Monthly Archives: December 2021

Christmas Treats

Christmas has come and gone here at Viewpoint Golf and RV Resort, just like it has everywhere else. Most of the residents here spread the Christmas spirit by decorating their homes. Some of the streets go as far as adopting a theme which everyone more or less follows. The management provides a tram – a small train with open cars pulled by a small tractor. People get on the train at the lot in front of the office and it takes them on a tour of the facility to look at all of the lights and decorations in the evening.

Christmas decorations viewed from our front steps

We had a fairly quiet Christmas Day. Our Christmas dinner included a honey-glazed spiral-cut ham. I sliced russet potatoes which Donna made into a very tasty side of au gratin potatoes and I cubed a butternut squash that she sauteed with fresh ginger and spices. Cubing a butternut squash was harder than I expected! She also made green beans tossed with shallots cooked in butter. And for dessert, she made Nanaimo Bars, a Canadian Christmas treat (recipe here). Donna fixed three plates that she delivered to three different homes where she assists the elderly residents. They live alone and were very appreciative to have a home-cooked Christmas dinner. She also delivered Nanaimo Bars to some of our neighbors.

Christmas Eve was about as wintery as it gets around here. The temperature only reached 59 degrees and an inch and a half of rain fell! We exchanged gifts on Christmas morning – I gave Donna a pair of diamond stud earrings that I bought online from Blue Nile. She gifted me with a nice set of Sony noise-cancelling headphones. I spend a fair amount of time on YouTube lately and these headphones are a treat.

We’ve had several wet days with heavy overcast since Christmas and I’ve only been out once for pickleball. Donna managed to get out for tennis a couple of times and also played a round of golf on the nine-hole Executive course. My days have revolved around reading and practicing guitar – I’m working on learning some new material. I ordered a Christmas gift for myself – a set of custom hand-wound pickups for my Strat-type guitar. They’re being made by Adam Asmus (dba Tone Hatch Pickups) in Norfolk, Nebraska and I’m looking forward to getting them in a week or so.

Last week, we watched the Beatles documentary, Get Back, on Disney Plus. It a three -part film with about 6 hours of running time culled from over 150 hours of film recorded in 1969. It was interesting to watch their creative process as well as the tensions that developed in the group at that time. It was well worth paying for a month of streaming Disney Plus.

Before Christmas, I made a batch of my signature Japanese fried rice. Donna grilled shrimp for a simple, delicious and savory dinner.

On Christmas Eve she kept it simple – we were gifted a delicious clam chowder from Hancock’s in Maine. And the day after Christmas, she made green chile pollo street tacos. She tried something new with the chicken filling, it was a different seasoning on the chicken and it was topped with a green chile sauce she made. They were outstanding.

Green chile pollo street tacos

After Christmas, we had our fill of leftover ham including ham sandwiches and slow cooker beans with the ham shank. Donna gave us a break from the ham with another new chicken recipe. She split chicken breasts into thin fillets, pan fried them and made a sun-dried tomato and cream sauce topping. It was very good!

Chicken with sun-dried tomato and cream sauce, zucchini spirals on the side

It’s hard to believe today is the last day of 2021. Tomorrow a new calendar year begins. It looks like we’ll be off to a relatively cold start – the forecast calls for clear skies with temperatures in the mid to upper 50s over the weekend before we begin warming up next week. After taking a holiday break, I’ll resume the Tuesday afternoon pickleball coaching clinics next week.

*Just so you know, if you use this link to shop on Amazon and decide to purchase anything, you pay the same price as usual and I’ll earn a few pennies for the referral. It’ll go into the beer fund. Thanks!

Short Days, Cold Nights

Today is the winter solstice – December 21, 2021. This is when the south pole of the earth is tilted closest to the sun and the north pole is farthest away due to the inclination of the axis the earth rotates around. Thus, in the northern hemisphere we have the shortest amount of daylight today while in the southern hemisphere, it’s the summer solstice and they have the longest amount of daylight hours. For the next six months, our daylight hours will increase daily – yay!

I haven’t posted lately as things have been fairly low-key around here. We attended a Christmas celebration at Kelly and Frank Burk’s house. We had good food, drink and great company for a fun-filled afternoon. They had a white elephant gift exchange and also a game played with dollar bills and Donna won the jackpot which she has used to make Christmas donations.

About a week ago, I found something on Amazon that seemed like a good idea. I’ve been kicking around the idea of adding a looper pedal to my guitar rig. A looper pedal is a foot-operated switchbox containing a digital recorder. You step on the switch to start recording as you play and hit the switch a second time to stop recording. With this, you can record some chords for a song’s rhythm, play it back through the amplifier and add a lead to it or any fills you want to layer over it as it plays back in a continuous loop..

I found a tiny pedal that was more than just a looper – it also had drum tracks. With this I could set up a drum beat, play rhythm over the drum beat and record it all to have a backing track for lead work. And this pedal from Flamma was inexpensive on Amazon. I ordered it and had it two days later.

Flamma drum-loop pedal – quarter is there for scale, this pedal is tiny

It didn’t take me long to figure out why Amazon had these for such a low price. It was a low-quality unit – it was noisy, introducing static, hiss and hum to the signal and the drums were hard to program and set tempo on it. That’s what I get for basing a buying decision on price and a few reviews. I was able to return the pedal for a full refund just by dropping it off in the original manufacturer’s packaging at a UPS store. Amazon issued the refund within a day of me dropping it off!

I learned something else from this purchase. Although a looper is still something I want, the drum backing was something that’s really helpful when you’re playing music alone. I did some research and bought a much better drum pedal. I ordered a Beat Buddy Mini 2 from Sweetwater Music and had it two days later. This cost more than twice what the Flamma from Amazon cost and it doesn’t have a looper, but it’s a quality unit.

Beat Buddy Mini 2

This drum machine is much more versatile and easy to set up. The drums aren’t just synthesized sounds – they recorded actual professional drummers playing various patterns and rhythms. It doesn’t crackle, hum or hiss either.

Last Saturday, Donna played in a tennis tournament here at Viewpoint Golf and RV Resort. I went to watch and tried to take photographs, but it wasn’t working out too well. From the spectator area, the players on the courts were backlit by the sun and I couldn’t get to any other vantage point.

Donna in pink on the far court

Donna and her partner won their match in two straight sets. Later, Donna went to a tennis club social hour dressed in her Santa suit and beard – I forgot to take a photo. But, she had this one on her phone with one of her tennis friends in Santa’s lap.

Donna is Santa

Donna has our place decorated for Christmas, so we’re lit up at night.

Donna’s Christmas decor – angel with a flute and reindeer.

Donna is really spreading Christmas cheer by playing traditional Christmas songs on her clarinet with backing tracks on our patio between the entry and car port. The other day, a woman stopped by saying she had to find the source of the music she heard from two blocks away.

We’re remaining healthy and eating well. Here are a few dishes from the past couple of weeks. First up, Donna tried a new grilled chicken recipe for Asian-style chicken breasts with grilled bok choy.

Grilled chicken and bok choy
Grilled chicken and bok choy

A couple of days later, she tried a different take on chicken thighs, slow cooked in a crock pot with loads of garlic, carrots and white wine.

Crock pot chicken, garlic and carrots with white wine

On Friday, I put a six-and-a-half-pound pork shoulder – a cut called pork butt – on the Traeger wood-pellet fired smoker/grill for about eight hours at 225 degrees. I wrapped it in foil for the last two hours, otherwise it would’ve taken about 12 hours to reach an internal temperature of 198 degrees and risk drying out at that point. Wrapped in foil, it retained moisture and reached 198 degrees relatively quickly.

Pulled pork with coleslaw and cornbread

The pork was cooked perfectly – the shoulder blade bone slid out of the meat easily and I pulled it apart with Bear Paw shredding utensils. Donna made cole slaw and corn bread muffins from a recipe she got from our friend Georgia Eaton in Maine.

The last plate is another chicken thigh variation – garlic butter chicken served over spaghetti squash.

Garlic butter chicken

As I said, it’s the winter solstice meaning we have officially reached the winter of 2021-2022. It was definitely winter weather last week and the overnight temperature here in the desert dropped into the 30s. The rest of the month looks like we should have overnight lows in the 40s and highs ranging from the low 70s today and tomorrow before dropping back into the 60s for the next couple of weeks. We may have rain for Christmas. I’ll close by wishing you a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

*Just so you know, if you use this link to shop on Amazon and decide to purchase anything, you pay the same price as usual and I’ll earn a few pennies for the referral. It’ll go into the beer fund. Thanks!

A Quick Trip and A Shot

I mentioned in my last post that Donna was heading to San Diego to visit her sister, Sheila. I dropped her off at the airport a week ago on Thursday morning. She had a short, enjoyable time there. Friday she went hiking with Sheila on the Los Penasquitos Canyon Trail.

This trail is in the Los Penasquitos Canyon Preserve – a park jointly managed by the city of San Diego and San Diego County. There’s a parking/day use fee of $3. They hiked the trail to the waterfall – a hike of about seven miles. The preserve is located north of the Mira Mesa neighborhood and straddles the city limit. It follows the Penasquitos Creek which flows from Poway Creek in the east to the Pacific Ocean near Torrey Pines. Here are some photos she took on the hike.

Trailhead
Sheila and Bandit
A lethargic alligator lizard

There’s a small gravesite along the trail with a headstone for John Eichar dating back to 1882. He’s believed to have been a cook at the ranch that once occupied this land.

Friday night Donna attended a concert that her nephew, Connor, played in. He plays saxophone in the Bishop’s School band. Bishop’s is a private college prepatory Episcopal school in La Jolla. She said the school band is very talented. Connor performed several improvised jazz solos and also wrote a piece of chamber music for two alto saxophones and a euphonium.

While Donna was away, I modified my Marshall 112 speaker cabinet. The Marshall 112MX comes equipped with a Celestion seventy/80 speaker. I favor the sound of most Celestion speakers, but the seventy/80 turned out to be not such a favorite. It is a budget speaker in the Celestion line and I found the higher frequencies to be spikey and somewhat unpleasant. I ordered a Celestion G12T-75 replacement speaker from Avatar speakers in Idaho – they have the best Celestion prices.

The 112 cabinet back plate was very tightly fastened and it took some doing to get it opened. When I removed the seventy/80 speaker, I found some excess glue hardened into a ball where the dust cap meets the speaker cone. This couldn’t have helped its performane any.

Celstion seventy/80 speaker – note ports in the front baffle to enhance bass response
Arrow poimts to the hardened glue defect in the seventy/80
Replacement upgrade G12T-75

New speakers can be somewhat stiff and benefit from a break-in period. Avatar offers a break-in service on some of their speakers, but not the G12T-75. Their service involves 15 hours of break-in tones. I hooked my signal generator into the input of my Marshall 18 Watt amp and ran a 1000 Hz tone through the speaker for about 12 hours. Then I played through it for a few hours and I’m very happy with the sound of the Marshall 112 cabinet now.

In my last post, I mentioned a problem in the treble bleed circuit of my Stratocaster guitar. I should have mentioned that I didn’t wire this circuit originally – I’d ordered the pickups, control pots and selector switch pre-wired. However, I may have had a hand in creating the problem. When I shielded the control cavity, I needed to add a ground lug and wire it to the pot. I used some scrap16-gauge wire that I had on hand. I don’t know what I was thinking – 16-gauge is way heavier than I needed and it was really stiff. It may have interfered with the circuit once I installed the pick guard. I rewired it with 22-gauge wire which is plenty to handle the millivolts present on the ground and it’s flexible.

Donna came back Saturday evening and I picked her up at the airport. My two nights of bachelorhood were mostly uneventful – in fact, I was down for the count Friday afternoon and most of Saturday. I had shingles vaccine (Shingrex) and pneumonia vaccine shots on Thursday and it knocked me for a loop. I ran a low-grade fever (101.5) and had a very sore arm. I’m glad that’s behind me now, but I need a follow-up shot for shingles in a couple of months.

Tuesday was Pearl Harbor Day – December 7th. Eighty years ago, Hawaii was hit with a surprise attack. Four battleships were sunk, many others damaged and 2,335 people lost their lives. I always take a few moments to honor those that were in Pearl Harbor on that date.

Sunrise over the Superstition Mountains on Pearl Harbor Day

We are 12 days short of the winter solstice – the days have noticeably shorter with the sunrise coming later and sunset earlier in the evening. After December 21st, the daylight hours will start increasing again.

Yesterday Donna hit the golf course with some of her girlfriends. I was inside, reading a book when I thought they ought to be coming up to the fifth hole soon. I went outside to the rear deck just as they came into view. I watched them play the fifth hole behind our house.

Donna chipping to the green
Donna putting on the fifth hole

While Donna was away and I was feeling punky, I didn’t have the best meals. Now that she’s back I’m getting much better nutrition. Sometimes it’s a simple thing – like the green chile bratwurst we bought at The Pork Shop served with fire-roasted corn and grilled zucchini and peppers topped with feta cheese.

Tuesday night I manned the grill and grilled bacon wrapped petite filet mignon from Basha’s – I still have it when it comes to the barbeque grill. The filets were perfect. Donna baked potatoes and steamed green beans.

The weather has cooled here in Mesa, Arizona. We’ll be lucky to see 70 degrees on the thermometer today. Tomorrow is predicted to be downright cold with a high of 59 degrees – in this climate that qualifies as cold. We probably won’t see temperatures above the upper 60s for the rest of the month.

*Just so you know, if you use this link to shop on Amazon and decide to purchase anything, you pay the same price as usual and I’ll earn a few pennies for the referral. It’ll go into the beer fund. Thanks!

Typhoon Karen

I’ve fallen behind on posting – it’s December already! I hope you all had a safe and enjoyable Thanksgiving. We had a great day with a Thanksgiving potluck feast with friends at Mike and Jodi Hall’s house. We watched football while Mike and I enjoyed cigars and, of course, ate lots of good food.

I received an unexpected piece of mail from my sister before Thanksgiving. It was a publication of the US Navy called Crossroads from November of 1962 – it took me back in time to another Thanksgiving. In November of 1962, I was six years old and our family lived on the island of Guam. Guam is a US territory in the western Pacific (Micronesia). The tropical island has an area of 210 square miles and great beaches with coral reefs.

I learned to snorkel inside the reefs when I was five years old and still love snorkeling in the ocean whenever I can. On November 11, 1962, Typhoon Karen hit the island dead-center. It was the most powerful tropical cyclone to ever hit the island and the 185-mph winds were devastating. The 20-page Crossroads paper my sister, Cori, sent me was entirely devoted to coverage of the typhoon and its aftermath. She had kept it for almost 60 years – I had no idea.

The island was wrecked – 95% of the homes were damaged or destroyed and more than 45,000 people were left homeless. We were lucky – we got through the storm without damage to our home after a long, scary night in total darkness. In the morning, we found twisted metal wreckage in our backyard – someone’s carport had been swept up by the wind, twisted into an unrecognizable shape and deposited in our yard.

Along the highway, we saw fishing vessels – sizable boats – along the roadside more than a quarter of mile away from the marina.

Rear Admiral John F. Coye, Jr wrote, “We in Guam have learned the true meaning of Thanksgiving Day. We have witnessed the devastating forces of nature, and our lives have been spared. Let us pause for a prayer of thanks and redouble our efforts to rebuild Guam. Guam was good and we’re going to rebuild it better.”

It was hard to believe only 11 people lost their lives amid all of the destruction. We left Guam soon after the typhoon and moved back to California. If you’re interested in reading more about the typhoon, here’s a link to a Wikipedia article.

I wrote about the oscilloscope I bought in a previous post. It’s something I’ve wanted for a long time. When I was younger, oscilloscopes were very expensive instruments – even a Radio SHack Heathkit model would set you back about two weeks worth of wages. Nowadays, digital technology can make them inexpensive – the Rigol model I bought was under $300. I’ve been having fun playing around with it – it’s nice to be able to visually track the electronic signal through various stages of amplification in my guitar amps. Donna thinks I’ve become a bit of a nerd watching YouTube videos to learn how to effectively utilize the oscilloscope.

One of the things I found was I had deferred maintenance for too long on a couple of my amps. I had replaced vacuum tubes in my Trainwreck and Marshall 18-Watt amps that I built nine or 10 years ago, but that’s about all I did. Time plus wear and tear from riding in the basement of our motorhome took a bit of a toll. I could see some noise in the signal path and could also hear how they were noisy compared to the Trinity OSD I recently built.

I took a little time to re-solder a few components and used a product called DeoxIT to clean the tube sockets and potentiometers. Much better! I watched a YouTube video where Mike Zaite – designer and owner of Dr. Z Amplification described his recommended annual maintenance. I’ll put that schedule in place for future maintenance of my amps. He also said why he uses vintage Russian military spec vacuum tubes in his Maz18 amps. He likes them because they sound good and are very robust – he thinks they should last at least 5,000 hours. He has a large stockpile of tubes that he bought from a retired Russian military officer – I wonder how that guy came upon a large quantity of surplus military tubes.

I saw another video where Mark from Gary’s Guitars in Portsmouth, New Hampshire went on about the old Russian military vacuum tubes. He once lived in Russia and he said every major city had radio parts swap meets at the time. Buying a transceiver in Russia wasn’t easy back then. People would scrounge parts and build them. He is a big fan of the old tubes from the Foton factory (it burned down in the early 1970s) and the Reflektor factory.

Gary said to look for a code which is OTK plus a number. That indicates the tube was inspected and passed military specification. In the old days, the quality control inspectors for the military were very thorough – passing a defective tube would result in a new assignment in Siberia. He also showed how to read the date codes. A while back, I bought some Reflektor 6V6 equivalent tubes that I thought were from the late 70s or early 80s. After checking the date code, I see they’re from 1974 – the year I graduated high school.

I found some old Russian military EL84 equivalents on eBay that are what I use in the Marshall 18 Watt. I ordered four of them and they came from the Ukraine! These are dated 1972 and are from the same Reflektor factory and have OTK codes. I read the Reflektor plant produced up 50 million tubes per year back in its heyday.

Ebay package from Ukraine

Now that I had my amps back up to snuff, I suddenly heard noise and sound dropping out while I was playing my guitar. Then it quit making sound altogether. Wouldn’t you know it, my Stratocaster-style guitar that I built last month was on the fritz.

I did some trubleshooting and found problems in the treble bleed circuit. I replaced the resistor and capacitor there – I always fix anything I find out of order when troubleshooting – but that wasn’t the problem. An open treble bleed circuit wouldn’t stop the signal from getting out of the guitar. I played around with it for a whole day and the problem was intermittent. It would work fine on the bench, but once I put it all back together, it quit working again.

Treble bleed circuit on the volume pot circled

The problem seemed to be centered around the volume potentiometer. I ordered a new pot from Amazon and got it the next day. I checked it and it was fine, so I installed it and it wasn’t fine. It seems like the wiper or carbon strip inside warped when I soldered it. This puzzled me as I know I didn’t overheat it – I’ve soldered lots of pots. I looked at the CTS branded pot more closely and I suspect it’s a Chinese counterfeit, not a genuine CTS pot. Yesterday, I drove to west Mesa and bought a volume pot at Milano’s Music. This was a CTS genuine article.

I installed the pot and replaced the wiring from the pot to the output jack. It works again! I plugged into my Dumble-style OSD and made lots of noise – I mean music. By the way, I never believed I would play or own an amplifier that I liked better than my Trainwreck-inspired amp, but the Dumble-style OSD tops it. It’s my all-time favorite.

Monday night, Donna made a new dish for dinner – it was Creole shrimp. It was bit labor-intensive with thinly sliced celery, onions and peppers, but it was so tasty.

Creole shrimp – the photo doesn’t do it justice

I won’t be eating such fancy dishes over the next few days. Donna’s flying to San Diego tomorrow morning to visit her sister, Sheila. She’ll be back on Saturday night.

The weather cooled considerably over the past week. We had highs around 70 degrees and overnight lows in the upper 40s. The week ahead calls for upper 70s to low 80s with overnight lows in the mid 50s. December in the Valley of the Sun – you gotta love it.