Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Rio Grande! Really?

Rio Grande...the big river....

From National Geographic:

One of the largest rivers in North America, the 1,885-mile (3,033-kilometer) Rio Grande runs from southwestern Colorado to the Gulf of Mexico. It defines much of the border between Texas and Mexico. But the once grande river is looking more poco these days, thanks to heavy use on both sides of the border.

Less than a fifth of the Rio Grande's historical flow now reaches the Gulf. For a few years in the early 2000s, the river failed to reach the coast entirely. All that separated the United States from Mexico was a beach of dirty sand and an orange nylon fence.



Here’s a snapshot taken at Caballo Dam on the Rio Grande. The piddly little puddles are all there is to the Rio Grande near Arrey and Derry! Let’s hope it snows a lot in the next 3 weeks so the runoff to fill the reservoirs can get underway. If not, it’s gonna be hot and dry on all the crops.

Farmers are a hopeful lot. Tractors are plowing the fields near Hatch…hoping!




But.....Hey! 

 Hay for the cows!

Sunday, February 24, 2013

World Golf Tucson

It's over, Matt Kuchar has claimed victory at the World Golf Championship Match Play tournament. Now they all head down the road to the next stop on the professional golf tour.

Here are a couple of observations from "behind the ropes" of the tournament.

It is fun to attend - and I've been to a few golf tournaments in my time. Best part, not thousands of people to fight for space.

The winner gets a beautiful trophy (oh and a check for $1,500,000). Second place gets a measly $875,000. 3rd $615,000. 4th $500,000. And so on down the ladder. If you were one of the 64 lucky to get here you got $46,000, if you moved to the 2nd round that became $96,000, if you moved on to the 3rd round you got $144,000, if you made to the 4th round $275,000.

You don't hear them talk about that much on the TV - it would take a lot of luster from the "competition". The TV signals are beamed from this cluster of satellite dishes...



Cadillac Escalades wait to take away the winners and losers when a match is over (these are waiting in the gully off the 16th green).



Then the players leave the grounds and head for airports - some on chartered planes, some traveling like the rest of us.

Oh, I checked...Tiger Woods is said to own a Gulfstream 550. Flying operating cost is estimated at $2,300 an hour. Flying time from West Palm Beach to Tucson (nonstop of course) is about 4 hours. So he puts 8 hours of flying time on the bird. So the plane ride cost about $18,000. He only got $45,000, because he lost in the first round. That leaves some pocket change!

Good event. Good time.

Friday, February 22, 2013

Tucson Parade

At first blush you may think this is about the parade of #1 seeds in the World Golf Championships who had to find their jet planes and head home. Tiger Woods. Rory McElroy. There will be more as the tournament progresses. I'll have more photos later.

One observation, and I wonder what it means for the next few days...

Tiger Woods, seen here on practice day, was easily the focus of half of those of us who tromped along the fairways during the tournament.  Yes,  more than half of the people there were watching one person. The other 63, and the TV and media personalities didn't come close.


A phenomenon.

The other big story in this town, yes 2 big events - even without counting U of A basketball, is the Tucson Rodeo.  Thursday was parade day.  Some schools were even closed for the parade (that doesn't happen in Albuquerque with the NM State Fair parade - why?).  Here are a couple shots of the parade starting with Grand Marshals Mark Kelly and Gabby Giffords..



Watching it all, numerous officials on horseback, and each horse or donkey pulled wagon had a wrangler walking alongside. Great event with community support in an area of Tucson that needs it, rather than high rolling multimillionaire golfers.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Accenture golf snow


Yes, that picture has something to do with golf.
The white stuff on top of the roof tiles in a nearby home is....snow.

Play was stopped, and the whole town of Tucson is in a storm watch mode!

When the sun was out yesterday, it was practice day and golfers actually stop to sign autographs and post for pictures.



Although not a golfer, Tim Rosaforte, a famous Golf Digest writer and now more famous because of his appearances on Golf Channel seemed to really enjoy folks stopping him and then posing for pictures.  That's how to build ratings!  Oh, he does have the contacts in the golf world and knows what's happening.

In this photo of Rosafort, he's wearing a cap.  On the air, he doesn't - and doesn't have to worry about combing his hair.  If you've seen him, you know what I mean.

On to the next day...


Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Standing By Accenture Golf Tournament

Here are a couple of images from the closest airport to the AGC Accenture Golf Tournament.  Pilots for them have differing desires.

Hoping to fly tomorrow---Snoopy - for birds eye views of the golf course:



The other pilots and planes, if they belong to or are used by the multi-millionaire golfers, are hoping they get to stay around for a few days.


Weather on opening day of the tournament...winter storm warning with snow in downtown Tucson mid-day.

Eeegads!

Friday, February 15, 2013

Incoming meteor

Look out below!


This morning comes news that a meteorite had come to earth, blasting its way into an area of Russia.  I headed for the internet and found the following:

For forty-five years, Chelyabinsk province of Russia was closed to all foreigners. Only in January of 1992 did President Boris Yeltsin sign a decree changing that. Shortly afterwards Western scientists declared to be the most polluted spot on earth.

In the late 1940's, about 80 kilometers north of the city of Chelyabinsk, an atomic weapons complex called "Mayak" was built. Its existence has only recently been acknowledged by Russian officials, though, in fact, the complex, bordered to the west by the Ural Mountains, and to the north by Siberia, was the goal of Gary Powers's surveillance flight in May of 1960.

The city sprang up during the Second World War, when Stalin moved weapons production to the isolated region. It would go on to produce 50% of the Soviet Union's tanks.  This gave the city its nickname, "Tank City."

I guess “Tank City” failed to prepare for an attack from the sky!

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Too Much Cruise Info

There has been a lot of talk on the tube these days about a cruise that went wrong in the Gulf of Mexico.

A lot of the stuff is too much information.   Do we really need to hear the anchors say ....'oowew' when they talk about some of the living conditions?

Oh well...looking forward to our next cruise ship trip.

Bon Voyage!

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Time for golf!

 
"Ninety percent of the putts that fall short don't go in."
 
Yogi Berra
 
 

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Bill Eisenhood

(Photo from abqjournal.com)
Bill Eisenhood
69 years old
Rest In Peace

Bill was the weather guy at KOB-TV for quite some time back in the 1970's and 1980's. 

When I was News Director and Executive Producer there he was part of the on-air talent team.  While there were times when we had our little disagreements (sometimes he didn't take suggestions well) - nonetheless he delivered.  

And he knew the weather and felt really bad when his forecast was "confused" by Mother Nature. 

Rest, buddy.  May you forever more have sunny skies, clear sailing, smooth flying.


Another Lesson - The Movies

You just can't make this stuff up!

OK - so Albuquerque and New Mexico were the envy of the nation 3 or 4 years ago.  Movie and TV production houses were flocking to our area, along with the hundreds of jobs and tens of thousands, if not millions of dollars being pumped into the economy.  They were coming here because had an envious incentive program that helped pay the bills - and in the process put people to work, paid rent on vehicles, homes, houses, and bought thousands of meals, lumber and hardware.  It was private industry making a buck!

What do we do?

We strangle the baby!

Other states see our success and climb on the band wagon.  No wait, they don't climb on the band wagon, they become the producer of the band and take it away!

Now, instead of being #1 or #3, we're #8 and falling fast!

We can't stand success.  Or rather our elected leaders don't want to be a part of success.

In this instance, Governor Bill Richardson and many of his ardent supporters (yes including unions) worked hard to get the movie business to recognize New Mexico.  And it paid off.

What happens with that successful program?  The new sheriff (Susana) comes to town and says, "that was a successful program, but it was started by him, so we need to stop that right now!"

How pitifully small. 

Meanwhile, the little people who benefit from the jobs, selling donuts and coffee to the crews, renting vehicles and selling gasoline, renting apartments and houses, selling meals and booze to the Hollywood set go wanting.

Oh New Mexico, will we never learn!   Build on success, don't chop off its legs.

It happened with the State Fair, what used to be one of the best in the country is now middle-of-the-road and slipping. 

It's just a darn good thing that our flying weather in early October is beneficial to hot-air balloons - or somebody else would take that away, too!   

As Ernie Mills, used to say on the radio, "Don't say we didn't tell you".

Wake Up New Mexico!  


Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Nailing it!


Here's a column that appeared in the Albuquerque Journal authored by Win Quigley.  He's been around, seen a lot, and in my opinion hits the nail right on the head with these comments!  The bold highlights are my emphasis...
First at a briefing hosted by the Greater Albuquerque Chamber of Commerce, then in the pages of the Journal, New Mexico’s businesspeople were shocked to learn that about 70 percent of our state’s children are born with the assistance of Medicaid. 
Their shock is difficult to understand. When you have the nation’s worst childhood poverty rate and the 43rd-lowest per capita personal income, Medicaid goes with the territory. 
The businesspeople asking for an answer to this state of affairs need only look in the mirror for the solution. The cure to poverty is jobs. As businesspeople are fond of saying, it is business, not government, that creates jobs. 
So where are the jobs that the state’s businesses are supposed to be creating? The Great Recession has been over for years now. 
It is time for difficult conversations. 
Business lobbyists are all over the Legislature pushing for a reduction in corporate income tax rates and an approach that bases taxes entirely on in-state sales. For what it’s worth, I think this is an OK idea, though a better idea is to eliminate not only corporate income taxes entirely but also the corporate welfare the state awards in the form of tax breaks. 
Intel insists this is not an Intel bill, but the reality is companies like Intel and Fidelity and Hewlett-Packard will all benefit from this legislation, and if that means Intel will put its next-generation fab in Sandoval County, I’m all for it. 
But this legislation, proposed by the Gov. Susana Martinez administration, will do nothing to help the vast majority of businesses in New Mexico for the simple reason that very few pay corporate income taxes. 
The Legislature is being asked to provide tax breaks to small businesses that hire people. In the real world nobody, but nobody, puts someone on the payroll for, potentially, years and years just because he or she got a tax break in 2013. People are hired because businesses need them, and all the tax incentives in the world won’t change that calculus. 
Yet, you can’t attend a business organization’s luncheon without someone rallying the troops to descend on Santa Fe to back the administration’s program. 
Difficult conversation No. 1: Are New Mexico’s businesspeople so out of ideas for growing their own businesses that their solution to our lack of economic growth is to modify tax codes in hope that large out-of-state companies will hire the workers our own businesses will not? 
The rationale for these tax changes is that they will help New Mexico compete with other states trying to lure manufacturers and corporate headquarters. 
Difficult conversation No. 2: Is there any reason to think, given our remote location and lack of water, that a manufacturer of any size will locate here? Is there any reason to think that Intel’s locating here was anything more than the exception that proves the rule? 
Can we attract corporate headquarters when our air connections are so much more difficult than those in Chicago, Dallas, Atlanta and New York? Given that manufacturing and corporate administrative jobs are usually the first to be cut when bad times hit, do we want to court these companies? 
Businesspeople I talk with despair frequently that New Mexico’s economy is too dependent on the government. At the same time, countless businesses depend on spending by the military, the national laboratories and a host of federal and state agencies. 
Difficult conversation No. 3: Where are these businesses’ plans for finding new private-sector and consumer markets? If they think government dependence is such a problem, why do so many of them depend on the government, for everything from research dollars to construction contracts? 
Much of New Mexico’s poverty is in its rural areas. About 25 percent of the state’s people are enrolled in one Medicaid program or another, but the rate goes over 30 percent in some of our most rural areas – 35.9 percent in Torrance County, 34.3 percent in Union County, 30.8 percent in Chaves County, 38 percent in Luna County, 40.8 percent in McKinley County. 
Some of our agricultural businesses are so marginal that the smallest dip in prices, the loss of one calf to a wolf, or one more week of drought will put them under. At the same time, 90 percent of the state’s water is still dedicated to agricultural use. 
Difficult conversation No. 4: From a strictly economic perspective, how much agriculture can New Mexico afford? 
Go to the membership luncheons of any number of business groups, and the speaker who details the approach we must take to improving our economy is almost always a city or state government official or a lobbyist. 
Difficult conversation No. 5: Does the New Mexico business community have any real leaders? Where are they? Is the Legislature the best place for a business leader to spend their time? Should leaders instead spend their time growing their companies? 
The most difficult conversation of all is this one: New Mexico’s businesses are the economy. If they are run successfully, the economy will be successful. What does it say about the quality of our businesses and the people who run them that the state’s recovery lags behind the national recovery so badly? 
UpFront is a daily front-page news and opinion column. Comment directly to Winthrop Quigley at 505-823-3896 or wquigley@abqjournal.com. Go to ABQjournal.com/letters/new to submit a letter to the editor.
— This article appeared on page A1 of the Albuquerque Journal

Monday, February 4, 2013

Paul Harvey RAMing it home.

I always admired Paul Harvey for his ability to perform on the radio.

I remember meeting him in Taos one day.  When he traveled, he'd tell a story about what he'd seen along the way.  When he got back to Chicago to do his daily radio show, after his visit to Taos, he talked of the Taos Pueblo Indians wrapped in warm blankets..."except these are JC Penney blankets" he said.

And then he was in Albuquerque for a Chamber of Commerce speech (which he got paid well for, I'm sure). While he was here he watched a smaller version of the balloon fiesta at the state fairgrounds.  I then had the responsibility of getting him to the airport.

But first, he wanted to stop at Pioneer Wear and get a western jacket that he could wear to the next days Super Bowl party in Chicago.  He wanted something that looked like a cowboy.

He purchased some $400 fringly leather type jacket and I got him on to his private jet and away he went.

I recall this story, only because I was impressed with the way RAM Trucks used a Paul Harvey speech in last night's Super Bowl TV commercial.

Here it is

His politics aside, he was a very effective communicator on the radio.



Saturday, February 2, 2013

Springtime?


Wiarton Willie, Shubenacadie Sam , Punxsutawney Phil, General Beau Lee

The Canadian Press
It’s Groundhog Day — the day millions of North Americans turn to weather prognosticating rodents in the hope they’ll call for an early spring.

And Wiarton Willie, Canada’s most celebrated of all its furry forecasters, is predicting an early spring.

Folklore has it that if a groundhog sees its shadow on Groundhog Day it’ll flee back to its burrow, heralding six more weeks of winter, and if it doesn’t, it means spring’s just around the corner. 

Willie did not see his shadow this morning.

On the East Coast, Nova Scotia’s Shubenacadie Sam was the first out of his burrow this morning to make his prediction to a worldwide audience via webcam, and sadly for those hoping for an early spring, the pride of Shubenacadie did see his shadow. So did Quebec’s groundhog, Fred, who gave his forecast in front of a church in Val d’Espoir, a community in the Gaspesie region.

And, this just in…

On this February 2nd, 2013,
the One Hundred and Twenty Seventh Annual Trek of the 
Punxsutawney Groundhog Club at Gobbler’s Knob….

Punxsutawney Phil, the King of the Groundhogs,
Seer of Seers, Prognosticator of Prognosticators,
Weather Prophet without Peer,
was awakened from his borrow at 7:28 am
with a tap of the President’s cane.

Phil and President Deeley conversed in Groundhogese
and Phil directed him to the chosen Prognostication scroll.

The President tapped the chosen scroll and
directed Phil’s Prediction be proclaimed:

My new Knob entrance is a sight to behold
Like my faithful followers, strong and bold

And so ye faithful,
there is no shadow to see
An early Spring for you and me



 (AP Photo)  Groundhog Club Co-handler John Griffiths holds the weather predicting groundhog, Punxsutawney Phil, as he is surrounded by photographers in Punxsutawney, PA this morning.

And then there’s General Beauregard Lee,  a groundhog that resides at the Yellow River Game Ranch in Lilburn, Georgia just outside of Atlanta.  He has received honorary doctorates from the University of Georgia - "DWP, Doctor of Weather Prognostication" and Georgia State University - "Doctor of Southern Groundology."

 “Beau,” as his intimates refer to him, works only on February 2nd.

Groundhogs are classed as mammals. Their order is Rodentia. They primarily eat healthy vegetables and salad items. They are nocturnal, sociable and “chatter” to those they know in fluent “groundhogese.”  While groundhogs in the wild live only to about four years old, Beau’s lavish yet healthy lifestyle at The Game Ranch has extended his years. The first General Lee, “in service” for ten years, is now retired and lives in seclusion at The Game Ranch. Beauregard is his seventeen-year-old bachelor nephew and has inherited his wealth and brilliant prognosticating skills.

Background

Around the fifth century, the European Celts believed that animals had certain “supernatural” powers on special days that were half-way between the Winter Equinox and Spring Solstice (forty days after Christmas and forty days before Easter). Folklore from Germany and France indicated that when groundhogs and bears came out of their winter dens too early, they were frightened by their shadow and retreated back inside for four to six weeks.
When Christianity came into being, the formerly pagan observance was called “Candlemas Day.” In America, Candlemas Day became “Groundhog Day” to singularly honor the whiskery waddler. The current tradition calls for “Spring Just Around the Corner” if the groundhog does not see his shadow. However, look for “At Least Six More Weeks of Winter” if the groundhog spies his pudgy image!

Breaking News from CBS Atlanta:
Gen. Beau Lee saw his shadow and that traditionally means six more weeks of winter. The Georgia groundhog made his prediction today.


Meanwhile, at New York's Staten Island Zoo, fellow groundhog Staten Island Chuck also didn't see his shadow, agreeing that an early spring was on its way.


So there!