Showing posts with label Prius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prius. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

framed!

Here is the framed version of my ledger art (details of purchase here). This was my reward/celebration for earning full professor. I had received my dean's letter of recommendation for promotion a week or two before we went to the Marin show, but I wanted to wait for the provost's letter before getting it framed. I just love the way it turned out. For me, the big question about framing styles was whether to highlight the archival quality of the piece (i.e. the ephemera) or to foreground the contemporary art component. Clearly, I went with the latter. The first image is a cropped version of the second one (I had a hard time dealing with the glare from the glass while also getting enough light to show the true colors). What do you think?



I bought my Prius when I was promoted to associate professor, so it's 5 years old now, but still running like a gem.  I think the biggest expense associated with it must be the new (clean!) floor mats I just purchased. I love that car; every time I pull into a gas station I think "wow, it's been a long time since I've had to do this!" 

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

car recalls

Lots of people ask me if my Prius has been recalled or has any problems of the sort we are hearing about in the news. So far, the 2010 Prius seems to be the one with the brake problems (and I've been driving my 2007  for long enough to have experienced any such difficulty). So knock-on-wood; I've got no car issues right now. However, as a T*yota owner, I did receive a broadcast email about which cars and models have accelerator problems and how/when to bring them in. Here is that list.

  • 2005 - 2010 Model Year Avalon
  • 2007 – 2010 Model Year Camry
  • 2009 – 2010 Model Year Corolla
  • 2010 Model Year Highlander
  • 2009 – 2010 Model Year Matrix
  • 2009 – 2010 Model Year Rav4
  • 2008 – 2010 Model Year Sequoia
  • 2007 – 2010 Model Year Tundra

At the time I was in the market for a new car, many of these models just seemed too expensive for me. I guess I lucked out in that regard. Sorry for any of you guys who must deal with this fiasco.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

turning 10,000


A few days ago, when I wrote the previous post, I hadn't hit the big 10,000 mile mark on my Prius. Today, on the way home from campus (had to get some books from the library), I happened to look at my dashboard while stopped at a red light, and voila--there you have it. The big ten thousand.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

ta-da !

I paid off my Prius yesterday, 20 months ahead of schedule (4 yr. loan), thanks to lots of scrimping and saving the last couple years. I was initially planning to try and pay it down in 36 months, but given the craziness all around of late, I decided to ramp up the payoff effort so that I'll have more options for next year and whatever financial configuration that may bring. Plus, I hate, hate, hate paying interest--especially on my post-furlough salary. The loan company requires a certified check to pay off the balance, so I had to go to the bank yesterday, where the teller turned out to be a former student. THAT was a bit weird for me--having my financial info up on her screen. The title should arrive in a few weeks and the car will be all mine. Mileage still under 10,000--though I should document exactly where it stands; maybe tomorrow.

Friday, August 14, 2009

back-to-school shopping

This is a follow-up to my previous post about MP1's new car. I think anyone who has purchased a car in the last 100 years knows what a hard sell the business office begins once they've got you in the office to sign the loan papers. This person, who checks one's credit, draws up the loan papers, obtains one's signature on 40 different documents (at least that number, when cashing in a clunker) etc., is motivated by commission to sell you an even better (i.e. more costly) warranty, on-call road service, anti-theft this-n-that, and the famous inside and out sealant. Having been through all this quite recently, with the purchase of my Prius (2 years ago counts as recent in our family--especially where new cars are concerned), I was fully prepared to keep this guy from a) selling us stuff we didn't need, and b) trying to fold what we did decide to buy into the loan price. He was pretty disappointed when I related that the Toyota finance agent had a big snit-fit when I refused to purchase the already-installed-by-the-dealer anti-theft device (he had to send someone out to remove it from the car and was absolutely furious that I wouldn't pay for it). I realize these folks need to make some money on their side of the car sale, but it is our money they are going after. So the other night, this guy realized pretty quickly that we weren't going to be suckers for all these add-ons that would effectively raise our purchase price by the very same amount we'd gotten through their rebate: $3,000.00. But he did try, and I suppose he has too. I could just feel his pain as he was forced to delete item after item that he had ever so hopefully added onto our loan. We ended up going for only 1 add-on, the sealant. I did this for my Prius and it does help to protect the car (especially the exterior finish, which is very important when parking daily under sappy trees, or--in the case of MP1--without benefit of garage). Both our cars have white leather interiors and in truth, I don't think we needed them "sealed." We buy leather for its durability, versus its resale, since we tend to drive our cars till they are literally all worn out. However, there is no option to go for just the exterior sealant, so we got the price knocked down by $100.00, wrote a check for that amount, and then made an appointment to have the job done that Friday.

This day also happened to be TH's first formal "furlough Friday," and given the fact that a) the dealership would need the car for quite a few hours and b) there is a very nice mall nearby, we decided to turn this into a back-to-school shopping day for MP2, who needed a few special items for when he performs. He has been wearing the same dress-shirt and couple of ties for several years, so I was thrilled that he actually wanted something new (he is a committed non-consumer of everything, but music).

Once we got to the mall, TH and MP1 went one way (blue-tooth device shopping), and MP2 and I headed off to Macy's. I had the sales clerk take his measurements and here is what we bought. I love it all, but especially the paisley.

Very jazz-musician worthy, I think. The white shirt has french cuffs,
so we found some very stylish cuff-links for that.

New shoes!

These handsome, Ecc* Berlin, bicycle-toe, dress shoes will be very comfortable for the long hours of standing up, playing the horn. [Side note: they were a little more expensive than some similar brands, but they've got great rubber soles. It was easy to justfy buying them for that reason alone. But I also felt like they were practically free because they cost almost to the penny the same amount of money that I had just, a few nights before, emptied out of one of our many change jars and rolled up to take to the bank. We throw all our loose change into one or another container--we've got several around the house--and then TH and MP2 inspect it for old or rare coins before we turn it in.]



This was my big purchase for the day.
A new Paul Fr*nk silicone iPhone case. Isn't it cute?

Saturday, July 25, 2009

debriefing

Wrapping up, in mostly pictorial form--with a few fast facts to begin:

  • miles: 538
  • gallons gas used: 9
  • MPG: 59.7 (driving conditions: mountainous 2/3s of mi.s, running AC ~ 1/2 time, speed in mt. terrain varied btwn. 30 - 55).
  • national forests: 3 (Lassen, Plumas, Tahoe)
  • counties: 11 (Lassen, Plumas, Tehama, Nevada, Placer, Glen, Colusa, Yolo, Placer, Sierra, & X).
  • highest elevation traversed: 6701 @ Yuba Pass
  • 2nd highest elevation: 5758 @ Morgan Summit
  • smartest thing I did before I left: ran by work to get business cards (which I otherwise NEVER use).
  • dumbest thing I did on this trip: climbed a boulder while wearing flip-flops
  • weird fact for which I would love to know the biological basis: I never get car/motion sick when driving in the mountains as long as I am at the wheel.


partial map of my route (click to enlarge all photos)

A couple scenes from the Yuba Summit--I drove this really early in the morning and was practically alone on the road. The lack of traffic and the natural beauty made this leg of journey really magical.

Moss-coated tree

(above & below) vista point between the towns of B*ssetts & C*lpine, and near the junction of hghways 49 & 89.



Entering Qu*ncy, seat of Plumas County

their airport sits in the heart of a beautiful mt. meadow

quaint town (looking N., above) with gorgeous courthouse all decked out in white marble (below)

(below) interior of the museum portion of the archives in which I was doing research on Tuesday

after the museum closed, I headed north up to and through Keddie (another gorgeous, mountain drive)


looking E. over the valley named above, where grn.-ville is located

Still not sure precisely where the site I wanted to visit was located, I drove into town on "main street" and then decided (out of purely touristic interest) to turn right when I saw a historical marker sign. I figured it was settler and not native history that was "marked," and this turned out to be exactly the case (see above, site of Peter Lass*n's Trading Post). Nonetheless, this was the luckiest of detours from main street, since on my drive to find the historical marker, I passed the reservation that was once the location of the Gr**nville Indi*n School (GIS), an off-reservation boarding school-- first established by a mission society (1890s) and later taken over by the Bureau of Indi*n Affairs. The school burned down in the 1920s, but the land is now fed trust land and occupied by an acknowledged group. I made a quick loop through the southernmost part just to get a sense of place. The photo below is one of many taken onsite by the missionary/school director. My research subject is located on the bottom lower-left (I'm 99.9% sure). This is one of several GIS images (c. 1899-1902) I just paid to have digitized at the archives visited earlier in the day. It will go poof fairly quickly, as the terms by which I can use it require a very specific credit line that I don't want google to crawl in this particular location. I pulled this copy off another (credited) website.
**poof**
this sign (below) is for an active church that remains on the grounds

I think this would have been the valley view from the old school grounds

back in downtown, this mural has been somewhat defaced on the side (to the r. of this photo's right-hand border) that depicted pre-contact days...I hope it has been restored by the time I make a second visit.

Leaving grn-ville and driving N to my next destination, I come upon the southern tip of Lake Alman*r--a man-made reservoir that flooded the ancestral homeland--"B*g Meadows-"-of my research subject (RS).
Continuing N. and E., I drove into Pr*ttville, which was a late 1800s resort/health destination established by a gold rush era physician. Right on the edge of what would later become Lake A., this area once overlooked B. Meadows. My RS knew this location well. I had to slow my car to 10 mph to keep from hitting (or being hit BY) deer. It is a lovely location, with lots of boathouses and campsites and cabins right on the southwestern shore.


lacey moss-laden branches lying on the cemetery grounds

back on 89, headed N with Mt. L*ssen looming in the distance

Pulling into my northernmost destination, where research subject lived from 1915-1941 (after graduating from the Carl*sle Ind*an Industrial School in PA.)

I'll stay here again...clean, comfortable, new--w/brkfst included. Nat'l volcanic park is just a few miles N--hence the motel name.

The next morning, I was up early to go out to town cemetery in hopes of finding RS's g-father or mother's gravesite. No luck--all WWI era (or later) settler folks. Then I was off to see if I could find the general location of the hunting & fishing camp that RS and her husband ran on the shores of Lake A. (above).

Headed E. on 36, I passed yet another historical marker referencing original pioneer settler.

This town was also terrain in which RS and family lived and worked
Westw*od was established as a logging "company town." And boy, can you ever tell when you drive through--the rows of company houses (read: teeny wooden row houses) are still there, occupied in mostly disrepair. I found the Lass*n Cty visitor's center fairly quickly and they told me where the cemetery was located. On my way to that, I passed the town museum--which I had planned to locate after the cemetery. It was still prior to opening hours, but I parked anyway to look through the windows (partly to decide if I should be hopeful or not). Old-timer (relocated from Bay Area) director saw me outside and opened up for me. So nice of him. He filled me in on town history and agreed to look for old telephone directories (at this point I was still not exactly sure in what lakeside town the RS's hunting & fishing camp had been located) and to see if there might be any photos of Native people of the area stashed away somewhere. No luck on the latter, but he found a repro. of a 1930's phone book. That was fun to look at--no luck per se on my people--but relatives definitely lived there by this time.

This museum was just the classic small town museum
I love these places--where there are things to discover and professionalization is just a twinkle in some earnest young employee's eye. Most of their objects date to the town's founding period and thereafter. This character (above) sits in the main, entry gallery. I love the rifle in the lap. Old-timer director says to me "Oh, the kids and teachers all just love this old skeleton." Firearms and real skeletons are NOT to be found on the exhibit floor within reach of kiddies in most museums. I just had to chuckle (I've worked in several small historical museums and they are equal parts FUN and underFUNded). The big find in this stop was a reprint of an out-of-print publication I've been wanting. It was a bit tattered, but worth buying. Thank goodness I had the forethought to put a check in my wallet for exactly such locales, where no debit or credit card would be accepted.
The cemetery was very pretty to wander through. I think I found the gravesite of one relative, but not the one(s) I really care about, so I didn't stay for too long.
I originally planned to make a quick visit to S_ville, and was 1/2 of the way there (mileage-wise), so I thought, "oh hell--I'll just go now and come back to Ch*ster in the afternoon." And so I headed E. on 36. This plan didn't last long. Repaving of mountain roads (which was happening just everywhere on this trip) meant that there were one-lane/one-way rotations over Fredony*r Pass. I stuck with this slowpace until it became clear that I was going to be wasting at least an hour each way, at which point I cut my losses and headed back to Ch*ster. This turned out to be the luckiest move I could make. It placed me at the C. Museum just a few minutes before the director just happened to come in (on her 0ff-day) to take care of some minor thing and then be gone. She was an absolute gold mine of contacts (several of whom I was able to talk with before I left) and locations, like the camp and the street on which RS later lived -- right across from another Ma*du woman (now in her 80s0--who was best friends with RS's youngest daughter. In short, I am damned happy that Caltr*ns had traffic to S_ville at a standstill, because I would not have run into the museum director in the late afternoon, and would not know of all these riches that I can tap on my next trip up. She pulled out a handful of photos, letters, and artifacts that directly or indirectly touch on RS's life and times and let me take photos of them. Among them, was the original photograph of two half-siblings of RS. I had already made a 2nd generation copy of a crappy photocopy of this image (no attribution/location of original known) at the archival repository I'd been working at the day prior. The archivist and I were wondering where in the world the original photo might be. Well, now I know. It is in a tiny little one-room museum less than 2 hours away.
The museum is located along the southern shore of the (now-dammed) and gently meandering Feather River, whose snow-melt is mostly-siphoned off by Lake A.

These basketchains were made by girls in GIS. We have one in our campus museum. The tag on ours is so faded that I was not positively sure that it was representative of what GIS was having young Native girls produce in it's basketry classes. But yesterday's museum and this one at Ch*ster have several examples of this handiwork. So now, I have no doubt about the curricular importance of weaving.

On my way out of town, museum director led me to the street where RS had lived. This was the place that the woman I'd spoken to on the phone recalled playing with RS's youngest daughter. While the older woman could not remember the exact address, museum director (2-decades younger) was pretty sure she knew. One of the houses is still standing and I was able to get a photo. Native woman is checking her photo albums for family pictures from the 20s and 30s.

These girls are the daughters of the engineer who was in charge of flooding B*g Meadows for a hydroelectrical reservoir (pictured below, from a northern perch off Hwy 36). Their names are Alice, Martha, Eleanor. Their father named the Lake by merging their first names.
I headed home by westerly route, going through I*shi country, past Child*s Meadow and Mill Creek. This is strikingly beautiful countryside and I kept waiting for a chance to take a picture. I was out of the most picturesque territory by the time a safe opportunity came. The photo below is taken between Miner*l Summit and the town of Payn*s Creek (on the map above, it is just about exactly where the hwy 36 marker is located). It overlooks the S. Fork of Battle Creek. This is a great lookout point with sweeping vistas to the NE and NW. But they just weren't good enough for me, so I had to climb up on a rock outcropping that would put me a good 4 feet higher and bring Mt. La*ssen into better view. And, and, and... I had to do this in flip-flops even though I had a perfectly good pair of hiking shoes in the back of my car. So up I went in my Niki flip-flops with my new camera in hand. Almost at the top, I begin an entirely unplanned descent. No one was there to observe this graceful slide/fall, which left me with a bloody left-hand, knee, and arm, but boy did it hurt. My injuries were sort of on par with what one would sustain falling off a bike. But I learned something really useful (apart from the proper shoe protocol): the water hoses at gas stations (meant to fill car radiators) are great for washing the blood and dust from one's scraped up legs and bruised extremities. I will always have a soft spot in my heart for the Shell station at Hwy 5 and 36 in R*dbluff (45 minutes from where I fell). And the Burg*r King, too--where I got a huge coke icee that kept me awake all the way home.
And so it is, that by Thursday evening we were able to celebrate our anniversary with take-out from Whole Paycheck. Their very yummy "basic [chocolate] cupcakes" (what a misnomer) and a bottle of Pinot Noir did the trick. And there was an entree of some sort in there as well, but it wasn't nearly as memorable. Eating at home was oh-so-nice and made sense given the furlough announcement we awaited the next day. Now to turn in receipts, sort through all the stuff I brought home, and then to get BACK to what I left behind.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

day two



I am too tired to blog today's events in any depth, but I can say that this trip has been a big success in terms of finding what I was looking for (even if I get NOTHING in current location). Today, I spent $66.00 to have some images digitized, and another $40 in photocopy fees (and the archival staff is doing all the work for me--in fact--I've got the photocopies order with me, but am too brain dead to sort through and enjoy my finds). When I woke up this morning, I wandered a bit more around tiny gold rush town (taking a few more photos that I've posted below). Then I headed north to the location of the archives featured above. And what a gorgeous drive that was (will upload some of those images tomorrow), especially over the Pass--which is about 6700 feet up in the wondrous alpine forest. Tonight I am in yet another location (and stopped at two more along the way)--a very small little resort town that also is the ancestral homeland of one of my research subjects. I'll catch up on all this, plus some events of last week--on Friday or Saturday. Maybe.






view of the river (and my car) from my room at the Inn