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NICK’S BLOG
Posted by Nick Russell at 12:39 am Nick's Blog. Jun 082021. Forget Lassie and Rin Tin Tin. In the pleasant small town of Marshall, Missouri, we learned the story of what has to be the most amazing canine of all time, Jim the Wonder Dog. And unlike those movie hero dogs, Jim was real, even if his accomplishments seem the stuff ofHollywood fiction.
CAMPING WITHOUT CAMPGROUNDS I have shared some of this information before, but after yesterday’s blog question about difficulties finding camping sites, I thought it was a good time to rerun this blog post. I’ll w BOOM AND BUST IS DONE Boom And Bust Is Done. Boom And Bust, the third book in my Tinder Street historical saga, is now available on Amazon. This is my 45th book and my second new book so far this year. And even though this latest book in the series stays with the historical theme of the first two, I have thrown in a bit of mystery based on history. DO THE ZOO – GYPSY JOURNAL RV TRAVEL NEWSPAPER Do The Zoo. Posted by Nick Russell at 12:06 am Nick's Blog. May 242021. I saw an article online yesterday saying that the Smithsonian’s National Zoo in Washington DC will reopen to the public on July 24. There is so much to see and do in our nation’s capital that we’ve never made time for that, but maybe we shouldsomeday.
OLD BETSY COMES HOME The historic town of Fremont, Ohio, located 35 miles southeast of Toledo, has many interesting things to see, from beautiful old homes and quaint shops to the Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center, a complex of several buildings related to the life and presidency of Rutherford B. Hayes, the 19th president of the United States.Built in 1916, it was the first presidential library. POTPOURRI – GYPSY JOURNAL RV TRAVEL NEWSPAPER Definition of potpourri – 1: a mixture of flowers, herbs, and spices that is usually kept in a jar and used for scent. 2: a miscellaneous collection. The second definition above pretty much describ ARMY DAYS – HOW RUMORS GET STARTED – GYPSY JOURNAL RV Army Days – How Rumors Get Started. Posted by Nick Russell at 12:25 am Nick's Blog. May 122021. You can’t turn on the news right now without hearing about the cyberattack on the Colonial Pipeline operation that has disrupted gasoline deliveries in many eastern states. But why let facts get in the way of a good rumor, right? THE SAD END OF MATTIE EARP The Sad End Of Mattie Earp. On a lonely windswept hilltop a couple of miles east of Superior, Arizona, we came across the grave of one of the Old West’s more tragic figures, a scorned woman named Mattie Blaylock Earp. Born Celia Ann Blaylock in Wisconsin in 1850, and raised on a farm in Iowa, accounts of the day describe Mattie ashaving
GYPSY JOURNAL RV TRAVEL NEWSPAPER Masquerading as a hotel maid, a vulnerable widow woman, a lady gambler, and even as a fortune teller, she had an uncanny ability to ferret out the truth in even the most difficult cases. Her most famous case was when evidence of a plot to assassinate president-elect Abraham Lincoln was brought to light. IT’S JUST US AGAIN 10 hours ago · We had to get up early yesterday morning, something I never like doing. And especially not for the reason we were up. We had to take our daughterNICK’S BLOG
Posted by Nick Russell at 12:39 am Nick's Blog. Jun 082021. Forget Lassie and Rin Tin Tin. In the pleasant small town of Marshall, Missouri, we learned the story of what has to be the most amazing canine of all time, Jim the Wonder Dog. And unlike those movie hero dogs, Jim was real, even if his accomplishments seem the stuff ofHollywood fiction.
CAMPING WITHOUT CAMPGROUNDS I have shared some of this information before, but after yesterday’s blog question about difficulties finding camping sites, I thought it was a good time to rerun this blog post. I’ll w BOOM AND BUST IS DONE Boom And Bust Is Done. Boom And Bust, the third book in my Tinder Street historical saga, is now available on Amazon. This is my 45th book and my second new book so far this year. And even though this latest book in the series stays with the historical theme of the first two, I have thrown in a bit of mystery based on history. DO THE ZOO – GYPSY JOURNAL RV TRAVEL NEWSPAPER Do The Zoo. Posted by Nick Russell at 12:06 am Nick's Blog. May 242021. I saw an article online yesterday saying that the Smithsonian’s National Zoo in Washington DC will reopen to the public on July 24. There is so much to see and do in our nation’s capital that we’ve never made time for that, but maybe we shouldsomeday.
OLD BETSY COMES HOME The historic town of Fremont, Ohio, located 35 miles southeast of Toledo, has many interesting things to see, from beautiful old homes and quaint shops to the Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center, a complex of several buildings related to the life and presidency of Rutherford B. Hayes, the 19th president of the United States.Built in 1916, it was the first presidential library. POTPOURRI – GYPSY JOURNAL RV TRAVEL NEWSPAPER Definition of potpourri – 1: a mixture of flowers, herbs, and spices that is usually kept in a jar and used for scent. 2: a miscellaneous collection. The second definition above pretty much describ ARMY DAYS – HOW RUMORS GET STARTED – GYPSY JOURNAL RV Army Days – How Rumors Get Started. Posted by Nick Russell at 12:25 am Nick's Blog. May 122021. You can’t turn on the news right now without hearing about the cyberattack on the Colonial Pipeline operation that has disrupted gasoline deliveries in many eastern states. But why let facts get in the way of a good rumor, right? THE SAD END OF MATTIE EARP The Sad End Of Mattie Earp. On a lonely windswept hilltop a couple of miles east of Superior, Arizona, we came across the grave of one of the Old West’s more tragic figures, a scorned woman named Mattie Blaylock Earp. Born Celia Ann Blaylock in Wisconsin in 1850, and raised on a farm in Iowa, accounts of the day describe Mattie ashaving
HAVING LOTS OF FUN
Our son Travis and his wife Geli arrived on the 26th from Alabama, and two days later our daughter Tiffany flew in from Arizona, so we havebeen having
DOUGLAS THE CAMEL
1 day ago · Note: We find some of our best stories wandering around in old cemeteries. This one began with a visit to the Cedar Hill Cemetery in Vicksburg, Mississippi. Animal mascots have been an POTPOURRI – GYPSY JOURNAL RV TRAVEL NEWSPAPER Definition of potpourri – 1: a mixture of flowers, herbs, and spices that is usually kept in a jar and used for scent. 2: a miscellaneous collection. The second definition above pretty much describ THE MYSTERIOUS DEATH OF AL SIEBER Thanks for putting that on line. I have just been watching a film called ‘Arrowhead’, and the main character was based on Al Sieber. It is very interesting to find that some of these ‘Wild West’ films are based on fact, actual events, or real characters, and that they are not all fabricated after a night of heavy drinking – or whatever it is that inspires script writers to come up HOMESTEAD NATIONAL MONUMENT OF AMERICA The Homestead National Monument of America is open Monday – Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and Saturday – Sunday from 9:00 a.m. to 5 p.m. Outdoor trails are open from dawn to dusk. Homestead National Monument of America is a No Fee park. Admission, parking, and special events are all free of charge. The Heritage Center and EducationHOUSEKEEPING
Be sure to enter our latest Free Drawing. This week’s prize is an RV camping journal donated by Barbara House. Barbara makes several variations of these, and they all have pages where you can list the date, weather, where you traveled to and from that day, beginning and ending mileage, campground information including amenities at RVsites, a
THE LEGEND OF ACREFOOT JOHNSON Johnson walked fast and could cover a lot of territory in a short time with his long legs. Once, he met up with Judge King, who was riding a handsome stallion, on the way to Fort Ogden. When King offered him a ride, Acrefoot said “Thanks, but I’m in a hurry.”. This offended the judge, who spurred his horse into a gallop and left JohnsonNEWSPAPER DAYS
Newspaper Days – Car Thief. Posted by Nick Russell at 12:13 am Nick's Blog. May 202021. A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away (no, actually it was right here, come to think of it), automobiles came with this funny little metal thing called a key that you put into a slot on your car’s dashboard or steering wheel column. HUMMERS AND MONKEY BUTT Hummers And Monkey Butt. With only a few days left before our kids come to visit, Terry and I have been busy getting ready for the big event. I started the day by going out to the garage and clearing off an accumulation of stuff that had piled up on the workbench. They saya tidy desk is a
OH, THE PRESSURE!
Oh, The Pressure! Posted by Nick Russell at 12:13 am Nick's Blog. May 182021. A couple of days ago I wrote in a blog titled Tidying Things Up that our lawn sprinkler system had stopped working quite some time ago and I never got around to messing with it until recently. When I did, I found that the control box for the sprinkler system was dead* Home
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HomeNick’s BlogMiss Terry’s KitchenFree DrawingsContact Us 265 MILES PER HOUR????? Posted by Nick Russell at 12:39 am Nick'sBlog
Jan 052020
As a former newspaperman and an independent book author and self-publisher, I hate typos. But I’ve also been at this game long enough to know that they are a part of life, and no matter how carefully you watch for them, they slip in. I have at least three or four proofreaders for every book I put out, and these are people who really know their stuff. But still, with just about every book, at least one typo makes its way through. And it’s not just me. I’ve seen typos in magazines, big city newspapers, and in books published by the big publishing houses. You will also see them on TV from time to time. For example, this news report last night said the wind here in the New Smyrna Beach area was 265 miles per hour. Wow, we didn’t feel a thing here! After seeing my post about the 1960 Ford in yesterday’s blog,
somebody pointed out that I also had a 1960 Ford police car on the front cover of my book Return to Dog’s Run . Is it an omen? Should I get started on that garage expansion project? In other news, I guess winter is headed our way. It’s been in the upper 70s and low 80s for several days now, but starting today it’s going to be down in the low 60s. I don’t care, I’ll be doing the same thing I have been doing; working on my new book. I knocked out another 3,000 words yesterday, and if all goes well I’ll get somewhere between 3,000 and 5,000 more in today. I really want to get this book done because then I can start on another book. And when that one is done, I’ll start on a third book, and then I’ll… well,you get it.
But all of that depends on whether we get another 265 mile-per-hour day. If that happens, I hope it blows me to some nice tropical island where I can sit on the beach and write while looking at all of the pretty girls in their skimpy’s playing volleyball. Of course, with my luck, the wind will blow the other direction and I’ll wind up in Mission, Texas watching all the Q-tips with their white hair and white shoes doing the Winter Texan crab crawl with their walkers throughWalmart.
Today is your last chance to enter our Free Drawing for an autographed copy of Big Lake Blizzard , the fourth book in my Big Lake mystery series. This copy has the original cover, before I commissioned Elizabeth Mackey to design all of my book covers. To enter, click on this Free Drawing link or the tab at the top of this page and enter your name (first and last) in the comments section at the bottom of that page (not this one). Only one entry per person per drawing please, and you must enter with your real name. To prevent spam or multiple entries, the names of cartoon or movie characters are not allowed. The winner will be drawn Sunday evening. Thought For The Day – _Superman could have become a doctor, using his x-ray vision to detect life threatening tumors. But no, we really needed another journalist._3 Responses »
Tagged with: big city newspapers, Big Lake
Blizzard , Big Lake
mystery series
, books
published by big publishing houses,
independent book author, magazines
, Mission Texas
, New Smyrna Beach
Florida ,
newspaperman ,
proofreaders , Return toDog’s Run ,
self-publisher , typos WE’RE GONNA NEED A BIGGER GARAGE Posted by Nick Russell at 12:49 am Nick'sBlog
Jan 042020
After driving my Mustang to Daytona Beach a few days ago and some running around I did yesterday in it, it now has 840 miles on the odometer. So I was a little distressed to find rust on one of the bolts that holds the driver’s side door hinge to the car. It lives in the garage, and even though we’re close to the Intercoastal Waterway, neither Terry’s van, which we bought in October of 2017, nor my pontoon boat, which has been in the salt water, have any rust on them. So yesterday I took it back to Mullinax Ford , where I bought it, and showed it to Jack Tuthill, the salesman who handled the transaction. Jack is a great guy, not pushy at all, and really believes in taking care of the customer both before and after the sale. He took a picture of the hinge and went in and talked to the service department and got me scheduled to bring it in on Thursday to take care of the problem. It’s a minor thing, but there’s a reason they call rust cancer. Once it starts, you need to get rid of it as fast as possible. While I was at the dealership, I looked at new Ford Explorers. Our trusty old 2005 Explorer has 141,000 miles on the odometer, not counting another 80,000 miles or more that it was towed behind our motorhome. It still runs great and it’s our daily driver, but if I ever did replace it, I thought I would buy a new Explorer. That’s not going to happen anytime soon, but because Sheriff Jim Weber in my Big Lake mystery novels drives a newer Explorer, I just wanted to get a feel for what they are like. Did you know the Ford Explorer is the number one selling police car in America these days? Jack is not a pushy salesman at all, which is why bought my Mustang from him in the first place. I mentioned that I didn’t really like the body design of the new Explorers, preferring the more squared back-end of the one I have. That’s when he showed me the new Ford Expedition. Now that’s an amazing vehicle! If we would have looked at those before we bought Terry’s Chrysler Pacifica, we might have gone that route instead. But what really grabbed me at Mullinax yesterday was this 1960 Ford Galaxy. I had a car exactly like that when I was in high school, even the same color, and I think the interiors were the same. The only difference was that mine was the old three on the tree standard shift, and this one is an automatic. It’s been in the same family forever and a photo album on the front seat included the original sales paperwork, owner’s manual, and receipts for work done on it over the years. It’s not show room perfect, but it’s very nice. Being an old car guy, I kind of keep up with prices, and this one is a heck ofa deal.
I took a couple pictures of it and sent them to Miss Terry and told her I really needed that car. I didn’t even hint that our 22nd wedding anniversary is coming up in a couple of weeks, but she merely wrote back and said “then you should have it.” I do love that woman of mine. But then she took the wind out of my sails when she asked what was going to come out of the garage to make room for that car. Well, I know it’s not going to be my Mustang or my pontoon boat, and I’m just as sure that it’s not going to be her van. Honey, we’re gonna need a bigger garage! Over 90 people have entered our latest Free Drawing . This week’s prize is an autographed copy of Big Lake Blizzard , the fourth book in my Big Lake mystery series. This copy has the original cover, before I commissioned Elizabeth Mackey to design all of my book covers. To enter, click on this Free Drawing link or the tab at the top of this page and enter your name (first and last) in the comments section at the bottom of that page (not this one). Only one entry per person per drawing please, and you must enter with your real name. To prevent spam or multiple entries, the names of cartoon or movie characters are not allowed. The winner will be drawn Sunday evening. Thought For The Day – _I got my father’s weak chin, receding hairline, and big ears. It was the strangest will reading I have everattended._
No Responses »
Tagged with: 1960 Ford Galaxy, 2018 Mustang
Ecoboost Premium fastback,
2020 Ford Expedition, 2020 Ford
Explorer , Big
Lake Blizzard , Big
Lake mystery novels
, Chrysler
Pacifica ,
Intercoastal Waterway, motorhome
, old car guy
, police car
, pontoon boat
, salt water
, Sheriff Jim Weber
, three on the tree
standard shift
DO IT YOURSELF AUTO REPAIRS Posted by Nick Russell at 12:19 am Nick'sBlog
Jan 032020
Here’s another tale from the Nick Happens file, a collection of true stories about my adventures and misadventures over the years. We all know you can save a lot of money by doing your own vehicle maintenance and simple repairs. I even suggest it in my book The Frugal RVer . The problem is that there is so darned little I am qualified to do! When it comes to mechanical things, I am a complete idiot. Here is an example: Back during our fulltime RVing days we were hanging out in Lake City, Florida one winter when the battery in our Toyota Tacoma started to fail and I needed to get it replaced. The local Wally World did not have the right size in stock. They install new batteries free if you purchase them there, but I figured “How hard can that be? You take off the hold down clamp, loosen the battery cables, pull the old battery out and replace it with the new one, then clamp it down, and hook up the cables, right?” Actually, I did not think all of that. Miss Terry explained the process to me. I was all for jump starting the pickup every time I needed to go somewhere until Walmart got a new shipment of batteriesin.
So off we went like a herd of turtles to a nearby auto parts store and bought a new battery. I swapped it out with the old one right there in the parking lot of Auto Zone and it seemed easy enough. I took the old battery back into the store to collect the core charge and was ready to hit the road. Back in the truck, I turned the key and nothing happened. The truck would not turn over, no idiot lights came on, it was as dead as dead can be! I got out, checked all of my connections, got back in the truck and turned the key. Still nothing. Back inside the store I go to tell them they sold me a dead battery. The manager came outside, took one look, and started chuckling, then said “Give me your crescent wrench.” He removed the negative battery cable, pulled off the black plastic cover that comes on the posts to keep anyone from accidentally shorting them out, replaced the cable and it worked fine! Some of us are just too dumb to do things for ourselves, and at this stage in my life, I don’t think I’lllearn anytime soon.
I should have just let Miss Terry do it right in the first place. She’s the talented one in our household, I’m just the eye candy. I tell you, my life as a boy toy isn’t always easy! In less than 24 hours 60 people have already entered our latest Free Drawing . This week’s prize is an autographed copy of Big Lake Blizzard , the fourth book in my Big Lake mystery series. This copy has the original cover, before I commissioned Elizabeth Mackey to design all of my book covers. To enter, click on this Free Drawing link or the tab at the top of this page and enter your name (first and last) in the comments section at the bottom of that page (not this one). Only one entry per person per drawing please, and you must enter with your real name. To prevent spam or multiple entries, the names of cartoon or movie characters are not allowed. The winner will be drawn Sunday evening. Thought For The Day – _A car with a roof rack behind me looked like a police car so I slowed down, only to realize I had been tricked into obeying the law for no reason._2 Responses »
Tagged with: Auto Parts Store, Auto Zone
, battery cables
, Big Lake Blizzard
, Big Lake mystery
series ,
cover artist Elizabeth Mackey, dead
battery , doing your own vehicle maintenance and simple repairs,
Fulltime RVing , jumpstarting a car ,
Lake City Florida ,
mechanical things ,
negative battery cable, Nick Happens
, obeying the law
, police car
, replacing a car battery, The Frugal
RVer , Toyota Tacoma, Wally World
, WalMart
WHERE THE BUOYS ARE
Posted by Nick Russell at 12:33 am Nick'sBlog
Jan 022020
An oversize visitor from the north cloaked in red came to visit New Smyrna Beach for the holidays and has been generating a lot of excitement around here. No, I’m not talking about jolly old St. Nick. He comes around every year. This event is probably a once-in-a-lifetime thing. News reports say that this huge navigation buoy floated south along the Atlantic coast after Hurricane Dorian last year before beaching itself here. Since it first washed ashore it has been drawing visitors from across the state. The Coast Guard and local authorities are going to try to figure out how to move it today so Terry and I decided to go check it out yesterday while it was still here. The 21-foot tall buoy weighs 13,000 pounds, and to put its size into perspective, the gentleman standing in front of it with the sunglasses on is about 6 feet tall. We’ve had some stormy weather recently and the sea has been very rough, which explains why the buoy ended up near the sand dunes, at least 30 yards from the water. The buoy was originally placed at Port Royal Sound, South Carolina according to Petty Officer 2nd Class Ryan Dickinson, the spokesman for the Coast Guard’s Sector Jacksonville, which oversees the Atlantic coastline near New Smyrna Beach. One news report said that this is not the first time Red Buoy Number 8 has pulled a disappearing act. Though buoys are usually attached by a thick chain to large pieces of concrete on the ocean’s floor, the same buoy broke free of its moorings during Hurricane Irma in 2017 and wound up on South Carolina’s Hilton Head Beach. It was returned to its original location, only to go on the lam again, this time turning up in our neighborhood. At least for now, it will be stored at the New Smyrna Beach Coast Guard station, and eventually will be returned to service at Port Royal Sound once again. But one has to wonder if it will stay there this time, and if not, where the free-spirited buoywill go next.
Anytime is a great time to go to the beach, and even though the temperature was only in the mid-60s and breezy late New Year’s Day afternoon, there were still people out soaking up the salt air, and a hardy few even going in and out of the water. The storms have calmed down for now, but the surf was still pounding the shore. It’s Thursday, so it’s time for a new Free Drawing . This week’s prize is an autographed copy of Big Lake Blizzard , the fourth book in my Big Lake series. This copy has the original cover, before I commissioned Elizabeth Mackey to design all of my book covers. To enter, click on this Free Drawing link or the tab at the top of this page and enter your name (first and last) in the comments section at the bottom of that page (not this one). Only one entry per person per drawing please, and you must enter with your real name. To prevent spam or multiple entries, the names of cartoon or movie characters are not allowed. The winner will be drawn Sunday evening. Thought For The Day – _I’ve reached the age where when I hear a suspicious noise in the house late at night, instead of getting out of bed to check it out, I just roll over and think to myself “Meh, whatever. I had a good run.”_No Responses »
Tagged with: Atlantic coastline, Big Lake
Blizzard , Big Lake
mystery series
, Coast Guard
, Elizabeth Mackey
, Hilton Head Beach
, Hurricane Dorian
, Hurricane Irma
, jolly old St. Nick, navigation buoy
, New Smyrna Beach
, New Smyrna Beach
Coast Guard station
,
Port Royal Sound South Carolina, Red
Buoy Number 8 ,
sand dunes
HAPPY NEW YEAR
Posted by Nick Russell at 12:01 am Nick'sBlog
Jan 012020
I hope 2019 was a good year for you and yours, and that 2020 will beeven better!
7 Responses »
LUCKY 7S
Posted by Nick Russell at 12:40 am Nick'sBlog
Dec 312019
Between lots of bad weather and lots of pain from my back, I can’t remember the last time I drove my Mustang. But I was feeling pretty good yesterday and the weather was nice, so I pulled it out of our garage so we could run some errands. As we were leaving the house I happened to notice the odometer, and decided that it would be a good photo op, so I pulled off the side of the road to take this picture. That’s right, my 2018 Mustang Eco Boost that I bought the end of November, 2018 is a true garage queen. It still only has 777.7 miles on the odometer. I wish I could see those numbers on a high dollarslot machine!
That’s less than 60 miles a month! I said when I bought the car that it is just a toy, but obviously I need to find more time to play,don’t I?
When I bought the car, couple of people asked if it was evidence of my midlife crisis. No, I had my midlife crisis when I was 46 years old. That’s when I divorced the cute little blonde bimbo 10 years younger than me, bought a red Corvette, and married a beautiful woman four months older than me. The Corvette was fun, but being with a person I can actually have a conversation with is even better. We ran several errands, including some in Daytona Beach. While we were there we stopped at Books A Million and I picked up a couple of new books for research for my mystery novels. Even though Terry and I both have Kindle Paperwhites, which we use for reading fiction, for research books, I prefer them printed. Speaking of books, I recently finished an excellent one called Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann. It is a true crime book that reads like fiction, and you almost wish it was by the time you are finished with it. Back in the early part of the 20th century, the Osage Indians of Oklahoma were among the richest people in the world, due to oil being discovered on their reservation. Over a period of some 20 years, give or take, dozens, if not hundreds of Osage were murdered or simply disappeared at the hands of whites who wanted to get their hands on their oil money. It’s a story of corruption, graft, and greed that stretched from the sparse Oklahoma prairie all the way to Washington DC. After our errands were done, we stopped at Hibachi Grill and Supreme Buffet for dinner. It seems to be our go to place in Daytona Beach, although there are a lot of other great places to eat in town. I go because I love their General Tso’s Chicken, and I think Miss Terry goes just because she loves me. We had a wonderful surprise waiting for us when we got home. When we were visiting my son Travis and his wife Geli in Alabama back in July, we went to Spectre, which isn’t really a town, but was rather a set for the movie Big Fish . I wrote about that in this blog post . As I have mentioned before, Travis is an amazing photographer, and one of the pictures he took during that visit was of Terry and I holding hands as we were walking together down the only street in Spectre. Travis had that photograph printed on a beautiful curved beveled glass frame and sent it to us. We absolutely love it! Thank you so much, Travis. We will treasure it forever. We spent most of the evening relaxing watching TV while I tried to reason with a cousin of mine who is irate because she went to an after Christmas sale and bought a bunch of goodies, including an Xbox for her son. But apparently, while putting everything away in the car the Xbox got set on the roof and forgotten. That is, until they were pulling out of Walmart and it fell off the back of her car and the car behind her ran over it. Both vehicles stopped, and the person in the second vehicle apologized and said it happened so fast he had no time to stop. Most people would chalk that up too bad luck and call it a lesson learned, right? Not this person. No, she expected the man in the second vehicle to reimburse her for the cost of the Xbox! When he said that wasn’t going to happen, she asked for his insurance information and he told her to go pound sand. I think that’s what I would have said, too. There’s a reason I don’t have much to do with some of my relatives. Thought For The Day – _Most household injuries are caused by saying “whatever” during an argument._6 Responses »
Tagged with:
2018 Mustang Eco Boost, amazing
photographer ,
author David Grann
, Back Pain
, bad weather
, Books A Million
, corruption
, cute little blonde bimbo, Daytona
Beach , General Tso'schicken , graft
, greed
, Hibachi Grill and SupremeBuffet
,
high dollar slot machine, Killers of
the Flower Moon
, Kindle
Paperwhites ,
midlife crisis , movieBig Fish , Mustang
, mystery novels
, Oklahoma prairie
, Osage Indians of
Oklahoma ,
red Corvette , researchbooks , Spectre
Alabama , true crimebook , Xbox
TAKING THE DAY OFF
Posted by Nick Russell at 12:02 am Nick'sBlog
Dec 302019
For the last few days I’ve been working hard on my new Big Lake book, knocking out over 20,000 words in three or four days. Yesterday alone was over 6,000 words. That, coupled with the fact that Miss Terry hasn’t been out of the house much at all since her surgery two weeks ago today means we need a day off. And today is going to be thatday.
A couple of weeks ago I had new tires put on our Ford Explorer. The car has built-in tire pressure sensors, and besides needing new tires, I kept getting a message on the dashboard saying Tire Pressure Sensor Failure. When I had the new tires put on, I also had them replace the sensors in each wheel. But twice now since I got the new tires and sensors, I have gotten the same message. So the first order of business today will be to drop it off it Leon’s Auto Repair, where I had the tires installed. This is a small family run business that has been serving the community for over 30 years, and they always stand behind everything they do. I know they’ll take good care of me. Theyalways do.
From there, we have a few errands to run, including dropping off some stuff at the post office and buying stamps, going to Space Coast Credit Union to make payments on Terry’s van and my Mustang, I think there may be a stop at the grocery store somewhere along the line, and if Terry is really good, I might even take her to dinner. Okay, let’s be honest, as much as I love Terry’s wonderful cooking, I’m jonesing for a dinner out. Now, what will it be? Pizza? Chinese? Barbecue? Seafood? The possibilities are endless. Several people have asked me what our plans are for New Year’s Eve, or if I have made any New Year’s resolutions. While Terry enjoys a glass of wine now and then, I have not had any alcohol since about 1974, when I got out of the Army. I never had a drinking problem, I just decided that it was dumb to spend money on something that made me sick to my stomach, and made my friends tell me what an ass I was the next day. I can do that without the aid of booze! Since we are not drinking people and we are not bar people, we will spend New Year’s Eve like we have for the last 22 years, enjoying a quiet evening athome.
As for New Year’s resolutions, I disappoint myself enough on a daily basis as it is. I don’t need the added pressure of any self-imposed resolutions to make it even worse. In the words of Inspector Harry Callahan from the movie _Magnum Force_ , a man’s got to know his limitations. Lord knows I have plenty of them and I’m not going to tempt fate by pushing the envelope. And finally, here’s a chuckle to start your day from the collection of funny signs we see in our travels and that our readers share withus.
Congratulations Mary Maniaci, winner of our drawing for an RV camping journal donated by Barbara House. We had 62 entries this time around. Stay tuned, a new contest starts soon. Thought For The Day – _Whomever tries to drown their sorrows by drinking should know one thing – sorrows know how to swim!_1 Response »
Tagged with: 2018 Mustang Ecoboost Premium fastback,
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JAMES MONROE MUSEUM
Posted by Nick Russell at 12:12 am Nick'sBlog
Dec 292019
“A better man cannot be.” Those are the words Thomas Jefferson used to describe James Monroe in 1785, and most scholars of our country’s fifth president would probably agree. Born in Westmoreland County, Virginia in 1758, Monroe attended the College of William and Mary for a year before dropping out to join the Continental Army, where he was commissioned a lieutenant in the 3rd Virginia Regiment. He joined a small party of men to raid the arsenal at the Governor’s Palace in Williamsburg, Virginia, where they seized 200 muskets and 300 swords to help arm the local militia. At the Battle of Trenton he was wounded by a musket ball to his shoulder that severed an artery and took him out of the rest of the war. With the British defeated and independence won, Monroe turned to politics, and in 1790 he was elected to the United States Senate, where he helped negotiate the Louisiana Purchase. He followed that with an appointment as ambassador to France, then served as both Secretary of State and Secretary of War under President James Madison. In 1816, with the backing of outgoing President Madison, he was elected president, and easily won re-election in 1820. Monroe was a popular president, and during his two terms in office he acquired Florida from Spain and helped establish the United State’s role in international affairs. In December, 1823, he introduced to Congress what would become the Monroe Doctrine, proclaiming that the sovereign countries of the Americas should be free from European colonization and any European interference in their affairs. It also stated that the United States would stay neutral in European wars and conflicts between European powers and their colonies. The Doctrine also made it clear that the establishment of new European colonies or outside interference with existing sovereign countries in the Americas would be considered hostile acts toward the United States. Six years after leaving the White House, James Monroe died in New York City on July 4, 1831, making him the third president to have died on Independence Day. He was originally buried in New York City’s Marble Cemetery, but in 1858, Monroe was re-interred in the President’s Circle at Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond, Virginia. Today visitors to the James Monroe Museum and Memorial Library in Fredericksburg, Virginia can see the country’s largest collection of artifacts and documents related to Monroe’s life and political career. Now administered by the University of Mary Washington, the museum was opened in 1927 by descendants of James Monroe as a place to house their personal collections of family heirlooms handed down through generations. Until then, many of the items had been stored in closets and attics, never to see the light of day. Visitors to the museum can take guided tours of five galleries, where displays include a tea box that belonged to Monroe and his wife Elizabeth, a tea table that Monroe purchased while in Paris as an ambassador, a vest and pair of breeches worn by Monroe during his years as a young lawyer in Fredericksburg, and a unique flintlock lighter that family tradition says Monroe used as a young officer during the Revolutionary War. One of the most impressive items on display is a scale model bas relief of a temporary panel displayed during the 1904 St Louis World’s Fair. Created by sculptor Karl Bitter, the scene re-creates the signing of the Louisiana Purchase Treaty and includes James Monroe, Robert Livingston, and Francis Barbe-Marbois, and served as the template for a larger bronze sculpture that can be found at the Missouri State Capitol. Visitors will also see the desk that family legend says President Monroe was sitting at when he wrote the Monroe Doctrine. In the early part of the 20th century a secret compartment was discovered in the desk, containing letters exchanged by Monroe and other notables, including Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. Those letters are now included in the museum’s archives. It is believed that at one time the handsome building that houses the museum was James Monroe’s law office. Back in the 1920s, when Monroe’s great granddaughter, Rose deChine Gouverneur Hoes learned that it was going to be demolished and a gas station built on the site, she purchased the property and opened the James Monroe Law Office Shrine, which has evolved into the museum we see today. I’m glad she had the foresight to save such an important building, and that we got to tour the museum. It has a fine collection of exhibits and helped us learn more about one of our presidents who is sometimes overlooked on the pages of history. Located at 908 Charles Street in Fredericksburg, the museum is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 1 to 5 p.m. on Sunday. December – February the museum closes at 4 p.m. daily. Admission is $6 for adults, $5 for seniors age 65 and over, $2 for visitors ages 6 -17. AAA, and group rates are available. For more information, call (540) 654-1043 or visit the museum’s website at www.jamesmonroemuseum.org Today is your last chance to enter our Free Drawing for an RV camping journal donated by Barbara House. Barbara makes several variations of these, and they all have pages where you can list the date, weather, where you traveled to and from that day, beginning and ending mileage, campground information including amenities at RV sites, a place for a campground reviews, room to record activities, people met along the way, reminders of places to see and things to do the next time you’re in the area, and a page for notes for each day. To enter, click on this Free Drawing link or the tab at the top of this page and enter your name (first and last) in the comments section at the bottom of that page (not this one). Only one entry per person per drawing please, and you must enter with your real name. To prevent spam or multiple entries, the names of cartoon or movie characters are not allowed. The winner will be drawn this evening. Thought For The Day – _I posted a selfie and people told me to getwell soon._
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Tagged with: ambassador to France, American
Revolution ,
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Posted by Nick Russell at 12:10 am Nick'sBlog
Dec 282019
Yesterday morning I decided I had to do it. I had to actually put on real clothes instead of the comfy leisure pants and t-shirt that I normally wear around the house and go to the post office to mail off a couple of packages. Big mistake! I figured now that Christmas is behind us, they wouldn’t be very busy. I was wrong. There was a line of people from the door all the way to the counter. I don’t know what they were all mailing off or sending back, but I really don’t like standing in line that long. It was way too peopley for me. Instead, I went to the local Safe Ship, where I probably paid a couple bucks extra, but it was worth it because I was in and out in just minutes. From there I made a quick stop at Publix for a gallon of milk. It was kind of peopley there, too, but not nearly as bad as thepost office.
I got home just in time for Miss Terry to take the last of the delicious cinnamon rolls she had made out of her Breville convection toaster oven . As I have said before, I think if Terry ever had to decide between me and her Breville, I’d be history. She uses it almost every day for everything from cooking roast beef to baking pies to making pizza. She has had the oven for about 10 years, and though they make a newer version that I keep offering to buy her, she says the one she has is working just fine and there’s no reason to upgrade. She’s thrifty, that lady of mine. Or maybe she’s just cheap, I’m not sure. If you are thrifty and/or cheap and you like reading good romance books, have I got a deal for you! My dear friend Mona Ingram is offering _Chasing Rainbows_, the first book in her popular _Love in a Bottle_ series for free. Click this link to get your copy.
Another good friend of mine, Billy Kring, just released his latest Hunter Kincaid mystery, A Cinnabar Sky . Billy is a former Border Patrol officer who worked the West Texas border for many years, and when he tells a story you know it’s coming from someone who has actually been there and done that. Combine that with his natural talent as a storyteller and you are in for a wild ride in every one of his books. Last night the weatherman said we are supposed to have showers off and on all morning, followed by intermittent showers throughout the afternoon and evening. Huh? Is this guy getting paid by the word? Why not just say it’s going to rain all day and be done with it? Either way, I know what I’ll be doing; working on my new Big Lake book. I got another 3,000 words in yesterday and the story is really startingto heat up.
And finally, here’s another chuckle to start your day from the collection of funny signs we see in our travels and that our readersshare with us.
Be sure to enter our latest Free Drawing . This week’s prize is an RV camping journal donated by Barbara House. Barbara makes several variations of these, and they all have pages where you can list the date, weather, where you traveled to and from that day, beginning and ending mileage, campground information including amenities at RV sites, a place for a campground reviews, room to record activities, people met along the way, reminders of places to see and things to do the next time you’re in the area, and a page for notes for each day. To enter, click on this Free Drawing link or the tab at the top of this page and enter your name (first and last) in the comments section at the bottom of that page (not this one). Only one entry per person per drawing please, and you must enter with your real name. To prevent spam or multiple entries, the names of cartoon or movie characters are not allowed. The winner will be drawn Sunday evening. Thought For The Day – _Make sure your Viagra label says “Made in USA”. We do not want the Chinese or the Russians meddling in ourerections._
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CALL ME CHRISTOPHER
Posted by Nick Russell at 12:04 am Nick'sBlog
Dec 272019
From now on, you can call me Christopher, as in Christopher Columbus. You know, the guy who thought he was going one place and ended up somewhere else entirely and got credit for a discovery that he may or may not have been the first to stumble upon. Because I have made a discovery myself. And just like old Chris, while I may have not been the first to do so, it’s all new to me. As many of you probably know, I use Dragon Naturally Speaking software to dictate my books because my stiff fingers usually hit the wrong keys when I try to type. Since I’m a two-finger typist at best, that can really slow down production. Typing by hand, I can do 3,000 words a day, but the next day my arthritis would give me so much pain that I couldn’t work. When I switched to Dragon software several years ago it helped tremendously and a 5,000 word day was nothing to me. I have even had some 10,000 word days on occasion. The problem is, Dragon is less-than-perfect, no matter what the TV commercials want you to believe, and I get a lot of errors. Compound that by the fact that as I am dictating, I’m looking at my screen, and whenever I see errors I stop and correct them. Again, this slowsoverall production.
In Scott Baker’s excellent book The Writer’s Guide to Training Your Dragon , one of the things he stresses is not to do that. In fact, he says you shouldn’t even look at your screen while you are you dictating. Instead, just do your thing and go back and make corrections when you’re done. That sounds good in theory, but it’s a habit I’ve had trouble trying to break. In a blog a few days ago I mentioned that I sometimes use a Sony ICD-PX440 digital voice recorder to knock out a couple of chapters while waiting in the car if Terry is shopping or something like that. Then when we get home, I plug the recorder into my computer and the Dragon software transcribes it into print. Just like when you are dictating right into the microphone attached to the computer, there are going to be errors and typos. But nothing I can’t clean up pretty quickly. Even though my expensive Lifeform chair has been good for my back, the last few days when I was hurting so much, I found that I just couldn’t stay in the chair for more than an hour at most before the pain would force me to get up and move around. The other day I sat down in my recliner, which is more comfortable, and dictated a chapter into the recorder, and it didn’t take long, so I dictated a second chapter, and then a third. There’s no way to tell the word count when you’re dictating into the recorder, but when I plugged it into the computer and called up what I had written, I was surprised that I done over 7,000 words in about two hours. Hmmm, that’s interesting. So yesterday I did the same thing, knocking out 5,000 words in just over an hour. I think I need to be using this recorder a lot more, don’t you? As of now, I’m very close to the halfway point of the new book, and I’ll be back at it today, cranking out more words. We have some packages to mail off at the post office, and Terry and I need to run into Daytona Beach and pick up a couple of items in the next few days. But I’m not sure if we want to brave the after-Christmas crowds looking for sales and returning gifts yet, so I’m not sure when that will happen. Terry said she’s going to cook the turkey today that she originally bought for Thanksgiving and then left in the freezer because we had to be on the road on Thanksgiving Day, going to Mayo in Jacksonville. She will be roasting it the traditional way, but one of these days I really want to try frying a turkey. We’ve only had it once or twice when other people cooked it, and I really enjoyed it. And finally, here’s a chuckle to start your day from the collection of funny signs we see in our travels and that our readers share withus.
Be sure to enter our latest Free Drawing . This week’s prize is an RV camping journal donated by Barbara House. Barbara makes several variations of these, and they all have pages where you can list the date, weather, where you traveled to and from that day, beginning and ending mileage, campground information including amenities at RV sites, a place for a campground reviews, room to record activities, people met along the way, reminders of places to see and things to do the next time you’re in the area, and a page for notes for each day. To enter, click on this Free Drawing link or the tab at the top of this page and enter your name (first and last) in the comments section at the bottom of that page (not this one). Only one entry per person per drawing please, and you must enter with your real name. To prevent spam or multiple entries, the names of cartoon or movie characters are not allowed. The winner will be drawn Sunday evening. Thought For The Day – _The older you get, the more dangerous it isto sneeze._
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Tagged with: after-Christmas crowds looking for sales,
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