Saturday, May 1, 2021

Travel in the Time of Covid 2

Note: this is another blog based on my weekly emails to my family on the mainland.] 

May 1, 2021

Aloha Everybody --

While we were traveling in Europe it was not uncommon to pass through a town with one or more attractions that we wanted to see on our way to the day's destination and find them either closed for the day or for the hours we had before having to move on. This same thing happened to us in Charlotte NC except that we had two whole days there.

The attractions were the NASCAR Museum and the highly acclaimed Museum of the New South (i.e. post Civil War). We did manage to get to the NASCAR museum but the other was closed the entire time.

In Charlotte we stayed at the Duke Mansion in an area called Myers Park, designed by John Nolen, the same urban planner who designed Merimont in Cincinnati. Despite the sightseeing woes,  we enjoyed staying in the mansion very much -- it ranks in the top 10 of all our travels. Also, Charlotte may be short on historical sights but it has to be one of the most modern and livable cities in the country.

The weather has been a yo-yo.  Nice in Charlotte but now in the Smokies at Blowing Rock it has turned windy and cool again. It is sunny, however, and today we managed a couple of nice hikes. Having a lot of good food and excellent beer so we need to work it off!

Take care. I imagine your spring is in full swing. Enjoy!

Saturday, April 24, 2021

Traveling in the Time of Covid

[Note: this is another blog based on my weekly emails to my family on the mainland.] 

April 24, 2021

I can't believe it has been so long since we experienced traveling.  So far some aspects have been very familiar and some very different.  For example, the journey itself is normally exhausting and uncomfortable.  This time was no exception.  On all three legs of the mainland flight the planes were nearly full --very normal for us B.C. (Before Covid), and just as cramped as always. However, wearing masks was definitely not normal. (Btw, we were pleased to see that UAL rigorously enforced the mask at all times requirement.) Also, I noticed that people used the bathrooms very infrequently compared to previous trips -- either from lack of beverages or from wanting to avoid a high-risk environment. 

Our first hotel experience was also not normal --check in/check out was online with no waiting at the front desk. Indeed, so far this has been the most online trip ever. Since our last trip over 1.5 years ago we have both acquired cell data plans that keep us constantly connected to maps, gps directions, reviews of restaurants,  and in text communication with mainland and island friends. This has been very convenient at times -- limited seating at restaurants has meant making online reservations for anything decent. But we've had to learn to put our devices aside at times and just be together. 

The trip so far has reminded us that it is normal for weather in most parts of the world to be very variable and occasionally sucky. Our first day in Knoxville was very nice. The next was cold and rainy.  I have learned a very positive feature of masks is that they make good face warmers. 

I'll leave a more detailed description of what we've seen and done for another time. For now I'll just say that we're enjoying the trip overall and glad (as always) that we're making the effort. 

Take care. Stay safe and healthy. 

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Me and My Guitar Part III: Audiophonic Fermentation (?)

Decades (!) after my first encounter with the guitar I couldn't play a single recognizable song (I had long since forgotten Kumbaya and Wayfarin' Stranger).  However, I could produce some pleasing sounds by noodling around and practicing my chords -- something that has eventually become extremely important, as I'll try to make clear.

My wife and I retired in 2000 and move moved to Hawai'i a year later. The guitar she had given to me 30 years earlier successfully made the trip with us.  However, somewhere in the discombobulation I lost my pitch pipe and with it the ability to keep the guitar in tune.  For a while this didn't matter too much, because (a) I was busy with many projects around our new house and didn't play much, and (b) I could keep the guitar acceptably close to being in tune just by ear.  My intent was to eventually buy a new pitch pipe but something always seemed to get in the way.  As months and years went by the guitar got more and more out of tune and my tuning-by-ear approach didn't work.  I played less and less.

A few years ago while hiking with a new snowbird friend I found out that he was an accomplished guitar player.  When I briefed him on my own interest and my current tuning problem, he offered to tune my guitar for me and also suggested I go online and buy a cheap electronic gizmo that would allow me to easily and accurately tune it myself.  At the time I had never heard of such a thing, but it turns out there are several different brands of these nifty little things, most of them less than $20.  They clip onto the guitar and register the frequency of the string that is vibrating, transforming it into a visual display that shows how close it is to a particular note. By watching the display as you turn the tuning knobs you can dial precisely the correct tension for each string.  Damn!  Not only is this gadget helpful for those of us who don't have perfect pitch, it also has many of the characteristics of a Geezer Techno-Toy -- it's cheap, has colored lights, involves sounds, and runs on batteries.  Sold! A few days later mine arrived in the mail and it has changed everything.

My Friend

For the first time ever I began playing regularly.  At first this was mainly rediscovering the basics and toughening up the fingertips of my left hand.  Most beginning guitar players have to go through the somewhat painful process of building up callouses that come from pressing down with your fingers on thin strings of metal or nylon.  Gradually I could play longer and longer without pain, but initially five or ten minutes was all I could take.  Today there doesn't seem to be a limit.

So what do I play?  This is where it gets a little weird.

As I've continued to "noodle around" I find I really like the melodies that emerge from sequences of chords that I seem to choose almost randomly.  Not only that, but I can now pluck individual notes within the chords -- something I've never done before -- and this adds interesting variation and complexity to the sound.  But the really weird part is that I'm doing this without really thinking about it or intentionally choosing the chord sequence or the notes.  I find myself just listening to what is being produced and being amazed at how pleasing it sounds.  If I start to focus on the mechanics of playing or on consciously trying to choose chords or notes, the whole thing goes sour and falls apart.

I don't know where this music comes from.  It certainly isn't from any natural talent that has ever been apparent before, nor is it the result of disciplined study and practice, as I'm sure I've made clear in recounting my saga.  As a crackpot pseudo-explanation I offer the term "audiophonic fermentation," an invented process whereby my brain has absorbed decades of visual and auditory encounters with guitar music and performance and somehow processed it into a potentiality for musical expression. (Wow, my knack for b.s. is still intact!).  Anyway, it is certainly enjoyable to be able to do something now that I couldn't do in my younger years, contrary to the usual Geezer trajectory of losing function.

Over time I've created a number of "structures" or "sequences" each with a different tonal quality and progression. I can choose to return to one of these, but once I begin to play the pattern takes on new nuances and embellishments that I don't plan nor consciously control.  An overly generous and limiting name for these structures would be "tunes" or "songs."  At present there are about a dozen of these, giving me a "repertoire" of roughly 40 minutes of music.

I should emphasize that this new-found skill is restricted to making stuff up -- I still can't play any well-known specific song, nor can I mimic a musical piece that I hear being performed by someone else.  However, what I invent does have a vague similarity to music I've listened to over the years,  and I can often detect the general influence of certain favorite performers and genres.  Maybe it's part of the "audiophonic fermentation" process -- my brain has extracted and distilled music I like down to different patterns of "potentialities" that are favored when I noodle around.

Some people have suggested that maybe this is the time to take lessons and develop my skill in a disciplined way, or that I try harder to perform known songs.  I'm not interested in doing either of these, at least for the time being.  For one thing, my childhood aversion to formal training has stuck with me.  A more palatable alternative is the rich trove of excellent instructional videos available now online, and I've sampled a number of them.  Although I get some good tips from these, I've found that attempting to copy the style or technique of the teacher leads to a degradation of my own.  I also don't have much interest in learning songs or tunes that other people might recognize because my current goal isn't to entertain other people -- it's a more selfish goal to explore a creativity I never knew I had.  If people like what I play, I am certainly appreciative.  But my main motivation is to produce new music that I enjoy.

It's also been suggested that I should buy a better guitar now that I'm taking it seriously. I've looked at a number of them and so far in every case decided that my old guitar sounds better.  It may be my pro-geezer bias operating, but I swear that my old Aria has a resonance and tone that the new ones don't have.  If I find one that is truly better, not just newer and more expensive, I might buy it.  But for now I'm following the example of Willie Nelson, who refuses to give up his 50-year old "Trigger" even though the sounding board is starting to look like Swiss cheese. [Take a look at this great video made by the man who is entrusted to care for Trigger, and also this one where Willie tells the story of Trigger.]

There are a few lessons from this 55-year saga.  First, never assume your abilities and limitations are fixed, nor that you even truly know what they are.  Processes we aren't aware of can lead to some very surprising developments in what you can and cannot do.  Second, conscious awareness isn't always necessary or even desirable for controlling behavior. There is an interplay or a balance between conscious and non-conscious control that can produce some astonishingly positive outcomes.  Finally, sometimes even very small things we do for other people can have dramatic effects on their lives. There are several examples of this in my guitar saga, but the most recent obvious ones are the impact of my friend's casual remark about electronic tuners and his spending 5 minutes to retune my guitar.  These small acts have opened up a whole new world of experience for me at just the right time in my life to me to greatly appreciate.  Me and my guitar are very thankful..... 

Saturday, April 17, 2021

Medical News, Travel Prep

 [Note: this is another blog based on my weekly emails to my family on the mainland.] 

4/17/21

 Medical News, Travel Prep

Aloha Everyone –

I see from my daily weather reports that you seem to be into some nice spring weather.  Our rainy spell has at least temporarily let up, and we’ve had a string of gorgeous days, highs in the low 80's and a cranking PV system.  The pool has been a comfy 80-84d and we’ve really been enjoying it.  Of course, during our trip we will leave the cover off for our pool service to have easier access, and that will likely drop it down into the chilly range by the time we return.  Another reason for leaving the cover off is that we are due for a new one – they last about 3 years here and it has to be handled delicately. I’ve been having trouble this time finding one locally and online.  This will be a top priority project when we return. It’ll work out somehow, I’m sure.

Last Saturday I had my eyeball exam, about 6 weeks out from my last injection.  Nothing but good news, I’m happy to report.  Absolutely no sign of edema, low pressures, and I even picked up a couple of lines in the acuity test for my right eye – 20/60!  I did a central visual test this time – like the usual field test but the gazillion little dots of light appear in the center of your vision rather than out to the side.  Naturally it showed my right eye is a mess, but my doctor said that even so it looked a little better than the last time I had it done, not because the cells have come back alive but because the absence of goo allowed the ones that are left to function as well as they can.  Next exam will be May 23rd, and by then I am likely to need another shot, but I’m delighted with the longer intervals this new drug, Eylea, seems to allow.  On that front I also received good news this week – my insurance (Medicare/Aetna) has once again approved coverage for 6 months, until October. Good news for the wallet, since the uncovered cost to me could be north of $1k.

Also in medical news is that I had a pretty strong reaction to that shingles shot, and it took a few days to recover – mainly fatigue and a sore arm.  Karen wasn’t as bad as I was, but it definitely put me down big time – even more than the second Covid shot.  The alternative of getting Shingles, though, is way, way worse, so I’m quite ok with it.

Most of our time this week, aside from Karen’s golf and our workout at PF, has been dedicated to getting the house ready for our trip.  This mostly means getting our monthly trimming and cleaning done now so we can do it again when we return.  The gardening stuff is essential – to leave it for that long would produce a jungly mess, even though we have a gardener who works on the front area every couple of weeks. I’m also concerned that while I’m gone the coquis will move in without me here to catch them.  Of course I can get them when we return, but I don’t want to give them time to mate and start producing little coquis that I’ll have to deal with.  The best I can do is make sure we’re free of them at the moment and then be extra vigilant when we get back.

Ok, that’s about it.  I’ll try to write a couple of quick updates while we’re on the road.  Take care, stay healthy, and enjoy your spring flowers!

Saturday, April 10, 2021

Dinner With Friends, Two Toys, Another Virus Vanquished

 [Note: this is another blog based on my weekly emails to my family on the mainland.]

4/10/21

Aloha All –

Last Saturday evening we drove up to Waikaloa Village (about 30 miles north) and had a very good Italian dinner with mainland friends spending the winter with their daughter, who is a teacher in Waimea. It was a beautiful afternoon drive along the upper road with a brief stop at Makani Golf Course (the one where Karen saw

the 40-50 Nenes) to admire the Jacarandas, which are tall, stately flowering trees that bloom each spring for several weeks.  Since we arrived early at the restaurant, we decided to drive on down to the coast to assess the tourist population in the rental condo complexes in the Waikaloa resort area.  When we were there last summer it was a ghost town, and very eerie.  This time it was really jumping and nearly every parking lot was full – clearly one of the sources of our newly returned traffic jams. Anyway, we enjoyed dinner and seeing our friends (all of us are now vaccinated, so we were pretty relaxed being with them).

Speaking of vaccinated, on Thursday after our Planet Fitness workout we both had doses of the newest Shingles vaccine.  This was Karen’s second shot and my first.  Like the Pfitzer Covid 19 vaccine, this is also a two-shot combo administered about 2-6 months apart.  I was very relieved that Karen is now protected, because as you may recall, I had Shingles about 6 years ago and it is a really, really, painful experience that is best avoided.  We both had received the older vaccine, but it was only about 60% effective, and I was one of the unlucky 40% .  The new vaccine is over 90% effective.  I might have some immunity from having had Shingles, but I’m not taking any chances.  It is a long-lasting and sometimes excruciating rash that in my case reset my pain scale upward by a couple of notches.
    
Early in the week I finished setting up a new receiver that drives our home entertainment system.  The old one developed a problem holding a wireless signal, so it was time to upgrade.  The setup wasn’t too bad, except that the connections were close together on the back of the unit and it took me a couple of tries to get all them on tight.  Another techno-toy I played with this week was a new router.  The cheap unit I got to quickly get us connected again worked ok, but once I had a chance to do more research on the latest and greatest technology available, I decided it was time to go up the a more high-powered unit.  I ordered one online and I got it set up on Wednesday.  The installation went ok, except for way too many wasted hours and angst caused by putting the internet cable in the wrong slot.  Once I figured that out it all went smoothly, and the transfer speeds and strength of the signal are definitely better.  I’ll probably keep the other new one as a backup or I may try to sell it online.

Ok, that’s it for the week.  We’re going to be busy with our trip preparations next week, but I’ll try to send one more update before we leave.  

Take care.  Stay safe, enjoy your spring.

Saturday, April 3, 2021

40-50 Nenes, A House Guest, A “Lolo” Market

 [Note: this is another blog based on my weekly emails to my family on the mainland.]

 4/3/21
                                       
Aloha All –

This week we hosted our first house guest since the Pandemic began.  She was our good friend from Oregon, the wife of my old hiking buddy.  He didn’t come for health reasons, but she was here for about 10 days, three nights of which she stayed with us.  All of us have had our Covid 19 shots so we weren’t likely to infect each other.  Btw, two pieces of good news this week were that there is now data showing the Pfizer vaccine is highly effective against the new SA strain and preliminary data that show it is also highly effective in preventing asymptomatic cases (i.e., people who are spreading the virus but don’t know it, like some of those who have been vaccinated might be doing).  Since she had lived here at one time we didn’t have to do any tour guide duties, and just enjoyed hanging out.  Karen and she played golf at a course further north than Karen’s usual spot – another beautiful upslope venue with a great view of the northern coast.  It also had Nenes – even more than Makalei.  Karen estimated a total of 40-50!  Their abundance no doubt led some visitor golfers to think they were just ordinary geese, a nuisance in some places on the mainland, rather than the endangered and very unique Hawai’i state bird.

Our geckos continue to rebound after the tenting, and are slowly reappearing at the breakfast table down by the pool.  They’re also reappearing inside, including in the guest quarters where our friend was staying.  In fact, the day after she left we caught two that had taken up residence there and transported them to a new home way down the street.  Unlike the coqui frogs we catch, which we humanely freeze to death, we give our gecko captives another chance by releasing them outside.  We learned early on, however, that unless we took them far away they just returned, and being wise to us they were harder to catch the next time.

Our return to normalcy has continued to bring with it some negative aspects.  For one, the number of Covid 19 cases is rising again both statewide and on our island.  As I’ve reported before, the cases aren’t coming from tourists but from locals giving it to each other in social gatherings.  Right now the Hilo side is leading the number of new cases, but there are some are on our side as well.  So far the situation isn’t out of control. Most people (92%) are wearing masks in public settings, and we’re going pretty fast in terms of vaccinations (about 30% of the island have been immunized so far).  And as I mentioned last time, the influx of tourists and more people returning to their jobs has produced terrible traffic jams, maybe even worse than before the pandemic and definitely worse that last week.

And Sold in A Few Days
The pandemic has led to a housing market here (and as we understand it on the mainland in certain desirable areas) that is “lolo” – “crazy” and a bit disconcerting.  A number of houses have sold online to mainland buyers who haven’t even seen the property in person.  Prices have gone absurdly high in just a few months – many houses sell within a few days for more than the asking price and for cash.  The buyers seem to be young mainland professionals with deep pockets who can work remotely and are looking for a pleasant place to live.  We’ve seen these bubbles before, and sooner or later they burst, but for now the realtors are raking in the commissions and living large.

Ok, that’s all for now.  Off to market and our beach breakfast picnic.  Stay safe, enjoy your spring, and keep your eye on the light at the end of the tunnel.

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Me and My Guitar Part II: Kumbaya (Sort Of)

After my aborted introduction to playing a musical instrument (the accordion, aka "The Refrigerator") ended with my broken left wrist at around age 10 or 12,  for a number of years my only experience at playing music was "Chopsticks" and the first few bars of "Blue Moon" on available pianos. I frankly can't recall how or when I learned to play these, but their simplicity as well as the keyboard similarity to a concert accordion made it pretty easy to do.  However, although I like listening to piano music very much,  I never had any interest in playing it seriously.

Fast forward to college days.  A couple of my new friends played the guitar.  And not tunes like "Turkey in the Straw" that I had played on my accordion or "Chopsticks" on shared pianos, but songs by very popular folk performers of the time (the 60's) like The Kingston Trio, Peter, Paul, and Mary, Joan Biaz, Pete Seiger, Judy Collins, The New Christy Minstrels (youngsters, please use Google to identify these people).  The guitar was an instrument that drew positive attention whenever it was played in a dorm room or at an informal gathering, and those who knew how to play it were admired and exuded "coolness."  This was way different (i.e., better) than the accordion and I wanted to learn to play it.

My friends taught me a few basic cords and strumming techniques on their guitars, and I would borrow an instrument to practice whenever I could.  But I couldn't afford to buy my own guitar and I never got beyond a very rudimentary level of playing.  My chord changes were slow, awkward, and sloppy.  I became aware that my left wrist had a permanent limitation that was probably the result of a lack of physical therapy after my childhood break (the expert therapy available today would undoubtedly have led to a better outcome).  This made certain chord positions very difficult for me and to this day they present special challenges to playing. Nevertheless, I was able to produce some pleasing sounds and even managed a halting rendition of a couple of cheesy songs -- "Kumbaya," and "Wayfarin' Stranger."  My informal lessons and playing sessions didn't get me very far in terms of mastering the guitar, but they showed me that it was possible to really enjoy playing a musical instrument -- something that had never happened with the accordion.

Aria AC-6, Age 50+
Fast forward past school days to the early 70's.  My wife bought me what has turned out to be one of the most enduring and impactful gifts ever -- my own guitar.  This was in 1972 or 1973, and I still have it today, almost 50 years later (!).  In those early days we were just starting out and didn't have a lot of money to spend on something like this, but nevertheless she got me a very good "entry-level" guitar -- an Aria AC-6 classical acoustic model that she bought with the advice of the owner of our local musical instrument store.  The Aria company is still in business, and their guitars generally get pretty good reviews. Mine has the advantage that age has given it a deep, mellow resonance that only comes from guitar geezerhood.

I'm afraid I didn't do my gift justice, however. I was fully absorbed in my career,  as well as working around our new house, and indulging our passion for travel. Guitar playing was not a high priority but I would occasionally get it out and try to recover what little skill I had achieved earlier.  I couldn't remember the chords to any tunes, but in trying to reproduce them I discovered that just noodling around and faking it could sound pretty good.  I also found that playing for playing's sake, without regard for looking "cool" or emulating a popular performer, was very satisfying.

If I would have had more time and commitment I might have approached learning the guitar in a more formal and structured way by taking lessons from someone.  However, my childhood experience with the accordion left me with an aversion to playing scales and practicing the same thing over and over.  Although this might have led to a higher level of proficiency than I have now, it is more likely the guitar would have joined my accordion in that great music store in the sky -- in the Used Instrument Section.

So, for the next 30 years my guitar and I had a sort of "companionable neglect" relationship.  Every once in a while I would get it out and together we would amiably explore my incompetence.  I always liked these sessions, though, and vowed at the end of each to do them more often -- but then didn't follow through.  Even after I retired it took another 15 years before I finally began to give my guitar playing a real chance to develop.  It has turned out to be one of the most positive aspects of my Geezerhood, but not in a way I could have predicted, as I'll try to explain next time.

Next up -- I discover why the guitar is often described as a very "personal" instrument.