Thursday, December 29, 2005

Win my engine!


Remember way back when... this summer? I was waiting for my new scooter, being promised that it would be ready "this Friday", and when I showed up to get it, the engine that the mechanic had built for me was in another scooter, on it's way to Vancouver for a tv show for the CBC?

Well you can win that scooter! Here's how: http://www.spaceforrentcontest.ca/space_for_rent/rules_regs.htm



Hey! That's JB on the scooter! Small world.

I encourage everyone I know to enter this contest. I would love someone I know to win this scooter - I'm dying to know what kind of strings end up being attached.

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

Merry Christmas, Alaska!

Every once in a while the gub'ment does something to give you hope.
On another note, how sleazy is it pairing the go-ahead to drill in Alaska with aid for Katrina victims and Defence spending?
God, these guys are jerks sometimes.
Senate Blocks Alaska Refuge Drilling

By H. JOSEF HEBERT, Associated Press Writer1 hour, 33 minutes ago

The Senate blocked an attempt to open an Alaska wildlife refuge to oil drilling Wednesday, foiling an attempt by drilling backers to force the measure through Congress as part of a must-have defense spending bill.
It was a stinging defeat for Sen. Ted Stevens (news, bio, voting record), R-Alaska, one of the Senate's most powerful members, who had given senators a choice to support the Alaska drilling measure, or risk the political fallout of voting against money for American troops and for victims of Hurricane Katrina.
Democrats accused Stevens, the senior Republican in the Senate, of holding the defense bill hostage to drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
"It took a lot of guts for a lot of people to stand up," Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., said after the vote.
Republican leaders fell four votes short of getting the required 60 votes to avoid a threatened filibuster of the defense measure over the oil drilling issue. The vote prompted GOP leaders to huddle in private over their next move.
The vote that was 56-44.
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist for procedural reasons cast a vote with ANWR opponents, so that he might be able to resurrect the issue for another try. But Democrats said they expected the defense bill to be withdrawn and reworked without the Arctic refuge provision.
The 43 senators who voted against refuge drilling — all but four Democrats as well as GOP Sens. Mike DeWine of Ohio and Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island — "are intent and unyielding" and not expected to budge should Frist try for another vote, said Lieberman.
Stevens called the refuge's oil vital to national security and bemoaned repeated attempts over the years by opponents using the filibuster to kill drilling proposals.
Democrats, conversely, accused Stevens of holding hostage a military spending bill that includes money to support troops in Iraq and $29 billion for victims of Hurricane Katrina.
"Our military is being held hostage by this issue, Arctic drilling," fumed Sen. Harry Reid (news, bio, voting record), the Democratic leader. The Nevada Democrat said the Senate could move quickly to pass the defense bill once the refuge issue was resolved.
"We all agree we want money for our troops. ... This is not about the troops," said Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., a strong critic of disturbing the refuge in northeastern Alaska by oil development.
During the vote, Stevens, 82, who had fought to open the refuge to drilling since 1980 and is the most senior Republican in the Senate, sat unsmiling in a chair midway back in the chamber, watching his colleagues vote. When it became apparent that he had lost, he briefly talked with Frist, presumably over what move should be taken next. He briefly shook his head, a signal of his disappointment.
"We need ... to open up the small area of the coastal plain (of the refuge) for oil exploration and development," said Sen. Lisa Murkowski (news, bio, voting record), R-Alaska. She called making the oil available a matter of national security by reducing U.S. reliance on oil imports.
Senators determined to protect the refuge from development found it difficult to oppose the politically popular defense bill, which has money for troops in Iraq, relief for Katrina hurricane victims and help for low-income families to pay energy bills.
"Destroying this wilderness will do very little to reduce energy costs nor does it do very much for oil independence," said Sen. Dianne Feinstein (news, bio, voting record), D-Calif.
The Alaska refuge's 1.5-million-acre coastal plain is believed to contain about 10 billion barrels of oil and possibly a reserve comparable to the Prudhoe Bay fields 65 miles to the west. Oil companies have pumped 13 billion barrels from Prudhoe since 1977.
But drilling opponents long have argued that ANWR's oil should not be exploited because of the coastal plain's fragile ecosystem and its wildlife. While the region looks bleak during its long winters and oil can be seen seeping from some of its rock formations, the coastal strip also is the calving ground for caribou and home to polar bears, musk oxen, and the annual influx of millions of migratory birds.
"There are literally hundreds of thousands of Americans following this issue," William Meadows, president of the Wilderness Society, said Tuesday, adding that there has been "an outpouring of angst and concern" over Stevens' attempt to link hurricane relief money, low-income energy assistance funds and money for the Iraq war to push the drilling measure through a reluctant Senate.
Stevens and others maintain the refuge's oil can be extracted using modern techniques without damaging the environment

Thursday, December 15, 2005

Its sap to you New York, New Yoooooork

I caught this story on Yahoo News, and love it.

Big Apple warms up as pleasant, syrupy, mystery smell is reported in New York
Fri Dec 9, 6:53 PM ET
NEW YORK (AP) - Was it the sweet smell of success? For the second time in two months, a mysterious maple syrup aroma wafted over Manhattan on Thursday, and city officials still don't know what caused it.
Callers to the city's 311 help line and the Fire Department reported the pleasant scent around 3:30 p.m. in neighbourhoods from midtown to the Upper East and West sides.
"The calls aren't exactly complaints," city Department of Environmental Protection spokesman Ian Michaels said Friday. That's no surprise in a city where a host of less appetizing smells are often on the menu.
Michaels said the odor appeared to be the same one people detected in late October, mostly in lower Manhattan.
The agency sent out its hazardous materials team to take instant readings of the air from neighbourhoods where the calls originated, but nothing dangerous was found. Air samples brought in for additional testing were also negative.
"It is once again a mystery. It seems to be gone," Michaels said.

******

I'm still mulling over how to best report my Disney trip, so in the meantime, check me out!

Sunday, December 11, 2005

Home!

Over a week at DisneyWorld.

Excellent fun, great family time.

Exhausted.

Ate too much, but walked it off.

Now trying to clear a couple of hundred emails out of my mailbox. Apparently some phisher wants me to click on their fake PayPal link reeeeeal bad. Idiots.

Friday, December 02, 2005

Insanely early

That's what we are.

I found my passport, by the way. It was with some stuff.

But right now, we're at the Buffalo airport, waiting for our Southwest flight. Which is at 7:15. It's almost 6 now. but we've been in Buffalo since 3:30. I'm still not sure why we're here so early, but we are. We took a Greyhound Bus from Toronto to here. Busses are interesting.

On our bus, there was a very loud girl who, rather than sitting next to her companion/boyfriend, chose to sit in the seat in front of him. And when I say "sit", I actually mean "kneel on the seat and lean over the back to talk with her boyfriend/companion". I feel like a stuffy old fogey for being annoyed at how loud, or how inconsiderate that was for the person seated beside her.

But would an old fogey pump up the volume on her ipod shuffle so she could hear Kanye "George Bush doesn't care about black people" West's "Goldigger"? Probably not. I try to stem the tide of my fogey-ism.

Going through customs was really smooth. Actually a lot easier than doing it at the airport.

From the bus, we took another bus. A city bus that comes out to the airport for a couple of bucks. What a great money saving idea, right? No, not really. The bus was not the best equipped, space wise for two travelling gals with big luggage. (We both seem to have packed like we're evacuating).

Now, I don't know much about Buffalo, it's economy, or it's socio-economic make up... but that bus trip was depressing, looking out the windows at burned out and abandoned houses, liquor stores, shelters and pawn shops. One guy got on the bus with two huge garbage bags filled to the breaking point with alumnium cans. I feel you, Kanye! We got looked at a lot. Two of the only white people on the bus, with giant suitcases... I'd have wondered what the hell we were doing on that bus, too. Airport express or no.

More loud girls on the bus. The loudest was bragging about how she'll say whatever she wants, she doesn't care, she isn't going to bite her tongue for anyone! And she wants to beat that girl up so bad! Lots of talking about how tough she was, how she scared a girl at school but she "wasn't even going to hit her" - aw, that's hiLARious. Anyway, the bus stopped quickly and honked at another car. This girl screamed like "that girl in that white car" according to her friends who had apparently witnessed some sort of crime. Really weird bus trip.

I showed my sister the joys of curbside check in. We'd printed off our boarding passes at home already, so we handed our luggage over to the curbside guys and came on in. She thought that was pretty cool. Way better than standing in some long, annoying check in line!
Grabbed some pizza, and here we sit. At the gate. An hour away from hour 2.5 hour flight. I told my sister that she can make up for insisting on taking the early bus from Toronto by agreeing to take a taxi back to the bus station when we got back. No argument there, just a "yeah, I have no need to take that bus trip ever again".

Some dude's already standing in the "A" group line, an hour before the flight. What's his deal? Families are starting to arrive. I don't know why I am always suprised to see kids at the airport. Especially on a flight that is going to Orlando. Where Mickey lives.

I bought a 24 hour internet connection here at the airport for $6.95. It's a pretty good racket for them. I mean, who stays at the Buffalo airport for 24 hours? What I've really bought is an hour and a half of internet time or $6.95. American.

Now there are four people in line. 45 minutes away from the flight. Weirdos.

Although.... the lounge is filling up... and there are a lot of kids with big families, which means a lot of pre-boarders... do they know something I don't know? Should we get in line too?

No! Fight it, Wells! Do not become one of those antsy-pantsy gotta be firsties! Those people are jerks! We don't like them!

I'm going to sign off now, but I'm NOT going to line up or anything. I'm just... gonna... go...

Thursday, December 01, 2005

Something you don't want to discover the day before you leave for vacation

I can't find my passport.

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