Notes from the road
6 Feb 2008 08:04 pmalt.polycon in Las Vegas is over; the OH and I spent two days with
webmaven and
chickenwitch; and I got back on the road. Tonight I'm back in Bakersfield in the same hotel (Springhill Suites) and same room even.
I had plans to go to a restaurant, but I have a thing against going alone to sit-down restaurants. It makes me feel self-conscious and anxious. I considered combating the anxiousness and going anyway, but I didn't have the energy. So I went to Trader Joe's. The Bakersfield Trader Joe's doesn't have any prepared salads or sandwiches the way my local one does, but they had microwave-in-a-bag green beans and carrots, and a new product that I absolutely love, Marinated Three Bean Salad in a can. When I got back to the hotel I realized I didn't have a can opener, but then I realized I did have one on the swiss army knife I carry in my knitting bag. I've never used that kind of can opener before but I figured it out without cutting myself. Go me.
Trader Joe's helps my Buddhist practice because it reinforces the fact of impermanence. That is, they are always introducing some product that I love and then taking it away again just as I start to rely on it. The product I am still pining for is Hot & Sour Soup in a jar. It was perfect and I bought it by the dozen hoping they wouldn't stop selling it, but they did. Now they've introduced the Three Bean Salad and I suppose the same thing will happen. In the meantime I'm enjoying it.
Random thoughts and observations from the road:
I can has cheezburger? Starting a few miles outside of Barstow, CA - the town on the edge of the Mojave that has the first 'services' for many miles (although there are more services between Las Vegas and Barstow than there used to be) - there were multiple billboards for different restaurants and fast food joints, all with virtually identical photos of cheeseburgers. No billboard had a photo of any other kind of food that I can recall.
Wind energy There is a wind farm on the peaks near Tehachapi pass. I think the wind turbines are beautiful and love to see them all spinning.
Trainspotting Somewhere around Tehachapi, paralleling CA route 58, there is a railroad with multiple short tunnels boring through the hills and coming out again. Snaking in and out of those tunnels was the longest freight train I've ever seen. I think it was going through at least four tunnels simultaneously. (Google tells me this railroad is called the Tehachapi Loop and that sometimes the train is so long it even loops back on itself.)
Black gold, Texas tea In a field next to 58 between Tehachapi and Bakersfield there were these machines that looked and acted like gigantic drinking birds. I thought at first they were irrigation pumps, but further investigation tells me they are oil pumps. Kern County oil fields produce ten percent of US oil.
I had plans to go to a restaurant, but I have a thing against going alone to sit-down restaurants. It makes me feel self-conscious and anxious. I considered combating the anxiousness and going anyway, but I didn't have the energy. So I went to Trader Joe's. The Bakersfield Trader Joe's doesn't have any prepared salads or sandwiches the way my local one does, but they had microwave-in-a-bag green beans and carrots, and a new product that I absolutely love, Marinated Three Bean Salad in a can. When I got back to the hotel I realized I didn't have a can opener, but then I realized I did have one on the swiss army knife I carry in my knitting bag. I've never used that kind of can opener before but I figured it out without cutting myself. Go me.
Trader Joe's helps my Buddhist practice because it reinforces the fact of impermanence. That is, they are always introducing some product that I love and then taking it away again just as I start to rely on it. The product I am still pining for is Hot & Sour Soup in a jar. It was perfect and I bought it by the dozen hoping they wouldn't stop selling it, but they did. Now they've introduced the Three Bean Salad and I suppose the same thing will happen. In the meantime I'm enjoying it.
Random thoughts and observations from the road:
I can has cheezburger? Starting a few miles outside of Barstow, CA - the town on the edge of the Mojave that has the first 'services' for many miles (although there are more services between Las Vegas and Barstow than there used to be) - there were multiple billboards for different restaurants and fast food joints, all with virtually identical photos of cheeseburgers. No billboard had a photo of any other kind of food that I can recall.
Wind energy There is a wind farm on the peaks near Tehachapi pass. I think the wind turbines are beautiful and love to see them all spinning.
Trainspotting Somewhere around Tehachapi, paralleling CA route 58, there is a railroad with multiple short tunnels boring through the hills and coming out again. Snaking in and out of those tunnels was the longest freight train I've ever seen. I think it was going through at least four tunnels simultaneously. (Google tells me this railroad is called the Tehachapi Loop and that sometimes the train is so long it even loops back on itself.)
Black gold, Texas tea In a field next to 58 between Tehachapi and Bakersfield there were these machines that looked and acted like gigantic drinking birds. I thought at first they were irrigation pumps, but further investigation tells me they are oil pumps. Kern County oil fields produce ten percent of US oil.
no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 05:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 06:02 am (UTC)There are a couple of sit-down restaurants near work that I go to alone (I used to go w/ my friend but she moved). I REALLY like them. If I didn't go alone, I'd rarely/never get to go. They aren't really fancy. I bring a book to read or CEU quizzes to work on while I wait. I LIKE being by myself in those situations.
That is, they are always introducing some product that I love and then taking it away again just as I start to rely on it.
I feel your pain!
no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 06:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 09:16 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 12:09 pm (UTC)It took a long time for me to get used to eating alone, but with all the travel by myself, I got used to it. I actually kind of enjoy it now. :) Me, my book, good food and people watching.
no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 04:47 pm (UTC)I'm going out for dim sum alone tomorrow, which seems even weirder than general going-alone-to-sit-down-restaurant. But at least I finally found a dim sum place locally that gets good reviews.
no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 05:00 pm (UTC)Poof, gone.
*sadness*
no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 05:32 pm (UTC)I guess the little bit of rain we got in Vegas was responsible for the extra snow on the mountains. We noticed there was much more snow too.
Did you see the signs for "Fresh Alien Jerky"? It was maybe an 1 1/2 hours outside of Vegas. We happened to stop there for a bathroom break and they have this giant sign with a standard green, bug eyed alien in a cowboy hat sitting on top of it next to a flying saucer. There's also an explanation, but we were in a hurry so I took pictures of it all and will read it later. It was just bizarre.
Somehow the ride back seemed so much longer. We didn't hit Bakersfield at a hungry time, so we didn't go to the Basque restaurant. :-(
no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 06:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 06:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 06:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 06:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 7 Feb 2008 10:06 pm (UTC)I didn't know they did that. You've just explained to me why their excellent cocoa powder went away. Sic transit gloria etc.
no subject
Date: 8 Feb 2008 04:21 am (UTC)I sort of aspire to Buddhist practice, and I am really bad about losing products I've grown fond of. Thanks for reminding me.
no subject
Date: 8 Feb 2008 05:21 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 8 Feb 2008 06:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 9 Feb 2008 01:17 am (UTC)Fort Irwin is probably the most wired desert on Earth. There are sensors and cameras covering all the engagement areas; after the day's battles the officers can watch a replay of how they got their collective asses kicked. Things have only improved since I was in, they now use GPS equipment to track every vehicle in battle, and may soon issue individual GPS trackers so you can watch how every man in a battle moved.
In many ways, Desert Storm was won at Fort Irwin. Before NTC opened, opportunities for large-scale maneuvers at this level were non-existent. By allowing officers to learn how to handle their units in chaotic conditions in a controlled environment, we went into Iraq and Kuwait with perhaps the best-trained battalion and brigade officers ever.
no subject
Date: 10 Feb 2008 02:31 am (UTC)Cracked up at the impermanence reflection on Trader Joe's. Very clever.
I last drove through Tehachapi just before sundown and it was gloriously beautiful and green after days in the desert canyons, dry lakes, and boulder-outwashed mountains.