Sunday, November 22, 2009

Old and New


New Me!


Sometime last spring, I began to notice an occasional hitch--or catch--followed by a sharp snapping sound coming from the drive train (chain, crank, or bottom bracket) of my light-weight road bike. When I put the bike on the repair stand, I could create the same effect. There was indeed something that almost locked up the drive train. If I pushed hard enough, I would hear a pop and then it would seem fixed; smooth pedalling would continue for some considerable period of time.

I couldn't determine the exact location of the sound, so I decided to just keep riding the bike. Eventually it would fix itself or something would break, and then I would deal with it. And so I churned on for several thousand miles of summer suffering, including the Big Dam Bridge 100-mile ride. I was still recording reasonably fast rides--though I had not managed anything memorable for months. Just old age, I thought to myself--nonetheless a little irked.

After we returned to the Ozarks from Bethany Beach, I found myself drained after some rather slow rides. Well, there had been the sodden weeks of rain in October, followed by lethargy during the drive out East and back. Perhaps I was just out of shape--so I rode a little more and a little harder until one day I could hardly even turn the cranks and there was a perceptible grinding noise like sandpaper rubbing across a windowpane. Finally, I knew the cause of my problems, and it wasn't just (or even primarily) that I am getting old and slow. My bike's axle-bearings were shot.

Several days ensued during which I labored to discover what kind of bottom bracket my road bike uses and what exotic tools I might need to replace it. Lurking beneath the surface was the dim worry that perhaps I couldn't replace the part at all. After all, the bike had been used for five seasons, seeing about 20,000 miles of hard use. Would I be able to get enough leverage to unscrew the part without breaking something (most likely my knuckles) or stripping the threads? Could I even remove the cranks to get at the bottom bracket?

Time and patience prevailed. From studying pictures on the web, I deduced which tools I'd need and determined exactly which bottom bracket to order as a replacement. Bike technology, like most other technology, has rapidly become complicated by diversity. This is especially true of light-weight racing bikes. The desire of weight-weenies to cut grams has led to continuous redesign of bike parts that once seemed simple and unchanging. In the old days, when I first began wrenching on my own bike, the cranks and axle were a single piece of bent, stout steel laced through the bottom bracket. The bearings were the size of large bb's and were packed into races machined into the rims of the bottom brackets. Cups slopped full of grease and threaded onto the axle held it all together. Every year or so I would have to add more grease, but the rest of the mechanism seemed immortal.

About ten years ago I had my first encounter with sealed bearings, which never need greasing--and cannot be greased. Nice! But the cranks and axle on a super-light racing bike are marvels of modern technology. The cranks are carbon fiber, making them stiff and very light. The axle has to be the stiffest part of the entire bike because of the torques to which it is subjected. That is why it was made of such heavy steel in the past. A light-weight racing machine, however, uses an axle that is much bigger in diameter (to provide stiffness) and hollow (to save weight). This very clever way of building an axle means, however, that there is less room for the wheel bearings. They are miniature bb's now; and they wear out faster than they once did, requiring that the entire part must be replaced. Thus, the classic bicycle bottom bracket was heavy and hearty, while the high-tech replacement is much more frisky and finicky. It's fast and light, but not particularly fragile. On the whole a considerable improvement. Time passes; things improve.

As it happens, I have just had another--and entirely opposite--experience contrasting old and new technology. When I was a boy and young man, eyeglasses were really made of glass. Glass is the perfect material for optics. It is hard and scratch-resistant with excellent refractive properties. That is why telescopes generally still use glass optics.

There are only three problems with glass lenses: (1) glass is quite brittle, making it easily shattered in some circumstances; (2) glass is relatively heavy; and (3) glass is quite hard, making it difficult to grind and polish. The design problem presented by these three qualities is not difficult to solve. Because glass is brittle, eyeglass lenses ought not to be too thin. But making eyeglass lenses thicker makes them heavier, so to keep the total weight down, the lenses should be kept small. Smaller lenses are somewhat easier and less expensive to grind. For centuries, then, corrective lenses have tended to be tiny--like the 19th-century pince-nez or John Lennon's granny-glasses.

Sometime after 1970, however, plastic lenses came into vogue. Plastic is much easier to grind and is about half the weight of glass. For ordinary prescriptions (not bifocals), the lenses could be ground on the premises of the optometrist, and the lighter weight gave frame designers many more options--leading sometimes to very large lenses in unusual shapes--think Elton John. Plastic is also more shatter-resistant and more UV-resistant than glass. For these reasons nearly all modern eyeglass lenses are now plastic. Unfortunately, plastic has two rather serious flaws. First its refractive properties are inferior to those of glass, so you just can't see as well with plastic lenses--especially if you have a strong correction. Second, plastic is easily scratched, and even the scratch coatings on plastic are inadequate. To the optometrists, these aren't really problems; they'd like you to get a new set of lenses every year anyway. To the purchaser, however, it is simply irritating to pay hundreds of dollars for a pair of glasses that start to deteriorate almost immediately.

This year, when I went in for new glasses, I decided to insist on glass. It was a bit of a battle, as I was forced to listen to multiple lectures from everyone in the office on the superiority of plastic. They like to blather on about the horrendous weight of glass, but their favorite tactic is to raise worries about getting shards of shattered glass in one's eyeballs--forgetting entirely that plastic shatters too and that eye injuries caused by broken spectacles are very rare. I listened politely, but I got my way. Eventually, I was allowed to pick out a small pair of frames to cradle my glass lenses. Then my frame and prescription was shipped off to an out-of-town facility that could actually grind glass.

I couldn't be happier with the result. As the photos below indicate, the new frames and lenses weigh exactly the same amount as my prior set of plastic lenses in larger frames. The optics are superb. Best of all, these lenses should last years without deteriorating in any way.

So, modern high-technology in bicycles and in bifocals is lighter, but far less durable than the older way of doing things. There may be a general principle at work here. The heavy typewriter I used while writing my dissertation is still perfectly functional, but I have half-a-dozen worthless old computers gathering dust in the closet. In some cases (eyeglasses) the old ways are better, while in others the light-weight, high-tech stuff is superb. Nothing could get me to haul out my fifteen-pound 1960-vintage portable typewriter to compose a blog when I have the option of writing on a three-pound netbook. Indeed, that old Remington weighs nearly as much as my shiny, new Motobecane SL racing bike!

One final observation: businesses love profit, and hardly anyone will promote the free solution to a problem. I've lived with severe myopia all my life, but only when I was researching this blog entry did I finally discover that in a pinch one can fashion a pair of corrective spectacles for daylight use by poking two pinholes, pupil-width apart, in a strip of flimsy cardboard! But who could sell such an item at a profit so why publicize the possibility--even though it's exactly the sort of tip that could save some camper's life after a tumble down a wilderness hillside.
Old Me

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Installing Tiny Core Linux on My Eee 900

 
A strong argument can be made that Tiny Core  Linux is the fastest-booting and most efficient operating system currently available--especially for netbook computers that are used for web browsing and cloud computing. Tiny Core is a modular operating system, allowing each user to select the programs and features most suitable for his system. I wanted to make my system as compact as possible so that it would boot quickly while still having a full-featured browser and other fairly standard capabilities. The total operating system described in these paragraphs uses only 44.1 megabytes of file space. While this installation is optimized for my Eee 900, the basic concept should be applicable with minor variations on a wide variety of other netbooks and laptops.
   
Assumptions:
You have access to a working version of linux.
You have about 100 MB of free space on sda1 (or your computer's boot partition).
   
Steps:
1. Create two directories on sda1 for your Tiny Core installation. Name one of them "tiny" and name the other "tce." Within the "tce" directory create another directory named "optional". 

2. Download the Tiny Core iso from http://distro.ibiblio.org/pub/linux/distributions/tinycorelinux/2.x/release/
   
3. Use an archive manager (FileManager in Xandros) to extract "bzImage" and and "tinycore.gz" from the Tiny Core iso. Put both of them in your "tiny" directory on sda1.
   
4. Use a file editor with root privileges to find and open your GRUB "menu.lst". You should be able to locate it in /boot/grub on sda1. Check that the GRUB menu is set to display during boot-up by commenting-out the "hiddenmenu" entry. (I.e., put a # at the beginning of that line.) Next give yourself some time to select your choice of operating system during the boot process; initially, I recommend that you set "timeout=5", but you can later reduce that to 1 or even 0 to speed boot time. Then, scroll to the end of the file and type in the following text:

  title Tiny Core Linux
  root (0x80,0)
  kernel /tiny/bzImage quiet tce=sda1 home=sdb1 opt=sdb1 nodhcp
  initrd /tiny/tinycore.gz


(NOTE: "root (0x80,0)" is the sda1 partition on my Eee 900 and it is used in each of the other three grub entries for the standard Xandros installation. If the boot partition is described in some other way on your machine, then use that designation. For example, on some hard drives it is "root (hd0,0)". Use whatever is the standard for your other grub items.)

At this point, save the changes you have made to menu.lst and reboot your computer. If all has gone well, you should be able to reboot into Tiny Core Linux. To add software and continue building your operating system, you will need to have a wired (ethernet) connection to the internet. Usually, this is as simple as plugging the appropriate wire either into the ethernet ports on your Eee and your router, or into the usb ports on both machines.

Now you are ready to build a fully functional system. I am going to recommend the smallest setup that provides wifi access, a browser, a couple of text editors, a couple of file managers, a music player, a video player, and a flashplayer. Tiny Core Linux uses two different types of packaged programs: tce and tcz. While both types still work, tcz's are preferred for version 2.4 of Tiny Core. 

So, begin by using Apps (the gears button at the bottom-center of your display) to mount 915resolution.tcz (for better screen display on some Eee pc's with Intel chipsets), opera.tcz (a browser), mc.tcz (a file manager and file editor), wireeless-tools.tczl (wireless), wireless-2.6.29.1-tinycore.tczm (wireless), wpa-supplicant.tcz (wireless), OSS.tczm (sound), cpufreq.tczl (cpu speed control), beaver.tczl (a graphical editor), conky.tcz (systems reporting), and xmms-musepack-1.2.1.tcz (for music). This will download the relevant files to the tce directory on your sda1 partition.

Now, click on Aterm (the screen button at the bottom-center of your display) and type in "sudo mc" without the parentheses. This will open Midnight Commander your file-manager/file-editor. Find your way to the /opt directory and highlight the bootlocal.sh file. This is a file that automatically executes commands every time you reboot your computer. We will use it to connect to wifi and to set the cpu speed. Push the F4 key to open the file for editing. Enter the following lines:

  sudo iwconfig wlan0 essid any
  sudo udhpc -i wlan0
  sudo modprobe p4-clockmod
  sudo cpufreq-set -g ondemand
  sudo mount -t auto /dev/sdb1 /mnt/sdb1


Push F2 to save the changes you have made to bootlocal.sh. The first two commands assume that you are going to be using a public wifi signal (i.e., no password needed). If you will normally be using a password-protected network, you can modify the lines appropriately. For example, to connect automatically to a wep-wifi, you will need the following:

  sudo iwconfig ath0 essid your-essid-name
  sudo iwconfig ath0 mode managed key your-password
  sudo udhdpc -i ath0


Similarly, cpufreq-set can be changed to "conservative" for the improved battery life or to "performance" for the best performance. This can also be changed anytime you wish while using your computer by opening a terminal and typing in "sudo cpufreq-set -g ondemand" . . . or "sudo cpufreq-set -g performance." (NOTE: When you are in the terminal window, you can push the up-arrow to cycle through the commands you have recently used, sparing you the need to retype many commands.) Having made these changes to bootlocal.sh, shut down your computer. Note that the first time you shut down Tiny Core, you will be prompted to select a location for a backup file. You can select any location--sdb1, for example. 

Reboot your computer. If all has gone well, it will automatically connect to wifi. (If it doesn't immediately connect, open a terminal and type in "sudo iwlist scanning." It should show either ath0 or wlan0 with an ESSID name and other info. Based on what you find, edit your bootlocal.sh and try again.) Try out your Opera browser, your graphical editor (Beaver), and your mp3 player (Xmms). Now we are going to reboot the computer one more time before installing your flashplayer, your pdf reader, and another file manager. While we are at it, we will also set up conky to monitor your computer's performance.

By now you should be getting used to how quickly Tiny Core Linux boots up. (On my Eee 900 it takes less than 30 seconds to boot and acquire a wifi signal.) Once again, use Apps to mount the following files: getFlash10.tgz, emelfm.tgz (a graphical file manager), Mplayer-nodeps.tcz (a video player), and xpdf-3.02p12.tcz. These are some hefty applications and they may take a bit of time to download and mount. Once they have done so, you should open a new desktop (hit Ctrl-F2) and put your mouse somewhere on the screen. Then click the right mouse button, scroll down to Applications, and run getFlash10. After it does its thing, switch back to your first desktop (Ctrl-F1) and shut down your computer. Boot again, go to youtube.com, and test your ability to play flash video.
The three somewhat bulky programs you installed in the previous paragraph may have somewhat slowed your computer's boot time and/or eaten up too much ram. You can cure this by moving these programs and their dependencies into the /tce/optional directory. After you have done that, they will no longer load into ram when you reboot your computer, but you can invoke them at will by using Apps>File and mounting them from their directory.

Now there is a little more tweaking to be done. First, let's set up Opera so that it invokes xmms to play streaming audio. Start Opera and go to Tools>Preferences>Advanced>Downloads. Click Add and insert in the Mime box "audio/x-scpls" -- and insert in the Open box "xmms %s" (without the quotes). Use Opera to go to www.publicradiofan.com and see if you can play streaming audio through xmms. While we are configuring Opera, let's reduce its demands on flash drives. Go to Tools>Preferences>Advanced>History and change Memory Cache to 40 megabytes, switch Disk Cache to off, and tick the box for Empty on Exit.

Next we need a good default configuration for conky. Create a new file with Beaver and paste in the following text:

  # maintain spacing between certain elements
  use_spacer yes
  # set to yes if you want tormo to be forked in the background
  background no
  # X font when Xft is disabled, you can pick one with program xfontsel
  #font 5x7
  #font 6x10
  #font 7x13
  #font 8x13
  font 9x15
  #font *mintsmild.se*
  #font -*-*-*-*-*-*-34-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
  # Xft font when Xft is enabled
  xftfont Verdana:size=12:bold
  # Text alpha when using Xft
  xftalpha 0.8
  # Xft font when Xft is enabled
  use_xft no
  # Draw shades?
  draw_shades yes
  # Draw outlines?
  draw_outline no # amplifies text
  # Draw borders around text
  draw_borders no
  # Text alignment, other possible values are commented
  alignment top_left
  #alignment top_right
  #alignment bottom_left
  #alignment bottom_right
  TEXT
  ${color #FF0000}$nodename - $sysname $kernel
  ${color #0000FF}Uptime: $uptime
  RAM: $memperc% ${membar 8}
  Swap:$swapperc% ${swapbar 8}
  CPU: $cpu% ${cpubar 8}
  CPU Temp: ${acpitemp}C
  CPU Speed: ${freq}MHz
  ${color #FFFF00}/ ${fs_used /}/${fs_size /}${alignr}${fs_used_perc /}%
  ${fs_bar 8 /}
  /home ${fs_used /home}/${fs_size /home}${alignr}${fs_used_perc /home}%
  ${fs_bar 8 /home}
  ${color2}Battery ${color1}${battery}
  ${battery_bar}


Save this file as ".conkyrc" (without the quotes, but using the period at the front of the filename). Open a terminal window and type in "conky" (without the quotes). Close the terminal window. Now you can monitor cpu temperature and speed, as well as other features of the operating system. Many different configurations of conky are possible if you do a bit of reading on the internet.

Finally, I recommend two optional modifications. First, each time you shut down your computer, Tiny Core makes a backup file. But we have installed it in a way that creates persistent directories so that it is unnecessary and undesirable to load the backup file each time you reboot your computer. I recommend that you copy your current "mybackup.tz" to a removable usb stick and change the installation so that backups are not automatically made and loaded with each boot. To do so, open a terminal window, type in "sudo mc", scroll down to ".profile" and highlight it. Push F4 to edit the file. Scroll down to the line that starts "export BACKUP" and edit it to "exportBACKUP=0." Push F2 to save your changes. Bingo. Tiny Core will no longer automatically backup and reload your system, but can still be made to do so if you desire it. Second, you'll probably want to use Opera every time you boot your computer. To make it start automatically, you need to edit your ".xsession" file (using "sudo mc" as above). Simply add "exec opera" at the end of the file, save it, and reboot.

This is the way I have set up my Eee 900 for optimal use for most daily tasks. Enjoy modifying your own installation. If you make a mistake, it is easy to reinstall everything in this small, efficient Linux version.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

For the past several years, I have made an annual resolution to swim across our part of the lake at least once before autumn. This year autumn seems to be setting in early and the lake is already a little chilly. Yesterday I decided it was now or never for the 9/10ths of a mile ordeal.

Sue served as photographer and oarsman, working perhaps harder than I did since she had to row back across the lake with me in boat. Her pictures say it all. Click on them to see larger versions.

Setting off


Nearing shore


Finally done

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Biking the Big Dam Bridge 100


Last Saturday, in celebration of my 61st birthday, Sue and I drove to Little Rock to ride the Big Dam Bridge 100.

This charity ride is only four years old, but it has already become the largest cycling event in Arkansas, drawing some 2,000 participants. Sue and I both achieved personal records. On her part, she rode 30 miles at an average speed of 16.5 mph. I took on the 100-mile marathon, cruising along at 18.8 mph.

It was a pleasant trip--nice soft beds in the motel, plenty of friendly fellow cyclists, oodles of lovely bikes to admire!

If you want to get a feel for this event, have a look at the following youtube videos. The first video shows some leisurely riders cruising to a catchy tune. The second gives a better idea of what it is like riding in a pace line.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BGF5FVr1QRY

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SIfZabkEqX4

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Dave and Lisa Kayak the North Fork River


In the third weekend of September, David and Lisa came for a brief visit. Basically, they had three days of fairly steady rain, but they were able to squeeze in a kayak trip down the North Fork River. Below the dam the North Fork is very cold and has become a nationally famous trout-fishing stream, so a float down it always includes a chance to see plenty of decked-out fishermen--often in the process of reeling in a big one. Usually one can also see many fish, a few happy herons, and the occasional bald eagle. This fall there were also plenty of wildflowers in bloom--though their names escape me at the moment. The accompanying snapshot shows David and Lisa as they were about to set out on their float.

While they floated the river, Sue and I biked in the area. We both warmed up on River Road, which runs for four miles along the bank of the White River. It's a very pretty ride--both because of the river with its dramatic bluffs and because a couple of the home-owners are enthusiastic and successful gardeners whose yards are always luxuriant and colorful. Sue stayed below in the flatlands while I completed my ride by climbing Matney Mountain. Matney is one of the best climbs in northern Arkansas--two miles uphill culminating on a ridge that provides lovely expansive views of the Ozark National Forest spread out below. The downhill cruise is fast and fun taking me to the 40 mph range that I try to maintain as my upper limit. Any faster and I start to get very scared.

Because of the plentiful rain, the four of us entertained ourselves playing ping pong on the table that I built from plywood siding salvaged from residing sections of our home in Jonesboro. Note the steady red-eye focus as David gets the ping-pong ball perfectly centered on his paddle.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Ordinary Adventures


Not all memorable adventures require extraordinary effort.

Yesterday afternoon Sue and I decided to cartop our kayaks over to nearby Hand Cove Landing. On the brief drive down the lane, we passed two twin fawns, standing on the road's edge, unperturbed by our presence.

After putting our kayaks in the water, we paddled over to Sandy Island. The shores of Norfork Lake are mainly composed of limestone ledges and rocky strands, but near Hand Cove Landing there are several ample stretches of glistening sand which are capable of sustaining the illusion that one is on a Caribbean Isle. Sandy Island is a great place for a quick swim.

After rounding the island, we paddled along Jordan Cliffs. The ledge at the top stands fifteen or twenty feet above deep water and is often used for diving. At one point a hole in the ledge leads to a twisting cave that descends to an opening slightly above the water line. It's a tight squeeze which I, despite some interest in caving, have never tried.

The composition of the rock along this section of the lake is endlessly fascinating. Much of it is stratified shale which often breaks off--here there is a block of a size to be used in constructing Washington's Monument anew, over there one sees a scattering of thin plates suitable for paving stones, dinner plates, or guillotine blades. Then there are sections of the cliff where fist-sized stones seem cemented together by some natural mortar. Finally, there is a column of twisted rock rising from the water, like something formed from molten lava.

In a cove past the edge of the cliffs, we reached a further unusual geological phenomenon. The rocks here are like gigantic weathered blocks, rounded at the corners, but fitted together like massive paving stones. Some of these stones have been eaten away from below and stand on the backs of others like three-legged turtles. Very strange.

From Jordan we paddled across a narrow bay toward another cove with a sandy beach. As we were nearing the beach a flight of geese--perhaps a dozen in all--glided down, not fifteen feet above us, to skid to a stop on the surface of the reflective waters. Then, no more than five minutes later, a mature bald eagle sailed high overhead.

It was a perfect adventure in our ordinary lives.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Perception

What do you see when you look at the picture above? To me, it looks like a falling fox, ears streaming back from the speed of the fall. Our cabin is made of wood and there are lots of knots and swirls in which I can easily imagine that I see many things.

I now realize that I have been doing something similar in my push-up routine. I have been working toward 100 push-ups for more than a year and in the last week I got to where I did 98 in my first set. Almost there! I rested four days and set up our camera so that I could record myself as I made my first serious attempt at the big goal. I wasn't too surprised to fall a bit short with only 95, but I was surprised when I watched the play-back of the short video. I knew I wasn't doing perfect form push-ups, but I hadn't realized they were that bad. Over the months I had perfected a method of doing push-ups that required very little movement at all-- arms spread too widely, vertical movement too minimal. So I had been deceiving myself, believing what I wanted to believe.

Here is another example-- but not such a disturbing one:
That's a shot of my bicycle odometer taken early this spring. The bottom line shows the total miles, and when I look at it, I like to think it reads 99,999 miles. In fact, it is only 9,999.9 miles. Still, that's a real milestone--the first time I had ever "rolled-over" the odometer on any bicycle. (I've ridden a lot more miles than that, but usually the battery gives out on the odometer and it gets reset before rolling over.) Equally deceptive is the second line of the odometer which supposedly shows my maximum speed on the bike--70.8 mph. I've no idea how that reading showed up, but it is about 30 mph faster than I have ever gone on the bike!

Anyway, my reality check about push-ups means that I'll go back to a more balanced and less obsessive upper-body workout. I may never get to 100 push-ups, but I will get stronger.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Pushing On




A picture says 1,000 words. Here are three pictures about my progress in the "100 Push-ups" challenge.

The top graph shows the total for my five sets of push-ups on the y-axis and the date on the x-axis. The graph shows my progress from early December through early August. The slope for the total is clearly increasing over time, but the slope for the all-important first set up push-ups almost looks flat.

I've broken the first set out in the third graph. It, too, shows a gradual slope upward, though it is less clear that progress is continuing--and can continue--to be made. I hit 50 first-set push-ups in early December. By early January I was at 60. I didn't hit 70 until mid-March and 80 in mid-June. Since then progress has been slow. . . . I think I can get to 90 on a good day, but 100? I just don't know.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Biking BATS



Every year--usually in early July--my wife and I load up the two cats and make the fifteen hour drive to Northern Wisconsin. By that date the thermometer in Arkansas is usually bursting its top, and it is a great relief to dangle a foot in the recently unfrozen waters of Trout Lake. Since we live in a post-and-beam cabin in the Arkansas Ozarks and my mother's guest house is also a post-and-beam cabin, the adjustment in lifestyle isn't substantial, but switching from the prevailing oak forest of Northern Arkansas to the prevailing pine woods of Northern Wisconsin does bring welcome sensory impressions. A good general impression of the lavishly-laked and heavily-wooded terrain is provided by the satellite view above.

Another delightful aspect of a vacation in Northern Wisconsin is a result of the beautifully paved roads that meander through the entire area, financed by sky-high property taxes. For avid cyclists, this is biking heaven--something obviously noticed by the Boulder Junction township elders who have had the foresight to establish the Boulder Area Trail System (BATS). There are roughly eleven miles of paved trail running from Boulder Junction down along the east side of Trout Lake and then east to Crystal Lake. This entire ride is stunningly beautiful, with expansive views of Trout Lake and Crystal Lake and plenty of places worthy of a stop and further exploration. Not to be missed is the short trail out to Cathedral Point near the mid-point of the Trout Lake section. Cathedral Point is a famous picnic spot at the narrows of Trout Lake. The tables are sheltered by massive pines and the views take in the entirety of one of the most beautiful lakes in Wisconsin. Another nice feature of the ride is the roadside wildflowers.

Click on the small photo at right to see a larger picture of the paved trail and a profusion of "Butter-and-Eggs."

The BATS trail system connects with similar trails from other nearby townships, so that a great web of interlinked biking trails is gradually emerging. But serious road bikers actually favor ROADS! The paved trails are great for family rides, but all those kids and distracted adults on the bike paths makes for a perilous experience if one is hoping to hammer down the path at top speed. I find it safer and more satisfying to wander around on the many, many wonderful paved roads. Here are a few fine rides:

The Trout Lake Loop is, perhaps, my favorite ride. The ride starts with the toughest climb in the whole area--Pope's Hill--a short, savage little thing that causes a fair amount of suffering. It's dangerous, too. The pavement is very rough and it's easy to get going too fast on the downhill section. A crash would hurt! The north leg of the loop follows North Creek Road, which is a little bumpy, but worth it--no traffic, deep woods, wild strawberries and blueberries along the roadside. The east side of the loop follows the bike path discussed above. The southern portion is quiet and generally safe. Finally, there is a short section on busy Highway 51. Fortunately, the gravel shoulders are firm enough for road bike tires at moderate speeds. On weekdays the traffic is fairly sparse, but this is a road to avoid on weekends.

Both Sue and I think the out-and-back ride to Manitowish Waters is a local treasure. The paved roads are smooth and seemingly endless. There are about as many bikers as cars on them. The whole ride is fun, but the section on Alder Lake Road is especially enjoyable--winding, wooded, with plenty of lake views and side roads to explore. After one gets up to Highway 51 near Manitowish Waters, one picks up another paved bike path, which makes its wooded way up through the town, past several lakes, and eventually into a forest trail. Usually, I'm ready to turn back at Manitowish Waters, but some day I will continue on. A host of secluded, paved roads await my exploration.

A third, perfect road-ride heads east to Star Lake. The prettiest part of this ride is the northern section on CR K out to Star Lake. It is winding and a little hilly through a lovely pine forest. The sight lines are not good, so I keep a sharp eye on my helmet mirror for cars coming up from behind. There are a couple of nice parking areas where one can hike down to Lost Canoe Lake and there is a lovely paved loop with fine views of Star Lake.

Here are links to larger maps of these three rides:

Trout Lake Loop

Manitowish Waters Ride

Star Lake Loop

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Some additional thoughts about the asus eee 900.

First, it's excellent ebook reader. With the screen brightness turned down a few notches, the battery out, and the wifi radio off, it is light, cool, and eminently readable. The print size can be set at any level; the text can be rotated so that the machine can be held like a book. I's weight is somewhat less than that of a typical hard-back. FBReader keeps track of your place in the book so that all one needs to do is open the program to resume reading at the correct place and close it when tired of reading. A simple menu system allows one to have as many books on the computer as one likes, and the program keeps track of your location in each book.

Of course, the same features that make the Eee 900 a superb ebook reader also make it a fine browser. It connects with wifi networks readily. Firefox works as expected with "Noscript" and "Adblocker" add-ons to improve security. Linux is not plagued with viruses so I have not bothered to use the anti-virus software on the machine -- though it is nice to know it's there. Most wifi networks that I'll use will probably not be WPA or WEP protected, but that does not particularly worry me. I've got all open ports locked down tightly so I don't think this is a very vulnerable system--even in an open environment.

The very best features of the machine are its small size, light weight, and rapid boot-up (25 seconds) or shutdown (<10 seconds). The keyboard is tiny, but I find it no more difficult for typing than a full-sized keyboard--just different. All-in-all it continues to meet all of my expectations of the perfect netbook.

Interestingly, the world market for netbooks seems to be rapidly evolving away from the type of machine I prefer. I was able to get such a great deal on my Eee because the market is moving away from 8.9 inch screens to 10 inches or larger, and away from Linux to Windows XP. The $300-400 price point is holding firm, but even that makes my $215 price seem like quite a bargain.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Continued Adventures with My Eee PC

Despite having vowed to keep my Xandros Linux operating system as simple as possible, I continue to find myself tinkering. I had initially planned to use this only as a web-browsing ebook reader and to avoid using it for online purchases or for any other activities that would require real security. But as I have grown fonder of the machine and as I have found that it could totally replace my Ubuntu-loaded Acer laptop, I have been drawn into further explorations of security issues.

Generally speaking, Linux is so much more secure than a Windows system that it is unnecessary to run antivirus software, but it is desirable to protect any computer with a firewall of some kind. Fortunately our DSL router allows creation of a very strong firewall in our own wifi connection. I checked this with GRC's "Shields Up" and found the protection excellent. Most Linux releases also include a firewall for the individual machine (Iptables, which is often invoked with Firestarter). The version of Xandros on the Eee PC does not, however, allow Iptables. Then, too, to speed boot time and simplify things, all Xandros Eee's log in with "user" (instead of allowing or demanding unique user names); this further compromises security. I see the advantages to skipping a login screen on a netbook so I'm not complaining, but from a security point of view it is not ideal. Since I very much want to keep running the trim, efficient Xandros that came with the machine, I started looking into alternative means of creating security.

The answer is easily found on the excellent wiki.eeeuser.com site. Their guide for owners has a whole section on security, which taught me much about Linux security in general and about the particular quirks of the standard Xandros OS. A step-by-step guide walked me through the necessary terminal commands for closing all the open ports on my Eee. (The vulnerability exists only because the base installation is set up to allow networked printing with Windows computers through the Samba service.) After closing down these open ports, this is probably the most secure computer I have ever used. True, it does not operate behind a formal firewall program, but firewalls basically control traffic through open ports. No open ports equals no need for a firewall--at least so I'm told. And who ever knows the hard facts about any of this?

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Days Two and Three on the Eee PC

It's easy for me to get addicted to this computer. The small keyboard is almost exactly like the one I had on the Misubishi CN1, so I don't have too much trouble getting reacquainted with it. The "Easy" Xandros interface has it limitations, but I love how quickly it boots and how easily it does all the things I really need a computer to do--web browsing, word processing, spreadsheet, ebook reader, xbridge, and a few tasks with the terminal window. During the past two days I worked up my nerve enough to download SublimePorte's Launcher Tools and install them so that I could customize the Easy interface a bit more to my liking. I created desktop icons to launch xcbridge, konqueror (a browser/file manager), FBReader (for ebooks), kate (a text editor), and kstars (a wonderful planetarium program). I also changed my default terminal to konsole. Except for xcbridge and FBReader, the relevant software was already part of the basic Xandros installation. I may still decide to install xmms for music, though the mplayer already on the system is probably all that I really need.

The bottom line is the little Eee 900 continues to meet and exceed my needs--so much so that I am already using it as my primary computer. The Acer laptop sits unmolested unless I need its DVD R/W capabilities.

Friday, June 12, 2009

Netbook adventures--day 1


This entry deviates a bit from my normal subjects, but I have always been fascinated by computers--and especially by laptop, notebook, and subnotebook computers. I did plenty of writing on an Amstrad luggable laptop with a mere 64 K memory, two 1.4" floppy drives, and a tiny CGA display. Then for a time I also used a Tandy 100 three-pound tablet with even less memory and an eight-line text display. My favorite computer up until now was a Mitsubishi CN1, weighing less than three pounds and running Windows 95, Damn Small Linux, and Geoworks. Smaller and lighter have been my mantra, and thus I watched with great interest as the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) program began a few years ago. When Asus came out with the first Eee 701s toward the end of 2007, I was immediate obsessed. I wanted one, I really wanted one -- but not at the initial price. I decided to watch and wait.

During the past eighteen months, the market for netbooks has blossomed with a hundred flowers (in the form of different models and specifications). As newer models have come on the market, the price of older ones--usually less than a year old--has dropped. Finally, last week Amazon made me an offer I couldn't refuse. I wanted a Linux machine that was very light-weight, quick to boot, wifi-enabled, web-camed and useful as an e-book reader. In truth, many different netbooks could meet my needs, but the 2.2 pound Asus Eee Pc 900 20 gig is what I bought. Its price of $214, including shipping, brought it to the level of an impulse purchase. Useful, to be sure, but not really necessary since I have a perfectly adequate Acer laptop dual booting Vista and Ubuntu.

So this is my first day with the Eee 900. During the days before purchase and the week of shipping, I read all I could about it. Naturally, some people on the web complained about it, but they seemed to mostly be people who made lots of radical changes to the original operating system--often replacing it with some other version of Linux or with Windows XP and encountering problems in the process. There may also be some problems connecting to certain kinds of password-encrypted wifi networks. So my goal is to make minimal changes and keep things simple. So far, I have had to update Skype in an effort to get the web-cam functional. Then I had to add some software repositories to Synaptic and boot it from a terminal window in order to download and install FBReader for e-books. I also dropped on a copy of Xcbridge (a contract bridge game) for recreation. And I think that will be about it.

It boots up in less than 30 seconds. Reliably connects to my wifi network. Surfs the web with ease. And generally does everything I think a netbook ought to do. Minor questions about fine-tuning the various Xandros Linux programs are readily answered by a Google search of the accumulated knowledge of the large base of Asus netbook users already around. It really seems to be a very satisfying machine.

Friday, June 5, 2009

The Merry Month of May

May and June are often the two nicest months of the year in the Ozarks. While that has still been true this year (so far), May was actually considerably cooler and damper than normal. The result is that swimming season was delayed from May 1st to about May 15th, but the cool weather was actually productive of better--faster--bike rides.

My normal 31-mile ride is fairly hilly. The profile on the map shows only half the ride; the full ride has 2,735 feet of climbing! For the past five years I have always felt that any ride with an average speed in excess of 16 mph was fast enough to deserve a special notation in my log. Rides faster than 17 mph have been exceeding rare--and only three times in the past have I ever exceeded 18 mph. This May all that has changed.

Last month I recorded 413 miles in 14 rides--a fairly typical total. But the rides were fast! Nine of them were at speeds in excess of 16 mph; four of those nine were faster than 17 mph; and one of those four was faster than 18 mph. So far in 2009 I have had 17 "fast" rides. By way of comparison, in 2008 there were only 13 fast rides for the entire year. And in all of 2007 there were 20 similarly fast rides.

So I'm off to such a good start this year that I need to reflect on what I've done differently. One possible explanation is that in early April I raised my saddle by 1/2 inch to get slightly better leg extension. Perhaps that gave me greater efficiency in my peddle stroke and that's all it took. I like that explanation, but I'd rather think that I've actually gotten stronger and better. I did some long training rides in April and I've been pushing the time trials in May. Then, too, I'm making progress in my push-up routine, building core strength. Lately I've occasionally hit 80 push-ups in my first set, maxing out at over 325 for the five-set routine. Could that help? Finally, I have to be grateful that my back and my right hamstring muscle have finally nearly recovered from some long-term injuries.

Whatever the reason, I'm fast now (by my standards) and hoping to get faster.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

DIY Home-Building

I have a theory that do-it-yourself home-builders are satisfied with smaller homes than other home-owners.

If you create the foundation, do the plumbing, wire the circuits, cut all the boards, pound all the nails, set all the windows, mount all the doors, and lay all the shingles, you just get too tired to build a mansion. My own tiny cabin is a mere 1140 square feet, and I had some help. The people I have known who do everything for themselves are generally satisfied with something even smaller.

This general hypothesis is well-illustrated by the family of house wrens that has built an abode in my wood shed. As you can see from the picture below, the loving songbirds did not wholly plan for quadruplets.


Thursday, April 30, 2009

On the Value of Low Expectations


This spring I had set myself a goal of getting a bit more involved with the "Rhythm Riders," a group of cycling enthusiasts from the Mountain Home area. Back in mid-winter about thirty cyclists and their spouses had met at the home of one of the ringleaders to plot out some preliminary goals for the nascent group. Two activities were discussed: first a 2-3 day training camp in the spring, and then the Tour de Hills, a 58-mile race in Harrison, popularly known as the Jasper Disaster. I decided to get myself in good enough shape to take a crack at each.

The training camp was initially planned as a 3-day 180-mile endurance test in the third week of April. I rode hard in March and early April, culminating with three consecutive 32-mile rides in the week before the camp, but I didn't feel too confident about my fitness, since my 96 miles in three days was little more than half of what Erick planned for the group to do in the same time, so I was secretly pleased when the first day of the camp was cancelled because of rain. One-hundred thirty miles in two days was still apt to be a challenge, but I knew I had survived 150 miles in two days last October so I had hope.

On the first day of the ride, there was a strong wind from the west and, sadly, our route took us west before finally heading south. Six riders started--three men, three women. By the end of the day, the lead group was down to Erick and me--and I was there only because Erick did not especially want to drop me. The rain, which had threatened all afternoon, finally began to fall, and I was quite chilled for the final five miles of the 70-mile ride to Buffalo Point. Our lodgings for the night were somewhat run-down, but serviceable with accommodations for up to 12 people. After a shower, a beer, a glass of wine, some food, and some conversation, I did my best to rest up for day-two on a rock-hard mattress. I might have been better off in my hammock (I had brought my camping gear) except that the weather had turned blustery and cold.

The ride on the second day took us east on Highway 14 with two big climbs up from the river basins before heading north back toward Mountain Home on Push Mountain Road. Only Erick, Dennis, and I suited up for the second day since Laurie and Vivian had other plans and Karla was relegated to driving the support vehicle. We were joined by one other rider who was so fast that I barely got to know his name before he was out of sight for the rest of the day. Once again, Erick and I rode together part of the time and were never far apart until the half-way point when my Achilles tendon started aching and I dropped off the pace.

I survived the day and enjoyed the 132-mile challenge (with over 10,000 feet of climbing), but I may have paid a high price. The training camp ended on Monday. On Wednesday I took my normal 31-mile ride and found myself completely drained for 24 hours afterwards. I took Thursday and Friday off and then headed to Harrison bright and early Saturday morning for my first official road-bike race--the Tour de Hills, popularly known as the Jasper Disaster.

The route leaves Harrison in a series of rolling hills for about 14 miles. Then the fun begins with a 1.2 mile climb at about 6% grade (tough, but bearable for fit cyclists). Five miles further on there is a 3 mile climb at 7.5%. And finally about ten miles after that suffer-fest comes the "piece de resistance," a 4-mile climb at about 8%. That climb is hard enough to make a sane man weep, but I really thought the climbs were easier than the descents.

Streaking down a twisting mountain road at up to 40 miles per hour with only two half-square-inch patches of rubber to keep you from pitching over the guard-rail off the side of a cliff is fun for some. For me, not so much. And for two poor unfortunates, it meant a trip to the hospital in an ambulance to deal with their broken collar bones.

To sum it up, I'm pleased that I survived. My only ailment is a strained Achilles tendon that I hope has been healing up all this week while my road bike collects dust hanging on the wall. I didn't win anything except the nice tee-shirt given to all entrants, but I also didn't break anything.

(NOTE: Clicking on the route map above will bring up a detailed topo map of most of the Jasper Disaster race course.)

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Less Is More!

About a year ago, during one of my rambles around the web, I came across a site about how to build up to doing one hundred consecutive push-ups (www.100pushups.info). Sue and I got started, and after a few months I had set an informal goal of trying to manage 60 consecutive pushups by my 60th birthday. I fell a bit short of that goal and was growing vexed by my lack of real progress as I followed the program religiously.

Then I discovered the true secret of growing stronger (at least for aging men): LESS IS MORE! . . . Yippee! There is almost nothing I hate more than doing pushups, and the discovery that I could actually improve by doing less has been a delightful and liberating revelation.

The initial program calls for an every-other-day routine of five sets of pushups with about 60 seconds of rest between sets. I got bogged down at about "Week 7" and couldn't make any more progress until I made two changes: (1) Instead of doing pushups every-other day, I now do them every third or (more often) fourth day. A blissful reprieve. And (2) instead of taking 60 seconds rest between sets, I take as much time as I want--something like three to five minutes, but I don't time it.

To illustrate how successfully less can be more, here is a record of my routine for the past month:

3/10 64/50/48/50/50 -- 262 total
3/14 64/58/50/52/45 -- 269 total
3/18 66/68/54/50/46 -- 289 total
3/23 68/64/54/50/48 -- 289 total
3/29 75/62/54/58/54 -- 303 total
4/3 30/30/30 -- 90 total
4/5 75/60/56/55/44 -- 290 total
4/9 72/70/60/56/50 -- 308 total

Mind you, I don't by any means try to do "perfect form" pushups. I hate 'em. I do 'em fast and dirty. I want to get them finished and go have a beer. I'm no body-builder and never will be, but pushups do provide a quick total-body work-out that can help one avoid the injuries that are otherwise endemic among aging baby boomers.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Baking Bread



I first started baking bread when I was in college. It is an interest that I allowed to rest in dormancy for decades, but lately I've reawakened it. You're looking at a loaf of my boule bread. The particular no-knead recipe that I am using mixes up enough for three or four one-pound loaves in about ten minutes. The dough can be stored in the fridge for over a week and baked as needed. It is crusty and delicious.

Rather than post the recipe, I'll just refer you to my source, Mother Earth News--a magazine that I like at least as much for its name as for the eclectic mix of articles it includes. (As to the name, note the emphasis both on the feminine Mother Earth News and on the masculine MEN.)

On the MEN website (http://www.motherearthnews.com/) check out the article entitled "Five Minutes a Day for Fresh-Baked Bread."

Recycling

All right. I recognize that not everyone finds satisfaction in looking at stacks of wood. But I do. That's next winter's warmth you're looking at. It took hours to cut and hours to split and more hours to stack -- but it will provide heat for several months. What's more, nearly everything you see is recycled or home-grown. The posts grew up on our land. The beams and roofing boards came from the portion of the cabin roof that I replaced a few years ago. Even the shingles were torn off of the cabin and successfully reused on the woodshed.

The wood, too, is recycled "green" energy. Most of it comes from deadfalls or dead trees that are harvested on our four acres. Some of the smaller trees were downed as part of a necessary thinning to maintain the health of those that remain to spread in the greater sunlight. A bit of the wood comes from my civic service in cleaning out the roadside ditches of limbs brought down in January's ice storm.

One can argue about whether heating with wood is environmentally desirable. To be sure, there are fuels that burn more cleanly than wood. But since we grow all of our own wood on our own land, the amount of carbon released annually from the chimney is recaptured annually in the rings of the trees growing for fuel in future years.

It occurs to me that the same argument can be made (over a long, long time scale) for oil and even coal. The carbon in oil and coal was captured from the atmosphere by plants in the very distant past. Trapping it underground has left the atmosphere "carbon deprived" (from the point of view of a dinosaur). If we were to release it all through imprudent combustion, we might make the planet less hospitable for humans, but the dinosaurs might have applauded us for taking corrective enrivonmental measures to recycle trapped carbon.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Hanging Out



I'm a volunteer firefighter in my rural area, and as such I have taken some fairly extensive training in rough terrain and mountain rescue techniques. Gravity kills. And there is no way to remain current and safe in using rope rescue skills except to practice them regularly.

On cold winter days, I can get a bit of exercise and practice my skills by throwing a rope over a beam in the cabin and using various techniques to ascend the rope, rappel down it, and just "hang out" as comfortably as possible.

Monday, February 23, 2009

My Date with Lulin


Late Saturday night I had a fine time in the backyard with a pretty, green-eyed young thing named Lulin. My wife Sue not only knew about all it, but she seemed almost totally undisturbed by my fascination with Lulin.

OK. So that's not too surprising since Lulin is the recently discovered comet that is currently visible (i.e., on the night of February 23) near the hind leg of Leo in the night sky.

This comet is unusual, both because of its blue-green tint and because we see it nearly "head on". Thus, it seems to have a wispy tail both to its left and to its right.

More unusual still, the comet will be very close Saturn tonight, and Saturn itself will put on a great show just before dawn on the 24th. All four of Saturn's moon will transit the face of the planet over the next several hours. That's a rare event--occurring at about fifteen-year intervals.

The weather forecast is for partly cloudy skies tonight so I don't know how much of all this I'll be able to see.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

The Ice Sorm of January 2009





The first adventure of 2009 turns out to have been dictated by Mother Nature. On Monday, January 26th, and Tuesday, January 27th, a massive ice storm swept through northern Arkansas and Kentucky, snapping the tops of nearly half the trees and knocking out all utilities.

A power pole snapped in half, dangling its lines down onto the small lane exiting from our cabin. (Such was also the case for perhaps hundreds of thousands of other homes in the region.) Being at the extreme end of a long arm into the lake, we could not expect to be anywhere near the top of the power company's "to do" list. As it happened, we were one of the last homes in the area to regain electricity -- and when they finally did reconnect the power 13 1/2 days later, they cut the telephone line -- leaving us without phone service or Internet for another five days.

Life without electricity is a considerable inconvenience--especially when it turns truly cold as it did for about half of the days of the outage. Of course, for the ten years from 1989 to 1999, we had no grid electricity anyway so the cabin is pretty well set-up for such situations. The wood stove provides minimally adequate heat on the coldest nights and its flat top makes cooking both possible and kind of fun. We had to figure out where we had stored our iron pan and Dutch oven, but having found them, it was fun to experiment with country cooking.

For the entire first week we had no power, no telephone, and even no cell phone access so we were truly out of contact with the world. Then the phone line started operating, which gave us access to the Internet when I was running the generator. We ran the generator a couple of hours each morning and evening to keep the refrigerator cool. During that period things were almost normal except for the irritating rumble of the generator's motor and the tangle of extension cords to the various appliances needing power.

The biggest problem, as you can imagine, was getting water for drinking, cooking, washing, and flushing the toilet. For a time I had to use buckets of pond water to flush the toilet, and on some days the ice on the pond was thick. Later I was able to fill the bathtub with water, so the bigger difficulty became filling enough jugs with drinking/cooking water.

During the first two days, the main task was to cut our way through the tangle of tree that had fallen across the roads -- and when we encountered downed power lines we could never be entirely sure that it was safe to work near them. Then, I spent a day helping the fire department check on the safety of the various elderly and sick residents. Following that, Sue and I drove to Jonesboro to check on our house there.

The spectacle on the entire drive to Jonesboro was similar to that in the area around Hand Cove -- broken trees, downed power lines, and general devastation. When we got to our house, the yard was littered with branches, but fortunately the house was OK. We spent an afternoon and the next morning cutting up the big branches and dragging the remnants to piles by the road. Then, as there was no prospect of power in Jonesboro, we headed back to the cabin where at least there were the comforts of the wood stove, the generator, and the periodic telephone/Internet connections.

Over time we grew somewhat accustomed to the simple life, but when the electricity finally came back on, it was definitely time for high-fives and hot showers.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

2008 re-cap & Penny Wood Stove


January 1, 2009

New Year's Day -- a time to look backwards and forwards. In terms of adventures I had hoped to bike 5,000 miles, to do 60 consecutive push-ups, to remaster my trick-skiing routine, to re-explore the waterfalls in the Ozark National Forest, and to pursue countless other adventures.

Well, the water skiing and the waterfalls were stymied by the vagaries of the weather -- including the hundred-year flood of Norfork Lake which made it difficult to put our ski boat in the water. Waterfall hunting should have been great in last year's record spring rains, but I happened to be either in Jonesboro or on the Buffalo River during the opportune moments.

Sue and I did fulfill a number of other adventures. We floated the Norfork River and Bryant's Creek. I rode the MS150 at Petit Jean. My brother Page and I floated the upper 45-miles of the Buffalo River over four days--surviving a flash flood that engulfed our campsite and raise the river by over four feet! And we enjoyed a number of other short and long trips, but I didn't quite achieve my major goals.

Instead of biking 5,000 miles, a cold and rainy December limited me to 4,743. So I came up short, but I did reach 94.9% of my goal, which merits an A in my book! Similarly, the best I could do was 54 consecutive push-ups, but that is also at the 90% level--not too shabby, especially since I am continuing to make progress, having increased my five-set routine to a total of 225 push-ups.

Most recently, I am looking forward to some spring camping trips (river floats or waterfall quests). To that end, yesterday I built a new "Penny Wood Stove" for overnight camping. Penny stoves or Pepsi stoves are the standard in light-weight camping, burning 91% alcohol or "Yellow Heet." Their advantages are small size, light weight, and cheap, readily available fuel. Great as they are, though, the "Penny Wood Stove" might be better. I built mine out of a metal coffee tin, cut down so that it could be stored inside my cooking pot. A single load of broken-up pencil-thick sticks will burn for over fifteen minutes and boil a cup of water in under six minutes. One can easily boil two cups of water for a rice dish in a single load of wood, and the stove can be replenished as it burns to keep the final dish simmering. . . . Perfect! Furthermore, in dry weather the fuel is free, and the stove is nearly as light as a Pepsi stove. The pot supports (made out of 4/0-guage electrical copper wire) double as tent stakes. They were easily bent into the requisite shapes with pliers and vice-grips.