Wednesday, July 2, 2014

"Family Secrets"

July 1, 2014 — My first trip to the Peterborough Players in Peterborough, New Hampshire this season will be hard to top. "Family Secrets," a comedy by Sherry Glaser and Greg Howells, directed by Howard J. Millman, features Carolyn Michel in a one-woman performance that reminded me of Lisa Bostnar's one-woman show in 2010, "The Blonde, the Brunette and the Vengeful Redhead," where Bostnar portrayed seven very different characters, including two males, in a tour de force performance. Michel's offering is every bit the equal of Bostnar's.

Michel plays five members of a dysfunctional Jewish family, one of them male. She does her costume changes at a dresser and clothes rack on the left side of the stage in full view of the audience. What she does with her hair is remarkable, some of the changes accomplished with wigs but some with her natural hair. Costume designer Nicole Wee and hair and wig designer Michelle Hart deserve special mention for their contribution.

Michel's character transformations are complete, not only in appearance but personality and mannerisms. She goes through the five roles in the fast-moving hour and 15-minute play with no intermission. As the pregnant Fern, she does a cringe-inducing but hilarious take on child-birth. That's just one highlight. The entire performance was a laugh-a-minute audience pleaser, and a great start to Peterborough Players' 2014 season. Next Players production on my must-see agenda, "Last of the Red Hot Lovers," July 9-20.

Trivia note: Greg Howells, one of the authors of "Family Secrets," disappeared from a golf course in 1997. Never found, he was declared dead five years later and the case was closed. "They just stopped looking," said his wife and co-author, Sherry Glaser.

Saturday, March 29, 2014

2014 Lexus ES300h

March 29, 2014 — It's Day 3 with my new 2014 Lexus ES300h, my fourth Lexus, and I'm getting to know it, but I have some issues. More about that later. I traded in my 2006 Lexus ES330 after living with it almost eight years, during which time it had become as comfortable as an old shoe.

The 300h is a gasoline/electric hybrid. Its silence is a little eerie until you get used to it. It's a bit unnerving when you stop at a red light and notice the engine isn't running. But no, it hasn't stalled. When the light turns green, just step on the gas and it will go. If you've been driving for sixty years as I have, a car that moves when the engine isn't running flies in the face of everything you thought you understood about how automobiles work. It has a 4-cylinder engine as opposed to the 6-cylinder of my previous Lexus. I was a little concerned about performance before I bought it. but I really can't tell the difference. The engine is quiet, smooth and, supplemented by electric power, has more than adequate high-speed performance.

The 300h is rated by the manufacturer for 40 mpg city, 39 mpg highway. The city mileage is higher because at low speeds it spends most of the time running on electric power alone. Consumer Reports gave it a rating of 36 mpg overall in their tests. I find I'm becoming very light-footed around the city, trying to keep the gasoline engine from kicking in. Today I took it out on the interstate for the first time. It's steady, smooth and as quiet as you'd expect a Lexus to be at 65 mph. No Lexus has the sporty handling of an Audi or BMW, but my days of pushing a car to its limits are long gone, and I appreciate the serene ride and quietness of the Lexus. Power steering and brakes take almost too light a touch, but you soon learn to modulate them.

Now for the disappointments. Lexus has engaged in some obvious cost-cutting, especially in the interior. The dash is made of cheaper material than my old Lexus and lacks that elegant feel you expect in a car in the Lexus class. Even the outside paint doesn't have that expensive-looking glow that sets it apart from lower-priced cars. Storage space has been greatly reduced. The glove compartment is smaller than my previous Lexus, and center console storage is half that of the old car. I've had to leave out some things I used to carry around with me. The CD player will take only one CD at a time rather than the five I could load into my old car's player. Everything seems diminished.

It takes a 916-page owner's manual to explain all the car's intricacies. Much of it is dedicated to the frustratingly complicated audio system. Before I drove the car away from the dealer's, the sales rep sat in it with me for over an hour explaining and demonstrating many of the car's features and use of the controls. That shouldn't be necessary, and no car should need an operating manual that rivals War and Peace in length. Someone needs to explain to Lexus engineers that this is not a PC or home entertainment system you use in your living room. It's an automobile which, when used as intended, is in motion, sharing streets and highways with other vehicles, and your attention should be constantly on the road, not changing channels on a stunningly convoluted radio/CD player. I could do that with a few finger-pokes on my old Lexus without taking my eyes off the road. I almost need to pull over and stop to change stations in this car!

The 2006 Lexus was a better car, in design as well as quality of materials. Am I sorry I bought this one? No. I have a brand new car with a generous warranty, not an eight-year-old one, and if this Lexus has the same reliability and durability that have always been Lexus hallmarks, I should have quite a few years with no worries about repairs or parts replacement. Not only that, but the car is supported by the best dealer service of any brand. I'm hard to please by nature, but I'm confident I'll get comfortable with this car and be happy with it over the long haul. And I really like the prospect of 36 mpg overall. It's just unfortunate Lexus found it necessary to lower their standards in the selection of some materials, and driver and audio controls need a complete redesign.


Thursday, December 26, 2013

Christmas 2013

December 24-25, 2013 — Once again, I traveled through two states to share Christmas with my extended family, and once again the weather was cooperative — fair and sunny but cold. There was lots of great food, a wild and crazy Yankee swap. As usual, I recorded it all in photos and videos that can be seen at this link:

http://www.linwoodstreet.com/christmas13/

Friday, October 11, 2013

Macbook Pro Upgrade

October 11, 2013 — I should make this disclaimer up front — I have a Windows bias. I've been using Microsoft Windows almost exclusively as long as it's been in existence. Four years ago, mainly out of curiosity, I ordered a refurbished 17" Macbook Pro. I found it attractive, appealing, fun, with some neat features like iPhoto, iMovie and iDVD which allowed me to exercise my creativity more than anything in Windows. It has a superior monitor which displays my photos and videos better than my much newer Windows PC. However, I still do all my serious work in Windows.

That 4-year-old refurbished Macbook is still running trouble-free and does everything I demand of it. I have it networked wirelessly with my PC and can exchange files between the two, but it was still running OS X 10.4, also known as Tiger, that it came with. That OS was so outdated no new software could be installed on it, so I looked into upgrading it. The two main things I learned were that there's no upgrade path from Tiger to Mountain Lion, Mac's latest OS. I would have to install Snow Leopard first. But I couldn't download Snow Leopard from the App Store because my OS was too old to access the store. I learned I could go to the Apple website and order Snow Leopard on a DVD for $19.99, which I did.

Upon receiving the Snow Leopard DVD, I installed it successfully. There was little difference from the old OS. All my software and settings were preserved except the wireless connection to Windows and I couldn't figure out how to restore it. I posted the question on an Apple forum and got an answer later the same day with a solution. Otherwise, I couldn't see that I had gained anything except the ability to install new software, and it had one annoying feature. Every time I copied, moved or deleted a file or folder, it prompted me for a password. There may be a way to disable that, but I haven't found it. Back to the forum, I guess.

After a couple of weeks, Snow Leopard seemed solid, so I took the next step and downloaded Mountain Lion for another $19.99. Mountain Lion also installed successfully, everything was preserved, and once again I noticed little difference except some very minor cosmetic changes. It offers something called iCloud which I chose not to enable because I don't know how secure it is. I still have to enter my password every time I copy, move or delete. It's somewhat slower. It placed an icon for one of my videos on the margin of the finder and I don't know how to get rid of it.



I have since downloaded and installed the latest iPhoto and iMovie, $14.99 each, but haven't begun to test them yet. Overall, my Macbook still looks and feels the same and it's still fun, except for the couple of annoying features I mentioned.

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Peruvian Adventure

April 28, 2013 — Just finished posting my itinerant sister's photos of her tour of Peru and Machu Picchu on my website. She mailed them to me on a DVD (we live 1,500 miles apart). After I received them, we collaborated over Skype to examine and edit the series. She had already done a great job of sorting and categorizing the pictures by location. We reached agreement on what should be deleted and what needed fixing, then I began the process of uploading them to a photo site linked to my personal site.

There are 385 photos. That may seem like a lot, but they're divided into 13 albums, the largest of which contains around 60 photos. If you don't have time for all of them, I highly recommend at least the Machu Picchu album. You can access them at this link:

http://www.linwoodstreet.com/peru/

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Blizzard of 2013

February 8-9, 2013 — Forecasters and computer models combined to accurately predict every aspect of the "Blizzard of 2013" days in advance. However, no matter how well-prepared or forewarned, flooded homes, lost power, sub-freezing temperatures, high winds and up to thirty inches of snow can cause much misery for many days afterward.

The storm raged for about 36 hours, spanning Friday and Saturday. Boston's official 24.9 inches of snow put the city in fifth place in all-time snow depth records. The Massachusetts town of Spencer recorded 30.5 inches. Milford, Connecticut, recorded one of the highest figures in New England at 38 inches. Nearby Westport recorded an 82-mile-per-hour wind gust. Winds reached hurricane force in many areas along the Massachusetts and Rhode Island coast.

In my little corner of the world, I was unable to sleep Friday night as I listened to the wind rattle my windows, fearing a power outage, a dangerous situation with the temperature in the teens. At 5 a.m. Saturday, when it became obvious I wasn't going to sleep anyway, I decided I might as well do something useful, so I got up and dressed, bundled up and went out and shoveled out my entire driveway, walks, back porch and cellar bulkhead. About a foot of snow had accumulated at that time. Thanks to the cold temperature, the snow was powdery and light. At 10 a.m., I did it all over again after about another foot had accumulated. I had to go out one last time in the afternoon and, with the help of a kind neighbor, shoveled out the snowbank the street plow had thrown up at the end of my driveway. By that time, the snow had finally stopped falling. Fortunately, we never lost power in my neighborhood.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Christmas 2012

December 24-25, 2012 — For the third Christmas in a row, I had no snow or slippery roads to contend with in my travels to share the holiday with my extended family spread out over two states. There was some concern for Christmas day, when light snow was forecast, but instead we got light rain that ended before noon.

I spent Christmas Eve with my sister's family which, like most families, just keeps growing. After a buffet, at least 20 people pack themselves into a small living room for gift opening, followed by a loud, boisterous, hilarious Yankee swap. The next day, Christmas morning, many of us congregate at my niece's for her traditional Christmas breakfast. Following that, I headed north where I enjoyed an exceptionally good baked ham dinner and another gift exchange with my nephew's family.

As always, all our activities were recorded by my camera. You can see the results at this link:

http://www.linwoodstreet.com/christmas12/