Monthly Archives: February 2007

Stupid new tollroad

Stupid tollroad

I am beginning to hate this new toll road. There are huge tie-ups on both ends of my commute. Now that Mopac is connected to IH-35, there are a lot more people dumping onto Mopac. And the breaking point has been reached. This backup started well north of the Parmer offramp. You are looking at the Duvall exit. All three lanes of the frontage road is sold, bumper to bumper traffic. This really screws people trying to make a right turn onto Duvall. Fortunately, I am not one of them. I am so close to my destination, though! The IBM buildings are just behind those buildings on the left!

Lunch Time Tichuers 02/06/2007

When Adam went into his Grand-Tichu death spiral, Ed first passed him an Ace instead of the Phoenix. What was amusing was the second Grand-Tichu call. This time Ed passed Adam the Phoenix instead of the Ace. So when I played my King-high straight, Ed could have gone over it if he would have kept that Phoenix. This allowed me to set Adam. My dilemma during the pass was: should I pass Jon an Ace or a 9? I decided that my hand was not so great otherwise, so I passed him that Ace on the top of my straight.


02/06/2007 The scorecard for a game of Tichu

GT or T bet made or lost

This team scored more points than the other or one twoed

GT/T Team #1 GT/T GT/T Team #2 GT/T
Ed & AdamR Jon & MarkH
T- -80    
80
 
  120     80  
 
180
  GT+ 320  
  185    
515
T+
  85 T- T+ 815  
 
-40
GT-   840  
  -240 GT-   1040  

links

How to make your car look like one of the cars in Cars link via

A union outsources picketing to poorly paid day laborers link via

Hand wars link via

Wikiworld link via

The last question link via

Tupper’s self-referential formula link via

Running the numbers link via

Girl going to eat nothing but dirt for two months to break world record link via

“That is not a hair question!” link via

Tiny plant to hang on your cellphone link via

What hands can do link via

Pizza novemdeux

Swedish pizza #1

My pizza loving readers have called out for more. And who am I to deny them? I have a friend, Norbet, that says over a good beer: “I like to think with my stomach.” Well, my stomach gave me a burst of inspiration. Or was it acid-reflux? Anyways, I decided that the next pizza would be Swedish meatballs! So I diced up some new potatoes and browned them in the oven. I made the Gräddsås sauce with some extra cornstarch to thicken it up.

Swedish pizza #2

Of course, I had to try some Lingonberry jelly on top! Mmm… not bad at all. I am telling you that the pizza is a food delivery system.

Dessert pizza

The next pizza that I cooked was a dessert pizza. Cooked Granny Smith apples with home-made caramel sauce. Next time, I should put a strudel topping on it.

Game Day 02/01/2007

Game #1

Space Dealer

John was definitely wanting to hose me tonight. I had wanted to play H2olland for a while now. And yet when I suggested it for a game, John instead recommended Tara, Seat of Kings. Doug was accommodating and was willing to play either. So we settled on a game that all of us had played before: Space Dealer. This time we played with the Gizi cards (victory points for the neutral planets). As I play this game more, I loose the sense of being rushed for time. Next time, I want to play with the advanced cards. Or even with eight people…

Game #2

H2olland

Peter and Francesca helped me out by playing H2olland. And I was glad I did play it. Not only was it an interesting and thematic game. But, based on the comments I was hearing from the other table, Tara was sounding suspicious.

H2olland is ultimately about planting tulips and then scoring them. But, before that is done, land must be reclaimed from the sea with windmills. There are six species of tulips with victory points ranging from 1 to 6. The level of tulips that you can buy is determined by how many windmills that you have on the board. You get tulips either by purchasing them by trading supplies at the co-op. Or as a reward for reclaiming land from the sea. Tulips are planted much like crops. However, they don’t really do anything during this phase of the game. You do get a worker that is placed on top of the field. These workers tend the tulip fields and will get you victory points during the second half of the game.

You start out with one of each type of resource: beans, carrots, corn, cows, and potatoes. These are placed out on the board during spring time next to your farm houses or your windmills. The crops are harvested during autumn. A weather card is revealed that determines what crops are harvested and other events that may happen (floods, droughts, disease, shortages, or surpluses). If a crop is touched by at least one of your windmills or farm houses, then you get one of the matching tiles from the co-op. So players will want to either touch other’s crops or try and block other player’s from touching their crops. You can buy more farm houses, windmills, dikes, or tulip fields from the co-op during this phase. And you can only store 5 crops/tulips through to spring.

During summertime, the land is reclaimed from the sea. One windmill can only pump out one tile of sea. If there are more tiles of sea than there are windmills, then nothing happens. So, players will place dikes out in order to cut off the excess sea tiles and to allow the windmills to pump out the water. One interesting aspect of this is that there can be more windmills that can pump out a tile than are needed. Only one is used and ties are broken by the start player. So it is possible to steal the glory of pumping out a tile and getting the tulip tile reward for yourself.

The game enters its second phase after the lake has been fully drained or six years. First, we remove all of the crop fields that are connected by at least two or more players. Next, players are allowed to place any remaining farm houses, windmills, or tulip fields. Then, all of the workers are removed from the tulip fields.

Now, the race is on to claim tulip fields. In player order, you are allowed to place one worker on a field that is next to either your farm house, your windmill, or another field that is already claimed by you. So, your goal is to claim the most expensive fields and also to cut off other players from being able to claim fields.

All in all it was an interesting game. And it is one that I should have played sooner.

Disc Golf 02/03/2007

lake construction
stakes construction

Another day of disc golf. And one that I thought that I was going to be playing alone. It started off cold and windy. When Jon canceled, I thought that I was going to be the only one out there. So I started playing. I figured that if no one showed, then I would just continue playing alone. But at 10:01, I saw Gravitt drive up to the parking with Nick and Stephanie trailing.

It seems that they are building out into the lake. I wonder why. A fishing pier, perhaps? And there are now stakes running down the valley. Hrm…. keep away from the disc golf course, dammit!

Hole 8

I did have a good throw on hole 8.

disc in water

Of course, we still managed to throw discs in the new stream. And get one caught in the tree…

Disc Golf 02/02/2007

Good shot on 17

Adam, Rehana, and I went to Cat Hollow today for disc golf. Unfortunately, another group of golfers started out just before us. As we were waiting and watching, we thought that they were good (and therefore quick) based on their throws. But we caught up to them on hole two even when one of us went into the woods (the leaves are all dead so the disc was easy to find). This continued for a number of holes. We would wait for a while for them to finish up before we threw. Finally, we just decided to skip hole 4 and go ahead of them to hole five. So I was a little surprised when all three of them started yelling at us and calling us rude. Of course, isn’t starting a confrontation with someone else is itself a rude thing to do? I don’t know what they expected our other option to be besides waiting. Go back home?

But, once we threw at hole 5, they never saw us again. They didn’t catch back up and wait on us…

I did have one good throw on 17. Usually I try and throw through a gap between a very large tree and a Juniper bush. But, instead, my disc went to the right of the bush and curved back towards the basket.