Stopsign dance

The other night on Microsoft campus, I got stuck doing that repeated start/stop thing that you do at a stopsign when you and another driver can’t decide who’s going to go first. I ended up "winning". We were both headed the same direction. The other driver pulled up next to me at the next stopsign, and I shot him a glance (expecting, I guess, to connect over the shared experience that we just had). It was Bill Gates. That’s not something that happens every day.

What the hell is that smell?

Jennifer and I had been struggling since last Monday to determine the source of a mild to moderately strong rotting-like smell that has been developing in the downstairs part of our house. We first noticed it in the rec room, and spent days scratching our heads and searching the room for a possible source. It wasn’t in the closet, emptying the room’s garbage can didn’t help, etc.

So we closed the door to that room to see if maybe it was coming from somewhere else. Sure enough–the smell was no longer noticeable in there, but it was in the hall. The problem is, there are even fewer places for a source to hid in the hallway… Sigh. Perhaps it’s one of the other rooms attached to the hall. Surely not, but let’s try.

So I closed up all of the rooms attached to the downstairs hallway, and closed all the windows in the house to minimize air currents that might move the smell around. This involved moving the cats’ litter pan to a different room since they’d be locked out of their normal "bathroom"–and we had already mostly ruled out the litter pan as a possible source–it just didn’t stink enough to be the source.

I gave it yet another day to settle, and went looking for the smell. It seemed to be coming from the laundry room (the cats’ bathroom) afterall. I gave up and decided it _must_ be the litter pan, so I washed it top to bottom. It was a hot day, so I re-opened some windows and even set up the window fan to suck some cool evening air into the house. This made the smell in the laundry room worse. Which was very weird because the litter pan had not yet been put back in the laundry room.

I finally decided that it _must_ be coming from some vent because the fan had to be moving substantial air over the source for it to have gotten that much worse in a mere 5 or 10 minutes. The only thing that seemed to meet that description was the vent to the under-house crawlspace.

Only barely motivated to bother, but quite interested in making the damn smell go away, I put my shoes back on, got my headlamp, and went spelunking in the crawl space. Not 5 feet from the entrance, I found a large gray animal carcass of some sort. It didn’t really look like a rat, but it was definitely a mammal and probably a rodent.

Amazingly, despite my pathetically weak stomach, I managed to use the inside-out garbage bag trick to pick up the decaying body and take it out to the trash. Unfortunately, a small pile of fly larvae were left behind.

I think I’ll set some traps to make sure that the dead animal doesn’t have other friends queued up to replace his… ahem… role in my life.

My first flight as a private pilot

The mission
Went flying yesterday for the first time since I got my private pilot license. It was intended to be a practice flight for me, with three goals to plan around: 1) build time toward the 50 hours of cross-country experience required for my instrument rating, 2) get in three night landings and takeoffs to stay current for carrying passengers at night, and 3) get in some precision landing practice on a small runway.

For goal 3), there are fewer airports to choose from than for the other 2 goals, so I started with it. A friend of mine told me about Whidbey Air Park near Langley, WA (W10) one day while I was complaining about not having much practice on small runways. (The "small runway" at my home airport, Boeing Field in Seattle, WA (KBFI), is 100′ wide and 3700′ long–which has a tendency to spoil us a little.) I decided that W10 looked and sounded like a nice challenge.

Having selected an airport for precision landing practice, I started looking for airports to satisfy my other goals. W10 was too close to KBFI to meet the 50 nautical mile straight-line distance requirement in order to count as cross-country. Besides, I wasn’t sure I was going to be able to successfully get on the ground there especially expecting sunset shortly after I got there. So I chose Skagit Regional Airport near Burlington, WA (KBVS) a little further to the north, still along Puget Sound. It has a couple of nice runways to choose from and is appropriately lighted for night operations.

Finally, for my last goal, I figured I would just try to do my night landings at Boeing Field. We are encouraged to not do pattern work at night there out of consideration for minimizing noise over houses in the area, but I knew it wouldn’t hurt to ask. If the controller wouldn’t let me, I could easily move to another airport in the area, or even scratch that off the list for the night–I still had around 30 days left to get in the appropriate landings to keep current.

I read through and wrote summaries of all the information I could find on the unfamiliar airports that were going to be involved on the flight. Next, I double-checked that the runway at W10 would be long enough given how warm it was outside–it easily met the requirements. Finally, I filed a flight plan with the Seattle Flight Service Station, partly because it’s a good idea for safety’s sake, but mostly because the flight school requires it for cross-country flights. With the planning out of the way, it was time to go fly!

The flight
Since Jennifer’s out of town, I took Paul instead. He had never been up in a small plane before. When I took him out onto the ramp at the airport and showed him the airplane, he expressed shock at how small it was. ("I’m not sure what I expected, but I was definitely expecting it to be bigger than this…")

I preflighted the airplane and discovered we only barely had enough fuel to land with a whole hour in reserve. I always like to have way more than enough if weight&balance will allow, so I called line service to request a top-off. We had to wait a while for fuel, so I pulled out my charts and showed him where we were going and how to read some of the symbols. Fuel finally arrived, and we finished the preflight and took off.

We left the ground around 30 minutes before sunset, and headed directly for W10, which was about 20 minutes away. The airport was completely hidden in the tall trees around it, and would have been very difficult to find without either a GPS or someone along who already knew where it was. Once we spotted it, I descended to the traffic pattern altitude for the airport and set up to land. The wind was calm, so I chose the direction with fewer trees, runway 34.

(There were a couple of other aircraft playing around in the area that I was careful to keep track of. They looked a lot like hang-gliders to me, only they definitely had engines–clearly ultralights of some sort.)

I came in way too high and a little fast on my first pass. The biggest reason was that my downwind leg was only about half-mile from the airport since it disappeared behind trees if I flew any further out. Having nearly landed at the airport, however, set me up for a perfect rectangular traffic pattern second time around, so I was comfortable losing sight of the airport on my better-placed downwind. (One of the ultralights decided it was getting dark, and came in for a landing in front of me.) This second landing was set up nearly perfectly, but I was still a little above my ideal short-field landing speed, so I opened the throttle up wide again for a go-around. We decided it was getting dark enough that we should move on. One of these days, I’ll use my new-found ability to find the airport and go try it again.

After an uneventful 20 minute transition to Skagit Regional, the sun was far enough below the horizon that it was pretty dark out, but it was still before the total darkness of night had set in. We could see the airport on the ground even before I keyed the radio to turn on the runway lights. After debating with myself over which runway to land on, I decided to set up for runway 28. Made an uneventful landing on my first try. Out of the corner of my eye, I noticed that Paul flinched slightly just before the landing flair. He later mentioned that his mind projected the airplane onto the ground at the same rate of descent as the descent for landing. He said he actually heard a mental sound effect "thump", before noticing that we were still flying along just above the ground.

From the ground, we tried calling up the Flight Service Station to close my outbound flight plan and activate the plan for the return, but the radio wouldn’t reach them, and we couldn’t get cell signal, so we took off from runway 10 and took care of that in the air.

On the way back to Boeing Field, we took a detour over Redmond to show Paul what Microsoft campus looks like from the air at night. We headed back to Boeing Field, called them up just south of downtown Bellevue, and requested stop-and-goes. The controller cleared us as requested. We did the requisite 3 landings and 3 takeoffs, and taxied back in for parking.

Paul claims he had a lot of fun, and would love to go again sometime. I can only hope that I might have recruited one more pilot for General Aviation.

To work or to camp?

Some of Jennifer’s friends organized a camping trip over near Liberty, WA this weekend, and some of the campers made plans to make the short trip from there to The Gorge Amphitheater near George, WA to attend some concert called Sasquatch Festival.

I was looking forward to going camping with them, but I ran into some sticky problems in the software that I’m writing at work, and so I didn’t get as much done at work this week as I had hoped. I considered going anyway and just saving the work for next week, but I really want to make this a good review period at work for various reasons, and decided that getting the work done would go a long way toward making that happen.

So, at any rate, I’ll miss Jennifer while she’s gone, but it’ll be fun to hang out with the kitties and work on work stuff. I’ll take some breaks for fun stuff–I just can’t afford to make the whole weekend a break. The weather’s pretty nice here. I think I’ll go fly.

Non-rabid political editorial!

This young writer doesn’t like our President, but makes her case with a level head. If only every editorial were written rationally instead of rabidly. I guess rabies sells!

Oregon Daily Emerald – University of Oregon news and sports – 10 reasons not to kill Bush

Overheard on an airplane

Lady in front of me to one of her neighbors: "I don’t understand why they even bother making the seat cushions float–have you ever heard of a water landing? When you hit water it’s like hitting concrete."

Ummm, hello? When you hit the runway, it’s even more like hitting concrete.

[Edit: changing category from MSN's silly default.]

Hapland 2

A sequel to the original Hapland puzzle has been released! http://www.foon.co.uk/farcade/hapland2/

(I think I posted the previous one, but just in case: http://www.foon.co.uk/farcade/hapland/.)

Puzzle fix

http://web6.midworld.luxadmin.org/game.html

http://www.deviantart.com/view/8666529/

Video game remixes

I admit: I love the vast amounts of 8- and 16-bit nostalgia being poured out by geeks (surprisingly even those in the mainstream) these days.

SNES on eBay? $35
xBox 360 launch price? Dunno–$399 maybe?
Zelda and remixing? Priceless.

http://www.ocremix.org
http://www.vgmix.com
and
http://www.gamingfm.com

How many mm^2 does _your_ car use?

Want to know your vehicle’s fuel economy in mm^2? Google will tell you. How exactly this works (and probably more importantly, what in the hell it actually means) is left as an exercise for the reader. Feel free to leave a comment to show the world how smart you are.

Google Search: 25 mpg in sq mm

[Edit: adding a category. Those of you who read my blog via RSS, please let me know if your reader picks up a new copy of this. Apologies in advance for the redundancy.]