You're alive!Re-reading A Time for Trumpets, by Charles Macdonald. Battle of the Bulge. And for the first time in years.....some brewing and Michael Jackson's beer books.
You're alive!Re-reading A Time for Trumpets, by Charles Macdonald. Battle of the Bulge. And for the first time in years.....some brewing and Michael Jackson's beer books.
Hey man, so happy to see you! Yep, alive and kicking, if just a tad slower. Been a good and tough road - went from 270 to 220 and holding, training for mountain hunting with my son...and just started working in retirement for our LHBS, so...the itch is driving me pretty bonkers. I have tons to both catch up on...feel like a dinosaur and you kids are still plugging away!You're alive!
Wayward pines. I haven't seen it, but I believe it was directed by M. Night Shamalamadingdong or something like that, the guy who did lots of other spookey movies.I thought I saw a series based on Whispering Pines. Not sure
Thanks man! Awesome to see you too!Welcome back @Gadjobrinus !!! Haven't seen you in a good long while buddy!
I learned it as a Boy Scout, but never got to where I could translate as someone was sending, or send anything intelligible. I had to re-learn it to successfully identify precision radios, but was informed it isn't being taught anymore. If I'm given the letter, I can tell if the dashes and dots match.Does anyone use morse code still? My dad had to learn it when he was doing military service in the navy and it was considered obsolete even then...
Read that a year or two ago. Steinbeck is one of Americas greatest writes ever - all of it is so good.Rereading East of Eden, one of my favorite books
I have pulled a muscle in my calf, and so my audiobook time while cycling to and from work has been cut to 0 lately. Very depressing as I absolutely love cycling. I've been reading on my Kindle in bed or on the couch, lots of books on corporate finance and business, along with some computer science stuff.
Here are some I've managed to read lately that I feel are worth mentioning:
Never Look At The Empty Seats: A Memoir by Charlie Daniels
My Appetite for Destruction: Sex, Drugs, and Gun N' Roses by Steve Adder
Hell Divers III by Nicholas Sansbury Smith
I've been in oil and gas for almost 2 decades, and I finally decided to learn something about Geology, other than the incidental facts I've picked up over the years. I must say, I find this VERY fascinating.
![]()
My wife and I own and operate an Airbnb in the Ozarks, and are planning to build a small cabin (near Tulsa?) and so I've been looking for books on construction. I'm going to be my own GC, and will do almost all the work myself, except slab and framing, so I've been studying up a little.
![]()
@passedpawn I hope the CW is going well, I have a practice keyer and never put in enough effort to be any good.
It's amazing some of the things I've learned as an older adult, questions I only now have, and there is noone to answer them - all dead.The name of my newest book is irrelevant, it's a self published family history.
I was talking to a friend recently, he's 84 and from Florida, and he mentioned that his mother was from the same small town in Alabama my grandparents and father were from. He loaned me a copy of his mom's book, and in the first chapter I realized his grandparents and my grandparents would have to have known each other very well, they were born within 3 or four years of each other. This will give me a depiction of the life my grandparents lived, something i never got from them.
D&D was magical. I really liked it. This was in the early 80's I think, and we had the crazy dice and booklets that worked us through some odd scenarios. I don't know if it was the D&D that others were doing, but I loved it. It came and went in one summer, but I still remember with new fondness.As a kid I fell just shy of invitable to D&D happenings. For the same reason professional sports do not interest me, I struggle to grasp the importance of imaginary constructs.
All that aside, I can't help feeling like I've missed out on a lot of joy, and so I'll give it a read, to dip a toe. Thank you.
Which leads to my nightstand piled high with:Well, I was a D&D player, and I've been known to knock back a beer or 3... and free seals the deal. I promise, if I read it (i've got a backlog of unread books), I'll leave a review on Amazon.
I played D&D starting in about 1980-81 pretty regularly through the 90s. 1st edition only. Still have all the books, modules, character sheets, dice, etc. After computers came out (I feel old saying that), we wrote visual basic programs to automate a lot of the activities (random monsters, treasure generation, spell books, etc) and even created a digital mapping program using a digi board. Man were we some nerds! We are much cooler these days, right?Which leads to my nightstand piled high with:
An AD&D magazine I write for.
The Lord of the Rings Trilogy (I started Fellowship last night)
Hamilton
And a Gary Gygax Gord the Rogue novel I can’t recall the name of.
I have to get through at least 2 of them by the end of February.
I play Dungeons and Dragons almost daily. I run a home brew world called Thirith. Between sessions, there’s always something to fiddle with. I even created a custom set of random dungeon generation rules so I can play solo when I have downtime in the middle of a day.
https://thirith.proboards.com/
We still are.I played D&D starting in about 1980-81 pretty regularly through the 90s. 1st edition only. Still have all the books, modules, character sheets, dice, etc. After computers came out (I feel old saying that), we wrote visual basic programs to automate a lot of the activities (random monsters, treasure generation, spell books, etc) and even created a digital mapping program using a digi board. Man were we some nerds! We are much cooler these days, right?
did you enjoy it?I just finished reading Lift Off about the early days of SpaceX. I'm big into SpaceX, especially the work at the Starbase in Texas.