Google solves another problem!

We had a pet problem today.  One of the cats (Max, no doubt) took it upon himself to urinate on our down comforter.  Bad kitty.  Then Maggie (our sweet, adorable but sometimes misguided puppy) smelled the cat urine and decided to add her own unique scent.  Now we have a pee-soaked comforter and I have a very upset wife on my hands.  What do I do?  Turn to Google, of course.

I searched for “How do I remove dog urine from a down comforter?”  I could hear sobs emanating from the back room.  The first result I clicked on was a bulletin board discussing pet urine problems. I searched within that page for the words ‘down comforter.’  The post I read was by a lady recommending a product called Just Rite, and she claimed it is made by a guy named Bill, who often answers the company’s phone himself.  I surfed on over to www.justrite.com and searched frantically down the page for a phone number.  The crying in the back room was reaching a fever pitch.  I quickly called the number, which had an Illinois prefix.  Sure enough, Bill answered after the first ring and gave me very specific advice about how to deal with dog urine on a down comforter.

A few minutes later, as I came inside from my trip to the garbage can, I explained to Lisa what Bill had told me.  Oddly, the certainty with which I found the information was comforting to her, as was my comment: “Hey, at least it’s not winter!”

Thanks, Google, and thanks Bill!

Stuff Maggie Does

Maggie’s so cute.  She dreams while she sleeps on our floor, and sometimes when she hits REM sleep, her body starts moving and twitching.  Sometimes she’ll simulate running, and I’ve even heard her bark her defensive bark under her breath.  Today she was sleeping on my studio floor with her tail wagging back and forth excitedly.  Lisa and I like to speculate about what she may be dreaming.  She usually reserves that level of excitement for my arrival home, Lisa’s arrival home, our first-thing-in-the-morning greeting, or a trip to Shadow’s house.  (Shadow is Brad and Mary Fast’s dog, and Maggie’s best canine friend.)  Lisa and I speculated that she was dreaming that Shadow moved in with us, or that Max (our cat) finally decided it was alright to play with her.  That’ll only happen in her dreams.

Enough with the boring, the philosophical, and the book reports: a Tribute to a Teacher

Today, I’ve got some great news. My father, Larry Shinn, has been selected as the teacher of the year in Lodi, California. I’m so proud of him! He’s approached an increasingly difficult teaching environment with a caring, realistic attitude. As in any career, some times were tougher than others. But he’s persevered, and many students have benefited. In particular, he’s worked hard to share his love of science with students. He runs a science club at school and works at the district level with other educators on science education initiatives. The need for educators with a passion for science can’t be overstated. Many of the U.S.’s academic, ethical and national security issues in the coming decades will be decided not by policymakers in joint session but by scientists in lab coats. Some of these scientists may catch their passion as students at the gentle encouragement of Mr. Shinn. Other students will grow up to vote at the ballot box, with their consumer behavior, and with their labor resources on issues requiring an  understanding of scientific principles. They and the future they build may very well owe great thanks to Mr. Shinn. Let me be the first to express that thanks. “On behalf of my children, Mr. Shinn, thank you!”

Apology

Dear Readers,

I realize that I’ve now posted two images of my dog in a row. I know this blog is supposed to be about meaningful issues, and I intend to get back to the regular stuff shortly. Apologies for all the non-brainy personal stuff of late.

But what kind of meaningful stuff do you want to see? I’ve been thinking about blogging about some of my favorite internet writings out there. I’ve also been thinking about publishing an extensive survey of cool internet services that I’ve been experimenting with. Playing with cool “web 2.0”-type services has been a hobby of mine of late. Are you interested in reading about that? Or should I stick to more philosophical stuff ‘n’ junk? You let me know, and I’ll work on writing about it.

Looking forward to hearing your response,
Andrew

On becoming a redneck

In the past two weeks, I’ve found myself mired in no less than three conversations about truck parts. I don’t know anything about truck parts. All I do is shake my head and mutter about carbeurators. I’ve been complaining about it (to those who wouldn’t be offended), but today I accepted it. I realized that it’s a fact of rural life as much as riding the T is a fact of life in Boston. So I went about redneck-ifying myself (sorry Gwen) in a rather net-gen way: reading up on Ford truck engines on the wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org). I now know the difference between a Windsor V-8 and a Cleveland V-8 with a 2-barrel or 4-barrel carb. It’s not much, but it’s a start. It just goes to show that anything can be learned (and most things faked). It also shows that no matter what your interest, the internet CAN BE a shortcut to expert status.
Cheers,
Andrew (or Buck if you prefer)

Shinn Photography
Get the picture? Get the picture.
www.shinnphoto.com

Travel Horrors

Ok, fanbase, here it is:

The mighty Bear pulled into Portsmouth, Va., at about 11:00. This was okay. I left the Bear earliler than I should have. This, also, was okay. A friend drove me to Norfolk Airport, where I was holding a ticket for a 12:45 p.m. flight. Still Kosher. I arrived at the airport at 12:20 p.m., which still should have been alright. I was in uniform, and the people standing in line waved me to the front of the line. This was better than O.K., it was downright pleasant. I breathlessly told the ticketing agent which flight I was on, and tried to check in for the flight. This is where all the okay-ness came to a screeching halt. Worse than that, it actually kicked into reverse and floored the gas pedal of fate, catching me like a deer in the tail lights and running me the heck over. The ticketing lady (who works for United Airline, curse their very name) looked at her watch and told me that since I wasn’t there 30 minutes before the flight was scheduled to leave, she was not going to check me in for the flight. So I asked her if I could re-book, and she said she had already helped me and I would have to go to the end of the line if I wanted to be helped again. I was steamed. My mouth dropped to the ticketing counter, and I stood there and stared at her with my jaw hanging open until she threatened to call airport security. I didn’t tell her that they would probably be on my side. I just gawked at the ugliest little manifestation of bureaucratic evil I could possible imagine at that moment. Then I dragged my sorry butt to the end of the line and waited for more than an hour to get back to the front of it. It seems everyone else in the queue was getting about the same service I got. I met a family who was trying to fly to Sacramento who had the misfortune of walking to the same ticketing stall I did. They arrived just before me, and they actually waited for an hour and a half in the line before being told that United oversold their flight, and they would not be able to get on. The little Evil One told them that the next available flight wasn’t until the next day, so they could come back and try again if they wanted.

Well, after waiting through the entire line, I was back with HER again. She told me there were no seats on any flights leaving Portsmouth for the rest of the day. Hard to believe? I thought so, too. I told her to go ask her manager if she could get me onto another airline. She went through a door and came back with a sloppy guy who was licking his fingers. He didn’t bother to come out, just stuck his head through the door and looked around. Didn’t even look at me. She told me it was up to me to do that, although the travel agent I worked with vehemently disagreed.

So I spent the next 45 minutes with my head stuck to a payphone trying to find any flight out of Norfolk for that day. By now it’s almost 3 p.m. The travel agent found me a flight on another airline. I booked it and walked over to America West, and left all the cranky United customers behind.

When I tried to check in with America West, at least I got to talk with a man that seemed friendly. He was no customer service whiz, but at least he was working at a moderate speed. Besides, I think I would have been impressed with a high schooler talking through a fast-food microphone after my previous experience. Never fly United!

The moderate man told me my ticket wasn’t paid for. There was no way I was going to miss the chance to get out of Norfolk that day, so I handed him my credit card, bought the ticket, and hustled through security. When I was sure I was going to make the flight, I called the travel agent and found out they had also purchased a ticket and charged it to my credit card. So I had two tickets for the same flight, both on a credit card, neither that I was supposed to have paid for. I found another moderate man at the departure gate. He cancelled the ticket I was already checked in on and re-checked me. Disaster was narrowly averted, though I still have yet to figure a way to get reimbursed for the other ticket.

I flew to Pittsburgh. It was an uneventful flight. In Pittsburgh I found out that my connecting plane, which was supposed to have been bound for Los Angeles, was hung up in Boston. I was going to miss my connecting flight. Luckily, a mildly friendly counter-lady working for America West re-routed me through San Fransisco. I then scrambled all over the airport trying to find a payphone that worked to tell Lisa of the change of itinerary. I boarded the plane and found my emergency exit-row seat (ah, leg room!) and settled in for a long flight across the country.

After we took off and I was getting settled, I leaned my chair back after a quick glance behind me. I didn’t see anything on the lap of the man behind me, and he didn’t seem to be using the space. Besides, I had woken up 5 times zones away and I was exhausted. The man woke me up to tell me that he had both a cat AND an infant on his lap, and would I mind putting my chair forward? I didn’t say anything, but moved it forward and tried to go back to sleep. I was asleep about a half hour later when his cat landed on my head. Well, I guess it didn’t land there, but it took a good swipe at my head as the guy was taking the cat out to walk around the cabin. I was grumpy about it, but didn’t say anything. Neither did he, which made me even grumpier. I found out later from Lisa that it’s strictly forbidden to take your pets out and let them move about the cabin during a flight.

I tried to go back to sleep, and woke up later with a sore neck from sleeping upright. No fun. I arrived in San Fransisco to find that my ticket held a departing time for Fresno that didn’t match any published departing time. I feared I was going to miss my flight after all. I didn’t miss it, but ended up sitting in the front seat of a 10-seat turboprop next to a nervous smelly Ukranian girl.

When I got to Fresno at midnight (5 a.m. the next day according to my body), I found out the airline had lost my luggage.

Well, there it is. You asked. Just call me Alexander and write a children’s book about me.

Apologies…

…to the faithful, to those of you who check this blog every day, hoping for some morsel to indicate the well-being or otherwise of your favorite Shinns. I realize this update is long overdue. (I also realize that previous sentence is a terrific example of reverse hyperbole. Does anyone know the real term for that, or should we make one up?)

Ana-ways, (as Edna Brosie would say), (or is it Ed Nabrosie? I always wondered.), (is this too much parenthetical chatter? Am I throwing off an intelligence-gathering effort as we speak?), I’m in Reedley. I’m tempted to say that I’m back in Reedley, back that implies a prior state of physical location here, and we all know there is nonesuch state.

I arrived here after the worst travel day of my life. In comparison to many travel experiences, even some that YOU may have had, it wasn’t that bad. For instance, I arrived here with 10 fingers and 10 toes intact, and that meets the Navy’s definition of a safe trip. Feel free to share your worst travel experience in the comments below, and we’ll all ooh! and ahh! over how bad you’ve had it. I’ll spare you the details of my story.

Well, we’ve had some interesting experiences here in Reedley so far. So interesting, in fact, that I’ve pondered a name change for the blog. How does ‘Andrew and Lisa Move to Small-Town America’ sound to you? Yes, it is a shameless rip-off of ‘Jon and Rachel Move to England’. No one ever said the best ideas lay in the realm of originality!

Stay tuned for a blog post (coming soon to a blog near you!) (back to the parantheticals again?!) about our trip to the Saturday auction!

California Cheers,
Andrew