myweekandwelcometoit

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Nifty Fifty

Hello World,

I'm happy to report that I have returned safe and sound from Vacation Land, and lived to tell the tale, which is always my favorite way to travel. Actually, my vacation started early this year, because we opened vacation presents on Thursday instead of waiting until Saturday. We both got some practical vacation items, like sunscreen and beach towels, as well as other interesting items of a non-vacation-related variety, but none the less appreciated for all that. I'm afraid I jinxed Bill by getting him what I thought was an adorable cat-shaped gel pack, called a Boo Boo Buddy, which you put in the freezer and then apply to an injury to make it feel better. It only took until Sunday for him to walk into a tree root and hurt his toe, so I guess the Boo Boo Buddy did its job of causing an injury in order to make itself useful. Even though both cars were all packed and ready to go, the check-in time at the park is 3 PM, so there's no point in getting there too early, so we didn't leave until after 11:00, and soon had reason to regret it. We got stuck in the worst traffic in the Bronx, which turned out not to be road construction or accidents, but just too much traffic, and we couldn't even use the walkie-talkies to keep us company between both cars, because some surly truck driver kept breaking in on the same frequency. Later, Bill said that he checked his GPS device and found that we had been on the road for 47 minutes, traveled 10 miles, and averaged a whopping 4.5 MPH during that time. Fortunately, the problem cleared up after the bridge, and the rest of the way was smooth sailing in comparison.

We finally got to the park, hot and bedraggled, but late enough that they let us check right in and go to our sites, which it seemed were the only two open campsites out of 250 in the whole place. Alert readers may recall that I reserve the site behind mine, so that the previous campers don't erect their tent too close to the back of my site, but one thing I wasn't expecting this time around, was that the people on the corner were using my campsite to park their car on. I had to leave my car over on the other side by the gully, because the way they had everything set up, if they couldn't drive out through my site, their only other option would be to drive over their own tent. (I will not say that we did anything to chase them, but I will admit to unseemly rejoicing when they left on Sunday.) We tossed up both tents in a hurry and left everything else for later, and even Bill would agree that going down to the beach for the first time in a year was a special treat, and one that never fails to delight. The weather was glorious and the water was exceptional, and the cheese fries were just as we remembered them. All the aggravation of being stuck in traffic, and encroaching neighbors at the site, seemed to all drain away in the sun, surf, sand and gentle breezes that have been a tonic to weary souls the world over since time immemorial, and I ought to know.

Later, we dropped our wet things at the site and headed to our next destination, the Comfort Inn on Route 112 in Medford, which is just the latest in a series of hotel experiments over the years for us. It turned out to be very nice and inexpensive, especially compared to the more tourist-oriented hotels in Riverhead where we usually stay, and usually with very mixed results. Bill liked the flat panel TV with many of his favorite cable channels from home, and since he brought his laptop, he was able to make use of their in-room WIFI as well. Since the tavern at the hotel was closed for renovations, we had dinner at the nearby Metropolis Diner just down the road. (Here, I would be remiss if I didn't mention my favorite menu item from the diner, which I found at the top of their Finger Foods section, and was described as a Crock of Chili. I can't help but think that their idea of "finger foods" and mine must be completely different, because eating chili with your fingers is a concept which I hope will never catch on, at least in my lifetime.) In the morning, they provide a wonderful breakfast buffet, with a tempting assortment of muffins, bagels, French toast, waffles, rolls, fruit, eggs, cereal, coffee and juice, plus a charming alcove to enjoy it in. We considered the hotel a real find, especially after some of the duds that we stayed in previously. The funniest thing that happened was when Bill brought in the GPS from the car for safekeeping, and it woke us up in the middle of the night, shouting: "In point two miles, turn left! Turn left!" I said to Bill that the poor Nuvi lady was having nightmares of being stuck in traffic in the Bronx for an hour, and I can't say that I blame her.

We went back to the beach on Sunday, with more beautiful conditions, and not at all crowded. This gave Bill the opportunity to rescue what he thought was a drowned G.I. Joe doll out of the rocks, but turned out instead to be professional wrestler "HBK" Shawn Michaels of the WWE. He was none the worse for wear, except for a broken finger, although when Bill found him, his head was turned completely around to the back, which as wrestling moves go, probably doesn't have much to recommend it. Bill went home in the afternoon, so that he could go back to work and hold down the fort during the week, and did his usual bang-up job at it. I set up the rest of the site with the tables and chairs and shelves that I need, and even though it was crowded at the park early on the weekend, I had no trouble identifying the spy site, which this year was handily located right along with me on the inside circle of C Section. A camp site full of spies is easily recognized, because it always has a tent but no kitchen, no sign of occupancy no matter what time of day or night, no food or related products on the picnic table or grill, no indication of what the supposed occupants could be doing all day (for instance, fishing rods, kayaks, backpacks, bicycles or the like) and no car. It wasn't until after 10 PM that the spies came back to the site, and they turned out to be a young couple with two rambunctious boys, which I personally think it a brilliant disguise for espionage agents.

By Monday afternoon, the spies and I were all that was left in C Section, and they were gone every morning by 7 AM and didn't return until late at night. It didn't take long to discover what I referred to as "The 7:30 Deer," because I kept bumping into them in the street behind my campsite when I would walk around the park after dinner, and they showed up every night like clockwork. At that time of day, it's still perfectly light out, and the interesting thing about deer at Wildwood is that there is nothing for them to blend in with, because that distinctive faun color stands out no matter where they are. By the time I thought to bring my camera with me, everyone else had spotted them also, and so a couple of bad, blurry pictures are all I have to show for it, as they retreated back into the woods from the surging humanity. One day when I was walking back from the beach, I stepped over a twig that looked like a snake, and it occurred to me for the first time, that there are no snakes at Wildwood, and I had never seen or heard of any, after all these years out there. I think it was the very next day, when I spotted a tiny snake that had been run over in the road behind my site, which as bizarre coincidences go, ranks right up there with clockwork deer. So I thought this was an unusual year for wildlife, with a few new wrinkles left in the old campground still.

In another new wrinkle, for a place that should pretty much have all the wrinkles ironed out by now, I found the soda machine by the ladies room was working, but had no iced tea for me to have with my breakfast, so it was a long trek to the Registration Building every morning to use the soda machine there. Speaking of wrinkles, Bill reminded me that this would be the anniversary of my 50th year at Wildwood, although I have no independent corroboration of that, since the first pictures I can find of us camping are from 1959. But it's a legend in the family that our first year out there was when I was 4 years old in 1958, so I celebrated this as my 50th year, in spite of a lack of proof. During the off-season, the park maintenance crew tried to level off the trail from the park to the beach hill, ostensibly as an improvement, but they covered it with sharp treacherous stones which cut right through my beach shoes, so that for the first time in my life, I was reduced to taking "the fuddy duddy hill" for old geezers and little old ladies instead, and leaving the trail to the young whipper-snappers and daredevils with sturdy shoes. I couldn't scare up a WIFI signal with my laptop anywhere in the park, so I finally asked them at the Registration Building, and they admitted there was none, and in fact, didn't know of any in the surrounding towns either. As long as I was there, I asked about movies, since I hadn't seen any mention of them, and thought they might have discontinued this feature. Oh no, they assured me, they have them every Wednesday night in the parking lot. When I pointed out that there was no schedule to show what movies they were playing in which weeks, they seemed blissfully unconcerned, which is the kind of entertainment "pig in a poke" that I wouldn't expect to catch on in this information-saturated society nowadays.

It seems that on Tuesdays, they send the bulldozer around to re-allocate the picnic tables, so there's only one on each site, and on Thursdays, they have an enormous tractor that goes around and cuts the grass, which is a new one on me, and don't forget, I've been going there for 50 years, give or take. In a funny (not "ha-ha" funny) development, I had devised an elaborate contraption whereby I could secure my wallet in the car, which is a hatchback and has no trunk, and without keeping the doors locked, which is a nuisance when you use your car as a pantry, as I do. It involved chains and padlocks and lots of metal grating, and when I finally got it all set up, and was ready to put my wallet in there for safekeeping, this was the first I realized that I had left my wallet in the hotel suitcase, which had gone home with Bill on Sunday night. I still had my camping wallet with my vacation money, but no credit cards or checks, or my drivers license, for that matter. I couldn't even go to the bank and get more money, and I was faced with the daunting prospect of filling the car with gas and buying myself dinner all week, plus supplies if I needed any, with just the money I brought with me. I thought I was doing okay in the $5 range at McDonald's and the pizzeria, but when I blew $8.15 at the deli and another $11.10 at the Italian bistro, plus $20 at the gas station and $10 for camera batteries, things were starting to look pretty bleak on the financial horizon. On Thursday, I called Bill and asked him to make sure he brought along the suitcase when he came back out on Saturday, so at least I would have my license to drive home with, but Bill who is nothing if not gallant, left work in the middle of the day and drove 100 miles back out to Wildwood to bring me my wallet, like the Cavalry riding to the rescue of the beleaguered outpost. He joined me for another nice, if unexpected, day at the beach, and then we had dinner at the nearby Greek Island Restaurant, where they have the nerve to charge $9 for what is essentially two small pieces of fried cheese, which would certainly not have been on my budget plan without Bill picking up the tab. Believe me, I'm sure the President's economic advisers were glad that Bill came back with my wallet, because the next morning, I rushed out to the stores and spent about $150 on things I didn't need, with the giddy abandon of a prisoner who has been given a reprieve by the governor.

Friday morning, I realized that I still had more firewood than I needed for one last campfire that night, so I carried a bunch that had been scavenged from other campsites, and left it on the platform up the hill, for whoever would be camping there next to enjoy. When campers showed up at that site after dinner, I noticed that someone else had already come along and filched the purloined firewood before the new people arrived, which unfortunately proves that there is no honor among firewood thieves nowadays, that's for sure. Then on Saturday morning, I was trying to get an early start on packing things up, but instead ended up trudging around the park to three different soda machines, lost $1.50 in them, and still got no iced tea to have with my Twinkies. I was reduced to making warm instant lemonade from a mix instead, which had little enough to recommend it, and had just barely started on my packing when Bill showed up really early to help, and brought iced tea with him. We packed up the campsite and checked out, then spent a lovely last day at the beach, although a little more crowded than we would have preferred. We stopped at the gas station before starting for home, and because I had spent so much time using the lever on the floor to open the hatchback during the week, when I pulled up to the pump, I inadvertently opened the hatchback instead of the gas cap, which must have surprised the heck out of the man trying to pump the gas. We got home without incident, and had a nice dinner at the diner, and after we unloaded the cars and I was sorting through my belongings, I discovered that I came home with nothing but $8.75 left of my vacation money, so that's my idea of a good vacation, and a 50th anniversary that I can live with.

Friday, July 11, 2008

Age of Miracles

Hello World,

Well, I don't know about anyone else, but I can't say that this week has had a whole lot to recommend it around here. Last week was a short week because of Independence Day falling on a Friday, and as short weeks go, it was a pretty typical madhouse at work. Because I also planned to take off Friday this week, I knew that would be two short weeks in a row, with the added disadvantage that I had two meetings to go to after work, on Tuesday and Thursday. We also had a staff meeting at work on Monday, as well as the Safety Fair on Wednesday, and even though the hospital management can't tell us it's mandatory, we're still expected to go and be safe. (Although I am the only Lutheran person I know at work, the hospital seems to understand what the Children of the Reformation have long since learned, that if you want people to show up at something, you need to serve them food, so there was that incentive at the Safety Fair, which I'm sure improved the attendance dramatically.) Between the short work week and the extra-curricular activities, it was an uphill battle for four days trying to get anything done, especially since I intended to leave work early on Thursday besides. The fact that I accomplished anything at all under those conditions, without jumping out a window (and please don't think that I didn't have a list of people I was planning to drag along with me) can only be attributed to Divine Intervention, proving once again that the age of miracles has not passed, and a lucky thing at that.

Now, having said that however, I do have to point out that although this wasn't much of a week in many ways, it was still worth it in the end, because all of the craziness was just a prelude to my vacation, and I'll be leaving tomorrow morning for a week of fun in the sun at Wildwood Park as I always do. I can't wait! I had been getting things together for a couple of weeks, and I packed some stuff in the car early (like my plastic shelves, bricks and toolbox) that wouldn't mind sitting in a hot car while I was at work during the day. I packed the rest of my camping supplies today while I was off from work, and then put the bulkier gear, like the cot and lounge chairs, in the Buick after Bill got home from the supermarket. So I'm about as ready to go as I'll ever be, with about as much stuff as two cars can carry for just one person to sleep in the woods for a week. As always, my primary concern is good weather, although I'm planning to bring my laptop, in case I need to sit in the car and entertain myself during bad weather. So be aware that you will not be hearing from me next week, as I will be a merry wanderer out in the wilds of Vacation Land, and you can be sure that you will hear all about it when I get back safe and sound, with any luck. Fortunately, the age of miracles has not passed, so we have that in our favor.

Speaking of luck, because my vacation is a whole week later than usual (since the July 4th holiday was at the end of the week, rather than in the middle) we didn't miss the locally famous Round Hill Highland Games at scenic Cranberry Park in Norwalk, and still going strong in their 85th year. This year, the Games were scheduled for Saturday the 5th, which missed my vacation by a whole week, and that was good, because some years, these two events are on the same day, with the result that we have to reluctantly skip the Games to go frolic in the surf at Wildwood instead. So this was much better, and we were looking forward to enjoying the Games once again, as we often do, along with a friend of ours who lives in Connecticut, and it gives us a handy opportunity for a get-together. Last year, they relocated the parking area for the shuttle bus to the park without letting anyone know, so this time, we checked that out beforehand, so we would know where to go, and not drive aimlessly around Norwalk looking for tiny signs with rampant Scottish lions to show us the way. Our friend thought he would beat the crowds by getting to the parking area early, only to find that he also beat the shuttle bus there, since that service doesn't even start until 10:00 AM, and it ended up being a long wait just for the sake of being the first in line. In fact, he was still waiting for the bus when we got there, and fortunately, there weren't too many people at that hour, so we could all sit together in the bus on the way over to the park, so that was a mini miracle right there.

Even though we were just there last year, we were surprised at the renovations that had taken place since then, with new gates, access roads, decorative signs, rustic fences, charming walkways, landscape elements, and a wide variety of ornamental gardens and flower beds throughout the property. Because they changed the entrance from where it used to be, the bus drove in from the front of the Gallaher Estate (the family donated the land to the state to make this park, and the mansion serves as the administration building now) and revealing to us for the first time since we've been going to this shindig for over 15 years, that they have an actual gift shop on the premises. What with all the excitement of the day, we forgot to go back later and check it out, so I can't report on what sort of gift shop experience it might have been, and more's the pity, I'm sure. But it was news to us that there was a gift shop there, so we were surprised, although calling it a miracle would certainly be over-stating the case and then some.

The weather was not as beastly hot as it often is, and it was also overcast for the most part, which was just as well, since I somehow left home my rampant Scottish lion umbrella, which I use for shade at the Games, and usually glad of it. I considered it a big improvement over other years, when it was so hot that the musicians and athletes just about dropped dead in the center field, where there is not only no shade, but not a breath of wind to provide any relief from the scorching conditions. We had a chance to enjoy the parade of the marching bands through the center field area, from our vantage point next to the beer tent, followed by boring speeches and proclamations that serve to get the Games underway, and which no amount of beer can make interesting, believe me. Because the ethnic food there ranges from the plain inedible to the hideously frightening, we came up with a solution that scored points for expediency, although it must be said, at the expense of moral integrity. We got on line for the French fries during the playing of the national anthems for America and the United Kingdom, and were served in next to no time, as the more upright citizens were all busy standing at attention and singing, while we were skulking around behind them and sneaking off to the gardens with our lunch. When we walked past the food truck later, the line for the French fries went all the way past the beer tent and into the playground area, and I doubt if those people were going to get their meal before the Games came to a close at the end of the day. So the lesson we learned is that you can be upright and go hungry, or take the moral low road as we did, and feast high on the hog, or the potato, to be precise. As far as I'm concerned, the hogs will just have to fend for themselves.

Unlike other years, when it seemed that we were invariably in the wrong place at the wrong time, this time around we managed to catch just about everything there is to see during the day, from one end of the park to the other. There are the young lads and lasses who do traditional Highland dancing, plus another venue where they do what they call country, or folk, dancing, which is not as highly regimented as the other kind, but still entertaining in its own way. They also have the athletic competitions of hammer throw, tossing the sheaves and caber toss, as well as a variety of races for children and adults. There are band competitions, and other competitions for individuals in the categories of piping, drumming and drum majors. Even if you don't go and watch those events as they happen, you can hear the music from every part of the park, no matter how far out in the woods they stick the participants, the sound simply carries everywhere. and is one of the enduring charms of the festivities. You can also stop by the tents where they have story telling, or poetry reading, or face painting, or the history of the clans. They even have a rock wall for the more adventurous, and considering that this is a portable rock wall towed in for the occasion, I'm thinking a person would have to be pretty adventurous to give it a try, or perhaps had already spent a lot of time at the beer tent.

A highlight of the Games for us is always the vendor tents, where you can find interesting and unusual items of all descriptions, from actual kilts to cartoon bumper stickers, and everything in between. There's always a lot of beautiful jewelry, some of it just for decorative purposes, but much of it identified with individual clan names and family crests. We also find it interesting to survey the curious imported foods, and maybe try something new and different in foreign cookies or candy bars as a change of pace. It did seem to us that there were fewer vendors than other years, and so the variety of items was not as wide-ranging, but it's also true that we've been going for so many years and bought so many souvenirs by now, that there just isn't as much left to tempt us that we haven't already got. Of course, anyone who knows me will tell you that I never let anything stand in the way of buying souvenirs, so I managed to find something in spite of it all, which is the kind of miracle that I can live with.

Like last year, this year's event featured two performances by the Scottish rock band MacTalla M'or, and you can just go right ahead and visit their web site at www.mactalla.com and see for yourself. We were surprised by them for the first time last year, and didn't know what to make of this loud and raucous group, whose amplified sounds could be heard probably towns away from the park. It seemed incongruous to us, for a festival full of Scottish marching bands to import a rock band for any reason. But this time around, we were more familiar with them, so we stayed and watched both shows and earned a new appreciation for them. It's true that the family group includes an electric organ and guitar, but also features bagpipes and drums, so their sound is often reminiscent of a marching band in many ways. They do an engaging blend of traditional and modern music that is refreshingly different, with its appealing up-tempo tunes and intricate rhythms. Fans can also enjoy their music on CDs (Bill's favorite is "Piping Hot," which I personally think is a brilliant title) and it's no wonder that they are invited to play at fairs and festivals all over the place, and pretty much, all of the time. In fact, they're going to be at the Irish Festival in nearby Riverhead while I'm on vacation, and I might just take a drive out there and see them again while I'm at it. You can believe me when I say that until you've heard their rollicking electric version of Scotland the Brave, you just don't know what you're missing, and that's not just the beer talking either.

After a long and fun day at the park, we totally lost our minds and drove 30 miles from Wilton to Danbury just to have dinner at the nearest Denny's that we could find. It was all that we could have hoped for, and some of us even had dessert, so that was a special treat. It certainly beat the pants off of lunch, where we were eating French fries with our fingers, and sitting on a rock wall between a gas generator on one side, and a row of Porta-Potties on the other side, no thank you so very much not. Anyway, this was way better, and we were glad that we managed to talk our friend into leading us there, since he knew where it was, and he didn't even think we were totally nuts to go all that way for dinner, or at least he didn't let on, if he did. That may have been the highlight of the day for us, and we enjoyed it to the utmost. Then our GPS lady managed to get us safely home without incident, which is always our favorite way to travel, along with our fond memories and full tummies. And it will be a long time before I'll be able to get the sound of bagpipes out of my head, which unlike beer, really tends to stick with you no matter what, especially when the gang at MacTalla M'or serves it up Piping Hot!

Friday, July 04, 2008

Teacher's Pet

Hello World,

Independence Day greetings to you! Here is the day that Americans across this great land of ours take time out to celebrate our colonial forebears tossing off the yoke of their English oppressors, and forging a new republic based on the revolutionary concept of Park, Atlantic and Boardwalk. Wait a minute, that can't be right, those are street names in the game of Monopoly. I've got it, it was the revolutionary concept of Tinkers, Evers and Chance. No, that can't be right either, they were a famous double-play combination in baseball history. Let's see now, I think it was the revolutionary concept of Bacon, Lettuce and Tomato, and I'm pretty sure the pursuit of pickles was in there somewhere. Somehow that doesn't sound quite right either, although I'm sure it was a rather revolutionary concept for the new republic, but to be honest, if the concept wasn't Moe, Larry and Curly, I've kind of run out of ideas at this point. Oh well, it will probably come to me sooner or later, and when it does, you can be sure that I'll be right up there cheering with the rest of the patriots, because when it comes to being revolutionary, you can count on me lock, stock and barrel, as well as hook, line and sinker. Not to mention, hickory, dickory and doc, by golly.

If today was July 4th (and unless our old pal Comrade Sergei has been here with his infernal date machine again, I have every reason to believe that it was) then you can be sure that our flag brigade was up early and putting the flags out upstairs and downstairs, lending a star-spangled touch to the property, and striping up the neighborhood in fine style. It's true that it wasn't much of a day for flag flying, as summer days go, and the weather was warm but unpredictable all day. There was some sun, but it was interspersed with occasional sprinkles on and off throughout the holiday. Normally, we can count on the flag brigade to take the flags back inside when it rains, but this was hardly rain to speak of, and I figured if I could be outside doing yard work in it, there was no reason the flags couldn't stay out as well. It didn't start raining in earnest until after dinner, and by then, the flags had long since come inside for their requisite activity of terrorizing the cats, who continue to behave as if they've never seen a flag before in their entire lives, no matter how many times we do this exact same thing. I would say this was a learning process, except that they never seem to learn anything from it. I tell you, those old dogs weren't just whistling Dixie when they said that you can't teach an old cat new tricks, and I ought to know.

Speaking of old teaching and new tricks, I seem to be the last person in the whole wide world to find out that making your own character name is apparently an idea that has long pre-dated the computer age, and everyone else already seems to know all about it except me. Thanks to many alert readers from all over, I now know a bunch of things that I never knew before, and never realized what I was missing out on. Bill was the first to set me straight:

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I know you have a "thing" about names so I'm surprised that you even considered changing your porn name like that. The rules for a porn name are extremely traditional and have been in place for many years (at least 5.) You are Rinnie Blackstone because it's the name of your first pet plus the street you lived on as a kid. (Of course, that means you can't do girl-on-girl-on-girl incest porn with your sisters because they'd all have the same name. Though I suppose it would save on typesetting and porno makers are never too good at doing the credits in the first place.) So that makes me -

Bootsie 40

(Nobody said it worked WELL)
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Well, I guess the lesson here is that everyone in the same family cannot go into a career in porn, because it would just cause too much confusion. I will say that one funny thing about trying to find your porno name in AOL 9.0 is that, well, you can't. Apparently AOL 9.0 has a feature called "Safe Search" and when you ask it to locate a site where you can find your porno name, instead it explains to you that it can't do that, because in Safe Search, all porn sites are blocked from the results. Now, a random name generator that creates your porno name is not technically a porn site, but AOL is not getting on that slippery slope of moral relativism, by golly, and you can just go wash your mouth out with soap as far as they're concerned, and don't bother asking them again. I had to sign off AOL and sign back on using Internet Explorer, and they've obviously got no moral standards whatsoever, because they'll find you all the porn and pimp names you want, all day long, and couldn't care less about protecting your virtue. I thought that was so funny.

After that, another alert reader offered this edifying tidbit:

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And, using my own childhood's way of determining your Movie Star Name, whereby you link your middle name to the street you grew up on, I am yours truly,Christine Bennett
======================

Of course, I'm very grateful to everyone who took the time to pass along these notes and instructions, but I have to say that I still prefer the random name generators and the results I already came up with, and while it may be late in the game for me to embark on a career in porn, you can be sure that I'd rather go in as Lana Quickie than Rinnie Blackstone, and I'll bet my G-string on that.

Meanwhile, just when you think that there's nothing else they can teach us in this tired old world, along come our friends at www.oneplusyou.com and please feel free to visit their web site and see for yourself. You can take any number of their interesting tests, and discover things about yourself that you might never have considered before, or at least I would hope not. To find out How Geek Are You, you can take their quiz to determine how much geek is coursing through your veins. I was not equal to the challenge, and found that I am only 21% Geek, and even that is probably a stretch. In a time test of How Many Countries Can You Name in Five Minutes, I came up with 48, which I thought was pretty good, but they pointed out that I left out about 225 more, so they were less than impressed with my results. After that humbling experience, I didn't dare try to find out How Many Colors Can You Name in Five Minutes, and probably just as well. I thought I did pretty good at How Many Five-Year-Olds Could You Take in a Fight, and while I'm no Chuck Norris, I was satisfied with 12, especially for my age and size and lack of martial arts experience. But I really bombed out on the Moon Survival Challenge, where you have to prioritize a list of supplies after crash-landing on the moon, and according to the NASA guidelines, I got a big fat F with only 12% of my list in the correct order of priority. (Well, my apologies to NASA, but I'm not going anywhere without my MP3 player and digital camera!) A colleague who took some of the tests assured me, "I am only 57% likely to eat my friends ..." in their quiz about cannibalism after a plane crash in the wilderness, which he found encouraging, although I preferred to take a pass on that whole test, no thank you very much not. I'm not sure it was all that much better to find out What Are Your Chances of Surviving a Zombie Apocalypse, and come up with the result of 40%, and that was after admitting that I would strand my loved ones and save myself, as well as summarily destroy people I knew who had turned into zombies, so that was a sobering thought. I suppose what we can learn from this is that you should take me along with you to fight a bunch of five-year-olds, but I'm not much good surviving on the moon or fending off the undead. I think it's important to play to your strengths, so now we know. Of course, I didn't tell them that I'm really The Violet Vixen, and that might have made a big difference in my results, not to mention, Tiny "Two Fists" Bambino and Sweet Chocolate Lady Quick. And I don't mind saying, I wouldn't care for the zombies' chances all that much against the Psycho Crocodile, and don't even get me started on the five-year-olds. Heck, that'll teach them a lesson, by golly.