Show Notes - Week of January 11, 2021

Picture

Greetings from 53.5° north after a relatively boring week, at least in comparison to the previous one. This week was filled with reading, riding, and work, with the added milestone of being caught up on The Mandalorian. I have to hand it to Disney. Mando was such a well-done series with a great mix of comedy and tension. Plus the return of Boba Fett, Bib Fortuna, and Luke Skywalker did not hurt of course.

I am actually interesting in watching the upcoming Star Wars content coming out on Disney+, and this coming from a lifelong fan who had seriously soured after “Solo” and “The Rise of Skywalker”.

Enough geeking out. Time to get on with the rest of the update for this week.\


Reading Pile:
Book #2 for 2021 was “Cibola Burn”, the fourth book in the Expanse series by James S. A. Corey. There are a lot of reasons why I like the Expanse series. Certainly the action is good and the implications of humanity spreading out throughout the solar system and beyond is always fodder for interesting thoughts and speculations. However the best reason to read the series is that the good guys always win. Someway, somehow, they get things to work, but not with a macho, lone wolf bullshit trope, and not with some deus ex machina intervention. They do it with love and an undying loyalty for each other. They are highly principled people, even Amos who could be considered a killer, and the clarity their principles give them drive the forward to do the right thing and ultimately to be successful. Definitely recommend the series if you are interested in science fiction, space exploration, and humanity.\

Picture

Cycling Update:
It was a good week in the saddle. As I mentioned before, the distance I am traveling is not great but I am happy with what I am doing for the distance I am riding. I rode for just over 69 km this week but got some killer hills in and some good top end speed, which feels really good on my heavy winter bike with studded tires.

From a milestone point of view on my cross-Canada virtual tour, I made it to Barriere, British Columbia. As I virtually ride north on Highway 5, Barriere is the first settlement of note north of Kamloops. According to Wikipedia, Barriere only became an incorporated settlement in 2007, even though it has been home to the Simpcw people for thousands of years. The other interesting note I could find is that Barriere is at the same latitude as Stonehenge, so they have erected a scaled-down replica in tribute.

Here is the updated progress chart. I should be able to easily make it to Clearwater next week.\

Picture

New Music:
I wrote about 250 words for all of the great music that I found this week, but then Weebly went and screwed up on me and the whole section was lost. Instead of trying to redo it all, I will give a quick summary.\

New Beers:
I had four new beers this week and either they were all not very good, or I am just in a phase where I am not liking beer. These beers seemed average at best and two of them were definitely below average.

Beer #713 was the Fat Sherpa porter from Establishment Brewing in Calgary. It came highly recommended and my community on Untappd really liked it. I found it a bit smoky but did not really enjoy it. (3.25 / 5)

Beer #714 was Father John’s Winter Ale from Howe Sound. This was very aromatic but bland tasting. The winter spices did not really come through for me. (3.0 / 5)

Beer #715 was another from Howe Sound. The Megadestroyer Imperial Licorice Stout got points for originality but again I was not overly impressed. The initial shock from the licorice taste did pass quickly but there are many other Imperial Stouts that I would recommend before this one. (3.25 / 5)

I have now had three beers from Howe Sound and they are averaging 3.06. I think that is enough of a sample to give them a pass next time I come across them.

Last up for Beer #716 was the Sour Citra from Les Trois Mousquetaires out of Quebec.I picked this up thinking it was a Sour Cherry beer so it was a bit disappointing. Nice pithy taste, but the sour was just there and not really part of the beer. To be fair, I might have been a bit biased since I was looking forward to a sour cherry beer. (3.0 / 5)\

Picture

New Words:
The first word in the list of new words for this week is right from the title of the book I finished. A few others come from that book and others come from my catch up work with War and Peace.

cibola
[see-buh-luh]
NOUN

  1. the Seven Cities of, legendary cities of great wealth believed by earlier Spanish explorers to exist in the SW United States.


codon
[ˈkōdän]
NOUN

  1. (biochemistry) a sequence of three nucleotides which together form a unit of genetic code in a DNA or RNA molecule.


hector
[ˈhektər]
VERB

  1. talk to (someone) in a bullying way.


chiral
[ˈkīrəl]
ADJECTIVE

  1. (chemistry) asymmetric in such a way that the structure and its mirror image are not superimposable. Chiral compounds are typically optically active; large organic molecules often have one or more chiral centers where four different groups are attached to a carbon atom.


nacre
[ˈnākər]
NOUN

  1. mother-of-pearl.


boojum
[ˈbo͞ojəm]
NOUN

  1. an imaginary dangerous animal.


blackamoor
[ˈblakəˌmo͝or]
NOUN

  1. (archaic) a black African or a very dark-skinned person.


mummer
[ˈməmər]
NOUN

  1. an actor in a traditional masked mime, especially of a type associated with Christmas and popular in England in the 18th and early 19th centuries.


insuperable
[inˈso͞op(ə)rəb(ə)l]
ADJECTIVE

  1. (of a difficulty or obstacle) impossible to overcome.


parterre
[pärˈter]
NOUN

  1. a level space in a garden or yard occupied by an ornamental arrangement of flower beds.
  2. (NORTH AMERICAN) the part of the ground floor of an auditorium in the rear and on the sides, especially the part beneath the balcony.