2.024 boxing day

Saturday 12/26/2020

Welp, that was a Saturday. I took a moderate walk, intending to finish past the farmer’s market and have a delicious pastry from the bakery cart, but in fact the farmers’ market was having a day off. Alas.

Worked on the model, specifically finding good pictures of the speedo and tach from an MG and reducing them and printing them at high resolution and very small sale. Which took a couple of hours of fiddling with graphics software. This is because I don’t care for the little decals that came with the kit.

The tach and speedo printouts, and the dash with two big circles where the instruments go

I’m quite pleased with the leather seat and the matching door trim (not shown). It really looks leathery. I mixed the color myself, from a stock “leather” paint color plus some red and some black, and I “distressed” the seat with sandpaper so it looks well-worn.

The kit also has a decal of what I think they meant for wood grain, for the dash (see picture), but it is just terrible so I have to find some wood texture and print that out scaled appropriately, and cut to fit that curvy little dash piece. Actually I think I may try to paint wood grain. Cutting out that shape, complete with four little circles where instruments go, with scissors? I will go on YouTube and find out how to paint faux wood texture.

I took a shorter walk in the afternoon. Then I realized I had canceled my in-house supper for tonight. I was going to order a Wahlburger’s burger and shake, but they don’t offer shakes on their delivery menu. So I ordered by DoorDash from Gott’s Roadside in the Town and Country center, which isn’t as good but at least I could get a shake. DoorDash kept me waiting 20 minutes past the scheduled delivery time, which they made more annoying by showing “delivery in 4 minutes” on the app, followed by “in 5 minutes” and held that for 10 minutes, then “in 1 minute” for five minutes… sigh. But the food was ok, in particular, the shake was still cold and I could zap the fries.

2.023 humbug day

Friday 12/25/2020

Christmas day was all about the special meal service. Well, they tried. The breakfast was ok; I ordered french toast and it was pretty good, with a side of fresh fruit. The main meal was lunch and here I made a mistake, ordering the mushroom risotto instead of the roast beef. Our head chef Marcello has a fancy resumé but he (or his minions) can’t cook risotto as well as I do. Did. But seriously, I had rather a speciality of risotto, making several different variants for us. My complaint here was that the damn rice was not fully cooked; a lot of grains had a soft crunch to them. Al Dente is ok in pasta, not in rice. The mushroom sauce wasn’t much either.

Nevertheless I ate most of it and wasn’t really hungry for supper, which was a turkey and provolone sandwich. Which is a good thing, because as I recall (they haven’t returned our filled-out menus for next week) I had canceled lunch on Monday because I didn’t like any of the choices. I’ll save the turkey sand in my fridge for that.

Took a full walk. At 5pm we had a 6th floor zoom cocktail party. I have nice neighbors generally. Killed some more TV. Battlebots is fun to edit with the DVR remote. The broadcasts are two hours long, but they feature eight bouts that are each 3 minutes long, max; less if there’s a “knockout” where one bot can’t move any more. So I can rip through a two hour show and see all the fights, in a half hour or so.

2.022 humbug eve

Veronica’s zoom aerobics class froze twenty minutes in, so it was short. I went for a walk for an hour while Wanda cleaned my apartment. Worked on the MG model for an hour. Disposed of several shows off the DVR, mainly by deleting them after viewing the openings. I have several things lined up in my Netflix list, maybe I’ll delete (or watch) some of those tomorrow.

During the day I deposited the last of the mask purchase checks, and wrote a check to Marcia to cover her expenses. That whole endeavor had a net effect of -$60 on the RA account, not bad for what it accomplished.

2.021 bah humbug

Wednesday 12/23/2020

Went for my 3-mile round this morning. I jogged maybe 1/5 of it, two long stretches, which felt fine. When warmer mornings come back, and I can go in shorts and a tee instead of jeans and a hoodie, I will likely be up to jogging the full length.

During the day I worked a bit on the MG. I had been letting it sit pending warmer weather so I can spray the clear coat, but I got to thinking, surely there are other bits I can work on? And there are, the interior bits, the seats, the dash, the door cards.

That was about it; another boring day in Pandemia. Crossword puzzle, sudoku, reading.

I want to say, I am finding this un-Christmas season very relaxing. Soooo glad I don’t have to fiddle with decorations, cards, whatever. Just ignoring the whole thing and it’s great.

2.020 zoom zoom

Tuesday 12/22/2020

Did the aerobics class. Then at 9am, I sat down for a lecture on Ragtime piano! Stephanie Trick is a pianist that I’ve been a fan of since, I don’t know, the first time we went to the Sacramento Jazz Festival, maybe 2015? Earlier? Stephanie and her husband Paolo have developed a wonderful four-hands piano act (watch that link, it will brighten your day). They both play in the styles of the early 20th century: ragtime, stride, boogie.

Naturally their performing career has been stifled by the pandemic. But in a recent newsletter they offered a series of three online lectures on Ragtime, Boogie, and Blues, and I immediately signed up. The first lecture was excellent, rich in information but with lots of happy piano examples in between the facts. They told about the history of Ragtime, the career of the great composers, how the form was largely forgotten when popular taste changed to Swing, how it was revived in the 1970s.

That brought me to 10:30 and it was time to sign on to the writers’ group. The previous week I the prompt had been “someone who was an immigrant” and I had started a synopsis of my father’s life, and didn’t finish it. This time I finished it and got a lot of flattering comments. Nothing else happened the rest of the day, so here is that piece.

Everyone in my life has been a native-born American except one: my father. His life was remarkable for several reasons, not least that he’d had a full, productive life before, at age 50, he met the woman who would be my mother, and started an entire new family and career.

Emilio Cortesi was born in 1890 in the tiny village of Ponte Buggianese, a wide spot on the road from Lucca to Firenze. At age 16, he decided to emigrate to the United States, as many young people from the region were doing. He obtained a passport, borrowed passage money from relatives, and embarked with a party of other young men in April 1906. A few days out, his ship received, over the Marconi wireless — high-tech equipment only installed the previous year — news of the great San Francisco Earthquake and fire.

He came through Ellis Island, and went directly to work for the Northern Pacific Railroad, which shipped him and his cohort of young men to Utah to build new railroad track. For the next several years he did railroad work; then sawmill work; railroad again; and then found out that coal mining paid better, and for fourteen years worked in the coal mines that dot the Western flank of Mount Rainier above Tacoma.

Around age 24 (1914) Emilio completed the paperwork and examination to be a United States citizen; and soon after married Blossom, a divorced woman with a son; and soon they produced Emilio’s first son, James. In 1916 America went to war, but the coal company classified their miners as essential workers, so he didn’t have to go. In 1917, Blossom was ill with the pandemic flu for nearly two weeks, but Emilio didn’t catch it, and nursed her through it.

With the end of the War, demand for coal slackened and Emilio was out of work. His brother Baldo was now in the States and working coal in Colorado, so in 1920, Emilio spent a year mining coal in Pueblo. Returning to his family he obtained work by fortunate timing: Washington State was constructing its new Capitol building in Olympia, and had mandated that the stone should be the type quarried at a site nearby. Emilio, now age 31, got work in that quarry.

The quarry was demanding, manual labor, and no advance on mining, but Emilio had conceived another idea: education. He had had only five years of schooling before emigrating from Italy. Now he set his sights on a college degree. First he had to get an eighth-grade certificate, which he did over the course of 1921 and 1922. From 1923 to 1926 he studied at home and took quarterly examinations that the local Department of Schools offered.

Throughout this period his now ten-year-old marriage was deteriorating, finally ending in separation and divorce. So he was a single man when in the summer of 1926 he found he had enough high-school credits to enter the College of Puget Sound in Tacoma, and in September he started classes.

Studying nights and early mornings, taking only morning classes so he could work nearly full-time at a neighborhood grocery, Emilio completed his course-work for a degree in education in four years. He graduated at age 40, in the spring of 1930, just as the Depression settled in hard. He sent out applications for teaching jobs and got no responses. The bank where he had an account closed, freezing his money. Fortunately he could continue to work at the same grocery, which he did, although with increasing boredom and dissatisfaction, for the next three years.

In 1932, with the election of Roosevelt and the onset of the New Deal, the banks re-opened, the national mood changed, and Emilio’s boredom reached a climax. He decided to re-make himself for at least the third time. He quit his job and put his small savings into the purchase of twenty acres of land covered with second-growth brush about 25 miles south of Tacoma. He set up a tent, and began clearing this tract by hand, and planning where to build a house on it.

Over 1933 and 1934 he lived on his land, clearing brush and building first a small log cabin, then a 40×18 garage and storage building. He started a garden and dug a well. He got by on his dwindling savings and by doing casual labor for neighbors, and at age 45 he felt the best he’d felt in his life.

By 1935 the W.P.A. was ramping up, and it sponsored a variety of evening courses, which needed teachers. Emilio applied and was hired to teach Spanish and English classes for adult learners. For the next two years he commuted every afternoon to Tacoma to teach, earning $85 a month.

In 1936 he became friendly with another WPA teacher, Mrs. Cecil Hubert, a divorced single mother living with two daughters, ages 7 and 8, and her mother. In 1937 Emilio and Cecil married. He hastily threw up a two-room cabin on his farm and started planning a larger house.

By 1938 the whole family, Emilio, Cecil, the daughters Joyce and Eleanor, and Cecil’s mother Anna were under some kind of roof on the property. Cecil continued teaching WPA English and Citizenship classes, mostly to Japanese mill-workers in nearby Eatonville, while Emilio cleared land and built the new family house.

The attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941 precipitated the nation into war, and changed the status of the local Japanese who would soon be hustled off to concentration camps.

Further excitement entered Emilio’s family in the fourth year of their marriage when, to everyone’s surprise, Cecil announced that she was expecting a child. A year and a day after Pearl Harbor — and on the same day that, in Chicago, Enrico Fermi ignited the reactor with the first man-made controlled nuclear reaction — I was born. Which begins a different story entirely, one in which Emilio’s part continues several decades, into his 99th year.

2.019 meeting, SWBB, astronomy

Monday 12/21/2020

I had to hustle a little bit and start my walk at 8am because I had a zoom meeting at 10am. So of course I had forgotten to charge the iPhone, so I had to let it charge for 15 minutes, or I’d have had no podcast to listen to on the walk. Anyway, back in good time.

At 10am it was time for the FOPAL section managers’ meeting. The FOPAL board and the volunteers who have been willing to keep working through this year have done a superb job of keeping donations and sales going. They found ways to process, shelve, and sell the books without exposing people. There are by-appointment sales times for dealers, for example, where one buyer can come in and browse under the supervision of one volunteer. Their online sales via Amazon and EBay are almost normal.

At noon it was time for Stanford vs. UCLA. UCLA is ranked #10 nationally and they played like it, keeping close almost all the way. For a brief minute in the third quarter, they had a 1-point lead, which I think is the first time that Stanford has trailed in a game this season. Stanford asserted itself then and won by a dozen.

That was fine; what was not fine was that in the last 20 seconds, our senior leader and high scorer, Kiana, had what looked like a minor collision with a UCLA player, but then folded up on the floor and was clearly in pain and had to be helped off the court.

After supper I took the camera up to the roof again and photographed The Conjunction. This is a little snip from the middle of the picture. A little bit overexposed and a little bit blurred.

Saturn on the right. Jupiter and a couple of its moons on the left.

2.018 outing, astronomy

Sunday 12/20/2020

After I had read the Sunday paper, watered the plants (very quick in the winter), and absolutely blitzed the NYT Sunday crossword in under 30 minutes, I wanted to Get Out And Do Something.

I used Google Maps to find local parks that had hiking and picked one I’d never been to, Wunderlicht park in Woodside. Yes, there are parks in the area we never got to. Well, this one, I still haven’t been to. You would think I would have learned my lesson by now. I rolled into the parking lot just after 10am. Small parking, under 100 spaces, and of course all full with three other cars roaming hopefully. So I’d had a nice drive up into the trees for nothing.

I continued along the back roads to the West and worked my way back down to the Baylands. So many of these roads were familiar from my bicycling days. Anyway down at the bay I found a nice space and did a one-hour walk among the mud flats and fleets of ducks.

That was about it for the day. Well, around 5:30 I took the camera, tripod, and binoculars up to the roof and tried for a picture of Saturn and Jupiter. Another guy was up there with a better telephoto lens. He was getting the planets and four of Jupiter’s moons. I could only get the planets and two moons, and it wasn’t sharp enough to be worth showing anybody.

2.017 masks, SWBB

Saturday 12/19/2020

In the morning I had telephone chats with Dennis and with Scott. Then I took a moderate walk ending at the bakery cart in the Farmers’ Market for a raisin spiral.

After lunch Marcia and I met to close out all the mask orders. She had received her supplies from Amazon and we put each order on its order form and carried them off to deliver them. Next I need to deposit all the checks to the Resident Association account, and when she gives me an invoice, cut a check to her. And that will end the great mask info escapade.

At 6pm it was time for SWBB. The team has been on the road, exiles from Santa Clara County, for three weeks now. If they came back they’d have to isolate for 10 days, and then wouldn’t be able to play or practice. So now they are in Los Angeles, playing USC today and UCLA Monday, and the following week at the Arizona schools. Although those games are still “TBD” on the schedule.

USC gave them a good game, pulling within single digits several times in the second half, but Stanford pulled away definitively in the late 3rd quarter and won by not quite 20. I am becoming a drooling fan-boy of the freshman, Cameron Brink, 6’5″, thin, Nordic, athletic, she blocks, shoots, and rebounds. She also fouled out of the game, so in that respect plays like a freshman. Turns out her parents were best friends of the Curry family and she grew up as a frequent visitor and honorary baby sister of Steph Curry and his brothers. So, basketball royalty.

2.016 walk, realizing, magazine

Friday 12/19/2020

After a relaxing start to give the outside temp a chance to get over 45, I walked the route.

During my walk I was realizing, thing by thing, all the things I will be able to do after the second shot of vaccine. Yesterday afternoon I realized it meant I could go back to volunteering at FOPAL. (Although, today, it dawned on me, I will never be able to do some of the things I did there, because I have a lifetime ban on lifting more than 20 pounds! Which means, banker’s boxes full of books that I used to sling around all the time, are off limits to me. It would be playing Russian roulette with my aorta. This will make a significant difference to how I work at FOPAL.)

Today I began to realize all the other things that I’m not doing, just because I cannot accept the risk of bringing the virus back into Channing House. Truly, I don’t worry very much about catching the virus myself. I’m basically healthy, I take mass quantities of vitamin D, etc. Maybe I should worry about the personal effects; after all, it could kill me. But honestly, from the beginning my top concern has always been that I do not want to be the asshole that brings the virus to the 6th floor of Channing House. Not least because several of my neighbors are in just the health condition that it would snuff them like candles. So I have not been going to grocery stores, not going to plant nurseries, not getting my teeth cleaned… avoiding all the public places and unnecessary exposure. (I still regret going to that hobby shop a couple of months ago, although it worked out fine.)

Even after the full dose of the vaccine, I understand I will still be masking up and distancing. But just the same, I will be able to go into Piazza’s grocery, or Ace Hardware, or Palo Alto Dentistry any damn time and as often I please (or finally go get that goddamned colonoscopy) and not worry in the slightest about contracting the virus and bringing it back. February is going to be Freedom month.


In Rhonda’s open meeting the subject was almost entirely the vaccine. We are still told by the CVS organization that we will have a clinic on the 28th or the 29th. Yes, they will have nurses and be ready to deal with anaphylactic shock. There were a lot of questions about the consent form which is confusing as hell. I had messed mine up and clearly others were having trouble as well.


There is still a lot unknown about the vaccine. I am struggling with probabilities. It’s 95% effective, figured as follows: in the Phase 3 trial they gave it to half of 42,000 people. There were 170 cases of COVID in that group: 162 in the control group, 8 cases among the 21,000 people who got the real stuff (and none had serious illness). Eight is about 5% of 172, ergo, 95% effective.

But 95% isn’t 100%, so there is still some possibility of getting the disease (mind you, the annual flu vaccine is typically 70% or less), and it is not known at this point, whether, or how well, you could transmit the disease if you, after vaccination, caught it. Hence you keep masking and distancing. Life won’t really get normal until so many people have been vaccinated (or have had the disease) that transmission basically stops, and the disease becomes uncommon.

At this point, with widespread infection moving around in the general community, the vaccinated person has reduced his or her personal risk by 95%, but still has to worry about catching it and passing it on.

So around Feb. 1, when I’ve had both doses, plus two weeks after the second to develop full immunity, I can go, masked and distanced, into relatively safe places, like the grocery store, nursery, or FOPAL — places where precautions are being taken and protocols observed. Even if there was a contagious person in such a place, I’d be very unlikely to pick it up.

But I would not feel free to eat at an indoor restaurant, mask off. Or join a gathering where people are eating, drinking, chatting with masks off. Not while the community transmission rate is high. That kind of thing will have to wait for February 2022, when the majority of people have had the vaccine and transmission is rare.


Today they released the winter edition of Scribble and Sketch, our literary magazine. I have a piece in it, one I wrote for the Writers’ group, about this blog and how it came to be. Will anybody pick up the hint and come over to take a look? If so, hi! But I bet nobody will. They’d say, well, how do I find it? But I put the domain name right in the story: how pleased I was to find that Codgerville.net was available. But people aren’t used to thinking of a domain name as a live address.

2.015 walk, drive, vaccine

Thursday 12/17/2020

Did the aerobics class. Veronica is so cute, and she always throws in something different.

Mid-morning I went for a medium walk. After lunch, I was feeling like the Prius must be getting pretty lonely down in the garage. I thought for a while about a destination. I decided to drive over the Dumbarton bridge to Coyote Hills regional park. I knew there was a lengthy boardwalk through the tule reeds, which might be fun. It was a nice drive but when I got out of the car I discovered there was a very chill breeze blowing across them tule reeds. I walked about 500 feet out on the boardwalk and decided this was not fun, so walked back to the car and turned up the heat.

This evening came an email from CH with preliminary information on our COVID vaccine. Our first clinic day will be December 28 or 29, with the second shot in mid-January. Consent forms will be required, and they are available at the front desk now! I was up and out of my chair as soon as I read that, down to check my mail and get the form. I have not the slightest doubt that I want those shots.

Later I got an email from FOPAL outlining the new way it is organized; and realized that hey, when I have had the 2nd shot, I can go back to working at FOPAL. I’ll have no fear of bringing COVID home to Channing House, which is what keeps me away now. That will be a welcome first step on the road to “normal”.

Later still I acted on something I’ve been thinking about for weeks or longer: I revived my Netflix membership and signed up for streaming. There are just too many good shows that I read about and can’t watch. Next: to change my Xfinity sub to drop the HBO channels, from which I’ve gotten no use.