Snow Weebles

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Every life is precious, but not every snowman’s life is well conceived. (The picture doesn’t show how out of proportion this snowman was–very ugly guy.)

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They are voting for an early Easter. There snow bunny was designed to last a little longer as it leaned on the mailbox. The head was approaching a place where gravity would soon win.

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My snow weeble. I don’t know if snowballs were used in the construction of this snowman. His/her waist appears a little thick!

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Raptured Snowmen

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Someone in North Texas does in fact own a snowplow!

 

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He was built to simulate what a snowman would look like if global warming were actually occurring. 

 

The Thrill of An Unknown Frontier

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With the passing of Leonard Nimoy this week, my Facebook page was filled with many references to him.  As I read each of these post, I thought, “There is nothing I can add to this.”  While it might be debated whether anything new can be added, seeing an Alaska license plate today gave me hope that I might.

When I read, “The Last Frontier” on the plate, I could not help thinking of the “The Final Frontier”.  Why did Alaska choose “frontier” for their license plate?  Why did Gene Roddenberry choose to include “frontier” in the opening to Star Trek?

“Space…the final frontier.
These are the voyages of the Starship Enterprise,
its five-year mission

….to explore strange new worlds
…to seek out new life and new civilizations
…to boldly go where no man has gone before.”Gene Roddenberry (August 10, 1966)

Growing up in the 70’s gave me the opportunity to see the entire Star Trek phenomenon unfold.  And, while I do NOT own any Star Trek paraphernalia, I do have multiple bookshelves and boxes full of fantasy/science fiction books.  Although Star Wars also certainly influenced my reading choices, Star Trek certainly provided the foundation-making me receptive to many literary voyages outside of the mind.

Additionally, Mr. Nimoy took me by the hand and provided me a peek into the controversial and paranormal with “In Search Of“.  He introduced me to many mysteries and unexplained occurrences.  Now, with our many cable options, I find it very difficult to not sit down and watch a show on the pyramids, the loch ness monster, or any story hinting at extra-terrestrial involvement.

Thank you, Leonard Nimoy!  You played a significant role in stretching my mind to embrace a world where all of the pieces did not fit together perfectly.  You helped build a curiosity in the things on this planet and things on other planets.  You gave me a logical look at a situation when your Captain was nothing but emotion.  And, you helped sow the seeds in many creative frontiers – the minds of your viewers.

Texas White Fright

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Texas has had a full week of showing its weakness.  If the liberals want to totally take over Texas, they should make it eternal winter.  Texas drivers are largely inept in anything above a dusting of snow.  And, if the liberals can arrange ice on the roads and bribe a few snow plow drivers, they could take over the northern part of the state within days!

To protect Texas from any unseemly interest, I am offering a bit of advice to those drivers who are proud of their Texas heritage yet willing to admit they could use a little advice when they are behind the steering wheel in sub-freezing temperatures.

  1. Crowds are not your friend.  If you want to play “Lemmings” and follow the car crowd to an uncertain destination with an even more uncertain time, please ignore this rule. Saying, “The freeway is always the best way.” is wrong.
  2. Put down the cigs and cell phone so both hands can be on the steering wheel.
  3. It is okay to slow down going around corners.  In fact, it is recommended.
  4. Your windshield wipers are your friends.  If they freeze up, cursing at them will not help.
  5. Your brakes will still help you stop, but not as quickly as normal.
  6. If you see a snow plow….oh, never mind.
  7. It is strongly recommended you don’t tailgate like you often do; you aren’t that good of a driver.
  8. If you are from the north, you may have a tendency to get over confident while laughing at the other drivers.  Since many of them have trucks, any damage they suffer from sliding is likely to be minimal.
  9. When you can still plainly see the grass but the snow is still coming, closings are in your future.  (My daughters had 2.5 days off of school this week with an early dismissal on Friday.  B-ball games were cancelled.  Men’s retreats were cancelled.  The world is imploding and only August and 110 degree temperatures can save us!)
  10. If someone says, “I can’t drive in the snow.  I am afraid.”, don’t try and talk them out of it.  If they don’t have the confidence or the comfort, it is a losing battle.  You may want to try and take them to am empty church parking lot and help them to realize snow does not defy any laws of physics.  It is just a slight modification to the driving physics they are most familiar with.
  11. “It is beautiful.” is an accurate description of snow, but it is a comment best reserved for when you are not behind the steering wheel with cars anxious to get around you.

I am not a fan of snow either.  I hate it!  It and its ilk (freezing rain mostly) are part of the reason I am in Texas.  I acquired my “ice driving” reflexes the old fashioned way.  I did not get hypnotized and learn to spin the steering wheel the opposite direction you intuitively think you should spin it.  I went in the ditch a few times and maybe even had a slight ding or two to the car.  When snow is an anomaly and not an expected yearly evil, it is easier to stay in your home and pretend you are at a ski lodge that doesn’t have any skiing.

If you are on the political left, gather your forces.  Dress up like tow truck drivers and insurance adjusters.  North Texas is ripe for the picking!

Deliberate Littering

My youngest daughter had another morning of before-school activities.  All 5 of us (myself, my daughters and our two exchange students) loaded up and headed toward school.  The lights were rather unkind today.  I took this time to look at all of the other cars around me.  The bumper stickers are to be read, right?  As we continued our bad luck with the lights, we finally made it to the last “real” time-sucking light before getting the girls to school.  (I was going to get my daughter their a little later than she wanted, but the teacher she was to meet with was just walking in as I dropped them off.)  As I look to my right, the car ahead of me opened the driver door.  While I was expecting the driver to pour out their coffee onto the pavement, I was surprised to see them take a paper plate (likely a temporary home to their breakfast before it was consumed) and  slide it discretely under their car.

I will admit to being a little taken back by her actions.  I mentioned it to the girls as well.  I mentioned to my oldest daughter who was sitting in the front seat, “You should mouth the words, ‘I saw you.’ when we pass her.”  (The daughter on the opposite side of the car in the back seat would have jumped at righting in a small way this injustice.)  Our exchange students also saw the behavior as going against an Asian sense of planetary responsibility.

As a reluctant recycler, I can sympathize with those who are unwilling to make the occasional effort necessary to place a can or cup in the proper receptacle.  I don’t have the equation, but it would seem at some point there is a diminishing return.  However, if I have a gum wrapper, I will walk off the path to the closest trash can to throw it away OR I will give it a home in my pocket until a trash can presents itself.

Is willful littering a symptom of an entitlement mentality?  Is it the result of poor parental examples?  Am I using the mornings observation as a more serious problem then the random event it really was?  If I were a superhero ( not a real impressive superhero) who could animate trash and make it do my bidding, would the present or the past provide a better environment?  If there is such a superhero/villian out there, I will continue to do my part to provide him/her as little access to his superpowers as possible.

Who You Waving At?

Where I grew up, anyone who drove by on the the small country road I lived on was a neighbor.  And, if they are neighbors, you wave at them.  Whether I was riding my bike to the covered bridge or mowing the front yard of the 7 acres we lived on, I waved whenever a car drove past.  Most times, they also waved back.  It is how I grew up.  Although I knew most everyone I waved at, waving was one of those things you did 30+ years ago to give a greater feeling of community.

In my DFW neighborhood, some of that still remains, but not so much.  When I first arrived here, about 5 years ago, I was much more likely to wave at a car passing by.  If I was doing yard work, I considered it an obligation to give a friendly gesture to any passersby-whether they walked or they drove.  As my months in Texas have elapsed, the likelihood of a returned wave seems all but reserved for neighbors who are standing in their yards.  Nearly all cars driving by might get suspicious looks.  The cars are either hired help for one of the neighbors OR they are guys in beater pickup trucks driving around on trash day looking for bargains in the “free” pilfering piles.

When I leave the neighborhood, there are a couple of neighbors who are still likely to extend a hand of friendship.  In many cases, their waves are quicker then mine.  One of those neighbors is also responsible for the neighborhood “fat camps”.  Outside her garage, she has a heavy-duty kicking/punching bag.  And, when she is able to draw in the “fatties” or “near-fatties” from the neighborhood, she takes her enrollees through her proven (?) routine.  (She is fairly slender, so she does have some credibility.)  My wife and I have seen her working 5-10 women in her driveway/garage or within a few blocks of her house.  We have tried not to stare during the workouts.  She doesn’t seem like she cuts corners for any of her victims.

With this background information, I now take you to us leaving church last Sunday.  Not only do many churches have greeters, they also have people holding the door for you as you leave.  Our neighborhood exercise junkie was manning (womaning?) the doors on that day.  Not wanting to wait for the narrowing created by having only one door open (their were two doors), I went ahead and opened the other door and worked my way out.  We had a brief conversation.  I confirmed she was the “exercise lady”, and I mentioned to her how we have waved at each other a number of times.  She didn’t deny it.  But, she seems to be “old school” like I used to be.  While my philosophy has deteriorated to the point of “only waving if recognized”, she still takes the much friendlier stance of, “wave and let God sort them out”.

I hope I can reboot my waving.  Regardless of if someone knows me or not, I want people to see my smiling face and easy wave.  (When I take my walks, I will often “dip” my head as an acknowledgement, but waving is almost unheard of.)  I want them to see me and think, “What is different about him?”  I have plenty of time to be stiff after I am dead.  As long as I have the ability to move and engage in friendly gestures, I feel obligated to put forth a minimum effort of kindness.  It doesn’t have to be as gregarious as a hug.  It is a small effort to shrink the city down so it is more hospitable.  For that moment when the gesture is exchanged, a community of two is just fine.

 

 

The Manly Panera

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As I paid my weekly visit to a Panera, I turned my observational skills up to the highest level. I was nosier in my observing of the crowd than I normally am.  From the start, it was quite clear this Panera was much more “man-centric” than the other ones I had visited. The tables of (mostly) men went something like this:

  • One gentlemen was a Kurt Vonnegut look alike (he looked like he was much more focused then me).  He was focused on his computer.  I think he was trying to make an Amazon purchase.  No new novels seem likely….
  • One gentlemen seemed capable of studying (pastor) much more deeply than me-I saw him look up twice as his food was delivered and as an acquaintance said “hello”.  As he stood up to leave, he probably played football/basketball in high school.  Maybe he was a coach?
  • Two booths over two men were talking something spiritual (I heard “Holy Spirit”).  As I focused all of my nosy skills into my hearing, I would guess one of them was very involved administratively with the Catholic or Episcopal church.  As with most priest, they look like one of their spiritual gifts was accepting other people’s hospitality.
  • A VERY retired couple with walker and cane (he had a US Army hat on.  I would guess WWII vet, but he told me Korea and Vietnam) enjoyed each other’s company.  The husband was more mobile so he placed the orders, got the coffee refills, and still smiled as he awaited  for every word his bride could offer. After I thanked him for his service, he did not hesitate to tell me what a great wife he had.  How she held the family together while he was away.  Brief words exchanged with her revealed she had a German (I think) accent.
  • There was a table of four guys (it seemed to be a rather fluid group.  It was as large as 7 and as small as 2) who looked like all early retirees or soon-to-be with their newspapers and a constant hum of sports and current events.  As the conversations warmed up and the wannabes left the table, the core group sounded more like a support group as they discussed work issues, including some problems with younger fellow employees.
  • Behind me a couple of tables, was a couple of guys who didn’t give me much to work with.  As the one gentlemen picked his food up, he seemed to give me a rather stern look.  Was I in his normal booth?  Did he not like my t-shirt declaring myself as a visitor to the Grand Canyon?
  • The last table was the most interesting to me–a group of definite male retirees all listening intently to one another.  Every corner of the table was filled!  The only one who faced me directly was wearing an orange crocheted hat. (Kind of like a hybrid of the above.)

I considering discreetly (or indiscreetly) snapping a picture of the hat., but I could not image how the conversation would go if I felt compelled to ask.  I didn’t want to pull him from his friends, and even though I did chat with him briefly, the “would you pose for a picture?” question never came up.

As I went for a refill, my muse also needed his coffee refilled as well.

Me:  While backing away from the decaf coffee, “Sorry about that.  Go ahead and jump in.  I have what I need.”

Orange:  “No problem.  Whenever you are done is fine.”

Me:  “Quite a hat you have there!  Did your wife make it for you?”

Orange: “No, my daughter did.”

Me: “That looks like something my wife or daughter might make for me.  It looks good on you.”

Orange: While failing to extricate his coffee cup from the dispenser and spilling coffee on the counter and the floor, “Whoops.  My eyes aren’t what they used to be.”

Me:  “As long as it is your eyes.  I was afraid when I got older I would lose the ability to pour coffee and talk at the same time.”  I laughed a little and Orange joined in.  (I figured a person wearing a hat like he was wearing MUST have a sense of humor!)

As I gathered napkins to clean up his mess, he wandered back to his seat.  I let the management know about the mess while heading back to my booth.

The hats I found on-line are only a taste of what I really had the pleasure of seeing.   While his hat had a brim, it was not a rigid brim.  The brim seemed to droop slightly toward his nose.  The rest of the hat could not properly hold a firmness usually associated with a hat.  Due to yarns inability to effectively combat gravity, the hat seemed to sag in numerous places.  The yarn, however, was quite adequate to provide a very attractive ball for the top.  A different color of yarn may have given the hat a little more flair, but it was clear, the man wore it with pride.

While I admired his hat as I looked at it through the eyes of the women in my life, I now had an explanation why he could wear the hat with pride and no reservations.  He loved the hands and the heart of the person who made the hat for him.  And, his diminishing eye sight allowed him to spend over an hour at Panera confident he was the most stylish dresser there.

As I spoke to my daughter last night while we discussed an issue of incredible importance in her young mind, I made a similar comment of how age greatly fades the way we view people’s opinions.  She is a mess about a few things, and I tried to convince her how 20-30 years from now the things she is all worked up about will not even be a second thought.  She didn’t seem convinced.  After seeing my orange-hatted friend, I believe I still have some additional learning to do.  Maybe if I am really practicing what I preach, I will schedule the unveiling of my original orange hat for a special event sometime before retirement.  Unless my family also embraces an attitude of “Who cares?”, this special event will have to be a solo one…

 

Blue Bow Mystery

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As we began the final mile of our walk, we prepared to leave the established sidewalk and move into the less specific paths of the parking lot and park that would eventually lead us home.  The final house to our right was adorned with two bows.  It was not completely clear what their purpose was or why the mailbox and the light attached to the right of the front door needed one.  The bow appeared to be made out of blue netting.  At this point in observing, we were trying to mentally unknot the bundles lightweight material with the hope of developing a theory.  Our first conjecture was a new baby had arrived for the family that lived there.  (Blue was a pretty strong clue.)  A secondary, although remote theory, involved their support for some cause I was not immediately aware of.  Was there an edict out of Austin/Washington encouraging household to put blue ribbon-like knots in front yard to support the IRS or the EPA or Texas Independence?  As we put the house further in our figurative rear view mirrors, our discussion wandered more towards the weekend and what would be on our plates at dinner time.

The next time I walked by, the same knotted loops were still there.  The wind had ruffled them a little more, making there resemblance to bows less obvious.  The city workers continued their construction on the updated flood drainage system.  I cursed their construction equipment for temporarily excavating the area around my sidewalk and forcing me to detour through this part of the neighborhood.  The wind-altered bows were nearly forgotten….

The other morning, as I approached the final stretch of the sidewalk and prepared to emerge out of the neighborhood, I came up on the house again.  This time, a car was slowly heading toward the end of the street with no other destination available but the House of the Blue Knots.  As they slowly turned into the driveway, I slowed my pace.  (I am the type of person that assembles the entire contents of the shopping cart from Walmart of the person in front of me.  After processing all of the information, I make a determination what the next 4 hours of their life might look like.  What are they eating for dinner?  Are they having a party? etc. Often I put a humorous twist on the basket just to make sure my kids/wife are listening.)  As the elderly couple slowly got out of the car, I opted for slowing my pace rather than walking backwards while facing them.  As the back door to the car opened, a medium wrapped gift filled the assumed grandparent hands.  And, unless I have completely lost my grasp of the realities of being a parent, it was likely a couple of outfits that would either be worn only a couple of times because they were too dressy and too hard to put on OR an outfit that was destined to provide a supporting role to an overfilled diaper.

Should I have chosen to assume immediately the blue bow was performing its normal function, I probably would have been home a couple minutes earlier on that day.  I would have thought about some “interesting” subject common to the mind of an adult.  (If I had a normal mind, I might have more insight into what “normal” is like.  I suppose it involves a mind that likes playing by the rules and accepting whatever role it is cast into.  On the outside, I may accept this stereotype.  Inside, I am searching for extra storage space to give my brain extra processing power without allowing my head to swell to substantially.) But, I rather fill my mind with how life is a mystery rather than how it is so mundane.

Who Moved My Chair?

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Saturday was the culmination of many hours of labor for my 8th grade robotics team.  Although I was their “coach”, they didn’t really need me very much.  They are all very good students, and my primary role was keeping them on “task” over the past few months.   The FLL program they participated in is very well organized.  Feel free to follow the link for ALL the info you may want to find out about the program.

My entire Saturday was spent mostly keeping the team in front of the correct door or the correct table at the designated time.  Coaches were not allowed to be with the kids while they were being judged or while they were running their robots on the course.  Translated:  There was a bit of down time.  Also, since the school that was hosting the Robotics judging was hosting more people than it was used to, coaches were instructed to bring chairs if they wanted to be guaranteed a seat.  With my card table chair in hand as I entered the gym, I had my permanent spot reserved for my posterior whenever I wanted to park.  (In my mind, I didn’t think outdoor collapsible chairs would work.  They are outdoor chairs, aren’t they?  Sure they are cool with their armrests, but I just didn’t think this was the type of chair to bring to an event like this.  Would it hurt the wood gym floor?  I guess I am sometimes overly-conscientious. )

Each of the 26 teams at this robot judging, received an 8′ x 8′ area for their team to setup.  My team’s area was right by the main entrance.  The robot course tables (see above) were just in front of our area inside the main entrance.  Whenever a judging took place, all of the parents who were not permitted to enter any of the judging areas, flocked to watch their child’s team robot do all of the task it could in the 2:30 minutes it was given.  Additionally, each team got 3 chances to run this course.  Hopefully, my description implies it got a little crowded in front of our “space”.  As it worked out, we willing relinquished a portion of our space before eminent domain was necessary.  We huddled in the back half of our space knowing it was a contribution we were unlikely to be thanked for offering.  Other than one of the kids getting sick in the bathroom and having to go home early, the morning was pretty smooth.

Lunch time for 40 (30 kids and 10 adults) equals about 16 pizzas, or at least it did today.  Although we (the emphasis on the kids) tried to eat them all, about 1/4 of them made it home with us.  After lunch, my team had about an hour before their final robot run.  As I walked into the gym, a quick rightward glance showed my chair was gone.  I gave it a little time thinking someone had borrowed it and would return it after lunch.  As my team worked with their robot to figure out what programming changes they needed to make to allow their robots to work on the slightly larger (only 1/4 inch or so, but it makes a difference) course, I walked the gym looking for where my chair may have taken sanctuary.  I received a few looks as my glances moved from chair to chair.  As it turned out, the only card table style chair was right across from our space.  I was sure my chair was more gray rather than the olive gray offered by this chair candidate.  I roamed the halls and the cafeteria trying to determine if someone had hijacked my chair to any of these other locations.  I thought I might getting a text with a ransom request, but it never came.  I guilted someone into giving up their chair to the “poor guy who lost his”, and I mentioned my predicament to the staff.  I didn’t want momma to think I lost it without at least trying.

While I suffered through this possible loss of the chair, my robot team had a very good run on their third try.  Apparently, my “hands off” coaching style was continuing to prove itself yet again.  As the meet was winding toward awards, I approached the group where “my” chair was setting.  They claimed it showed up right before lunch.  Since there was difference in time of disappearance, I was pretty sure I would be walking out with this chair even if my chair didn’t turn up.

As it turned out, my chair obsession in no way hindered my daughter’s team from success.  They got second (or third) place at this meet.  And, since the top 6 were going to the regional on February 14th, it looks like my Valentine’s Day would not be spent smelling roses or eating chocolate.  Fortunately, the chair I walked out with did have at least one twin at our home.  I credit my chair obsession as the reason for the team’s success.  Kids like a coach better when he is not in helicopter-mode.

 

Desktop Down

After previous computer deaths (this includes external hard drives) and the discovery of “unreplaceable pictures”, we did set all of the computers up for “Carbonite” a few years ago.  So, when the computer semi-officially died yesterday (my son gets home from college tomorrow.  I will give him one shot at it before I deem it official.), my wife had NO concern about any of the expenses and time related to the purchase and setup of the new computer.

With a “I really hope you answer yes to this question” sort of look, she asked, “All my picture are okay, aren’t they?”
With no real choice in the matter, I answered, “Yes, dear!”

Fortunately, I had been anticipating this death for awhile.  The grinding or spitting or verbal exhaust of the nearly 6 year old desktop had Dr. Dad prepared for this moment for quite sometime.  A couple of weeks ago, I arrived at my most recent brilliant plan to save EVERYTHING digital at one location.  The previously mentioned “orange” Chromebook came with a two year TERABYTE of data deal.  So now, I have been moving videos, images, documents and whatever I can find from assorted CDs, DVDs, & SDHC cards onto GoogleDrive. Of course, I am maintaining an additional copy of everything.  However, due to Carbonite not ingesting all of the above mentioned file types on my chosen Carbonite plan, I have begun this consolidation journey.

As the details of my “plan” were coming together, I realized my wife’s pictures were a top priority.  Last week, I filled a USB drive with what I believed were all her pictures.  I had a tough time convincing myself I had ALL of her pictures.  The folders were all “time stamped” with descriptive names.  I saw a couple of small gaps, but I just assumed all of the folder names were descriptive of the most recent events prior to the upload.  No problem.  Happy wife!

After last night’s assumed non-rescusitatible death, I started digging around on the Carbonite backup of that computer.  And, I realized how many more pictures were tucked away somewhere in the Carbonite cloud.  I have been downloading folders FULL of pictures most of last night, this morning, and for most of the foreseeable day.  In total, I am likely to add another 40+ gigs of data to my “unlimited” GoogleDrive.

Although no death is convenient, this death should have a happy ending for me.  Momma is happy she should have all her pictures available again soon.  (I salute her for being such a shutterbug, but WOW does she capture everything.  Additionally, she borrows other peoples SD cards, so she has recruited other people to make sure she is never criticized by her children for not having a proper answer to, “Where is the picture of me doing [whatever]?”) I will be happy when my sons enthusiasm for a new computer will translate into them setting it up.  (Yes, I could wait for Christmas to get the new computer, but since Christmas lists are pretty full and momma needs her computer for more Shutterfly albums and researching vacations we may never take.) And, everyone else will be happy when they have a dependable, non-noisy, superfast hunk of hardware to play Runescape or look at Pinterest!

820 Express Joy Ride

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After coming off of almost 4 years of construction (ever since we moved to Texas), it would seem almost “whiny” to find fault with the “school taxi” route being reduced by 5-10 minutes both ways.  Of course, categorizing this as an observation clears my conscience and allows me to do the retelling…

The closest highway to our house is due south.  It is “820”.  It is an outerbelt to Fort Worth.  Just to the east to southeast of us are a couple of more well-traveled highways.  And, to the west, there is US 35.  (US 35 is a slightly messed up highway.  It “splits” north of DFW and reunites south of DFW north of Waco.  This allows directions containing “Go north on 35W off of 820W”) The story I heard is when “the really smart highway engineers” realized all of these highways were generating more traffic than could reasonably be handled by the existing structure, somebody came up with a rather unique plan.  Since we have quite a few toll roads in Texas-even though some of them are lightly used, “the really smart cheapskates who make decisions on how to pay for highways” decided they would allow someone (enter a rich guy from the Middle East-remember, I am not researching this-it is what I was told) to pay for the construction of this new road.  Fortunately, due to the incredible volume of traffic, “the people in Austin who have a conscience” would not allow the road to become a toll road with no alternatives.  They chose to split the difference.  They created a “normal” chunk of 820 (speed limit 60 mph), and they created a chunk of 820 (and points slightly east) where there is a toll with a speed limit of 70 mph.  (Having a toll card makes the pain minimal.)  “The people who sucked in an investor to this unique project” did give him/her (“the person/company who needed to spend lots of money on a project where they may never get a return on their money”) a concession.  Not only did “the greedy investor” get a toll road, but they got a road with varying tolls.  I have seen the tolls as low as $0.25 and as high as $3.25.  It varies on time of day and how thick the traffic is at that particular moment.

My adventure occurred yesterday morning.  It was a thick foggy day with visibility of less than 1/2 a mile.  After dropping off the girls at school, I began the normal 7:30ish route home.  Due to the visibility or the novelty of fog or the arrogance of some over-zealous Texas driver, my normal, non-toll route was WAY backed up.  I detoured to the access road (This is also a phenomenon in Texas.  I was not aware of “access roads” in Ohio.  Essentially, it is a road that runs parallel to many of the highways.  It allows a driver to get on the highway from the access road without having to enter an entrance ramp from a complete stop.  It also allows many addresses to incorporate the names of the highways.  An address like, “8200 820E” might be a completely valid address.)   to avoid sitting in traffic for any extended time.  At the next intersection, I could make a turn to the left or right OR I could go straight before choosing to take the left or right fork – one to the “normal” 820 and one to the “toll” 820.  Unfortunately, I chose left.  (I should have known left was the toll because on the highway the toll road is situated inside of the normal road.) I endured a near traffic free journey to the next exit. (This exit was past my normal exit.  The “express” did not allow me to get off where I wanted, but it was close…)  The rest of my journey home was uneventful.

As I dropped off the girls today, there was minimum fog and light traffic on the normal route home.  When I drove by the sign where my toll would have been displayed yesterday, the same “detour” today would have cost me $1.40.  I have convinced myself I would have sat in traffic for a considerable amount of time if I did not take my “joy ride”, so it is obviously money well spent!