Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Cold, Bleak, and Biting Weather

The cold weather is here, but isn’t nearly as impressive as the snowy winters of northeastern PA, where I lived for nearly two years. Still quite a transformation from summer, though. I took the following pictures yesterday evening.


Wednesday, December 06, 2006

RecipeMaker; or, The Quest for Spendy Glop

Recently I sent Claire (my sister) the following message:

I'm trying to decide what to have for supper tonight. My search for the proper recipe took me most of the day. At last I found it. Enjoy. Actually, I am about to go to Safeway (finally). Then maybe I'll prepare something simple. These recipes were just a bit much, or something, for the occasion. ;-) Cheers, Matt

I attached the following pictures (click for larger version):









For those who have been fortunately unacquainted with RecipeMaker (and Spendy Glop), I offer the following explanation. About ten years ago (let’s see, that would be 1996), I made a very simple piece of software called RecipeMaker. Like much of the software that I made at that time, I probably created the splash screen, with its bizarre “Helix Development” logo, before the rest of the program. This was a very easy project, because I did it in HyperCard (anyone remember that development tool?). Claire and I wrote two recipes as samples and then abandoned RecipeMaker. By the way, spendy has the same meaning as pricey, and we hadn’t heard either word before we moved to Oregon from California in 1993. Spendy still sounded funny to us in ’96 (and still does), so it was clear that it should grace the title of our most ambitious recipe. Well, maybe “Boy’s Lunch” is even more ambitious, in that it leaves out the most important ingredient: divine intervention.

After Claire replied to the above quoted message, I wrote a long description of how I found, and opened, RecipeMaker for the first time in eight years. Following is that description, only slightly edited. Unfortunately, it will probably make very little sense if you aren’t well acquainted with old Mac software and hardware. I hereby permit you to stop reading at this point. : )

About finding the Spendy Glop recipe...sometimes I just get too determined:

First I had to find the EZ135 Drive. I looked in most of the drawers in the office, in several boxes buried under a bunch of junk in the right closet in the office, in boxes, drawers, and cupboards in my bedroom, in a sprawling heap of Apple II and Mac stuff in the front of the barn, in piles of junk in the front shop, and on shelves in the back shop. I found some neat stuff in the Apple II piles. I guess we never really looked to see what’s there. [Hmm, maybe it's worth a few grand.] I wonder if we have Gertrude's Secrets and the Haunted House (or whatever it's called)? I spent a lot of time playing those in first grade, in Mrs. Slattery's room.

I finally found the power adapter in the first shop and the drive in a bag of computer cables in the section with the stereo.

I hooked up the drive to the Quadra 900 [a 15-year-old high-end Mac] in the office and found RecipeMaker (and some other stuff that hasn't been seen in 8 years--including a really early version of Trail Game [our spoof on Oregon Trail] ("You and your grandfather contracted a 31° fever")) on the first EZ135 cartridge that I tried. But I couldn't transfer it to my iBook, because the version of the AppleShare client on the Q900 was too old. So I hooked the EZ135 and the monitor and keyboard to the G3 instead, but it didn't like the driver on the cartridge (it kept hanging the computer), and I was also testing a lousy hard drive at the same time, which was causing other problems.

The AppleShare Client installer that I downloaded was too big to fit on a floppy disk to transfer it to the Quadra, so I copied just the AppleShare extension onto one, and then reconnected everything to the Q900. I got AppleShare installed, but it wouldn't work because I needed a new version of Open Transport. So then I dug out the tangerine iBook and hooked it up to the Internet to get the AppleShare installer. Mozilla hung because of some problem with the network settings, so I rebooted and then got AppleShare Client, and then connected the Ethernet cable to the Quadra instead (Dad took the Ethernet switch, so we can't connect more than one thing at a time to the DSL router), but realized that I also needed the Open Transport installer, so I connected the cable back, but in the meantime the TCP/IP settings on the tangerine were messed up, and I had trouble getting them right, but it finally worked, and then I got Open Transport and connected the cable back to the Quadra and copied it. I installed Open Transport and AppleShare Client, and then it worked, and I copied RecipeMaker and the other fun stuff onto the iBook G4.
In the meantime, I also discovered a lot of other stuff that needs to be sold on eBay or somewhere, and I got a new version of Pythagoras (a really neat After Dark [old screensaver] module that a relative said must be possessed), and found After Dark and all the weird modules I downloaded many years ago on another EZ135 cartridge, and put them on the Quadra. Needless to say, it wasn’t really a very profitable day, but I did find Spendy Glop. Like I said, sometimes I just get too determined....

Here’s a picture of some of the equipment used in recovering RecipeMaker to my iBook G4 (click image to view larger).


The gray laptop at left is the PowerBook 180. Then come the Tangerine iBook on top of a Server G3, and the iBook G4 and Power Mac G3 on the desk. In the right foreground is the Quadra 900, with the SyQuest EZ135 (dark gray) and one cartridge in its protective case on top of it.

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Jefferson Park Hike

Shortly after I returned to Oregon this summer, some of the young guys in my church—and their dads—began talking about having another camp-out and hike such as we had done two years before, at Olallie Butte.
That time, we camped a few miles north of the butte on a Friday night and drove down to the butte and hiked it in the morning. The weather was good, and we got some inspiring views from the top. Incidentally, none of us had known how long the trail was, but one of the organizers estimated about 1.5 miles one way based on his reading of a map. Well, that map left out a lot of detail, such as the numerous switchbacks. The entry at SummitPost says it’s actually about 3.8 miles one way. Maybe it was good that we didn’t know how long it would be, because we all made it, and I think most of us thought it was worthwhile.

This time, MB suggested that we hike in to Jefferson Park. He and his sons had done it with a group from the church that one of his brothers attends, and they really enjoyed it. I had been wanting to make that hike for several years, and enthusiastically supported this suggestion. That was back in July. By some time in August, a number of the young fellows and their dads (the latter including DS and RK) were planning to participate, and Jefferson Park had been definitely fixed as our destination. We were to meet at DS’s place on the afternoon of Friday, September 1.

Note: for many more pictures from this trip, click here: More Pictures.

The weather that afternoon turned out to be pretty good. I think the sky was fairly clear and the temperature was decent, if a bit warm at first. Our goal for that evening was to camp somewhere near the chosen trailhead.

We traveled as follows: south to Silverton, south on Cascade Highway to Hwy. 22, east on Hwy. 22 to just before Detroit, north on Road 46, south on Road 4685. As we traveled down Road 4685, MB’s son Brandon expressed some doubt about whether this could be the right road, since it was in much better condition than the road they had traveled the other time. When we got to the the trailhead parking area, it didn’t seem quite right to them either, but we were following the directions that someone had given them. MB’s brother hadn’t yet replied to his request for directions, so we weren’t exactly certain if this was the same way. I think that we later determined that they had come this way before, but had taken the more southern trail (3364) down to 3429 and then entered the Park via the Pacific Crest Trail (#2000). But we didn’t realize this until the next afternoon.

We wanted a more secluded campsite than the large trailhead parking area, so we drove further up the road (another reason for doing this, at first, was that there was still some doubt as to the location of the correct trailhead). I was riding with MB in his pickup, and we headed back to the trailhead after advising the others via radio to check out a steep spur road on the south side of 4685. We read the new map at the trailhead and realized that part of our confusion was due to a discrepancy between our maps and reality. The original two trailheads shown on our maps had been blocked and replaced by a new trailhead with ample parking. In the new arrangement, trails 3364 and 3375 are reached from the same trailhead; the trail forks shortly after the beginning. This discovery reassured us somewhat, although MB was still uncertain which trail he had hiked before. He thought it was probably 3375, so this is where we ultimately went.

We returned to the spur road and found the others setting up camp in a clearing a short distance from the end of the road. Food was set out on the tailgate of a pickup. Meanwhile, the sun had nearly set. There were at least four digital cameras along on this expedition (compared to zero such devices two years before), and several of their owners, including myself, attempted to capture images of the sunset.


We talked of building a campfire, but (I think) this was not permitted by the Forest Service that weekend.

In the morning, DS and MB prepared a large breakfast (pancakes and sausage). Some time after eight, we packed up everything and drove to the trailhead. MB filled out the wilderness use permit and attached it to his backpack, and then we set out. As expected, the trail forked soon after the beginning, and we took the left fork, labeled “3375.”

The first part of the trail climbed moderately through a forest of large trees, passing several flowing streams, and then ascended more rapidly through progressively sparser vegetation. At the higher altitudes the trail was worn into powdery soil on which grew a low, dense ground cover. DS had brought a GPS unit, and it showed nearly three thousand feet of elevation gain at the peak of the trail. My topographical map shows about 3080 feet at the trailhead and 5960 feet at the crest of the trail, giving 2880 feet of gain over several miles. From the top, the trail descends several hundred feet to a series of meadows just outside what is called Jefferson Park. We stopped for lunch where the trail first met the South Fork of the Breitenbush River.


After lunch, most of us continued on into the Park, stopping at Park Lake for a little while. We conferred and decided that it was about time to leave, so we should just cross the next ridge and then head back. RB and I set off at a rapid pace, soon reaching Scout Lake (actually on the other side of the second ridge). The others showed up a few minutes later. The GPS showed about 5.5 miles at this point, implying a round-trip distance of 11 miles. A couple of us checked out Rock Lake, in a deep hollow to the northwest. Then we all headed out.


We made much better time on the return trip. Some of us went on ahead with MB’s water purification kit to a stream in the forest on the downhill side, and BB and JB used this kit to replenish everyone’s water bottle—a very welcome development. I, for one, hadn’t brought enough water on this trip. After stopping there for maybe thirty minutes, we continued to the trailhead in at least three groups. The rest of the hike was uneventful.

Incidentally, there was a large wildfire west of Mt. Jefferson, and as we descended the last of the trail, we noticed that the sunlight was becoming prematurely red, and the sky was very hazy. We attributed this to smoke blowing north.


Although most of us were very tired, when we reached the parking area there was talk of relocating a mine shaft that DS and his sons had explored a few years before. The general opinion was in favor of such a venture, so we set off in the appropriate direction. The mine was supposedly above Elkhorn Valley, off of Road 2209, near the Henline Mountain Trail that Claire and I had hiked back on July 1. Well, we drove to the general area, and then parked near a steep ravine and scaled it looking for the mineshaft. We poked around for over an hour (maybe two hours?) but didn’t find what we were looking for. Some of the guys dug in rubble that had collapsed from the side of an old caterpillar road, but this was also fruitless.

We returned to the pickups and reexamined the maps, and decided to check out a few more ravines up the road. Several of us quickly checked the next ravine, determining that it didn’t look right, and then we headed up to the next one. Within a couple minutes, DS and his son J. had found the shaft. The rest of us soon followed them, discovering as they had that the shaft had collapsed more than it had been when they had explored it before. After digging for a little while, they saw that it would be a major undertaking, and dangerous, and so we gave up on it.

We stopped in Silverton for ice cream, and then went back to DS’s place. It was a very satisfactory adventure.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

New Pages On My Site

I’ve finally updated my main web site with new links on the formerly invisible (i.e. unlinked) Writing page. Second-year FB students will recognize some of the articles there, or at least the assignments for which they were written. Other pieces were written when I was at George Fox University, and others are several years older yet. As the page now says, “I do not necessarily endorse any of the works linked here. As always, read at your own risk. :-)” Maybe it’s inappropriate for me to make such a disclaimer. On the other hand, I don’t think that anything there is really bad. Let me know if you feel otherwise.

I’ve also been updating the Photography section. There are a few albums of pictures from my trip to Oregon from Pennsylvania this June. I’m about to check out a different kind of album builder, though. Perhaps the albums will be upgraded soon.

Saturday, February 18, 2006

Winter Break

The winter short term at FB ended on Friday, February 3. Unfortunately, I was not quite done with my assignments. More specifically, I still had a long way to go on the final project for Bible Study Methods.
The project consisted of writing a paraphrase of one of several scripture passages on the basis of a mechanical layout, word study, context study, historical and cultural background study, and figurative language analysis. [I had selected John 1:1-14.] By Friday evening I had completed most of the word study. I had originally hoped to finish the whole thing by midnight, but then I found that about eleven students were planning to go to Dairy Queen in Meadville, and I decided to go with them. There would be time over the break to finish the project. : )
So I drove to DQ with Elwynn Martin, and a couple other carloads met us at the restaurant. The others present were Michael Hochstetler, John Goertzen, Darrell Hershberger, Emma Jane Peachey, Lois Hershberger, Lana Martin, Janith Miller, Sherilyn Troyer, and Estalee Martin (if my memory serves me well). We had a great time there and got back after eleven.
Most of the next day (Saturday) was spent conferring with Brandon on the graphic design for the FB Chorale Europe Tour CD (2005).
Then on Sunday most of the remaining students left, after returning from the choir program in Middlefield, OH (
with which I was not involved). On Monday very few students were around, including Michael Hochstetler, John Goertzen, and Rosalie Miller. John and Michael were planning to leave that day, but the snow-covered roads deterred them. John and I left FB at 4:30 that morning and attempted to head for Erie. We soon discovered that this would be futile, as the main roads were unplowed. Even if Rt. 27 was passable it would probably be slow going. So with a bit of difficulty we got back to FB and entered through the PCH. John rescheduled his flight for Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. Michael finally left on Tuesday morning.
I worked on the graphic design for parts of Monday and Tuesday, bringing it close to completion. I also put in several more hours on the Bible Study Methods project, but didn't quite get into the paraphrase.
On Wednesday morning I too prepared to leave the area. Due to a new policy, all students must leave FB over breaks unless they must be there. I obtained an extension due to the graphic design project, but by Wednesday, what with all the students gone, I was really feeling out of place. I had planned to leave by 10:30, but then I was asked to play the piano for the beginning of an administrators’ meeting. I selected Chopin’s Nocturne in C# Minor (posthumous) but then discovered, upon practicing, that I didn’t know it very well any more. I played it anyway, but the piano at the meeting location was missing some key covers and has a generally frustrating action. I don’t usually dare to play on it without rehearsing on it first. It’s really a bad instrument for this nocturne anyway. But I made it through the piece, and headed off to finish my packing. I left just after 11:30.
The trip to fellow student Javan’s place near Mifflinburg took about four hours, as expected, and was uneventful. That evening I went with his family (parents and siblings) to their church for the weekly prayer meeting.
On Thursday I helped on a house they’ve been building for the past couple of months, putting up vinyl siding for most of the day. The temperature was below 20 in the morning when we started and gradually warmed up, but by midafternoon we were contending with a serious wind while trying to put up corner pieces high above the ground. We soon quit that and went inside to put up sheetrock.
[Hmm, I started this post back in February. Now it’s September 13! I’ll soon find out what I can remember. :-)]
That evening I worked on my Bible Study Methods final project for a while. JB, meanwhile, was working on the algebra course that he was taking in his spare time. Somehow it was difficult to make much progress on the project. I kept getting stalled on little details. For example, we were supposed to use different words than the original translation where reasonable, but what alternative word or phrase can begin to do justice to light or truth as used in John 1:1-14? I ultimate stuck with the original words in these cases, and a few others, and provided notes in the documentation to explain my choice.
The next day (Friday) Javan, his brother Sheldon, and I went to the Eastern Sports & Outdoor Show at the PA Farm Show Complex in Harrisburg. This show claims to be the largest of its kind in North America, and its size is certainly impressive. It fills most of the huge Farm Show Complex, which has 25 acres or more than a million square feet under one roof.
We intended to be there early, but were mistaken about the opening time. It turned out that it we were about 75 minutes early, and there were only about a dozen people ahead of us in the line. Despite the cold air in which we stood, this turned out to be a good thing, because by the time the door opened there were probably a few thousand people in the line. We also were handed discount coupons to take a few dollars off the admission fee, which is fairly high.
We wandered around among the hundreds of booths for a couple of hours and then met up with a group from Faith Mission Home. Somehow I became separated from them and wandered around for a long time without seeing any of them. Finally I found I place where my cell phone worked and called FB to get Javan's cell phone number (I should have thought of that earlier). Incidentally, I think that both of us had considered not bringing our phones into the show with us. I told Javan where I was and he and Sheldon showed up soon; the FMH people had recently departed. We got some lunch and looked at a few more booths before going back to their house.
I think that was the evening of some kind of Parent Appreciation Supper put on by their church youth group in the church basement. I went along and helped to serve one of the couples.
On Saturday Javan elected to remain at home to work on a few necessary things so he would be ready to return to FB. I think that was when we cleaned and washed our vehicles. In the afternoon I worked on my Bible Study Methods project some more, and then most of the family went to David King’s place for supper (Dave is Javan’s grandfather). We had a great time. It snowed fairly heavily that afternoon.
On Sunday after church at the home place was a surprise birthday party for Javan’s dad. A number of other relatives were also present.
Javan and I had to be back to FB early in the morning for the beginning of spring semester, so we left that afternoon after the meal in the midst of the festivities. There was still snow on the ground, but the roads were clear. We had an uneventful ride to FB and were welcomed there by most of the other students. Javan hadn't seen most of the them since December, and some of the VSers were new since he had left. There were a few that I hadn't seen since December, either. After that joyous occasion, I moved directly to working on my project again, and nearly finished it that evening. In the morning, I printed the various components of the document and turned it in with some ambivalence as to its quality. You can read it by clicking the appropriate link on my Writing page.
The previous evening, we had discovered notices at the entrances to our dorms to the effect that we were to report to the chapel for instructions at 7:45 a.m. This we did, and received some idea of what would happen in the rest of the week. The men's mentoring group still hadn't received instructions for the projects to be completed in the very near future: Life Story for Spiritual Formation Practicum II and Life MAP and Plan for SFP IV, as well as several smaller things for each. We received those instructions at a meeting in the student lounge later in the morning. We had the next day to work on these projects. I worked on mine (for SFP IV) late into the night and arose at a very early hour (3 a.m.?) to complete the big project as well as some of the smaller ones that I hadn’t even touched yet. This turned out fairly OK except that my level of consciousness at the subsequent mentoring meeting (on Wednesday morning) left much to be desired. The Life Plan was enjoyable and useful but I didn't put nearly as much on it as I had hoped. I would like to revise it next winter.
Well, such was Winter Break. I suspect there are some relevant pictures on a roll of film somewhere...this reminds me that I need to send several of those to a lab. Perhaps the pictures will be added in the near future.

Wednesday, July 27, 2005

How nerdy are you?

I am nerdier than 61% of all people. Are you nerdier? Click here to find out!

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Theological Worldview Quiz

Hey, I just found this Theological Worldview Quiz. Here are the results that I got:

You scored as Evangelical Holiness/Wesleyan. You are an evangelical in the Wesleyan tradition. You believe that God's grace enables you to choose to believe in him, even though you yourself are totally depraved. The gift of the Holy Spirit gives you assurance of your salvation, and he also enables you to live the life of obedience to which God has called us. You are influenced heavly by John Wesley and the Methodists.


What's your theological worldview?
created with QuizFarm.com

Evangelical Holiness/Wesleyan


89%

Emergent/Postmodern


61%

Reformed Evangelical


54%

Neo orthodox


50%

Classical Liberal


46%

Fundamentalist


46%

Charismatic/Pentecostal


29%

Modern Liberal


25%

Roman Catholic


18%

What's your theological worldview?
created with QuizFarm.com


Hm, that's slightly scary. If you take the quiz, feel free to post the results as a response to this one. Just copy the HTML from the scrolling text field. You can select which part you want; it would probably be best not to post "Everything" to this blog.