This is Dr. Erickson and I on the roof the UC Davis physics building on Picnic Day 1986. Picnic Day was (and still is) a very popular open house held in the spring. Former students return, prospective students explore, everyone throws open their doors and puts on a show. I had graduated by then, but was working in the area and still came back to campus from time to time.
The Last Mechanical Monster. A Fire Story. Whatever Happened to the World of Tomorrow? Mom's Cancer.
Friday, March 29, 2024
Dr. Glen Erickson
This is Dr. Erickson and I on the roof the UC Davis physics building on Picnic Day 1986. Picnic Day was (and still is) a very popular open house held in the spring. Former students return, prospective students explore, everyone throws open their doors and puts on a show. I had graduated by then, but was working in the area and still came back to campus from time to time.
Thursday, March 28, 2024
The Intellectual Life #24
A Peek into the Intimate Intellectual Life of a Long-Married Couple, Part 24:
(Karen and I are waiting in Terminal 2 of Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport to board an airplane for a 6-hour flight home.)
Brian: Y'know, whenever I'm about to end a trip like this, I often think, "What if I just didn't get on the plane?"
Karen: What would you do?
Brian: I have no idea! That's the point! What would I do?
Karen: Don't you want to go home?
Brian: Of course! But haven't you wondered? I'd have to figure out how to eat and sleep and get a job . . .
Karen: No. I just want to go home.
Brian: I could be the oldest Congressional intern! Or mow the grass on the National Mall!
Karen: I don't get why you don't want to go home.
Brian: I do! But it's like when you're standing on the edge of a cliff and wonder what it would be like to just jump off.
Karen: I never, ever wonder that.
Brian: Really? I mean, I'd never want to actually DO it, but--
Karen: I would never, ever even think of that.
Brian: Huh!
(Karen side-eyes me in wary silence until our boarding group is called, perhaps wondering if an annulment is still possible.)
This has been a peek into the intimate intellectual life of a long-married couple.
| These birds were inside the terminal and appeared to live on crumbs dropped by travelers. I can't imagine how they'd ever get out. Maybe they don't need to; it's a pretty cushy life! |
"Positive" is Good, Right?
My turn!
This is my first skirmish with the 'Vid. I feel all right: scratchy, phlegmy throat and some aches, like a mild cold. I am vaccinated and am on-boarding hot tea as I type, and Karen has banished me from our shared living space. We had some plans next weekend that I've spoiled, including a fun wedding celebration, and I feel bad about that.
Of course I caught it during our recent trip, either from the throngs of tourists in DC or the wretched refuse with whom I spent 6 hours in a plane. Let this be a lesson: Never go anywhere or do anything. Play it safe. Just stay home and drink tea and watch the world pass by your window.
Nah. No regrets.
Will keep you posted.
Wednesday, March 27, 2024
Washington, DC
Karen and I are home from a five-day vacation to Washington, DC that we took to celebrate our anniversary! Karen has been to DC a few times for work but I, a West Coast guy, never have. I think it's a pilgrimage every citizen should make, and mine was long overdue.
We hit many museums and monuments. The cherry trees were fully abloom, drawing throngs (plus us) to the Tidal Basin. We took a self-guided tour of the White House and, thanks to our U.S. Rep. Jared Huffman and his intern Charlie, got a personalized tour of the Capitol. We went to the Lincoln and Jefferson memorials, both under renovation, and the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum (NASM), likewise renovating. Toured the National Portrait Gallery, U.S. Botanic Garden, Library of Congress, the National Zoo, and more. We walked nearly everywhere; took the easy and convenient Metro everywhere else.
I won't list all the places we went because one thing I've learned about visiting DC is everyone says, "OMG, do not miss the National Barbed Wire Museum, it's the best thing there!" If anyone posts a comment like, "Hope you didn't miss the National Barbed Wire Museum!" I will reply, "It sure is terrific, isn't it?" Maybe we did, maybe we didn't. We did the best we could in five days and couldn't have seen it all in another ten.
| The Washington Monument through the trees. |
| Our timing on the cherry blossoms was perfect--as was many other people's. Depending on the time of day, the major cherry blossom walks ranged from pleasant to impassably crowded. |
| The Jefferson Memorial across the Tidal Basin and through the blossoms. |
My favorite thing about traveling is assembling my own mental map of a place--especially a famous place, where I've seen all the landmarks individually but have no feel for how they relate. You can study maps, but nothing beats walking for tying things together. We were on Day 4 when Karen and I realized we hadn't seen the Supreme Court building and had no idea where it was. Turns out it's behind the Capitol, and if we'd walked another 20 feet when we toured the Library of Congress on Day 1 we would've stumbled right into it.
I know: yokels from the sticks. But I'm not too proud to play tourist when I actually am one. You can learn a lot by asking simple questions, and some of our favorite interactions came from talking to folks like groundskeepers and docents who were more than happy to share.
Trust me when I say this photo dump only skims the surface. We took hundreds. It was a great trip. Five stars, would recommend!
| Cherry blossoms weren't the only flowers a-poppin'. Tulips were everywhere, and made beautiful picture frames. |
| At the Jefferson Memorial, where Karen noticed a nifty alignment with the Washington Monument between its pillars. |
| .....As you'll notice this armed officer keeping an eagle eye on her to make sure she's not an insurrectionist fascist who's about to vault over that barricade. |
| The view of the National Mall looking from the Capitol toward the Washington Monument. |
| The National Zoo has a carousel. Who doesn't love a carousel? All the animals were different. Karen rode a bison and I rode a bear. |
| Tamarins at the National Zoo. I like Tamarins. They seem less impressed with me. |
Friday, March 22, 2024
Regarding Louise Nevelson
I may have just shot the greatest photo I’ve ever shot in my life. In an art gallery, I saw two people with white hair and black jackets sitting on a black couch contemplating a black sculpture on a white wall. I kneeled down enough so their white heads just broke the plane of the black art, et voila! Possibly the most artistic thing I’ve ever done.
Tuesday, March 19, 2024
Mercury Ahoy!
Just stepped out into the backyard when a twinkle on the horizon caught my eye. I knew there weren't any bright stars in the area, but it wasn't moving, either, so not an airplane. A quick look with my SkyView app confirmed that it's the planet Mercury!
Astrophotography by iPhone is dodgy, but I took a shot. The bright "star" at upper left is Jupiter. Can't miss it. Mercury is down toward the twilight glow, just above the tree branches. I circled it in the second pic below.
A Mercury sighting isn't especially rare, but it is probably the most difficult naked-eye planet to spot because it's close to the Sun and relatively fast. It's said that the great Renaissance astronomer Copernicus never actually saw Mercury, although that may be apocryphal. I love delightful little discoveries like this that come your way when you're paying attention.
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| There he is! |
Monday, March 18, 2024
The Intellectual Life #23
A Peek into the Intimate Intellectual Life of a Long-Married Couple, Part 23:
Karen came home from a meeting around dinner time. I had tonight's stir-fry ingredients chopped and ready but hadn't begun cooking yet.
Brian: We can eat dinner anytime. I mise-en-placed it.
Karen: What?
Brian: I mise-en-placed it.
Karen: ??
Brian: When a French chef has all their stuff set up to cook, that's the "mise en place."
Karen: Uh huh.
Brian: I verbed it.
Karen: You certainly did.
Brian: Anyway, we can walk the dog first since I haven't started cooking yet.
Karen: So you mise-en-paused it.
(Fist bumps and hearty congratulations all around.)
This has been a peek into the intimate intellectual life of a long-married couple.
Friday, March 15, 2024
Wow, Is It the Ides of March Already?
1. Roman emperors who enter a room to find senators brandishing knives, and;
2. Expectant parents of twins who enter an operating room to find doctors brandishing scalpels.
Today is my daughters' birthday. I don't post this picture often (if at all, I don't recall) because it's kind of clinical and the girls aren't very visible, but this is the first photo I took with them both in the same field of view. Many more would follow.
They were born a few weeks early and Karen had eclampsia, so there was some urgency and concern. Each baby had a dedicated medical team, as did Karen. Somehow I was left to fend for myself. It was the sort of pregnancy that in the 19th century might've killed them all, but everything went just fine in the late 20th. A few days later the hospital shoved us out the door with two babies but no instruction manual. We winged it. All survived.
Happy Birthday, Chiquitas! Love you.
Sunday, March 10, 2024
Hornet + 2300
Carrier Con Photo Dump: What a nice day aboard the USS Hornet Sea, Air and Space Museum for Carrier Con 2024, which I attended mostly to take part in a conversation with ElfQuest's Wendy and Richard Pini that a hundred or so people came to watch.
I last went to Carrier Con in 2022, and the event has grown a lot in both attendees and vendors/participants. It's hard to make a cavernous aircraft carrier hangar deck feel snug--the last time I can recall was a special visit by Buzz Aldrin--but it did today. Although Carrier Con is growing, it's still a sweet, sincere little convention.
I think my panel with the Pinis went very well; they were happy and we got great feedback. Immodestly, I think the fact that I'm in the same line of work produced some gems that others wouldn't have mined.
I'd say it was a very successful day and I was happy to be a part of it. Pics!
| A wide view of my conversation with the Pinis, shot by my daughter Robin. |
| A closer view of the panel, also by Robin. |
| An even CLOSER view, shot by me! |
| The line to meet and talk to Wendy and Richard following our talk. ElfQuest fans are usually dedicated, and the Pinis return the love. |
| An overview of part of the hangar deck. |
| Some cosplayers: Alligator Loki and Captain America. |
| An impressive couple. |
| Admiral on the bridge! Well, near the bridge. |
| This young woman creeped me the hell out. Marvelous! |
| A corner of artist's alley, where I bought a couple of books to help keep up-and-comers up and coming. |
| I took my leave as the Sun set on another good day aboard the Hornet. |
Monday, March 4, 2024
Coming Saturday: CarrierCon 2024!
A reminder: next Saturday is CarrierCon, a pop culture (anime, cosplay, gaming, etc.) convention aboard the USS Hornet Sea, Air and Space Museum in Alameda, Calif., which is one of my favorite attractions in the San Francisco Bay Area. It's a fun little con that draws friendly, enthusiastic vendors and fans to a historic aircraft carrier. What could be better than that?!
Special guests include my friends Wendy and Richard Pini of ElfQuest fame, who will be there all day to meet fans, sign books, and talk elves and wolves. My sole responsibility is taking part in the Pinis' 3:00 panel, "Wendy & Richard Pini in Conversation with Brian Fies," and we want to make it a real conversation. I hope to dig into creativity and working independently with people who've been doing it at a high level for 46 years. Even if you don't know ElfQuest, my goal is for you to take away something interesting and useful.
The Pinis don't make many West Coast appearances and CarrierCon is small enough that an ElfQuest fan could have some quality time with them. Come on by, meet some people, tour a great ship. That sounds like a fine day.



