Surfing

Dolphins surfing the waves south of Santa Barbara, California

Driving south out of Santa Barbara, I told Caroline to put down what she was doing and look out the window as, with only 20 minutes of ocean view out of the 8 hours of driving back to Arizona, she needed to be on the lookout for dolphins and whales. There must have been a whisper in my ear because, within minutes, we were pulling over to watch more than half a dozen dolphins swimming along the shoreline and surfing the waves. We did not fare as well in the whale-watching department but were thrilled to watch the dolphins and even the sea lion that showed up.

South of Santa Barbara on Highway 101

Then it was back on the road for a beautiful spring drive out of the greenery of Southern California and all the ugly traffic, but that’s the way it is over here.

California Desert off Interstate 10

Into the California desert as we pass through the Palm Springs area over to Blythe.

Arizona sunset on the 10 freeway

Back in Arizona, we catch a glimmer of the sunset before heading east once again into the darkness.

Doing Fine

Woody Burns at 84 years old in Santa Barbara, California

Having spent three months helping my uncle Woody Burns get back on his feet after a fall that broke his hip, I couldn’t be sure how we’d find him this weekend after our 5-month absence. In fact, he is doing better than ever. Prior to his hip-breaking fall, my uncle had been on a heavy dose of pain medication for a back injury that ultimately required extensive surgery, creating more pain than it alleviated. While he now uses a walker for getting around, he is more sure-footed today than I had seen him in the previous years, which in part I attribute to being off the pain meds. The intervening five months were too long a break in our otherwise regular visits that my great aunt and uncle had become accustomed to expecting every 60 to 90 days – we’ll return with my mother-in-law in tow in early June.

Driving Into The Sunset

Late afternoon going into early evening on the 10 freeway driving west

On our way to Santa Barbara, California, for the weekend, we were able to get out of Phoenix near midday but were not fast enough to glimpse a view of the ocean before dark. High winds and rain pummeled us just before leaving Arizona and crossing over the Colorado River into SoCal, but from there on, we were treated to beautiful, cool, clear weather for the rest of the weekend.

Marketing Blunder

A Starbucks Loyalty card

For months Starbucks employees from various locations would try to entice me into buying a loyalty card. Every day I would hear how I could save the charge for soy milk and the syrup add-in. Every day I would say no thanks. And then one day I finally gave in. Heck, on my morning latte I would save seventy cents alone. Often Caroline and I would get a latte late in the day, I could save another $1.10. I took my newly charged loyalty card home and registered it on the internet so I could begin my savings.

Immediately I see we are going to save $54 dollars a month and I am quite happy. The thing is though, this has backfired for the Starbucks corporation. All too soon I have to recharge the card, so I put another $30 on it. Within three days my balance is once again depleted, ok I’ll put $40 on it this time. Every three or four days I find myself having to put money on this card. While I was buying a coffee every day on my debit card I never bothered to account for what I was spending, it was just a little here and then a little more later in the day. Now I’m faced with feeling like I’m charging the card three or four times a week and if I put $30 or $40 each time, I do a little calculation, we must be spending between way too much and an ungodly amount per month on coffee.

Solution: just as I took the card to save $54 a month on our coffee habit, I must use the card to wake up to the financial waste and stop the morning coffee, which will save me another $105 a month. That works for a while but now I’m considering that we move to only go to Starbucks every other day which would save another $97 a month. Attention Starbucks corporate marketing geniuses you have cost your company $159 dollars a month in lost revenue and are about to lose another $97 a month for a grand total loss of $3,072.00 per year because you pushed your baristas to interest me in a loyalty card. Thank you for your consideration in bringing my reckless spending to my attention.

Standby Power

Graph from Arizona Public Service showing hourly electricity consumption

Arizona Public Service or APS as we better know our electricity provider recently did us the incredible favor of installing smart meters in our apartment complex. A smart meter allows us to see our daily and even hourly electricity usage, as soon as the following day in a browser on the internet. This fantastic service allows us to adjust our consumption on one day and see the next day how that would impact our overall usage. For example, we now know that using the dishwasher is a huge draw even without the drying cycle – back to washing dishes by hand (although this is not for certain yet as we are just today doing the dishes in the sink and will have to wait until tomorrow to see if hot water usage and the subsequent electricity usage is significantly different from going through a dishwasher cycle – I can guess we’ll see large savings).

This January we started using Windows 7 in which the sleep function for the computer now works perfectly. Compared with last year, based on usage in the middle of the night we have trimmed approximately 190 watts per hour out of our electricity usage this year. This past Friday I rewired our computers to plug our router, modem, printer, speakers, backup drive, and table lamp into a different power strip and it appears we cut another 240 watts per hour out of our usage when the power strip is switched off. With the TV, DVD player, amplifier already on a powerstrip (and turned off when not in use) we are down to 140 watts of electricity per hour overnight.

Why is this meaningful to me and hopefully you? We are presently paying $0.133 per 1,000 watts of electricity, if we can save 400 watts of electricity per hour for only 7 hours per day, we save a whopping $0.37 per day – no big deal you might say. But, over 365 days this equates to a savings of $135.93 or $11.33 per month. I figure the average family could turn off equipment that uses “Standby Power” for nearly 13 hours per day, that would be from 11:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. and then again from 9:00 a.m. to maybe 3:00 p.m. saving that family $0.69 per day for total savings of $252 per year or $21 per month.

Late last July our attic was given a second layer of blown-in insulation, which resulted in an immediate 25% drop in how much electricity we were using. July and August of 2008 both saw daily average temperatures of 95 degrees but our July bill dropped from 2,202 kWh of electricity used down to 1,659 kWh for August. During 2007 we averaged $7.31 per day over the 120 hottest days of summer costing us roughly $876, based on my initial estimates of saving about 25% of summer time electricity usage we will see savings this year of about $219 over those 120 days or about $18 per month as we pay on a yearly average plan. Is it economical to have a new 3-inch layer of blown-in cellulose insulation? Well, it only costs $0.20 per square foot from King Insulation in Phoenix so you can see that your savings can be terrific, especially if you plan on living in your current home for more than another year and a half. Heating over the winter has seen similar dramatic results, during the previous 3 years for our January billing cycle we used an average of 1002 kWh per month, this January we only used 623 kWh for a 38% reduction in electricity use.

To read more and to be shocked at how much electricity your appliances are using in Standby Power mode visit the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory webpage on Standby Power by clicking here.

Mind Meets Music

Laurie Anderson and Lou Reed sharing the stage in Chandler, Arizona for the Mind Meets Music benefit concert April 5, 2009

Laurie Anderson on the left and her husband Lou Reed on the right performing in Chandler, Arizona this afternoon to benefit the Yongey Peace Prevails Center of Phoenix. The show started quite early, at 3:00 p.m. – the encore was finished before dark! The first highlight of the day was Shangao Cai and the Phoenix Chinese Art Ensemble performing three traditional pieces, one Chinese, one Tibetan, the last Mongolian. Before I move on to Lou Reed’s and Laurie Anderson’s performance I have to say I was shocked at how many people left during the concert – I can only imagine it was not what they expected. As for us, we were thrilled with the show. The best I can describe it is as though it were a Post-Bush American interpretation of a traditional Hindu Raga. Raga is Sanskrit for color or mood and that is just what these two legends of the music industry created. Where a Raga performance picks a ground note for a drone, Lou and Laurie used a drone that didn’t always follow a continuous tone but would shift between the artists from a synthesized noise to Laurie Anderson’s violin, to Lou Reed’s guitar or a device in front of him we could not identify from the audience and at other times the drone was replaced by Laurie Anderson’s storytelling with a simple melody playing beneath, before the drone would come rising back up. As I said, I was thrilled by this performance since it felt we were afforded the opportunity to see these two artists genuinely work their craft and not dredge up their famous past. Steve Hunter of Alice Cooper fame joined the duo for a while, adding another layer of ambiance for the audience to try and digest. How nice it was to see these artists paint their canvas live and in real-time for those of us lucky enough to attend.

To see a traditional Raga performed by Veena Sahasrabuddhe click here to watch on YouTube.