5 Men Meet Every 5 Years for 30 Years to Take the Same Photo 6

When John Wardlaw, John Dickson, Mark Rumer, Dallas Burney and John Molony took a picture in 1982 of all five of them at Wardlaw’s family lake cabin, none of them knew they had just started a life-long tradition. This is a rare friendship which has survived for decades and now the group of guys are sharing their story of friendship with everyone.

During the summer of 1982, the five friends were hanging out at the family cabin on Copco Lake in Northern California. Dickson, or J.D. to his friends, set up his 35-millimeter camera on self-timer and snapped away. The photo shown here dated 1982 is the one they chose as their “vacation photo.” They boys were around 19 years old at the time.

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Chaos ensues at Wal*Mart and other stores on Black Friday Reply


For new 2012 Black Friday footage, click here.


Violence marred Black Friday shopping in at least five states, including a California incident in which police say a woman doused fellow shoppers with pepper spray in a bid to cut to the head of the line.

The incident happened at a Walmart in the Porter Ranch area of Los Angeles, police spokesman Officer Robert Chavira said.

About 15 people were exposed to the spray. Los Angeles firefighters treated them at the scene and no one required hospitalization, Chavira said.

The woman was able to pay for her purchases and leave the store before police arrived, Chavira said. More…

Windows 8 desktop

Windows 8 unveiled at Anaheim CA conference. Review. Reply

The long awaited Windows 8 was fully unveiled at the Windows Build Conference on Tuesday.

It may have the start-bar-and-icon Desktop look that Windows users are familiar with, but as the crowd at Anaheim, California, saw, any similarities with Windows 7 end there.

The new system has a new, touchscreen-optimized interface called ‘Metro,’ which looks more like the Windows Phone operating system.

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California power outage 03

Massive power outage in California looks like human error 2

“Boom boom… out go the lights” a song from years past by Pat Travers is the first thing that popped in my head.

SAN DIEGO, Calif. (KTLA) — Electricity has been restored to hundreds of thousands of the estimated 5 million customers hit by a major power outage that stretched from Orange County to Arizona, officials said early Friday, adding that the entire incident was caused by one person’s mistake.

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CCA’s involvement with SCOTUS ruling to release CA prisoners 3

On May 23rd, 2011, SCOTUS (Supreme Court of the US) ruled in Brown v. Plata that California must reduce its prison population by over 30,000 prisoners. Why? Because their system was so severely overcrowded that the medical neglect prisoners were facing amounted to a violation of their 8th Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. That’s some mightily deficient medical care.

California has been facing a crisis in its prison system for decades, as the sentencing reforms that came as a result of the War on Drugs and other initiatives have steered an ever-increasing segment of the populace into prison. Arguably most impactful in this regard is California’s “Three Strikes” laws, which mandate a life sentence for anyone convicted of a third felony charge, whether that charge be for murder or larceny, rape or possession of a controlled substance. California’s prison population has grown dramatically under this legislation. More…

Baltimore Kinetic Sculpture Race – Human powered works of “art” Reply

Kinetic Sculptures are amphibious, human powered works of art custom built for the race. Each May, the American Visionary Art Museum (AVAM) hosts the East Coast Kinetic Sculpture Race Championship on the shore of Baltimore’s Inner Harbor in central Maryland. The eight-hour race covers 15 miles—mostly on pavement, but also including a trip into the Chesapeake Bay and through mud and sand.

Kinetic Sculpture Racing traces its roots to Ferndale, California in 1969 when artist Hobart Brown upgraded his son’s tricycle into a 5-wheeled pentacycle that was part of a race down Main Street. (Hobart did not win.). The original event, the Kinetic Grand Championship in Humboldt County, California, is also called the “Triathlon of the Art World” because art and engineering are combined with physical endurance during a three day cross country race that includes sand, mud, pavement, a bay crossing, a river crossing and major hills. You can learn more on Wikipedia.

Video from 2011 Baltimore parade

Video from 2010 race in California:

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2011 Grand Mediocre East Coast Champion: PLATYPUS

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Art: Ankh-ers Away

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Engineering: Am-Ish Sin Caballo

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People’s Choice: Go Ask Alice

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Golden Dinosaur: The Lobe Trotters

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Sock Creature of the Universe: Bee-Have

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Golden Flipper: The Claw Machine

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Top ten reasons John Muir – the Father of our National Parks – is awesome! Reply

Often referred to as “The Father of our National Parks,” John Muir (1838-1914) was America’s most famous and influential naturalist and conservationist, and founder of the Sierra Club.

Ten Reasons John Muir Is Awesome

1. He has his own Woods, mineral (Muirite), bird (Muir’s Winter Wren), and minor planet (Johnmuir).

2. While working in a factory at age 29, Muir was blinded in accident. When his sight returned months later, he left factory work to study nature.

3. Muir once described himself as a “poetico-trampo-geologist-botanist and ornithologist-naturalist, etc., etc.”

4. Choosing to go by “the wildest, leafiest, and least trodden way I could find,” he walked 1,000 miles from Indiana to the Gulf of Mexico.

5. Muir was a vocal proponent of the awesomeness of dogs, even referring to them as “our horizontal brothers.” (His position on cats has been lost to the sands of time.)

6. Before he took President Theodore Roosevelt camping in Yosemite Valley: 0 national parks. After? Five national parks, 18 national monuments, 55 national bird sanctuaries and wildlife refuges, and 150 national forests.

7. He traveled on every continent (except Antarctica), including exploring the Chilean Andes at age 72.

8. His beard can go toe-to-toe with any beard in history (including Brian Wilson’s).

9. He appears on the California state quarter.

10. Muir loved him some sequoias. He discovered that soaking sequoia pine cones in water turned the water purple. He then used the purple liquid as ink, and also drank it, “hoping thereby to … render myself more tree-wise and sequoical.” Click here to see the Sequoia and Kings Canyon site.

Original post in Charlotte Sierra Club on WP

NC Central Piedmont Group of the Sierra Club
Explore, enjoy, and protect the planet

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John Muir Trail

On the California State Quarter