were vaccinated.





The newspaper may run the headline “Half of those who died from the virus were vaccinated”. But this headline does not tell us anything about whether the vaccine is protecting people or not.

To be able to say anything, we also need to know about those who did not die: how many people in this population were vaccinated? And how many were not vaccinated?
Base rate fallacy explanation 03

Now we have all the information we need and can calculate the death rates:

  • of 10 unvaccinated people, 5 died → the death rate among the unvaccinated is 50%
  • of 50 vaccinated people, 5 died → the death rate among the vaccinated is 10%

We therefore see that the death rate among the vaccinated is 5-times lower than among the unvaccinated.

In the example, we invented numbers to make it simple to calculate the death rates. But the same logic applies also in the current COVID-19 pandemic. Comparisons of the absolute numbers, as some headlines do, is making a mistake that’s known in statistics as a ‘base rate fallacy’: it ignores the fact that one group is much larger than the other. It is important to avoid this mistake, especially now, as in more and more countries the number of people who are vaccinated against COVID-19 is much larger than the number of people who are unvaccinated (see our vaccination data). 

This example was illustrating how to think about these statistics in a hypothetical case. Below, you can find the real data for the situation in the COVID-19 pandemic now.

As can be seen, many people misinterpret the data. 

Here is the current chart (as current as I can find) for the United States:



The death rates among unvaccinated is much higher than fully vaccinated and digging further into the data it can be assessed that many of the fully vaccinated deaths have underlying complications, as in the case of Colin Powell.


So--the plan is get vaccinated, if you choose not to get vaccinated don't try to say the government doesn't have a plan. Your exercise of your rights is killing people and maybe yourself. 


-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD


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