Sunday, April 27, 2025

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

When adequately filled

To follow up on the Pouf! blog entry a few days ago, I wanted to show how the Moroccan leather footstool appears when adequately filled. I think it looks great. Betty has been attacking it lately, so it’s obviously already becoming a beloved member of our furniture family.

If you think you’d enjoy some light but smart mystery fiction involving jazz subjects, I highly recommend a trio of books by Bill Moody: Solo Hand, Death of a Tenor Man, and The Sound of the Trumpet. The latter two involve real-life musicians Wardell Gray and Clifford Brown. These books were published in the late 1990s, when I first read them. I just re-read the first two and am in the middle of the third. All are available at the Eugene Public Library; well, all but The Sound of the Trumpet, which will be when I’m done.

And speaking of books, yesterday two volumes recommended by friends arrived in the mail: Dragonflies and Damselflies of Oregon by Cary Kerst & Steve Gordon, and Jon Miller’s Confessions of a Baseball Purist (written with Mark Hyman). Miller is a funny man and one of my favorite baseball play-by-play radio announcers. He’s been working for the San Francisco Giants since the early 1990s, and has also spent time with ESPN, the Baltimore Orioles, and the Oakland Athletics.

And speaking of baseball, a pitcher with a great name—Hayden Birdsong—performed masterful relief work for three innings last night to help San Francisco defeat the Milwaukee Brewers in the first Giants home game since April 9. Nice to come back to Oracle Park and win the first game of the homestand!

Monday, April 21, 2025

We are kind of obsessing

        After almost daily transmissions for three weeks, Radio Free Random has hit a random hiatus. No shows since April 15. That’s randomness for ya!

Baseball, on the other hand, has shown no sign of abating. I’ve watched or listened to all 22 Giants games played so far, keeping score with #2 HB soft Ticonderoga pencil in a college-ruled notebook. The team is doing quite well, with hiccups here and there—like yesterday when they blew a 3-run lead in the bottom of the ninth in Anaheim and allowed the Angels to come back and win with a walk-off 3-run double—after hitting an Angel with a pitch and forcing in a run, darn it.

As Mrs. Random mentioned in her latest blog post, we are kind of obsessing over a house that we may have a chance to buy. There are lots of uncertainties and questions, and at the moment we have no control, but that’s not stopping us from fantasizing. If nothing else, it’s demonstrating rather clearly to us that we’re kinda ready to move on, leave this neighborhood we’ve lived in for 35 years, and try a new domestic situation.

On Saturday I took my new (to me) Lumix GM1 camera downtown, on foot, for some street photography. The prospect of Saturday Market, Farmers Market, and lots of anti-Trump protesters (and, it turns out, bonus zealot preachers) all happening in a small area was very alluring. I’ll post some images after the prose.

First stop Saturday, though, was the downtown public library, where I returned several books and DVDs that we’ve had checked out for a couple months. I had to wait while a dad with two young boys refereed them taking turns putting their books into the slot, onto the conveyor belt, as they squabbled back and forth. “Now Johnny let Timmy put his book in.” “Thank you Johnny for letting Timmy return his book.” “Please don’t argue with each other.” “Thank you Timmy for letting Johnny put his book in.” ETC. (Not their real names.) I’m sure the boys felt very empowered. Anyway, after forever, I finally got to put my books and discs into the return slot.

Then, as I was taking off my jacket (the outside temp was rising) and stuffing it into my backpack, a young woman who’d been sitting on one of the nearby benches approached me. “Hi, it looks like you’re interested in photography—you’ve got a camera on your neck and another camera there!” (I’d also brought my Canon S120 and it was out while I arranged the contents of my backpack). “Yes, and I have more cameras at home,” I laughed. Turns out she’s a University of Oregon student and needed subjects to interview for a class project. Apparently she was not having much luck, because when I agreed to an interview, she thanked me profusely, “You’re saving my ass here!”

Her name was Gracie, and the interview was fun. After getting my name and age and learning that I’m retired, she wanted to know what I do with my time. I mentioned typewriters, photography, baseball, and Radio Free Random. She immediately glommed on to RFR and wanted to know all about it. Turns out Gracie’s a podcaster and YouTuber, so we kind of talked shop. And I made her squeal when I subscribed to her YT channel on my phone there on the spot. So that was fun. After the interview I headed over to 8th and Oak where the action was happening.





























Thursday, April 17, 2025

Pouf!

Moroccan pouf shortly after arrival.

What’s the frequency, Kenneth? Oh, about 2 blog entries per month and plummeting, apparently. The flurry of posts here from June to March was mainly driven by medical updates, and now that these are thankfully few and far between, I guess I don’t feel as impelled to propel words out onto the internet.

That and the boring fact that I’m still in the same obsessive grooves, personally: Radio Free Random, baseball, and photography. The first two have been giant occupiers of my time (Go Giants!). The camera hobby is a bit more in the fits-and-starts category lately, depending on how often we get out and hike. I keep thinking about street photography but not getting off my butt and out there.

We’re still looking at houses on the internet, and Mrs. Random actually went to some open houses a couple weekends ago. We’re still quite open to the idea of moving sooner rather than later, but it would have to be to a place that really ticks the right boxes and inspires real passion.

Last week I ordered a Moroccan pouf (aka ottoman, hassock) for our old Kennedy Rocker. It arrived empty! A little research revealed that this is standard practice. You buy the pouf and it’s your job to fill it, whether with fiberglass beads or foam or blankets and pillows and random fabric from around the house. We chose the latter option: soft stuff we’re not using. It holds a lot! We’re still filling it. It’s to the point where it works as a footstool—but if you sit on it, it squishes way down.

Sunday, April 6, 2025

World's smallest

Panasonic Lumix GM1 shortly after arrival (no lens attached yet)
    In the pursuit of happiness (a patriotic duty, no?), I spent way too much money for “the world’s smallest micro four thirds camera”—a Panasonic Lumix GM1. I’d been pining for one of these tiny beasts for many months. It’s not a perfect camera, but it fulfills my hopes and dreams vastly more than the disappointing OM Systems TG-7. I took the GM1 out on a short neighborhood photowalk on Friday and got some decent images using the 12-32mm kit lens that came with my GX85. For me, the camera’s biggest shortcoming is a combination of no viewfinder with a barely-bright-enough LCD screen: it was a sunny day and I had a bit of difficulty framing my shots. Later I found a way to make the screen a little brighter (higher luminence and saturation), so next time out in the sun might be easier. That said, I still managed to capture good stuff. Over the past three years of taking thousands of photos, I’ve attained a pretty high batting average with my style of shooting from the hip, and the GM1 plays into this strength.

    Some photos I shot Friday with the new camera: