Hurricanes & Zip Codes

Blogging about anything and everything that's on my mind.

Name:
Location: Atlanta, Georgia, United States

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Chantal (& Dean?)

Well Chantal formed. It's only planning to hit St. John's, Newfoundland tomorrow morning (and then Iceland sometime around early Sunday Morning), but still somewhat exciting. The only problem with that is the fact that tomorrow is supposedly the Royal St. John's Regatta, a crew race. This is one of the few "weather-dependent" holidays in the world, so if the weather is crappy (like it is supposed to be) they can postpone it until the first good weather day. I assume you can keep up to date on that in the The Telegram. Just remember that Newfoundland is 1 1/2 hours ahead of Eastern Daylight Time, so for instance at 10 AM it would be 11:30 in St. Johns (b/c there is a time stamp at the top of the paper saying the last time the news was updated).

More importantly however, is a storm that has the potential to become "Dean". It is not even a tropical depression right now, but it is one of those classic African waves. Early model runs, which really don't mean anything show this. That is definitely worth watching. I just hope whatever it is stays away from Sandestin/Walton County, Florida for next weekend when we head to the beach!

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Monday, July 30, 2007

Are things heating up in the Tropics/Tour de France

First, I finished watching the Tour de France after three weeks...no I was not watching the entire time, but I tuned in enough to know what was going on, with all the doping scandals and all. A Discovery Channel team member got 1st & 3rd, and got both the white and yellow jersies...I'm sure Lance [Armstrong] had nothing to do with that...haha.

In addition, there are 2 areas of "concern" in the Atlantic Basin. The first will probably curve out to sea if it forms at all, but the 2nd, in the middle of the Atlantic, is a little more frightening and may get its act together. Which if any will be Chantal and/or Dean? I'll keep you posted on that one.

As everyone keeps reminding us, this could be a bad year still like 2004 when the 1st storm didn't form until 7/31/04. We shall find out.

UPDATE: Check out these articles about the US/Canadian border, one in Blaine, Washington and one in Derby Line, Vermont/Rock Island, Quebec.

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Thursday, July 26, 2007

Five weeks until Football season!

Yep that's right...five Thursdays from now I'll be watching some crappy game, but I don't care because it'll be the start of Football season!!! Four weeks from now I'll put out my UVa flag for the season, and will just about the rest of my neighborhood.

On a related vein, check out this article about Brentwood (Tennessee) High and the new Brad Paisley song.

Finally, nothing new on the drought or hurricane season...status quo so far.

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Friday, July 20, 2007

Huntsville, Alabama

We just made it to Huntsville! A scenic drive through rural (well, at least after we got out of Dallas, Georgia) Georgia and Alabama, including driving across Lake Guntersville and Monte Sano. Jazz Factory for dinner tonight!

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Thursday, July 19, 2007

License Plates and Northwest Territories

Here is an interesting article about the "prestige" of having a low-numbered license plate in DC, DE, IL, MA & RI:

Low-numbered plates still have high allure in some states

By Juliette Wallack, Associated Press Writer | August 13, 2005

PROVIDENCE, R.I. --Most people outside Rhode Island don't understand John Raiche's fascination with low-numbered license plates. After all, a license plate is just a license plate.

Unless that plate is from Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Illinois, Delaware or Washington, D.C., that is. In those states, low-numbered plates -- four digits or fewer -- have a mysterious allure, making them so desirable that drivers bequest them to relatives, pay large sums of money for them and jump at every opportunity to get them.

So Raiche's desire for a low-digit plate isn't that odd -- even though the Coventry resident already has three of them: 3294, 3641 and 917.

"A low-numbered plate is clearly viewed as a status symbol," Raiche, 40, said. "A great number of people want to have them. I guess it's like anything else. When you want something and you can't have it, you want it more."

Raiche is one of hundreds of people who's submitted his name for a lottery this fall, when state officials expect to dole out more than 100 two, three and four-digit Rhode Island plates.

Low-digit devotees say low numbers are a status symbol: owners are either important enough to get a plate from politicians, or they come from an important family that got a low-number plate years ago.

Massachusetts manufactured the first license plates in 1903, starting with number one, and other states soon followed. Low numbers became more rare as more cars were registered, and states added letters to their plate numbers, according to Jeff Minard, a license plate historian for the Automobile License Plate Collectors Association.

"There were always businessmen who, even in the very beginning, thought a low number was a good thing," Minard said.

Soon, state officials started claiming the low-numbered plates for themselves -- plate 1 went to the governor, plate 2 went to the lieutenant governor and so on. Doling out other low-numbered plates became a way to reward supporters, Minard said.

And there were benefits to the low-numbered plates.

"As people drove around with these low numbers, and it was the big cars in the big neighborhoods, what sort of happened was that the police, sometimes, if this guy ran a stoplight and he had a number 10 on his car, they let him go, because he was connected," Minard said. "Low numbers began to get favoritism."

In Rhode Island and Delaware, registration rules allowed people to keep plates for years and even will them to family members.

In 1994, a Delaware resident paid $182,500 for plate number 9. In Rhode Island, two brothers went to court in 1983 over their late father's three-digit plate. In Massachusetts, a recent auction of low-numbered plates raised more than $1 million for the state's 9/11 fund.

In 2003, the administration of former Illinois Gov. George Ryan was accused of handing out low-numbered license plates as political favors. In Washington, D.C., the mayor and city council still hold power over low-number plates.

But government officials have mostly stopped handing out license plates as a way of rewarding political friends, according to Richard Dragon, a Warwick, R.I., resident and author of "Registered in R.I.," a book about license plates.

"Back in the '50s, '60s, '70s, when low-numbers really became an object of fascination for some people, that was just the only way to get them," Dragon said.

In recent years, the fervor for plates has subsided, he said, because governments have attempted to make things more equitable through plate auctions and lotteries.

In 1995, Rhode Island began using a lottery system to eliminate patronage, after Gov. Bruce Sundlun commandeered plate number 9 and gave it to his wife.

David Darlington, who supervised the first lotteries when he was Gov. Lincoln Almond's director of constituent affairs, said the patronage culture was difficult to end. Even after the first lottery, two men who won low-numbered plates came to his office, thinking they still had to pay cash for the plates.

"I spent a considerable amount of time with these guys, trying to explain that this was the new paradigm," Darlington said. "It was so ingrained that there were people that thought they owed something."

Even now, a decade after Rhode Island started the lottery, people still approach Darlington to see if he can help them get their hands on one.

"I bet a week doesn't go by when somebody doesn't ask me how they can get a low-digit plate," Darlington said.

Salvatore Santoro, 79, of North Providence, has entered every lottery in the past decade, and he's never won a low-numbered plate. He hopes his turn will come during the lottery this fall.

"Everyone in Rhode Island wants low-numbered plates. I'm not an exception," he said, though he acknowledges that a low number doesn't mean as much as it used to.

"It used to be prestige," he said. "Now everybody's brother's got them. You could never get them. Now, you put your name in the lottery, and you get them."

Still, he wants one so badly that he's entering all his relatives' names in the lottery, too.

Even Darlington, who ran the plate lottery for five years, has gotten caught up in the low-number fever.

"All of the years I did that, I sort of felt bad for all the people who were consumed," he said. "I think I may send a card in for this lottery."

Also, just found the new British Columbia 2010 Olympic plates. This website also shows the "La Belle Province" 1976 Montreal, Quebec tags and the 1988 Calgary tags.

In addition, one of my new favorite shows is: Ice Road Truckers on the History Channel, a show about semi-trucks hauling goods up to the diamond mines from Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada (the place with the cute Polar Bear license plates to the deBeers Diamond Minds, also in NWT. It comes on Sunday nights, but I have the DVR set to record...I think about 4-5 shows have come on so far, and this weekend they are showing a marathon for me to catch up!

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Thursday, July 12, 2007

Bicycles & Sailboats

I took down the American flag on Wednesday morning and put up the sailboat flag...this will stay up until I put up my Virginia flag on August 23. I cannot believe we are that close to football season!!!

Now that Wimbledon is over (which ended with an awesome 5-setter pitting Federer against Nadal), I have started watching the Tour de France, which is interesting, but at this early stage, it is hard to pick someone you like. I think once the mountain stages start, the peleton will spread out and the leaders will emerge. Probably nothing like what happened when Lance Armstrong was on the Tour however.

Some new shows I've started DVR-ing: Ice Road Truckers (History Channel) - About trucking goods from Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada to a diamond mind near the Arctic Circle; The States (History Channel) - Never seen this, but it's an hour-long show about 4 states at a time...recommended to me.

Drought news: We've actually had a decent amount of rain, and it's been awfully cloudy lately, but no loosening of water restrictions yet. Tuesday is the last day for me to water my new Japanese holly, but I'm not worried because I feel it will stay alive. The gigantic Japanese holly I was given and that I cut back has plentiful new growth on it, so I won't be replacing that either. Looks like I'll be down to the traditional 10 hours/week.

Finally, getting ready to go to Huntsville, Alabama next weekend...we're taking the most direct route, using state and county roads to get there, since Mapquest takes us all the way to Birmingham and then north, which cannot be any faster and will definitely be much less scenic. This way we'll get to see Lake Guntersville and Cloudmont Ski (yes skiing in Alabama) area. The wedding is a 250-person black-tie affair.

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Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Peachtree Road Race Eve

Have you noticed that anything that happens, Global Warming is to blame? Today there was a thunderstorm at Wimbledon which stopped play (again), and the announcers asked rhetorically if this was caused by Global Warming.

Speaking of Wimbledon, it's been raining like crazy, with 5-6 rain delays just today. If they don't finish the 3rd round matches tomorrow, the tournament will be forced to play either the mens' championship on Monday, or the players would have to play 2 matches on one (or more) of the days. Apparently Wimbledon has occasionally gone into Tuesday or Wednesday of the third week. There is also a controversy why no play happened on the "People's Sunday", where traditionally no play occurs. Ironically the weather was beautiful that day...maybe it's a good thing that they did not attempt to play though because the Concert for Diana was that day at Wembley Stadium, and it did not rain (meanign that it might have if play had occurred).

There is a chance we may get a tropical system headed towards Florida...as of the 11:30 AM update, they have labeled it a system under investigation...conditions are somewhat favorable.

Finally, I have made a playlist for tomorrow's Peachtree:
Pre-race:
Buy U A Drank - T-Pain and Young Joc
Georgia - Elton John

Race:
2001 Space Odyssey (duh duhhhh DUHHHHHH)
Comin' to Your City - Big & Rich
Keg in the Closet - Kenny Chesney (through the old Buckhead bar district)
Shake Ya Tail Feather - Nelly/P.Diddy/Murphy Lee (for the Braves)
Give it to Me - Timbaland/Justin Timberlake/Nelly Furtado
Jesus Walks - Kanye West
Eye of the Tiger - Survivor (for Heartbreak Hill)
Maneater - Nelly Furtado
Nookie - Limp Bizkit
Jenny Says - Cowboy Mouth
Kerosene - Miranda Lambert
Such Great Heights - The Postal Service
Callin' Baton Rouge - Garth Brooks

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