Genesee Cream Ale

Driving through Kalamazoo I can’t help but notice the billboards that creep around town and breed. They spawn clusters of baby billboards and before you know it every square inch of boring natural imagery is obliterated by a billboard. On these billboards is a new ad campaign for of all things, now, hold on to your butts… Genesee Beer.

For those that aren’t laughing right now, you have no idea the inside joke that is Genesee Beer. I grew up in Upstate New York and one of the little breweries nearby was one in Rochester. The plant was located on the Genesee River and sucked up water, brewed beer, and just a touch downriver it would dump its waste back into the river. Genesee is cheap beer. What’s more, it’s got a funny “Andy” story attached to it. When I was very very young I used to retain gas and end up crying a lot and being rather fussy about it. My father, who at the time enjoyed Genesee Beer was trying to rock me to sleep and I was just having none of it. So he gave me just a little sip of Genesee Cream Ale. Down it went. The massive quantity of bubbles (for a little babies body, it did the trick) helped bring on a burp, and then that was that. Problem solved. Now every time I see an ad or a case of Genesee Beer I’m half tempted to buy some and enjoy it.

Now, for you Michiganders who might waddle into Genesee Beer, you should know, it’s profoundly low-brow. If you are okay with that, knock your socks off.

Genesee Beer. Indeed. ๐Ÿ™‚

Raw milk update: Michigan State University dairy newsletter cites fresh statistics, touts website | MLive.com

Raw milk update: Michigan State University dairy newsletter cites fresh statistics, touts website | MLive.com.

Once again people! There is a reason why Louis Pasteur is the father of modern food safety! I see this in lots of states, here in Michigan and also quite notably also in South Carolina where some of my family lives. Apparently not enough people have needlessly died from e. coli, cryptosporidium, or listeria!

I can’t believe this is still being talked about seriously. Just when you thought you won the war for one class of food to be pasteurized, and you’ve moved on to another (lets hear it for pasteurized eggs!) this bullshit comes roaring back. Raw milk was fine if you lived on a farm in 1928! It’s 2011. COME ON PEOPLE.

Of course, not enough death and illness have been suffered, we need more of that, yes, please! Sometimes humanity, as a species, dazzles me with it’s collective stupidity.

Furry Mystery

Just finished a phone consultation with our vet in regards to our youngest male cat, Griffin’s odd behavior. We put him on a 14 day series of Zeniquin antibiotic and that helped him out, and yesterday I noticed we’re starting to see a similar set of behaviors from Griffin. He will visit his litterbox and urinate just a little and then leave, 10 minutes later he’ll be back. It doesn’t happen all the time, and sometimes he urinates more, at least from what I’ve been seeing in the litterbox. The vet said that his X-Rays are clean, pH is right, and there aren’t any blockages or crystals. The vet suggested that we try some bladder-health supplements that might help correct what amounts in the end to being both pee-shy and having a nervous bladder. Griffin’s behavior is completely normal, no pain, no struggling, and no accidents. We’re going to go the supplement route and see how we do. The last thing I want for him is another overnight at the hospital and the dead last thing I want is surgery. One thing that did occur to me is changing the litter type. We have a continuous odor control litter and this problem may be linked to that in some way, perhaps going to a low-dust type would be better. We’ll have to see.

Having a sick pet is worse by far than a sick kid. At least you can talk to a kid and get a clear list of symptoms. All you get with a pet is a head-nudge and staring. I keep on having this recurring fantasy of being able to scan Griffin with a Tricorder. Too much Star Trek dammit. ๐Ÿ™‚

Griffin

It all started a few days ago, we noticed our youngest male cat, Griffin, making five to ten minute return trips to the litter box to pee and not being able to. He didn’t seem to be in any pain, just a lot of squatting. A day went by and nothing much improved and then he started having accidents around the house, little tiny accidents. So off we went to KL Cat Hospital, our vet.

They admitted him and we discovered later on that he didn’t have a blockage, that the pH and various things you can tell from test strips were acceptable but he was pee-shy for a very long time. Once he did use the pan he accidentally got his hindquarters in it and further made a mess of himself, and ruined his progress. The vet gave him a little ether and then coaxed some samples out of him manually. The samples were spun and analyzed. There was nothing to indicate any kind of kidney stones or crystalizations, so we were looking at a bacteriological etiology. They gave him a shot of flouroquinone (sp?) antibiotic and the next day they had him (it was an overnight) they gave him 12.5mg of Zeniquin antibiotic.

I got him home, through a fusillade of yowling and general complaining, Griffin does not like car rides. I suspect that too much car ride would bring on motion sickness. Griffin smelled a lot like the vets office, as well as the gas they used to do that quick-knockout earlier so Owien gave him one sniff and then started to growl and hiss. This upset us until we did some research and confirmed what we kind of already knew, that Griffin smelled very different from what Owien remembers and that over time everything will be fine.

It’s both amazing and a little surprising to note just how easy it is for humans to note a smell change but that it doesn’t affect us nearly as much as it does with other animals. I chalk it up to sentience, our vastly bigger brains, and the fact that human olfaction is pitifully weak. Smell was never a big thing for primates because we suck at it. The two of them are getting used to each other again, it’s just going to take time.

This morning I got a bit of butter and embedded the pill in it, then popped it in Griffins mouth and held his mouth closed. Down it went. He wasn’t upset, just unwilling and a little surprised. I left him licking his chops and looking at me with guarded affection. “What else are you going to try to make me eat?” ๐Ÿ™‚ So his daily 12.5mg of Zeniquin is down-the-hatch and doing its job.

I am glad to note that he is going pee less often, he’s producing more, and he’s eating and drinking water normally. The only things we have to work on now are the other 13 doses of Zeniquin and repairing the relationship between Griffin and Owein. There is only one real cure for that problem and that is time. I figure I could hasten things along by daily grooming with the same brush. Mingling the two cats scents together so that Me + Strange Cat = Us.

Travel Woes

I’ve been thinking about the places I’d like to go to this year. My work trip to DC is pretty much a foregone conclusion but I’ve been thinking about visiting my folks in South Carolina for Mothers Day. So I looked to compare three methods of travel and what I found was hilarious (all computations were for two adults):

By Air

  1. ORD – CLT = $658.60
  2. MDW – CLT = $658.00 on AirTran / $489.80 on Southwest, but Southwest only flies to Greenville SC, a two hour car ride from Rock Hill, SC.
  3. AZO – CLT = $1123.40
  4. GRR – CLT = $720.60

By Automobile

  1. The trip is 736 miles each way, my Santa Fe gets 374 miles per tank, that’s nearly 2 tanks of gasoline. With an average cost of $3.60 per gallon that’s $71.28 per tank. Each leg of the trip is $140. Total is $280.
  2. Trip time is 12h 31m.

By Train

  1. Amtrak can get two people from Kalamazoo to Charlotte. They do it by sending us to Chicago, then DC, then Charlotte. It’s $678.00 and each trip takes 35h 44m!

So, with money being tight I have to be very picky about where I go and how I get there. For this plan, if it actually comes, the most convenient and cheapest by far is to use my car. The train prices and times were comically absurd and flying out of AZO? With prices like that, why do we have an airport even? It’s laughably bad.

Where'd you come from Louis?

What a mystery! Genealogically I’m stuck on Scott’s Great Grandfather. Louis Lazarus was born (we think) near Vilnius in Lithuania on 13 Feb 1890 or 13 Feb 1891. When he was 17 or 18 he immigrated to the United States, so that would peg his arrival between 1908-1910, we have it on good authority that it’s 1909.

He married a woman named Tillie or Trinka and she followed after him and immigrated in 1910-1912.

They show up very nicely in the 1930 Census, so they must have completed their naturalization process by then. The family was Louis, Tillie, Herman, and Alexander. Herman is Scott’s maternal grandfather. They lived in 1930 in 712-718 W. 176th Street in Manhattan, New York.

I scanned all of Ancestry.com and I’ve found numerous Louis Lazarus’s but they don’t have Louis’s profession of Upholsterer. Louis taught his profession to his son Herman, and he taught his son, Steven. There is a Bricklayer and a Tailor Louis, but those families don’t have any members like the one we need.

Of course, everyone who knows anything has died. They’ve taken the names and the locations with them, however we have it on good authority from what information leaked out before they died that it’s Lithuania or popularly declared “Russia”, that they were either Russian or Hebrew, and that Louis and Tillie’s original language was Yiddish.

I’ve searched Ancestry.com with +/- 5 years on birth and arrival with names and family and the only real lead I’ve been able to find is the 1930 Census. Possibly they weren’t citizens in the 1920 Census because they don’t show up. I imagine they would have stayed in the environs of NYC because they were in Manhattan in 1930. After that the entire family migrated to the Capital District in New York, ending up clustered around Glens Falls, New York.

There is a big family who would give anything to break through this information blockage and find real names and real histories in the Old World. If anyone knows anything I know there would be a lot of very thankful people. I’m pretty much running out of options without flying to NYC myself, which I can’t do because I can’t afford it. :/

Ancestry.com

I finally got most of Scott’s family over to the new family tree on Ancestry.com. Unfortunately I can’t add any real details as I don’t pay for Ancestry.com’s data – I just use the free bits from their website. So, I will have to do my research the old-fashioned way. There are several websites that might have the information I’m looking for, but it’s going to be a slow and bloody import procedure with a lot of manual hand-entry. It’s what you get when you can’t really afford to fork over $200 to the Mormons. ๐Ÿ˜‰

Rebuilding Family Trees

I’ve started to rebuild Scott’s family tree in my Ancestry.com account from the research I did over the last holiday break when we were all in Mankato. I’ve got a lot of information and have to re-hand-enter all the relevant members of his family. I’ve just gotten started and it’s going to take quite some time to get all the information in. What really burns is that I have the entire structure exported as a GEDCOM file, but I can’t simply pull a section of tree out and plop it somewhere else. This task is going to take a very long time to complete.

I’m going to start with the family members that we have actual memories for. My overarching goal is to find Scott’s grandfather’s origin story. He came over from Ellis Island in 1906 and crafted a whole new identity for himself. This is a daunting challenge. Before I can take it seriously, I have to get some sleep.

Baby Steps…

Assigning People to Music

Here are my top ten played tracks on my iPod “Be A Jackass”:

  1. Hero – The Verve Pipe
  2. Homage to Patagonia – Lemon Jelly
  3. Hooked on Bach – Hooked on Classics
  4. Puttin’ on the Ritz – Taco
  5. Would You…? – Touch and Go
  6. Video Killed the Radio Star – Buggles
  7. Some Fantastic – Barenaked Ladies
  8. Hooked on Classics Part 3 – Hooked on Classics
  9. Hooked on Mozart – Hooked on Classics
  10. Hooked on Song – Hooked on Classics

The first track is easy, I’ve always associated that with Dennis Skinner. I don’t know why. As for the rest, I’m going to have to give them some serious listens in order to find where people belong. I really should find musical selections for every one of my friends and family. So far I’ve got my Mother, my Stepfather, and my Sister. I’ve got to assign music to:

  1. Scott – Glee, Jonatha?
  2. My Father – Something patriotic
  3. Scott’s Mom – Something classical
  4. My Boss – Dar Williams perhaps
  5. Andy Med
  6. Jeffery – Something from the 80’s
  7. Sean – Star Trek Theme
  8. Jeramiah – That section of remix in german
  9. Justin – Maybe a section of Homage to Patagonia
  10. Matt – “I Will Survive” perhaps
  11. Max

And perhaps more people if they ended up calling me.

Reagan’s 100th

Poring over the morning news I ran across a news entry that spoke about Reagan’s 100th Birthday. Much like how a very strong odor can key on a memory and bring a flood of remembered things back into your mind, so did this. I grew up with Ronald Reagan as President. I remember the Cold War with the USSR and I remember “Mr. Gorbachev, Tear Down This Wall!” speech that Ronald Reagan gave.

This man has accumulated a halo around him that places him just beneath the Holy Trinity itself for Christian conservatives. The memory of this man and his presidency bring many overheard arguments between my parents as I started to learn that when two people are dedicated to polar opposites, that the law of attraction is mostly relevant for magnets. I don’t think anyone really regards the man, Ronald Reagan any longer. Death has transformed him from a person to a canvas, it has sucked out his 3rd dimension and converted him into a handy surface that anyone can use to their heart’s content. The man is dead, how could he complain at how his memory is treated?

Conservatives pray to him. They read what he wrote, what he said, and what he stood for as slightly less important than the New Testament in the Bible, but way more important than anything else. His political life has been transformed into a conservative ideal, and if you fashion a hand grenade of Reagan’ness and pull the pin and lob it into a GOP gathering they all will turn to the light and get very quiet and pray to the Reagan-y-Explody-Goodness. The fascination they have borders on the fanatical, there are terms for what they are afflicted with – you could call it hero-worship, enthrallment to the cult of personality, a whole host of things. For a segment of our political spectrum Ronald Reagan is the second coming of Jesus Christ. I’m surprised they haven’t tried to force the hand of the church and have him sainted.

Now, for the Liberals, Ronald Reagan is something just as precious, but completely opposite. He’s a flame-eyed monster bent on world domination and more shifty criminal acts than you can shake a stick at. Liberals remember the Contras and Sandinistas, all the underhanded dirty tricks and the policies that brought anger and rage. Death brought Reagan to a canvas and Liberals painted that canvas with their impression of the man, casting him not in a saintly light, but one of monstrousness and epic Mordor-class evil. For the conservatives savior, he’s the Liberals bane.

If ever you want a handy guide to political polarity, simply drop Reagan’s name and watch the response. If you see a halo, wistful eyes, and te-deum’s forming then you have yourself a dyed-in-the-wool conservative. If however you notice some frothing, restlessness, agitation, and perhaps the construction of effigies that are set on fire, then you are facing a liberal.

I personally celebrate the fact that he’s very much dead and can’t form any new political opinions or wield any political power. It’s not that I sought his death, that I prayed for his untimely demise, but I did thank the Light when he did die. This is in stark contrast to the oedipal-obsessed spawn of Reagan’s Vice President. For that son-of-a-bitch (the term is apt) I will hold a very large party and feast upon his death, celebrating the worlds freedom from that unbearable monster. Reagan is just as much a monster, but his corpse in the ground tempers my anger into a kind of wistful fuzzy disgust.

So, for the 100th Anniversary of Reagan’s Birth, I mark it with this blog post, I bite my thumb and I spit on the ground. And that’s all I’m giving it.