It’s Friday.

Last night’s sunset.

This week has been busy with meetings at work. My calendar has been quite jammed with all sorts of events, all of it important, I’m sure. As I get older I realize I take more and more after my father. When supper time comes, I don’t want to think about it; I just want someone to tell me what we’re having and if they need assistance assembling supper I’m there to help, otherwise I’m ready to eat at 6:00 PM.

I know June, I sound like I’m right out of the 1950s. I’ll talk to the Beaver.

When you live in a home with four other men and no one wants to cook, you figure things out. I declared to Earl I’d take him to a place down the street that we enjoy. It’s called “Serial Grillers” and they have several locations in the Tucson area.

I snapped this photo from their parking lot. The sunset was gorgeous and it made me smile. It was a good way to bring Thursday to an end and it made me smile. The smile continued through the work day today, where my calendar was clear aside from a semi-weekly touch point with my team. Smiling made me productive and I cleared my to do list for the day.

It’s a great start to the weekend.

To See.

It’s been about five years since I was first told I needed glasses. At that event I was basically told I should wear glasses when working on the computer and the fine local optician on the north side of Chicago helped me find a pair of glasses that fit the bill. A year later I went and got another eye exam, continued the trend of occasionally needing glasses, found myself a snazzy pair of glasses and off we went. A little while later I moved to progressive lenses and tended to wear them only when I felt I needed to wear them.

On Tuesday I had my biannual FAA mandated medical exam. As a private pilot of a certain age, I maintain a “Class 3” Medical Certificate, meaning I need to meet FAA health standards need to prove this every two years. I went to the same doctor I visited back in 2022. He is very nice.

Well, it turns out I should be wearing my progressive lenses more than “when I think I need them”. I’m lucky I had brought them along for the eye exam portion of the ordeal, because I definitely needed them to get through the whole.

It is now documented that I must be wearing my prescription glasses when I’m flying an airplane.

Earl and I went flying last night. While touring the area by airplane I remarked, “wow, I can really see what’s going on up here!”. It’s amazing how well I can fly an airplane when I can see things.

It’s like my vision has gone from standard definition to Ultra 4K.

50 Days.

As of today I have 50 days remaining in my countdown to my 2024 Storm Chasing Adventure. Instead of thinking that I’m going “storm chasing”, I’m thinking of this trip as a “Storm Hiking” trip, because I plan on integrating some hiking to keep the blood moving while I’m inbetween supercells. The supercells will always win if there’s a battle for my attention, but hiking keeps me sane and allows my mind to relax while building up my physical stamina. It’s a win-win.

Even though it’s been well over 300 days since my last storm chasing trip, I’m still processing what went wrong and what went right with my 2023 adventure, as I don’t want to replicate my mistakes and come back to Tucson wishing I had done X, Y, and Z and not feeling satisified with the trip. I was a bit too contemplative on last year’s trip. I listened to too many self-help type podcasts, I was too entrenched with social media, and I was too concerned of not losing my productivity momentum, even though I was on vacation. Plus, last year’s trip took place during an unusually quiet time for storms in May. This year’s forecast looks much more promising.

I’ve been pulling away from social media in general since the beginning of this year. Continuing that trend going into my “storm hiking” trip in 50 days shouldn’t be hard to continue; the only caveat is that I will still follow a feed or two so I know what other storm chasers are doing. Seeing their take on the forecasting models I’m looking at helps me be better at figuring out where to position myself for a storm.

I’m a bit surprised at how fast the year is passing by. After a January that seemed to go on forever, here we are at the end of March. We’re already into springtime in the Northern Hemisphere and work oriented folks are already looking at the end of the first quarter. Time sure flies when you’re having fun!

Oddities.

When moved to Tucson three years ago this past Sunday. It’s been a great three years and I certainly love living in the Sonoran Desert.

When we first moved here it would be well over 45 days before we would see any rain. It was hot. It was dry. And the world around us appeared very brown. So desert like. I loved it.

Fast forward three years later and the world around us is very green. Storm system after storm system seems to be moving through our area on a fairly regular schedule. As a weather dork it has been a fascinating study.

They say we may get another storm passing through the area this coming weekend. I guess we’re also finally seeing an end to our drought.

Local.

This past Saturday my husband and I decided to go for a drive. This is not unusual for us; we enjoying meandering around this great country of ours. Instead of heading to the northwest toward Phoenix we decided to head to the southeast toward the city of Sierra Vista. Near Sierra Vista is Fort Huachucha, a good sized Army base. I always enjoy seeing Army folks out and about. Our men and women in uniform never fail to impress me, even when they’re walking through a Walmart or something. Plus, it reminds me a little bit of growing up fairly close to Fort Drum in Upstate New York. Plus, I do enjoy the eye candy.

We settled eating supper in Sierra Vista at a place called “The Pit Stop” (link goes to their Facebook page). A somewhat small space, we had a really good time there and the food was excellent. I told Earl it was reminiscent of what I try to seek out when I’m chasing storms. They did not disappoint.

The servers could be described as what I would call “zesty”. They knew how to interact with the locals and visitors alike with a certain sting with a smile. Down home goodness, right there.

We look forward to going back.

Soldier Trail Hike.

As I mentioned in yesterday’s post (with video), I hiked up in Coronado National Forest in the Santa Catalina Mountains yesterday. The Catalinas are best known for Mount Lemmon. I settled on tackling two trails (Solider Trail and Molino Basin Trail), totaling about six miles. The first mile of the Soldier Trail included about a 1000 foot climb, with the first quarter mile or so being loose rock.

Soldier Trail follows an old road and power line path. Molino Basin Trail is part of the larger Arizona Trail.

It was definitely an adventure. And more importantly, it was exhilarating.

Here are some photos.

Caturday.

Hanging out on the couch. Truman continues to enjoy TV time with his dads.

He also likes “Bewitched”.

Nope.

I haven’t read the U.S. Department of Justice’s 88 page suit against Apple, Inc. Because if there’s one thing I trust less than any tech company, it’s an elected or appointed government official. Do I think Apple is perfect? Of course not. You don’t become one of the biggest companies in the world through perfection or even through being trustworthy.

But if there’s one thing I do know, it’s probably that the U.S. government has little idea of what they’re talking about and that somewhere in this there is political motivation. These things always turn up during an election cycle.

I’ll skip the whole clusterfsck and just do my thing.