Monday, April 25, 2011

Maymont

Why not write about Maymont park?
I will never forget the large iron gates at the front. The park itself got its start when James and Sallie Doolie purchased the land in the late 1800s. Mr. Dooley struck it mega rich in the railroad business in the same era as famous richers as Carnegie and Vanderbilt. Over the years he and his wife (mostly his wife) compiled a grand array of worldly flora. Their house was pretty snazzy to. On their death, the couple left their house to the city of Richmond. Under the city's management, the estate became a public park, but maintenance efforts were far from sufficient. The condition of the estate continued to decline until the Maymont Foundation was given control. 

Dooley Estate







Sunday, April 24, 2011

Absent Minded




Sometimes I need to pay more attention; in my last post I mentioned nothing of its intended message. What I meant to discuss was one of the latest endeavors of professional billionaire Richard Branson. As if space travel wasn't enough, he has recently formed Virgin Oceanic, dedicated to exploring the deepest of the seas. If successful, the craft (above) will be able to "fly" up and down through the ocean layers and dive deeper  than any current submersible. This is a huge step from the previous record holder, the bathyscaphe Trieste, which could neither steer nor propel itself forward. The goals of the project are to provide new research and exploration opportunities and to pave the way for more advanced vehicles with sample taking equipment in the future. For current missions, unmanned camera pods will drop to the sea floor to film the sub and take samples. At the end of each expedition the pods will drop their weights and float to the surface.      And I think that is nifty

Monday, April 18, 2011

2.2853987 leagues under the Sea

 It recently occoured to me that the title 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea must be hyperbole (assuming that there isn't explanation in the book, which there may be as I have never read it). 20,000 leagues is just over 60 miles,  far deeper than the 11,034 meters(2.2853987 leagues) of the deepest depths of the Marianas trench. According to my calculations(which I believe underestimate actuality as I haven't the mathematical wherewithal to factor in the pressure and gravity gradients as given by this equationp(z)=\frac{1}{A}\int_{z_0}^z dz' \iint\limits_A dx' dy'\, \rho (z') g(z') = \int_{z_0}^z dz'\, \rho (z') g(z') ) the pressure at 60 miles would be 71 tons per square inch. To visualize...
about 71 tons or 142,000 lbs
Even still, the real deepest depths of the oceans, known as the hadal zones (from the word Hades), are far from accustomed to exploration . As a result, nearly nothing is known about the deepest of the deep. (I  wish I knew that before I started a research paper on it)

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

303

Can't think
muuuust use writing proooooompts
here we go   prompt 303 from creativewritingprompts.com   I am supposed to (and also did)  start off with the sentence in blue  Also, if you know what Jason Statham sounds like in the movie the transporter (less British than usual), you know what the first man in the story sounds like/looks like(except darker skin and black hair)   Although, now that I think about it, he only has one line, so he isn't that important, but whatever.

          Catching a signal from one of her friends, Angela brushed her skirt, took a deep breath and walked towards where he was sitting. He wore only black : black long sleeved button down shirt, sleeves rolled up, black dress pants. His buzzed black hair stood straight  "Do you think it's warm here," she asked while nervously looking around. "A little," his response was abrupt, rehearsed; standing tall he joined her. Together they purposefully  approached the exit exchanging not so much as a quick glance. Not even the intense excitement Angela's friend experienced completely distracted her from guilt, "I should have gone"
          five minutes later, with a too big backpack and a smile to match, Angela appeared at the doorway alone and ushered her friend outside.   
Ms. Nelson confidently approached, with a spark in her stride, a man, who matched the description: tall, buzzed black hair, black shirt. "Do you think it's warm in here?" he turned around looking surprised. "Not with my fancy new shirt" he slurred"It breathes." Her anger and confusion could be mistaken for nothing else as she abruptly turned around and left the lounge fearing the worst. Once outside, walking to the parking lot, she reached into her purse for her cigarettes and noticed something amiss.She had been right.

Cheeses of life(Ode to Cheese)

CORN ALERT


Cheese Ahoy! 
   Were it not mirrored by the oh so flavorful endeavors of life, it would be so that I may be unaware to the smelly delight!   


               Aged sharp cheddar white, Cheshire delight, and good old Saga Blue
Within these few there is not but truth, a waxed and and amber hue 
   whether riddled with holes or specks of blue, what cheese may please you no tyrant can ever undo

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Bad Mood, Good mood


          The view out to Lilly Avenue from the fourth floor east side window of the Brookdale apartment building, the only window in Mclarence Woodrow's dingy two room apartment, was incredibly dull and, by extension, ached with despair. Grey tree bark lazily grabbed at sullen grey clouds as fat raindrops, bone chilling, splashed into deep muddy slush puddles for an altogether greyer than grey scene. It was, in fact, so mind numbingly dull, and indeed ached so strongly with despair that a majority of local commuters chose to bypass it on the new route 86 despite its lengthy wraparound. While most avoided this street at all cost, Mr. Woodrow found the view from his fingerprint laden window comforting.  Above and below him, although no proof existed, Mclarence remained certain that the neighbors were enjoying a veritable Disney Land of glee. "Two thousand," he said in a distinctly deep and monotonous voice as he listlessly slid from his bed,"two hundred," his speech was labored and grew slower with each  utterance,"and seventy three." Mclarence had  a strange habit of counting; this number, which increased by exactly one exactly every day, remained entrenched in his mind more than even his own birth day. While shaving he cut himself and could not, for the life of him or another, tell if it  was a accident or not. "How dreadful," he said in a slightly reminiscent tone as hot red blood swirled down the musty grey drain. He watched the crimson circus with a distant shameful look, as though lost in thought."But on this matter," he once said,"There is only feeling." Neglecting to tend to his wounds, Mclarence wandered into the kitchen where he fixed himself a bowl of oatmeal, plain, and a  mug of warm water while teetering back and fourth on the familiar red stool.  Sadly, this just about this sums up Mr. Woodrow's contemporary existence. A few short years ago he amassed a small fortune to last him for the rest of his life, providing that he resided in the dingy fourth floor apartment on Lilly Avenue and avoided such luxuries as cinnamon or chairs, and that's what he did.  Mr. Woodrow spent the majority of his days, not quite under pressure, far from ease in the familiar red stool with a wobbly leg, always unsure.

          "The upside to being in a wheelchair," she thought,"Is that everyone is so friendly and helpful." Elizabeth Meyers slowly made her way down a glorious sweeping staircase on the vertical chair lift at her office, smiling and greeting familiar co-workers along the way. While wheeling across the pristine marble lobby floor of what was, in her opinion, the prettiest of all buildings in town her thought continued,"I also get a better parking spot than my boss." Now outside, she cast her view skyward at the glimmering structure for what must have been the thousandth time and was amazed that the building continued to woo her. Its speckled marble modern Greek architecture and intricate Corinthian columns never failed to instill awe in Ms. Meyers. With slightly more effort than the average person, she and her chair were strapped in and ready for the drive home. The interior of Elizabeth's car, at first glance, held no marked differences from all others, but on closer inspection one could deduce that it had been modified for the average paraplegic. The throttle and brakes, instead of their traditional homes on the floor, resided on the steering wheel." I can't believe that they make cars just for people just like me," Elizabeth said excitedly to herself," I mean, how many of these could they sell?" Her intense brown curls boinged as she checked, first left, then right, and pulled out onto N. Fifth Street.  The exceedingly bright dusk sunlight which probed her eyes, a light that would annoy even the most calm spirited and battle hardened of road warriors simply invigorated Ms. Meyers. The very idea that she could perceive this slight nuisance, or indeed anything at all, overjoyed her to the extent that it was no bother. "Now I get to try my new sunglasses," she giggled. They were rater sporty. Even the flow of traffic towards impending gridlock on route 86 failed to dampen spirits. To Elizabeth, it was just an opportunity to fiddle with the radio and maybe discover a new favorite song. She continued in these spirits for some time. It was only after 45 minutes or so that she finally discovered the ghastly cause of the bottleneck, a bone chilling reminder.
           The sky was grey that night. It had been some six long years since then but she could distinctly remember the impact, the flow of rosy hue into tall grass, gravel cuts and thunder, darkness, but strangely, most of all, forgiveness. It was through forgiveness that she found her strength. "Despite all odds," she recalled the voice of the midnight surgeon more than even her own mother's,"We think she is going to make it." Elizabeth only hoped that wherever he was, whatever he was doing,  he could find forgiveness within himself for what he had done; it was, after all, an accident. She had never seen anyone so hurt as him that night.

Monday, February 14, 2011

spread the word!

In my sporadic attendance of high school I picked up few math tricks, but the holistic concept behind most areas of mathematics evaded me. Now that I am actually trying to do well I regret the many many holes in my mathematical knowledge. Until recently I was slowly filling them with scraps of info and deduction.                              
    now something is different. What once was a snail's exodus from ignorance has beautifully transformed into a cheetah' s  race for knowledge.  What has changed?  
One disembodied voice, with the goal of knowledge to all has brought me to the promise land of A hood with his brilliant internet knowledge emporium.   This splen-da- wonder-tacular-iforus website has thousands of ridiculously informative math lessons from basic addition to complex differential calculus. In addition to math there is information on finance/economics, organic/inorganic chemistry, biology, physics, cosmology, history, and more.          
  If you miss a class go to this website; what you missed is probably there.