Rancho Elefante Blanco
Mi primo Andrew alquila alojamientos a cazadores (de ciervos, aves y borregos cimarrones). El rancho es el "White Elephant Ranch", a las afueras de Condon, Oregón. A continuación, algunas fotos:
Continúa leyendo "White Elephant Ranch"Retirement
I am planning (actually have retired now) on retiring before or on my 65th birthday, so when a client wanted a countdown timer I checked one out. Since I am now retired it shows the time since I stopped working.
Hace 9 años, 4 meses, 29 días, 17 horas, 11 minutos,Sobrino Phil y su hijo Aiden

Nolan y Chrysta Milojevich
Haga clic en la imagen para ver el gif animado.
Continúa leyendo "Nolan and Chrysta Milojevich"Tipo angustiado
Colibrí

Nueva cámara: Olympus OM-D
Acabo de comprar una cámara nueva, una Olympus OM-D. En 1974 compré una de las primeras OM-1 y me encantó. Me acompañó por todo el mundo. Con el tiempo, compré una Canon EOS de 35 mm y luego una Canon 1D digital. Pero mi primer amor siempre fue la OM-1. Así que ahora he vuelto a la marca Olympus. Aquí tenéis algunas fotos comparativas.
Continúa leyendo "New camera – Olympus OM-D"Budgets
President Barack Obama says, “Exxon pocketed nearly $4.7 million every hour”
This was talking about 2011. Now I found this interesting, so I wondered, in comparison how much did the US spend per hour in 2011. So I googled and found this site: http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/. According to them, government spending in 2011 amounted to 6.1 trillion dollars. So dividing 6.1 trillion by 365 days per year, then by 24 hours per day gives the hourly spending rate during 2011 of approximately 696 million dollars per hour. Hmmm, perspective is an interesting thing. It seems to me that this country has more of a spending problem than a revenue problem. Now if you take the current US population according to the Census bureau (2011) as 311,591,917, then if everyone paid their fair share (fair being defined as equal in this case) then it is only (approximately) 2.23 dollars per hour (696 million dollars divided by 311 million people) or about 52 dollars a day every man, woman and child needs to pony up. That’s about 19.5 thousand per year.Learning French
I am attempting to learn French once again. It was many years ago that I took a first term college class. it is amazing how many more resources we have today thanks to the internet. I am using the following tools:
Rosettastone software – While the product comes with CD’s, once you are registered you can access the on-line courses.
Babbel.com – Wow. For the money this is hard to beat. Six months for $40. Similar methodology to Rosettastone. I especially like the vocabuary review.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/languages/french/
This site is not as good as babbel.com but it is free. It has learning games and some good lessons including “Basic French in 12 Weeks”
Google Translate. French to English and English to French
French verb conjugater test – very good. Both regular and irregular verbs.
French radio streamed from the internet. I listen to France Bleu Azur












