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About Ramblings of a Hopeless Khowaga

Welcome to my Web site. My name is Chris, and I’ll be your host. I live in Austin, Texas, with my partner, Ray, and our child dog, Mocha. You can read more about me, learn 100 random things about me, and if you’re wondering what the heck a khowaga is, click here. Feel free to browse, read, and leave comments!

Tag: ‘weather’



LiveBlogging the Great Blizzard of 2009

Friday, December 4th, 2009

Given the extensive coverage the topic has received in major international outlets such as the Austin American-Statesman and KUT-FM radio, I’m sure that you are all aware of the impending blizzard that is set to descend upon the ATX later this morning (assuming the weathermen didn’t get it wrong, again).  In case you’ve been hiding under a rock, here’s the skinny: there is a 60% chance that we may receive up to an inch of snow today.

Naturally, this news has caused panic among some weaker willed individuals.  The University of Texas, for example, felt compelled to issue a pre-emptive notice yesterday afternoon reminding everyone that classes had not yet been canceled, but urged us to check the University’s emergency line before proceeding to work tomorrow for the latest updates.

As you know, here at ROHK we strive for journalistic and culinary excellence of a higher standard, and so, I am sacrificing my own well-being to bring you the latest news about the event that I am sure will be recorded in the annals of history as The Great Blizzard of 2009.

Do check back regularly for updates.

Friday, December 4, 2009

6:10 am: Wake up, get dressed.  In honor of the impending cold snap, I search for a clean sweater, and eventually discover one that my parents bought me for Christmas some years ago.  It was clearly purchased before they moved to Texas because, even before I lost the 10 pounds, it was still at least one size too large and makes me look like a mustard colored burlap sack.  However, today we are going with function above form, following the trend set by world-famous survivalist Jake Gyllenehaal in the documentary film The Day After Tomorrow:

jake-gyllenhaal-london-hat

See?  If Jake can sport an outfit that reveals no muscle definition whatsoever, so can I.

6:54 am: Sitting outside of Beverly’s house.  It takes her longer than usual to come out to get in the car this morning, because she is clearly working up the nerve to set forth in the malstrøm and dodge the sunbeams that are beginning to fall outside.

7:10 am: Realizing that I am driving too fast for conditions, I reduce my speed to 72 miles per hour (114 km/h).  This adds at least 2 minutes to my commuting time this morning, but it’s important to drive safe!  Arrive alive!

7:26 am: Walking from the garage to campus.  It is chilly this morning.  The guy who’s not homeless but wants everyone to think he is who usually sets up behind Einstein’s Bagels is nowhere to be seen.  I hope that he has managed to find a shelter for the not-homeless-but-wanting-others-to-think-they-are.

7:35 am: In the office.  It was a tough last sprint across the West Mall to my building, what with the grounds services golf carts whizzing by, but I did make it here.  Lisa has already begun prepping for the cold weather by cleaning out the oven, which has been left a mess by a previous user/staff member.  This is very wise of her — clearly we may need the electric stove as a heating device if the power goes out once the deluge has begun.

7:55 am: Typing these words.  Outside the window, I can see that it is cloudy.  This is clearly a very bad sign — much worse than it has been on every other cloudy day this week.

8:15 am: The men with the leafblowers are out in the pass-through between my building and the next (which once served as the setting for Café d’Amour in the first Spy Kids movie).  Clearly they have been apprised of the danger that can result from snow falling on top of leaves.  I’m not sure what it is, myself, but as landscaping professionals, it’s their job to know these things.

8:28 am: Discover that emergency provisions are already stocked in the front office: two bags of Chips Ahoy™ and one of Pecan Sandies™.  Skeptics may suggest that they are, in fact, left over from Professor E’s final-class-of-the-year celebration yesterday, but that’s just crazy talk.  Lisa continues preparation of baked goods for this afternoon’s Survivalist Training/Birthday Celebration.

9:14 am: Correction: Provisions are one bag of Chips Ahoy™ and two bags of Pecan Sandies™.  Please make a note of this. This is, of course, in addition to the banana bread that Lisa has made, along with the molasses cookies that are apparently on schedule to be made at noon.

Looking out the office window, I can see that we now have a lower cloud cover than we did earlier.  Possibly this is due to the impending snow.  Possibly this is due to the arrival of the alien/Snuggie™ vanguard that I described in yesterday’s post.  Will investigate further.

The Statesman is reporting that “some” snow flurries have been seen in some parts of Central Texas, and that San Antonio may see a light dusting.  I shall keep the brave people of San Antonio in my prayers.

9:28 am: Discover that #Austinsnow is now being hashed on Twitter.  I have to join Twitter to do this, but the feed is too damned amusing not to share:


10:07 am: Take a break from perusing postings about the first harbingers of wintery doom–is Skol preparing to eat the sun and invoke the long winter known as Fimbulvetr?–to notice that the clouds are looking far more sinister now than they did an hour ago.  At least a five on the Scale of Sinistry, up from a four and a half.

Kim suggests that the gravity of the situation requires that the word “aught” be worked into the title, and that we should refer to this as the “Great Blizzard of Aught-Nine.”  What say you?

10:15 am: Realize that I left my iPod in my car.  In the movies, the guy who goes back for something never, ever lives until the end.  (Well, except in the Final Destination movies, but then Death spends the whole movie trying to catch up.)  Not falling for it.  Take that, Law of Murphy!

11:13 am: Fear not, dear readers!  I remain as fervently committed to bringing you updates as they develop.

It has transpired that one of the bags of Pecan Sandies™ has been devoured by inconsiderate coworkers who do not realize the strategic value that they will play in our survival should the worst be realized and we become stranded in the building.  An investigation with possible court martial is under way.

According to #Austinsnow, the earlier rogue flakes have abated.  We remain poised for a resurgence.

It is very cold in my office.  Am contemplating putting on gloves.

11:32 am: Confirm with Ray that he made it to work safely.  Breathe sigh of relief.

11:47 am: Cabin fever has clearly set in amongst the staff.  Food is being anthropomorphised:

apple

Also, the Chips Ahoy™ are stale.  We will put them on the back burner for now.

12:12 pm: Hearing Christmas carols being sung on the West Mall.  Assume there’s irony involved in any song mentioning snow.  The Statesman is now claiming that the snow is “on the way,” downgraded from the “it’s already falling” that we got earlier.

Am off to dodge air molecules on the way to find lunch.  Pray for me.

12:26 pm: Back from acquiring food.  Bitter cold, grey skies, no snow.

There was, however, a young man in front of Goldsmith Hall wearing what is either a very large paper boat or a paper papal hat on his head.  Not sure what the purpose is, other than to make people stop and stare.  Which we did.

12:37 pm: Have met the first person today who claims to have seen at least several snowflakes.  There is much praising of his survival instincts.  He has clearly suffered emotional trauma (but not enough to get me to cancel the panel presentation in 23 minutes in which he is supposed to deliver a talk in Persian).

12:53 pm: Ray calls to tell me that it is “snowing heavily” in Round Rock.  The office moves to Defcom 2 in preparation for the snow to begin falling.

12:57 pm: SNOW!!!!!!  There’s at least 15 flakes out there.

1:05 pm: Photographic evidence that the onslaught has begun:

snow

It’s kind of hard to see, but you can definitely tell if you look under the trees.  There’s a small possibility that some of it’s dust on the window that I shot through, but some of it is definitely snow flakes.

1:47 pm: And now the sun’s out.

1:51 pm: The Statesman is now reporting that winter weather advisory that had been issued for today … has been canceled.

I didn’t even get to go out in it: I’m trapped in my office because there’s a lecture going on outside.  Poop.  On the other hand, it’s a nice sunny day now!  And I left my sunglasses at home.

2:43 pm: My journalistic efforts have been foiled by the final presentations of one of the Persian classes going on in the room outside my office, however, I assure you, I will continue to cover the story until my last breath.  Or until it’s time to go home for the day, one or the other.

2:56 pm: BREAKING NEWS: the baked goods that have been added to the stockpile of supplies in the office include banana bread, chocolate ginger cookies, and both Irish and English breakfast tea.

I have learned from this blizzard that the primary difference between Irish and English breakfast tea is that the former is caffeinated, the latter is not.  (At least, that’s according to the HEB in-store brand — I can’t help thinking that’s not actually correct, but I’m not a tea-o-phile, so can not confirm.)

I have also learned that the air filter on the LCD projector needs to be changed.  I didn’t know it had an air filter and that it could be changed.  Things our sales reps forgot to tell us.  I wonder if this will affect the quality of the breathable oxygen in the event that we become trapped up here.  There are at least two clouds that I don’t like the look of visible from where I’m sitting right now, and that’s before I turn my head too much.  I have a feeling this isn’t over yet, dagnabbit.

3:36 pm: I am startled to see that there is ice buildup on the roof of Goldsmith Hall, which I can see from my office window.  It’s blue and shimmery and … oh, wait.  It’s someone’s jacket.  In fact, now that I look at the photo I took at 1:05, I can see that it was there then, too.

Never mind.

4:07 pm: Whoa!  I’ve gone viral — 600 hits in the past two hours.  Who knew?  The pressure’s on!  (OK, I know I’m supposed to be all Ocean’s 11-style cool and act like this is so <yawn> boring, but I’m just a touch too neurotic for that).

In weather related news, we’re holding at 39 degrees F / 3 degrees C with bright, practically cloudless skies.  I do so hope that the roads have been plowed and salted before I head home–I’d hate to drive in unsafe conditions.  My palms get a little sweaty just thinking about it.

4:23 pm: Time to start powering things down and head out into the wilds.  I shall check in again once I have arrived in the wilds of Round Rock, across the moors of Pflugerville and the towering craggy peaks of Tarrytown.

Stay strong, fellow commuters!  Man shall always persevere over Mother Nature.  (I mean, just look at the Domain.)

4:35 pm: On leaving the building, I see the measures that my fellow Austinites have gone to in order to protect themselves from the blustery weather.  One young fellow is wearing a dark suit, but has elected for the protection of white athletic socks.  Clearly, desperate times call for desperate measures.  Later, I will see another young man so affected by the cold weather that he has had to pull his boardshorts down in order to cover his mid-calf, exposing a considerable amount of plaid boxer short above the waistline.  I feel for him.

4:50 pm: Apparently, the snow has caused a short circuit in the gate at the parking garage.  One poor woman sits there with a line of cars behind her, and is finally forced to back up and go to the pay station in order to make her ticket work.  It’s very sad that such desperate measures need to be taken in order to complete such mundane tasks.

5:02 pm: MoPac expressway.  Cars moving much slower than the posted speed limit.  Possibly due to the weather.  I can think of no other reason why traffic heading north out of Austin would be moving so slowly at 5 pm on a Friday afternoon, especially the weekend before the Red River Shootout in Dallas.  It just boggles the mind.

5:35 pm: I  arrive home and begin searching for things to cover the plants in order to protect them from tonight’s deep freeze.  I now have a basket full of habanero peppers (seriously, what am I going to do with so many habaneros?  I might have to make salsa for the office Chrismukkah gifts.  But, oh no, I’ve said too much.

5:45 pm: I send Ray out to Home Depot so that I can wrap the Christmas gifts that came in the mail today.  I hope they didn’t get wet.

6:03 pm: Gifts wrapped, Ray happily off at Home Depot, I sit in front of the television, open my laptop, and blog this, the last of my updates.  At 6 pm, the winter weather advisory has expired, and I, for one, am considering myself very lucky–very lucky indeed–to have managed to survive the Great Blizzard of 2009.

LiveBlogging has now ended.  Please remain seated until the vehicle has come to a complete stop.  Don’t forget to search under the seat in front and in the overhead bins of you for any belongings you may have brought on board, and have a nice day in town, or wherever your final destination may be.  Drive safe!

12 of 12: June 2009

Friday, June 12th, 2009

It is time, oh yes it is, for 12 of 12!

7:10 am: My capitol is bigger than your capitol.

June (1 of 12)

I’ve been running a workshop all week, and it’s on the other side of campus, necessitating my taking a different freeway into work in the morning.  I forget that the other freeway has splendid views of downtown, including the Texas State Capitol building, which is something like eight feet taller than the US Capitol building in Washington, DC.  On purpose.

7:17 am: It’s a religion.

June (2 of 12)

As I approach the building where the workshop is being held, I realize that it’s been overshadowed by the extension to the football stadium (that’s American football, not what the rest of the world calls football).  I think at this point that the stadium can now comfortably seat France.

11:50 am: Winding down the last session

June (3 of 12)

It’s been a long week.  I was ready for it to be over…

12:20 pm: Stragglers.

June (4 of 12)

Look, I know that I said we needed your evaluation forms, but could you write faster?  I want to go home!!

12:46 pm: Homeward bound.

June (5 of 12)

I couldn’t even be bothered to stop by my office and collect my mail and drop off the extras from the workshop.  I’ll do it Monday.  It’s pretty much traditional at this point (after 11 years) that the last day of the big summer workshop ends at noon, and we all go straight home.  We’ve earned the overtime over the past four days.

1:21 pm: Naptime.

June (6 of 12)

“Nap” is Mocha’s second favorite word.  Man, I needed it, too.

3:43 pm: Trying to put it all back where it was.

June (7 of 12)

I used my laptop as the presentation machine for the workshop, and trying to put it all back the way it was is annoying.  I still can’t find the lovely image that I had as my desktop wallpaper.  (For the record, I hadn’t updated the weather widget on my desktop before I shot this – it was actually 97 degrees (37 for those who speak Celsius)).

4:18 pm: Waiting.

June (8 of 12)

Mocha likes to sit on the sofa and stare out the window, waiting for people to go by or, in this case, for Ray to come home from work because she knows that she doesn’t get taken for a walk until we’re both home.  It doesn’t stop her from trying to convince one of us to take her anyway.

7:02 pm: Walking Daddy.

June (9 of 12)

“Walk” is Mocha’s favorite word.  The concept of “it’s too bloody hot” does not register with her.  And so, Ray and I go out in the heat.

7:51 pm: Church.

June (10 of 12)

This is Ray’s temple: Fry’s Electronics.  We go to worship there weekly when the weekend sales happen.

This time, I did a little shopping of my own: I discovered a copy of Eros Ramazzotti’s new album Ali e Radici on sale.  Since the copy I have wasn’t entirely acquired through legal means, I figured I’d try to go legit …

8:35 pm: Pho.

June (11 of 12)

Technically, this is mi, not pho, but … well, whatever.

8:46 pm: Storm clouds.

June (12 of 12)

Leaving the pho place, we can see tonight’s line of thunderstorms coming.  Last night was a pretty intense squall line, complete with hail and threats of tornadoes…  Kinda hoping tonight we just get rain.

Happy 12th everyone!

P.S.  My self-appointed critic wants me to load up some of the photos that he took today (with my camera).  I’m kind of a purist – I feel like I ought to take all my 12 of 12s myself…

[flickr]http://www.flickr.com/photos/khowaga/3621288109/[/flickr]

Do I even need to explain why I didn’t use this one??  :P

[flickr]http://www.flickr.com/photos/khowaga/3621286523/[/flickr]

Ray didn’t like this photo because I wasn’t smiling. That’s actually why I like it – my “photo smile” doesn’t look anything like my real smile.

[flickr]http://www.flickr.com/photos/khowaga/3621286135/[/flickr]

Relaxing Weekend

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

Mocha was supposed to have surgery on Friday, so that the two of us could recover together and both be able to tell people that we were both recovering from procedures that can’t be discussed in polite company.  So, on Friday morning I drove her over to the vet shortly after I had to take my anti-inflammation pill that’s made me loopy every six hours (including while sleeping) so that they could do pre-surgery prepwork.

I was in a light doze around 9:30 on the sofa (post-painkiller) when the phone rang.  It was the vet.  “We’ve been looking at the lump we were going to remove,” she said, “and it’s shrunk considerably.  We’d like to try oral steroids to see if that reduces it completely.  The surgery is just going to make her really uncomfortable, and keeping her from licking at it is going to be very difficult.”

Now, not spending a bunch of money on the dog’s surgery didn’t upset me so much.  On the other hand, it was getting dark because a storm was coming in, and I hadn’t driven by myself since my own surgery on Wednesday (except for the trip to the vet).

We’ve had weird weather this week.  Wednesday evening, while Ray was in class and I was at home parked on the sofa, a massive thunderstorm system went through that dropped baseball-sized hail on the part of town where the vet’s office is located.  When I’d dropped Mocha off, they’d had trouble finding an exam room to put us in because the storm had taken out all of their skylights.

So, I drove over to pick Mocha up and, sure enough, just as I entered the office, it started to pour (plainly audible from the two exam rooms with the busted out skylights).  They brought out Mocha, who seemed clueless about her reprieve, except that she kept licking at the spot on her leg that they’d shaved down to insert the IV they didn’t have to use.  All weekend, we’ve been listening to “lick … lick … lick … lick …

We dodged the raindrops back into the car (unsuccessfully – that never works), and I drove home at 30 miles an hour because that’s the fastest I could go with the rain coming down as hard as it was.

And then we got home and took a nap together.  That’s my girl!

That’s a wrap

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Jan09-1-2

Last morning in Seoul.  In a few hours, we leave for the airport to start the long trek home, which may very well be as bewildering as the one here.  We fly overnight and land in San Francisco, and it will be the same day.  This date line thing is confusing to me.

It’s been a good trip, I think.  I’d definitely come back to Korea … although maybe when the weather’s a bit warmer.  Not gonna miss that, no, not at all!

See y’all on the flip side!

‘Tis the Season

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

I know that friends from around the country will laugh at my admitted southern wimpdom at declaring the weather down here “cold,” but for us, it’s cold, dagnabbit:

IMG_8873

For the record, today is a bit colder.  Oddly, the weather widget I’m looking at says: “Today: High 59, Low 54.  Right now: 40.”  (In Celsius, that’s a high of 15, a low of 12, and it’s currently 6.)  Ech.  What do they know?

It’s also raining right now, which I’m feeling a bit conflicted about, because it hasn’t rained in so long, but I had plans to take the dog to the park today.  (Ray left to go home yesterday, so I’m on my own and a bit bored.  I’ve managed to sit through two of the Austin Powers movies so far, and it’s not even noon.)  She hates getting baths, and I don’t like giving her baths, so taking her to the park when it’s going to be a big mud puddle doesn’t strike me as a lot of fun!

So, instead I decided to bake cookies.  How domestic of me!  I’m not great with the baking, but these came out great:

IMG_8877

These are Chocolate Crinkle Cookies, which I’ve never made before.  However, Bev and I were driving home last week and NPR had this cookie lady on, who described these in a style of narration that I can really only describe as semi-pornographic.  At one point, Bev and I looked at each other and I said, “I’m starting to feel a little dirty listening to this!” and she laughed and said, “I know, right?”  The narration was a bit lascivious in tone, but memorable enough that when I realized that I was going to show up to the folks’ house empty-handed, I thought, hmm.  I wonder if I have all of the right ingredients in the house?  And, for once, I did!

I also think that after eating more than two of these, you might become diabetic.  They’re really sweet.

So, anyway.  It’s a quiet week, but I’m enjoying it right now.  For many, the holidays are a time of stress, but for me, I’m just going to sit here and be a lazy bum.  The weather is cooperating with that plan quite nicely :)

Happy holidays, y’all!

 

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