Monthly Archives: February 2022

Michiganders, Music and Snow

In addition to all of her usual activities, Donna had a busy week as we had visitors. On Monday, Martha and John Bergquist came by at noon. I had just returned from a couple of hours of pickleball when they arrived. Donna knew Martha from our time in Michigan and they were visiting Arizona, staying down in Tucson. Their home is in Wisconsin now.

Martha and Donna in front of our orange tree

Martha really wanted to see wild horses, so Donna invited them to come up and hike at Coon Bluff to see if they could locate some horses. They lucked out and found a herd of about 30 horses along the Salt River. I was beat from pickleball and wasn’t up for the hike. They went for a late lunch at Saguaro Lake. It was after 5pm before Donna made it back home.

Wild horses at the Salt River

Yesterday we met up with more friends from Michigan. Gary and Cheryl Bida were out here visiting their son in Scottsdale. It was a rainy day yesterday when we met up with them for lunch at Fat Willy’s. Lunch on the patio was out of the question with the cold, windy and rainy weather, so we dined indoors. We had a good time talking and visiting for a couple of hours. It’s been at least 10 years since we last saw them. I neglected to take any photos.

My last post rambled on about my stereo system. I have to say, we’re really enjoying it and have music on for hours every day now. It has rekindled my interest and love of music. I’ve always had an eclectic mix of recordings – everything from Mozart to Miles Davis to Jimi Hendrix. Lately, I’ve been expanding my CD collection with new material that I’ve largely ignored over the years.

I’ve added three discs by Diana Krall. Diana is a Canadian jazz singer and pianist and I love her voice, even when she’s singing some sappy song. Her piano playing is exquisite – she started studying piano at the age of four! He parents were musically inclined too. Her husband is none other than British recording artist Elvis Costello.

I recently “discovered” Tom Waits. I don’t know how he flew under my radar all of these years. Tom is from southern California and was a regular in the San Diego folk music scene in the 1960s. I wasn’t into folk music at all back then, so maybe that’s how I missed him. He moved to Los Angeles in 1972 and was already established as a singer/songwriter by then. I didn’t know it until recently, but he penned the Eagles hit Ol’ 55. You might remember their version of this song:

Well, my time went so quickly
I went lickety-splitly
Out to my ol’ 55
As I pulled away slowly
Feeling so holy
God knows I was feeling alive

Now, the sun’s coming up
I’m riding with Lady Luck
Freeway, cars and trucks
Stars beginning to fade
And I lead the parade
Just a-wishin’ I’d stayed a little longer
Oh Lord, let me tell ya that the feeling getting stronger…

Tom Waits is quite a character. He spent a lot of time in San DIego and LA hanging out in diners and dive bars with his notebook, picking up snippets of conversations around him to inspire his song writing. His early recordings in the late 60s and early 70s reveal a soft voice. By 1980, years of cigarettes and whiskey changed his voice to a gravelly rasp.

I’ve also added a couple of discs recorded by John Mayer. I knew of John, but didn’t have any of his recordings until now. He attended the Berklee College of Music and is probably the most famous student of guitar great Tomo Fujita. I like his songwriting and singing as well as his excellent guitar playing.

I also found a CD called On Every Street. Recorded in 1999, it’s the last album Mark Knopfler recorded as Dire Straits – by then, only he and the bass player remained from the original band. All of his work since then is under his name as a solo artist – he is an absolute guitar god.

I mentioned in my last post that Donna is back to following the Bright Line Eating plan. This doesn’t mean we have to curtail fine dining. She just has to be selective in the mix of protein, carbs and fats she eats and she weighs everything she cooks.

Last week, she made a lentil soup with duck sausage and it was delicious.

Lentil soup with duck sausage

Saturday she grilled a wild caught Alaskan salmon and served it with a citrus-chile topping. Another hit.

Grilled salmon with citrus-chile sauce and grilled bok choy

The citrus-chile sauce was so tasty, she used again on Monday over grilled chicken thighs and wings. It works as well on chicken as it does on salmon.

Chicken with citrus-chile sauce served with asparagus and cauliflower rice medley

We’ve had a strange weather pattern over the last couple of weeks. Last week, it was cold and wet on Wednesday but warmed back up to the upper 70s by the weekend. This week, the temperature only reached 66 degrees on Tuesday and Wednesday was rainy and only 52 degrees! Average highs at this time of year are 72 degrees. The overnight low last night was down to 33 degrees and we had overnight showers. This left snow on the Superstition Mountains east of us here at Viewpoint – we can see them out our front window.

Snow on the Superstition Mountains

We can expect another cold night with the low in the mid-30s, but we should warm up to the 70s for highs this weekend. The forecast calls for highs in the 80s by next Tuesday.

*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!

Analog Man

FedEx was on schedule and delivered the Elekit TU-8200R stereo integrated amplifier kit I ordered from Tube Depot. Elekit is a Japanese company that’s been in business for about 40 years. They are well-known in Japan for the science project kits they sell to high schools. High schoolers in Japan build projects like robotics and other electronic devices with the Elekit supplied parts and manuals. They are also well-regarded for their audio gear.

Mr. Yoshitsugu Fujita is the Chief Engineer and designer for Elekit. His audio circuits are brilliant. Unlike most boutique stereo amplifiers, which rely on circuit designs originally developed in the 1950s and 1960s, Fujita-san designs outside of the box everyone else is stuck in. His audio gear is vacuum tube driven, but he has no qualms about using solid state devices in the power supply stage. If a DB107 solid state bridge rectifier creates a cleaner power supply, that’s what he uses. He also incorporates transistors in circuit protection schemes, but the signal path is all analog tube driven.

It’s all in this box from Elekit

I got to work right away after the delivery came at 1pm. Everything was well packaged and sorted into plastic bags.

Lots of parts

One of the key elements of this kit is the R-core power transformer on the left in the photo above. The two output transformers – also very key components – are in the left center of the photo. Once I inventoried all of the parts to ensure nothing was missing, it was time to populate the main board. Over the next five hours or so, I soldered over 200 points on the main circuit board. There are seven boards total to make up the amplifier. These are high-quality printed circuit boards (PCB) with thick fiberglass plates and copper traces on both sides that are well proportioned and 70um thick. The through holes are copper plated.

Bottom of the main board with components in place
Top of the main board

I finished the main board around 7pm and knocked off for the day – I was getting tired and I didn’t want to make an error in the build. Building a stereo amplfier is like building two amps at once. Each channel (left and right) has it’s own, separate signal path. Only the main power supply is shared in this amp.

Main PCB finished – all capacitors and resistors are high-quality parts sourced from Japan

Saturday morning after breakfast and coffee, I got back to work around 9am. Assembling the rest of the boards was straight forward. I had to knock off at 1pm to have lunch before going to Donna’s concert. The Viewpoint Concert Band had their first performance of the season. They have fewer musicians than in years past due to covid and other reasons – they’re down by about 30 performers. They sounded great though and put on a good show.

PCB 2 with volume control, switches and headphone jack

Before I started building this amp, I went Michael’s craft store and bought a pack of craft sticks. These look like a popsicle stick but they’re larger – about 3/4″ wide. I glued two of them stacked together to make it 1/8″ thick, then I cut down the width on one end to make it 3/8″ wide. This was my jig for bending the leads on resistors and setting them precisely 1/8″ clear of the board. I did this because resistors get hot and keeping them up from the board would allow air to circulate around them. I wanted a uniform height for aesthetic reasons. This would be an issue later.

There were a couple of places where PCBs are joined perpendicular to each other and tricky soldering was required. The PCBs had copper pads on each board that aligned with each other but didn’t make contact. I had to solder a triangular fillit that joined the copper pads. This was tricky because both pads needed be simultaneously heated to allow the solder to flow and adhere properly.

Twelve triangular solder fillits joining the copper pads of these PCBs

After the concert, I got started on the hardware mounting and had everything put together a couple of hours later. Total time spent on the project was around 12 hours at this point – eight hours or so with a solder iron in my hand.

Finished – or so I thought

I put tubes in the sockets and it was time to fire it up. I plugged in through my my bulb limiter connected to the APC Line R voltage regulator. It was a disaster. I had a loud hum. I switched it off and looked everything over. I tried switching tubes but the loud hum persisted. I tried a few tests and found the noise was unrelated to the volume control – no matter where the volume control was set, the hum level was the same. I also found that touching the volume control or the input jacks changed the hum – it was lower volume when I touched them.

This made me believe the hum was from a ground loop. I put a jumper from one input jack to a ground point on the chassis and it killed the hum. I hooked up the CD player for a test – no sound output. Bummer. Up to this point, I thought this was the easiest amp I’d ever built. The kit was high-quality and everything fit well. The instructions were good. Somewhere along the line, I must have been a little over-confident and made a mistake.

I pulled the boards out and reflowed the component solder points. I couldn’t see anything wrong. I put it back together and had the same result. I was getting frustrated and tired. It was past 7pm by then and Donna had dinner waiting. I decided to give it a break and think about it for a while.

I thought about it while sipping a Scotch on the rocks and finally gave up for the night. I woke up at 4:30am Sunday morning and thought about it some more. I couldn’t get back to sleep, so I got up as quietly as I could and went back to the amp at 5am. I reconfirmed all of the component locations and values. I can’t tell you how many times I took things apart and checked them – I wasn’t getting anywhere.

I had to take a break at 9am to meet Mike Hall at our coach – he was going to look at the damaged body panel that I temporarily repaired while we were traveling through Utah last summer. He came up with a plan for a permanent fix.

Then Donna and I drove to Scottsdale to meet Alana and Kevin at Merci French Cafe and Patisserie for brunch. Kevin and Alana had left the Painted Mountain Golf Resort in Mesa on Saturday and went to Alana’s mother’s place in Wickenburg – over an hour away. They made the trip back to Scottsdale to spend a little more time with us before flying back to Washington on Tuesday. We had an excellent brunch on the patio at Merci – eating out again for the fifth time in eight days. I was a little distracted, thinking about the amp problem.

When we got back home, I finally wised up and quit looking for a visual clue. Instead I measured voltages throughout the circuit. The schematic identifies 29 points to take voltage readings. All looked perfect until got to number 29. The reading was impossible. I should have had around 6 volts for the heater filaments, but I found -30 volts. What? How could I have negative voltage there?

Looking at the schematic led me to the solid state bridge rectifier. It was installed properly, so I scratched my head again. I was using a headset that resembles the one used by dentists to magnify things in front of their eyes. The one I bought had five different lenses with magnifying powers of 1x – for eye protection only, 1.5x, 2x, 2.5x and 3x. I used the 2x lens because it allows greater depth of field than the stronger magnification – above 2x, you have view from a precise distance or things get out of focus. It also has an LED lamp to make me look like a cyclops while lighting up the working area.

With this headset on, I was searching the board around the DB107 rectifier chip when I saw something reflect a tiny bit of light. There was a fine line of solder – no thicker than a strand of spider web – across two terminals of the rectifier chip. Bingo – this was enough to short the rectifier. I used a braided copper solder wick to clean it up the solder joint. That should take care of the lack of sound and the voltage issue, but it didn’t explain the hum or ground issue.

I traced the ground circuits and resoldered the triangular fillits where the grounds went from one PCB to another. Then I put it all togther without the top plate on the chassis. I plugged everything in and it was silent – no hum. I turned the CD player on and I had sound. Hooray, I fixed it. All along, Donna kept reassuring me by saying, “You’ll find the problem, I have no doubt.”

I took the amp back to the bench and put the top and front cover plates on. I plugged everything back in and put on some music. Oh, no! Now I had nothing coming from the left channel. I took it apart again and traced back from the left channel input jack. Fujita-san cleverly marked all of the left channel components with odd numbers and all of the right channel components with even numbers. So I went to the resistor R1 to start checking and I found it bent with the lead touching the lead of R3 mounted perpendicular to it. This shorted the signal path to ground. Remember how I set the resistors all 1/8″ high? When I put the chassis back together after I fixed the original problems I must have accidently pushed R1 over onto R3. Problem solved.

This stereo sounds fantastic. It’s unbelievably good. Donna doesn’t exactly share my passion for chasing tone and good sound. When I say something like, “Listen to that bass and how clear the highs sound,” she usually says she just wants to enjoy the music, not dissect the sound. But when she heard this amp for the first time, right away she said, “That really sounds good!” The amp looks good to me in a simple, somewhat industrial way.

Elekit TU-8200R vacuum tube stereo integrated amplifier

Tube amps do sound good. I know, I’m a retrograde analog man in a digital world. But vacuum tubes naturally create an emphasis of second order harmonics – that is, they accentuate the octave above the fundamental frequency. Acoustic instruments naturally do the same thing. It’s a euphonic response and people find the tone pleasing. Solid state amplification creates higher odd order harmonics – the 3rd, 5th, 7th, etc, of the fundamental which most humans perceive as harsh or even unpleasant. Solid state designs require complex circuitry to try to work around this.

In my last post, I mentioned my concerns about the future availability of CD players. I decided to buy the Cambridge Audio AXC35 player after thinking about it for a day. I went online to Crutchfield and found out they had sold out since I last saw it the day before! Luckily, I found it on Amazon for the same price and placed the order. I went with the Cambridge Audio unit which is made by a company based in London, England because of the Wolfson Digital to Analog Convertor (DAC) in it. The Wolfson DAC is made by a company in Ireland and is a very good DAC. The DAC is a key component of a CD player.

Information stored on a compact disc can’t be amplified directly into music. The information is a series of microscopic pits in the disc separated by lands. These become a series of zeros and ones. The DAC takes this information and converts it to a waveform that represents the frequencies of sound. This waveform can now be amplified and sent to a speaker. Magic!

The Cambridge Audio CD player arrived on Monday. Now my stereo system is complete – new CD player, new amplifier and new speakers. It sounds so good, I can’t put it into words.

Cambridge Audio AXC35 CD player

Enough stereo talk – let’s get to the food. Thursday night, Donna made garlic butter chicken with riced cauliflower, mushrooms and asparagus. She seared the chicken thighs on the stove top, then baked them in the oven

Garlic butter chicken

Donna is back on the Bright Line Eating plan, which means I’m sort of on the plan. But I get to cheat some. Monday she grilled wild caught Alaskan salmon and served it with Brussels sprouts in bacon horseradish sauce.

Grilled salmon and Brussels sprouts

Last night ,she made lemony shrimp and bean stew – this was a new dish for us and really tasty.

Lemony shrimp and bean stew

Alana and Kevin picked a great week for their visit. The temperature was around 80 degrees everyday. Early this morning, that changed as rain moved in and we’ll be lucky to see 60 degrees today. The forecast looks good though, as we should be in the 70s by Friday.

*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!

Compact Discs, Family and Food

We’re ten days into February already. My perception of time gets more and more skewed as I age. We’ve been set into daily routines for most of the past week with a couple of exceptions. I haven’t been on the pickleball courts as much as I would like for a couple of reasons. First is the club’s scheduling – I can’t make much sense of how they are scheduling the courts for different levels of play. Most of the 3.5 play is 8am to 10am – I don’t play my best first thing in the morning. The other issue is wind – we’ve had a stiff breeze most mornings and I find outdoor pickleball in gusty wind to be an exercise in frustration. It becomes a game of chance, not so much skill.

A few weeks ago, we had visitors for happy hour. I had music in playing on the stereo at low volume for background sound. My friend commented that it sounded so clear and detailed. This was before I started upgrading my system and I wondered what he meant – it seemed pretty average to me. I thought about it later and came to the conclusion – it’s the general dumbing-down of sound quality.

My friend is used to streaming online music sources or MP3 files on an iPhone. These sources are so compressed that the music lacks the original detail and dynamics. He probably hadn’t listened to a compact disc in years. I read recently that last year (2021) was the first year to post a year-over-year gain in CD sales in the last 15 years! In fact, during that period, sales of vinyl records exceeded CD sales. Maybe people started to wake up and forgo the convenience of music files versus high-quality recordings. Nah, I doubt it – in the end, convenience wins.

My new Klipsch Reference R-51M bookshelf speakers arrived last Saturday. After about 12 hours of break-in and careful positioning, they sound great! The bass response is a big improvement over the Celestion DL4 speakers I had. To be fair, the Celestions are about 30 years old and the crossover network could probably benefit from fresh capacitors. But there’s no denying the bass reflex design with a rear firing port on the Klipsch speakers allows a much deeper and more powerful bass response. In fact, my Nobsound vacuum tube stereo amplifier sounds better than I ever expected it would. There’s no turning back now.

Klipsch R-51M with Tractix horn tweeter and spun copper woofer
Klipsch R-51M with grill cloth in place

Like the Celestion speaker, the Klipsch R-51M is a two-way design, meaning it has a tweeter for higher frequencies and a woofer for bass and mid-range controlled with a crossover network. Their designs differ though – Klipsch is famous for horn designs and this bookshelf speaker uses a 90-degree tractix horn tweeter and an injection-molded graphite spun copper woofer. I’m really happy I went for them.

Hopefully I’ll receive a package from TubeDepot tomorrow. I’m going to build another amplifier. I ordered the Japanese Elekit TU8200R kit. I think this will become my main stereo and I’ll set up my old speakers and the Nobsound amp in my ham shack.

I’ve read some alarming reports predicting the demise of CD music players. Here’s the situation and possible outcome. First of all, CD sales have been slow although they picked up a little steam last year. Right now, there’s a worldwide shortage of integrated circuit chipsets. This has impacted most consumer goods – everything from cars to cell phones. With CD players now a small player in consumer electronics, manufacturers aren’t prioritizing CD players for their precious chipsets – they have other goods to manufacture that are in higher demand. This in turn means that manufacturers aren’t buying the disc transport mechanisms that load CDs into the player – which means the companies that usually supply these components are moving on to other goods.

I looked at Amazon and Crutchfield and my findings seem to support this theory. Crutchfield lists 12 different CD players in their catalog, but 10 out of 12 are out of stock with no date for resupply. I have a lot of music on CDs and would hate to lose the ability to play them. Our Pioneer CD player is about 30 years old and sometimes can’t decode a disc that has dropouts. I think I’ll buy a new unit and relegate the Pioneer to the ham shack.

Donna’s golf game is improving quickly. Last week, she played her fifth game ever on the nine-hole course here at Viewpoint Golf and RV Park. She hit a bogie on one hole, made par on another and birdied a hole!

Last Sunday, we had a delightful brunch at OHSO Brewery in Gilbert with our friends Sara and Howard Graff. After brunch, we strolled the streets of old downtown Gilbert. It’s a fun place – I can remember when it was a one-horse town that was little more than a water tower and crossroads. I neglected to take photos.

On Tuesday, my daughter, Alana and her husband Kevin (collectively known as Kevlana) flew down from Washington. We had a cold one on our deck along with my middle daughter, Jamie. Then we piled into Jamie’s Passat and went to dinner at Alessia’s, an Italian restaurant a few miles from here.

Poorly focused photo – Alana and Kevin on the left, Donna and Jamie on the right

The food was excellent and we thoroughly enjoyed the time together. Yesterday, Kevin and Alana came over to golf the nine-hole course with Donna. Kevin and Alana are avid golfers and Kevin is quite good at it. Afterwards, we enjoyed lunch at Fat Willy’s, the restaurant here at Viewpoint.

Last night, we went out to eat with Kevin and Alana again at the Zushi Japanese Bistro and had Japanese beer – Kirin for me, Kevin and Alana, Asahi for Donna – and enjoyed miso soup and a platter of sushi.

Speaking of food, Donna came up with a couple of new dishes for us last week. She’s been meaning to try her hand at pizza for a while and finally got to it using the method her parents use as well as one of their old pizza pans that she brought back from her last visit.

Homemade pizza

The pizza was good, but she thinks she can improve the crust. We both thought she could use a little less sauce, but that’s just our thoughts – there wasn’t anything wrong with it.

She also made a chalupa dish by slowly cooking a boneless pork shoulder with dry pinto beans, green chiles and spices for about five hours on the stove. It was very tasty but made enough food to feed a football team. She served it over corn tortillas fried in olive oil and with a topping of tomato chunks, red onion, cotija cheese, cilantro and lettuce.

Chalupa hidden under the toppings

We vacuum packed the leftover and put two packages in the freezer – enough for two more dinners and two more lunches – a total of eight more servings.

Kevin and Alana picked the right time for an Arizona visit. It was cold last week by local standards with highs of only around 60 degrees. But that changed by Tuesday when we had upper 70s and hit 81 degrees yesterday – making an enjoyable, sunny morning on the golf course. The forecast calls for daily highs around 80 degrees for 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!

Chasing Sound

I’ve been known to chase a certain sound or tone with my guitar set-up, but I wouldn’t say I’m an audiophile by any stretch of imagination. There was a time, around 20 years ago when I got into home theater that I started down the audio rabbit hole.

I was living in Arlington, Washington at the time. I spent some time at a local hifi shop nearby in Marysville and ended up buying a 5.1 Surround System featuring Onkyo components. It wasn’t long before I wanted to upgrade. I started hanging around a higher-end shop in Seattle near the University District and started spending some money on a higher-end system – things like Rotel separates and better floor standing speakers. I had some reliability issues with this temperamental set up.

After a while, I settled on Pioneer Elite series components that served as a hifi stereo rig as well as a 5.1 Surround Sound system. I bought higher end Infinity speakers. This equipment served me well for about 10 years before it started to need repairs. I finally sold everything when we hit the road in 2013 and lowered my expectations to lo-fi iPod MP3 music storage and barely adequate speakers.

Last year, when we bought the park model home at Viewpoint, Donna found a vintage stereo system for sale here in the park. It featured a Pioneer CD player, Kenwood receiver and Celestion DL4 bookshelf speakers. The stuff was all at least 30 years old and dated, but it was better than what we had in the coach and only cost about $200 for the whole set up. We’ve had it in our Arizona Room since we moved in and enjoy listening to our CD collection again.

A few weeks ago, I got the idea that I wanted to check out vacuum tube stereo amplification. Analog circuits utilizing vacuum tubes appeal to me. They have a natural warmth to the sound due to the second order harmonics they produce as opposed to higher odd-order harmonics in solid state amplification. There are pros and cons to either approach, but old school tube amps appeal to me.

I dipped a toe in the water so to speak by buying a cheap, Chinese integrated tube amp. In my last post, it might sound like I was really beating the Chinese produced stuff down – and in a sense I guess I was. But that doesn’t mean everything from China is junk. Having said that, I take a close look at any Chinese products – it’s buyer beware.

The Chinese amplifier I bought was branded Nobsound, it comes from Douk Audio. I knew these things had some issues, but they are easily dealt with and not expensive. I did the minimum needed to improve the reliability and used the amp for a while. Then I went back in and replaced all of the capacitors. What I found was that many of the capacitors were Sam Young brand – a Korean Company that also produces electronic parts in China. They are not considered good quality and have a reputation for poor reliability. They were made to look like Japanese Nichicon products. Four of the capacitors I removed had Vishay BC branding, but I’m pretty sure these are counterfeits – not genuine parts from Austria. I bought genuine Nichicon (Japan) capacitors from Digi-Key and installed them in place of the cheap Chinese stuff.

New Nichicon capacitors in the Nobsound

The clarity of the music through this amp improved. I think I’ve taken it as far as I can go with it though. It sounds good, but I wish it had better frequency response on the bass – it rolls off somewhere around 70-100 Hz. I have about $500 in this amp at this point and I’m done trying to make it better – it would require better output transformers for any real improvement at this point and that’s too expensive for what I have here. I should mention that some Chinese audio products are quite good, like some of the Shuaguang vacuum tubes and the tubes from the unpronounceable Chinese brand Psvane.

I’m finding myself venturing down the audio rabbit hole again. In an effort to improve the bass response of my system, I ordered a pair of Klipsch Reference R -51M speakers. These are a bass reflex design speaker with a rear-firing port and horn tweeter versus the Celestion sealed cabinet speakers I now use. We have background music playing most of the day now, playing a wide variety of music from classical to jazz and rock.

I have a feeling that even with an improvement with the new speakers – I expect them to arrive on Friday – I won’t be completely satisfied. I’m contemplating building an Elekit TU8200R integrated amplifier. These come from Japan and the kits are designed by Mr. Fujita of Elekit, Japan and contain high-quality components. They are well-regarded by hifi audio enthusiasts and reviewers all agree they perform well above their price point. I can get the kit for under $1,000 and I have the skillset to build it. I’ve seen used examples selling for $1,800 on Ebay. I’ll think about it for a week or so before making the plunge.

Other than that diversion, we’ve been enjoying our usual routines here at Viewpoint Golf and RV Resort. Donna is like an Energizer bunny, always in motion for one activity or another. I’m a little more laid back but I still get my exercise on the pickleball courts and offer a 90-minute clinic every Tuesday – that’s been stretching to two hours lately as the participants don’t want to stop after an hour and a half.

Last Thursday, I went back to Dr. Kessler to address the spot of basal cell carcinoma on my back. The worst part was the injection of local anesthetic. The actual cutting and scaping with a dermatologist’s curette wasn’t felt at all. I was in and out of the office in less than half an hour. Now I just have to keep a dressing on it for about a week and it should heal.

As usual, Donna has been feeding me well – I always have to include a few dinner examples in my posts. She had a new take on chicken thighs called sheet pan roasted chicken and pears. It had a hint of spiciness from fresh ginger and a few red pepper flakes among other spices.

Sheet pan roasted chicken with pears

A couple of days later, she made a dish that was a more elegant take on the pizza chicken she makes. This had thin chicken breast filets with roasted tomatoes and mozzarella, red onion and sliced pepperoncini. She served it with spinach gnocci sauteed with fresh spinach.

Chicken with tomatoes and mozzarella

Sunday’s dinner was an old favorite – maple chipotle pork tenderloin with garlic smashed new potatoes and fresh asparagus. And it was perfectly timed and ready to eat during halftime of the NFL playoff game.

Maple chipotle pork tenderloin

We started off February with Donna manning the grill for fennel-crusted rack of lamb. She grilled it perfectly along with grilled zucchini, peppers and onions topped with feta cheese.

Rack of lamb and grilled veggies

The weather has been fabulous with daily highs in the low to mid 70s. Yesterday it clouded up in the morning and early afternoon – it almost looked like it was going to rain – but we still had a high of 68 degrees. Today and tomorrow are forecasted to be what Arizonans call “wintry weather.” The forecast high today is 60 degrees and only 58 tomorrow. We should be near 70 on Friday and back in the 70s for the weekend and week ahead. Just right for a visit from my daughter Alana and her husband, Kevin 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!