Sunday, July 31, 2011

2nd District Police Host "National Night Out" on August 2


The Second District Police are hosting a party called "National Night Out." It's a family-oriented event, including crime prevention tips, safety education, giveaways, plus food and some fun and games for kids.  Here's the event invitation with all the details: 
Please join the Second District Police Station for National Night Out on August 2, 2011. We will hold our National Night Out Event at Hearst Recreation Center, which is located at 3950 37th Street NW from 5-7pm. 
The FBI will be there to fingerprint kids and give parents ID kits, discuss and give out information on cyber bullying and safe internet "surfing." Burglary prevention information and anti-burglary pens will be given away, and you can sign up for burglary home safety inspections at this event. There will be crime prevention information and drug prevention information tables. Kids will enjoy a clown act (Cleveland Park's own Judy and Gary Kopff, who donate their clowning performances), a moon bounce, canine unit and temporary tattoo artist. This event is free and we will have food! Please plan on attending!

Free Home Security

If you have a computer with a webcam, you can create your own free or virtually free home video monitoring service.  There's peace of mind in being able to check on your home while you're away.  Here three different ways of keeping a eye on your home using nothing more than your desktop computer or laptop.

Use Skype: Get a second Skype account. (You have a Skype account already, don't you?) Install that second account on your other PC and set Skype to answer automatically with video when you call. Add that new account as a friend, and point the laptop or webcam in the direction you want to monitor. Just Skype your PC and you'll be able to see what's going on in your house.  If you have a smartphone that also does Skype video, you can monitor things from wherever you are.  Lifehacker has an article about how you can set up a comparable system using Google+

You can set up a similar home monitoring system using Google+'s Hangouts. As with Skype, set up a second Google or Gmail account.

Try out Cammster, which takes home video monitoring to the next level by recording and alerting you when your PC's camera detects motion. Unlike the Skype method, you don't ever need to call in: You can elect to receive an email (free) or a text message (fee based) when the camera detects motion. What's especially good about Cammster is that it doesn't need any software; it works right through your web browser.

iCam, a $4.99 app, offers a iPhone and iPad home monitoring service that's free once you've purchased the inexpensive app. iCam works over wifi and cellular connections and is both motion-activated (it will send you a photo and message if it detects motion) and on demand, so you can call in and see what's going on. iCam can also send push notifications when it detects motion.

Now there can eyes on your house from wherever in the world you are.



Your Daily Dose of Weather (Sorry, It's Hot Again)

Friday, July 29, 2011

Still Life with Robin: Listen Up, You Miserable Appliances!

by Peggy Robin

You know how Wile E. Coyote can never win against any appliance, gadget or device he owns? My track record is a little better, but not a whole lot. Appliances don't usually blow up in my face, but they do work to defeat me in more insidious ways.

Take my coffee maker. (Please!) It's a single cup maker, and it has this nasty habit of sending the freshly brewed coffee down the spout before I have had a chance to set a cup underneath. It would be so easy for it to give me a hint, just some little reminder --a light-up icon of a coffee cup, perhaps-- to let me know I've forgotten to put my coffee cup at the base. But no! Coffee freely pours down like a waterfall, and no matter how fast I spring up, I can't get my cup there in time to prevent a Java spill. You'd think at the very least there would be a drain at the bottom, just in case. But better still would be a coffee maker that would not even start to brew unless it detected the weight of a coffee cup in receiving position.

Then there's my oven. It schemes against me while I'm away on vacation. Here's the usual scenario. Before leaving the house unattended for more than a day or two, I follow the manufacturer's safety tip and turn the oven to "off." Vacation over, I return home, and in the mood for a home-cooked meal after so many nights of eating out, I plan a dinner around a casserole that must bake for 45 minutes at 375 degrees.  First, I turn the oven dial to 375.  I assemble the casserole, pop it in the oven, and start preparing the side dishes and bread. I have everything timed so that just as the timer goes off to let me know the casserole should be golden brown on top, all the elements of the meal will be ready to serve. BING! goes the timer, and I open the oven door...and see a sickly white, cold, gluey assemblage of ingredients, exactly as it was when I put it in the oven 45 minutes ago. Because my oven is still in "off" mode, and it tricks me into thinking it's on by allowing me to move the temperature dial normally, just as it always does. What it needs is some sort of digital automated voice recording that would be triggered by movement of the temperature dial, to say: "Hey, I see you're trying to turn up the heat, but you forgot that you turned me off!" Okay, maybe that's too elaborate. Then how about some kind of mechanical switch that stops movement of the temperature dial unless the whole oven is turned on? I bet there's a $2 part that could do just that.

My washing machine is not quite as sneaky as my oven, but it does have this one little annoying trick: It hides a single washed item from view. Let's say I spill some coffee on my shirt. (You already know how that happens.) To avoid letting the stain set, I may run down to the laundry in the basement and toss that one T-shirt into the washer. Then, hours or days later, whenever I next go down to the laundry to do a full load, I open the washer and it appears to be empty. The single washed item is actually plastered against the side wall of the washing machine tub, and if it's stuck on the side closest to me, it's completely out of my line of sight. So naturally, I start to fill the machine with water, add detergent, and add the dirty clothes. Just as the water reaches the bottom of the washed shirt, it peels away from the side and falls into the water. So it gets washed twice. That's no big deal, I know. It's just that I don't like being outwitted by the same appliance, in the same way, multiple times. I want the washer to tell me it's not empty before I start a new cycle. But it doesn't want to tell me anything it doesn't have to. I get better communication from my teenager.

Want to Go Biking with Your Out-of-Town Guests? Capital Bikeshare Has a Way

Capital Bikeshare, DC's new bike-sharing program, started in September 2010  but already it's been a huge success, giving thousands of DC residents a quick, convenient, energy-efficient way to get around the city. Of course, you need to be a member to be able to go up to any Bikeshare location and check out a bicycle for short-term use. Until now, that meant that your out-of-town guests would be unable to join you in an impromptu bike-ride.

But now all you need to do is suggest that out-of-town visitors stay at a hotel that participates in the Capital Bikeshare program, and you all can go biking together. Or your guests can check out a bicycle and use it to bike to your house -- saving you from having to go and pick them up, or saving them on cabfare.

So far just three hotels, all part of the Kimpton Hotel group, are participating. The Hotel Monaco near Gallery Place, Hotel Helix in Dupont Circle, and Hotel Rouge near Scott Circle, are all offering their guests complimentary 24-hour Bikeshare memberships. Guests who take advantage of the bicycle rentals will also be provided with helmets, safe biking guides, and bike maps.

Each of the three hotels is located close to a Capital Bikeshare station. Currently Capital Bikeshare has more than 1,100 bikes at 115 stations throughout the DC metropolitan area.

For more information about visitor use of Capital Bikeshare and other sustainable transportation programs in DC, visit goDCgo.

Your Daily Dose of Weather

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Translation Telephone

Remember the game, telephone, where you whisper a sentence into the ear of the person sitting next to you? Then then whisper that same sentence --hopefully-- to the next person and so on down the line. Without fail, the sentence gets garbled, often in hysterical ways.

A creative website has done something similar with Google Translate. Type a sentence in English, Translation Telephone translates that into 20 random languages before returning your sentence to English. I tried "It's not the heat, it's the humidly," and ended up with "No warm and dry." You can view the sequence that led from here to there on this page, or you can try it yourself on Translation Telephone's website.

Poll Results: For How Much Would You Give Up the Internet

We asked, "How much money would it take for you to never use the internet again?"

Here are the results

$1 million: 10%
$10 million: 27%
$50 million: 13%
$1 billion: 22%
No amount of money: 25%

We love our internet.



The Most Amazing Bird Video Ever

Almost impossible to believe, but the video doesn't lie. Watch this seagull capture and steal a miniature video camera.

Your Daily Dose of Weather

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Ask Kelli: Pushing Meditation, Pushing a Girlfriend, Pushing for Birthday Presents

by Kelli Miller

Dear Kelli,

I’ve recently gotten into meditation and really feel the benefits. I want my husband to try it as well but he already said no twice when I asked him if he’s interested. I think I know my husband well and believe that he'll really take to it once he learns the technique. How can I get him to do it?

Signed,
Hoping He’ll Meditate


Dear Hoping,

The gift of meditation starts when the idea becomes your own. Not that someone can’t suggest trying meditation but the true gift, in my opinion, comes when the person is ready on his/her own. Let your husband find his own gift, if it’s in the cards for him.

You may be able, however, to get him interested without even trying. The best way? By showing (authentically) how much you’re getting out of it. Don’t brag or talk about it, or else he’ll be turned off. But in subtle ways show him how you’re calmer in certain situations or less stressed, and he may just become curious. And then “on his own” he may ask about it. Until then it’s best to stay out of it.

Just because he said no now doesn’t necessary mean he’ll never be interested. But it does mean, “stop bringing it up for now.” So lay back and focus on you for a bit. The good news? You’re getting a lot out of your practice!

All the best,
Kelli
---

Cathedral Care Pharmacy vs. CVS

by Michael Ross

It was the winter of 2007 and the snow was coming down hard and fast across the city. Schools were letting out early and businesses across town were preparing to do the same when the phone rang at Cathedral Care Pharmacy in Woodley Park. A customer was on the line and there was a note of panic in her voice. She needed a refill for an important prescription, but was snowbound in Chevy Chase, Maryland. Not to worry, the pharmacist assured her: “We’ll get it to you.”

Claudio Sayan, one of Cathedral Care’s long-time employees, grabbed the prescription and set out in the pharmacy’s delivery vehicle. He did not go far, however, before realizing that the car was not going to make it into Maryland on the still unplowed streets. So parking the car and striking out for the Metro, Claudio caught a train to Bethesda and then trudged several blocks through high winds and whiteout conditions to get to the woman’s door.

Recalling the incident, Cathedral Care owner Mike Madden says simply: “My people do extraordinary things.” The way he says it is not a boast; it’s just how this small, family-owned pharmacy treats its customers and has always treated them ever since it opened its doors on Connecticut Avenue nearly 90 years ago. How much longer Mike’s people can continue to do these extraordinary things for their customers is now very much in doubt, however.

Earlier this month, the CVS Caremark Corporation, citing an alleged auditing irregularity, terminated the contract that allowed Cathedral Care to fill prescriptions under the Caremark drug plan. Since Caremark manages drug plans for many major employers, including the Federal government, the loss of this business has dealt a devastating blow to Cathedral Care.

Madden is an unassuming and modest man, but he’s also a determined one and right now his determination is focused on doing everything he can to stay in business. In this he has a growing list of allies, from DC Councilwoman Mary Cheh and ANC Commissioners Anne-Marie Baristow and Lee Brian Reba to the officers and members of the Woodley Park Community Association and the Cleveland Park Citizens Association. But the bottom line is that Madden doesn’t have the financial resources for a protracted legal battle against a corporate giant like CVS Caremark, whose reputation for muscling small, family owned pharmacies out of business has been denounced by consumer groups and increasingly is becoming the focus of attention by Federal regulators. Unless CVS Caremark can be persuaded by public opinion to reverse its decision, or unless Madden can somehow replace the business he stands to lose as a result of it, Cathedral Care’s days could be numbered.

Now, truth-in-advertising-time: While I have no financial or familial interest in this dispute, I have been a resident of Woodley Park for two decades, during which I have patronized both Cathedral Care and CVS (and before CVS gobbled it up, People’s Drugstore.) I have nothing against CVS per se. But I am engaged in this fight because I don’t think what CVS is doing is ethically right. I am engaged because it strikes to the heart of our values as a community. No, I’m not old or infirm enough to require free delivery of my prescriptions, but others in our community are, and I care about that.

All of which is to say that, if you share these concerns, then I invite you to sign the petition I’ve created at this link or using the link below. When we’ve gotten at least 1,000 signatures, we’ll be sending it to the corporate suits at CVS to let them know that we object to what they are doing and to remind them that the community’s loss of Cathedral Care pharmacy will not necessarily be their gain (after all, there’s always Walgreens).

The petition is also being circulated door to door as my spare time (and the heat) permits. If you want to help in this regard, please do contact me at either: mross1949 @ yahoo.com or mross1949 @ aol.com. Since they express what’s at stake here far more eloquently than I have, permit me to close by citing excerpts from just a few of the many comments I’ve received from Cathedral Care customers since launching this campaign.

“I can’t count the number of times Mike Madden has straightened out a stubborn insurance company on my behalf, rushed an order, or showed more professionalism when dealing with sensitive information,” writes DC resident Carl Johnston. “I can actually feel my blood pressure go down when I call the pharmacy and he’s on the other end of the line.”

Cathedral Pharmacy “has been an absolute life saver for me,” adds Woodley Park’s Trish Mitchell. “I have a chronic condition and am forever picking up meds [and] Mike has even come in on a Sunday to take care of a prescription for me.”

“When the pharmacist sees me walking in the door, he already starts filling my prescription,” says another Woodley resident, Adrienne Danforth. “He has watched my children grow up, knows every one of their names and what they’re doing.”

And finally this, from Lise Gladstone: “I’ve been a customer of Cathedral Care for over 25 years. I first started using them when my kids were little because they were able to deliver our prescriptions to our door by the time we returned from the pediatrician. After 9-11, I saw one of their pharmacists on the street pause to read the headlines in a news box and I noticed a rosary in his hand. I have seen Mike at community events for parents and discovered that his youngest son is the same age as mine. These kinds of connections are so rare in retail. They are a part of what binds our community together and makes it such a special place to live.”

Thanks, Lise. That about says it all.

Sign the petition at: www.thepetitionsite.com/1/save-dcs-cathedral-care-pharmacy/

--

Guest columnist Michael Ross, a recovering journalist and conservationist, is a long-time resident of Woodley Park.

Heatwave Photo Contest - We Have a Winner!

We are pleased to announce that Henry Throop has won our heatwave photo competition and will awarded the Quantaray Pro photo bag. Henry's photo was selected because it was the most refreshing photo we received. And while we'd like to say that this photo can remind us of a heatwave gone by, we are sorry to report that another heatwave, with temperatures in the upper 90's, will be here momentarily. In the meanwhile, enjoy the photo.


Your Daily Dose of Weather

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Easy To Remember Link to Make a DIY Emergency Air Conditoner

Hold onto this link: http://bit.ly/emergencyac. It's your ticket to making a home air conditioner for when the power or your air conditioning system goes out.

This link leads to instructions on how to make a room cooler out of just three parts: a Styrofoam cooler, ice, and a battery powered fan.

Is It Legal to Park a Boat on a DC Street? A Dialog

The Second District Police (MPD 2D) maintains a listserv, not just for crime alerts, reports, and tips, but for questions from the public and answers from the police. In the case of the question about boat parking on DC streets, the first police officer to answer the question got it wrong, and was later corrected by a second police officer. 


The original question came from an ANC commissioner from Barnaby Woods, asking on behalf of a constituent:

Sun Jul 17, 2011 3:43 pm 
Subject: Boat parked on residential street - legal or illegal?

Hi there,

I received a complaint regarding a homeowner who has parked their boat on a residential street in front of their home. Is this legal?

Thanks,

---


Just nine minutes later police officer Marcello N. Muzzatti replied:

July 17 Sun Jul 17, 2011 3:52 pm
Re: Boat parked on residential street - legal or illegal?

If the trailer has a current DC tag and residential sticker if needed then it is legal.

---

Three days later a second police officer, David Baker, wrote in (at 4:07am) to disagree:

Wed Jul 20, 2011 4:07 am
Re: Boat parked on residential street - legal or illegal?

I was sent this question. It is not legal to park a boat on a DC public street. It is considered storage on public space. I see where someone wrote you could, as long as you had a valid residential parking permit for the trailer. DC does not consider a boat a vehicle in the city's definition. We all know you cannot pull the boat away from the curb or drive it on the road. ( I hope we never have a flood that big!) I hope this answers your question. You can send me a email with the address of where the boat is and I will let the folks know what the law is.

---


Two and a half hours later, Officer Muzzati got a chance to respond. Apparently, he was not convinced by Officer Baker's assessment of the situation.

Wed Jul 20, 2011 6:34 am
Re: [MPD-2d] Parking of Boats on Public Street

Well the boat is not a vehicle but the trailer is. The trailer must be inspected and have a valid tag on it.

---

Your Daily Dose of Weather

Monday, July 25, 2011

Washington Tweets

Washington tweets. A lot. The Washington Tweets column is a collection of the most interesting, recent Washington-area tweets. These tweets reveal a candid and fascinating portrait of what is on our collective minds: Twitter gives a snapshot of what we're doing, thinking and hoping for as a group. Washington Tweets is Washington in the raw. Bill Adler tweets at @billadler


Washington, D.C. - heat epicenter - highest heat index in US (last two hours on weather.com maps)

Big change! DC's Metro subway now allows passengers to carry bottled water in hot weather. Metro has banned all food or beverages until now.

I'd like one day of nice weather. Is that too much to ask? #DC

the one day of the year i decide to wear my hair straight it's drizzly and DC humidity is out in full force #blackgirlproblems

My clock radio at 6AM. "Good morning. It is 78 in nation's capital with relative humidity at 99%."

Let's be realistic #Nats fans. A MLB roster w/Stairs, Livo, Pudge, Gorzo, et al, was never and is not now playoff caliber. Build for future.

After seeing the Men's Health magazine spread, I'm leaving cell phones around DC, hoping #Schock finds them as well: http://politi.co/pPDih0

Tourist injured on Segway in sudden downpour at corner of G St and 12th. #DC hope she is ok!

Birthday dinner for tourists: Hop on the Red Line two stops north to Cleveland Park and enjoy Dino

Headed to New Jersey. Driving the DC Beltway. Avoiding the far left and the far right...lanes. http://t.co/5NFT0rI

I'm sick of Adams Morgan.. It's not fun nomore. The Feds made it so dumb now.

Dude with elevated air mattress by Metro Center is, by far, the best homeless guy in DC.

Guy in Dupont Circle offering "money back guarantee!" if his ice cold water isn't

Just had a crab cake sandwich from Tackle Box in Cleveland Park. Yummm

Nothing like honeymoon morning mimosas at the airport (@ Jet Rock Bar + Grill - DCA): http://4sq.com/noqJB6

Ex Central chef heading to Adams Morgan. Hooray!

I allowed myself to be a true American tourist today, walked around the DC monuments, first time since 5th grade. Loved it.

Im excited about the new mlk monument in washington

Vienna: most romantic metro stn in the system according to Craigslist’s “Missed Connections” section

The longer I live in DC, the more insane it makes me when TV shows have cars passing the lincoln on the way from ward 8 to the Mall.



All You Need to Know About Google+

All you need to know about Google+ is in this short, creative video. Is Google+ going to turn Facebook into the new Myspace?

Online Petition for More Police in Adams Morgan Draws Heartfelt Pleas

Photo by Aude
About a week ago, I received an emailed request to sign a petition in support of increased police presence in Adams Morgan. I tend not to sign onto a neighborhood-specific petition unless it's my own neighborhood of Cleveland Park. I worry that by too quickly endorsing a cause in someone else's neighborhood, I may not fully understand how it will affect the surrounding neighborhoods. For example, if police patrols are beefed up as a result of this petition, will that take any police staffing away from, say, Mount Pleasant, Shaw, or Columbia Heights?

Still, it's not a hard and fast rule; I do my best to research an issue before appending my name, whether in cyber-ink or actual ink. The very first thing to do is to read the petition and see who's behind it, and what their reasons are for pushing for the requested action. With an online petition, that's all public, and in this case, you can read the comments left by the signers. As of today, there are six pages of signatures, totalling 279 supporters. I found that the comments make a persuasive, and in some cases, rather alarming case that the neighborhood right now is not receiving the police attention it sorely needs.

Take a look at some of these citizen reports:
There are regularly gangs of people roaming around at night vandalizing our property and doing who knows what else. I've also noticed a spike in what I can only assume to be drug dealers on 18th Street, particulary in front of the school and tennis courts at night, and sometimes in the afternoon (often near trashcans where I've seen drug drops occur). There is a very clear connection between the types of people making this trouble and the people who are patronizing some of the sketchier bars on 18th street. It would be nice if the police would actually do something about this problem instead of just watching it from the corner of 18th and Columbia.
In just three years at my current residence, my car has been broken into, my friend's car has been broken into, and my boyfriend has been assaulted and robbed. Recently, there was a girl who was robbed and got away from men who tried to throw her in the trunk of their car. All of this happened right in my neighborhood. Please help build more protection for the community of Adams Morgan. We need more patrols and video cameras in this neighborhood to ensure our safety.
We need a processing detail so as to keep more cops on the street as opposed to when an arrest is made it does not take the cop out of action for the night...
Last week I literally saw an officer hiding behind a payphone. Some guy on the street went over and told him he just missed a huge fight and pointed him in the direction of the fight. The officer literally waved him away. I can't say that gives me faith in our police, although, that said, if I were the officer alone on the street, I might hide behind a payphone as well. What does it take for our government to pay attention? How bad does it have to get?
As someone whose second floor bedroom faces Kalorama about 5 houses off of 18th Street, I can tell you that those times are like the Wild West on the best of nights. Impromptu "parties" on our front steps (a private home, not an apartment house or condo, require us to get out of bed almost every weekend to run people off. A simple slow moving vehicle patrol which stops to query loitering people who go a long way towards stopping this intolerable situation.

Is a DC Police Officer Out to Get Patrons of Takoma DC Restaurant?

We found this intriguing story on the TakomaDC Listserv. We'll keep you posted if there are further developments in this case.

My Fellow Residents of Takoma,

Like many of you, I get my regular fix of Jamaican food at Spicy Delight near the Takoma Metro. It is right in front of the fire hydrant on Carroll Avenue. Many times customers pull up in front of the hydrant, put on their hazards, run inside to get their order, then run out and be on their way. In the past, an officer may tell them to move their car or just give them a warning or a pass, but for the last month or two, there has been an officer who has been specifically targeting customers of Spicy Delight.

I witnessed two incidents. One where the officer, J.W., gave a guy over $200 in tickets within a span of 4 minutes because he felt the guy did not move his car fast enough. (I personally thought this officer appeared to have a Napoleon complex, but I figured perhaps this was just a one time thing to prove a point.) Days later, however, when I returned, the co-owner, Ms Spicy, had posted a sign in her window saying her customers were being targeted, so please do not park by the hydrant. I was concerned. About a week or two afterward, I inquired if she still felt targeted. In addition to more hydrant ticketing stories by this same officer, she shared with me that one of the other small business owners told her that this officer, J.W., told them that he indeed plans to ticket as many Spicy Delight customers as possible, because he thinks she's mean. (What?!) Ironically as she shared this story, a customer pulled up to the hydrant, put on his hazards, and walked in the store. She immediately and urgently told him to move his car because he will get a ticket. The gentleman yelled out his order as he immediately walked back to his car and got inside of it. Within two minutes, I watched officer J.W. pull up in his car (I guess the officer stays near the 7-Eleven) and proceed to give the man a ticket. This man then shared that when he offered to move his car, the officer told him "no," to stay there, while he wrote out the ticket. He also shared that the officer asked him from which business did he just return.

Your Daily Dose of Weather

Sunday, July 24, 2011

DC Government Holding Graffiti Meeting with "Taggers," Artists, and City Officials - July 26

In a controversial move that some critics are saying will just legitimize graffiti "taggers," the DC government is holding a public meeting with a panel of experts, including graffiti writers as we;; as DC officials representing agencies charged with cleaning and preventing graffiti, artists who have been commissioned to create public murals, and officials in charge of funding public art. The listing of participants did not indicate anyone representing building owners or residents of buildings that have been marred by graffiti.

The meeting place is the Langston Room at Busboys & Poets, a local cafe and bookstore favored by hip urban artists, so it appears that the venue is favorable to the "graffiti is legitimate public art" viewpoint from the outset. At any rate it sounds like there will be some lively and provocative discussion.

Here is the invitation to the event sent by the Department of Public Works:

Got Graffiti? Come Join Us For A Close Up Look At Graffiti In DC 

How do you feel about the graffiti in your neighborhood? Is there a place for it in DC? What is your impression of the people who illegally tag? How would you like to see graffiti handled?

Join MuralsDC as it launches its 2011 program with a look at the culture of graffiti and discussion with people involved on all sides—former taggers, artists, agencies who clean graffiti, and those who fund public art.

Help us achieve a better understanding of graffiti and what we can do to achieve solutions that last.


What: MuralsDC Panel Discussion on Graffiti
When: Tuesday, July 26, 6:00-8:00pm
Where: Busboys & Poets (2021 14th St., NW – Langston Room)

Contact Nancee Lyons at nancee.lyons @ dc.gov or call 202-673-6833 with questions or comments.

Think Cool

Some Antarctica photos. A good time of year to share them. Think cool, everyone. Photos by Bill Adler. Follow Bill Adler on Twitter @billadler.












Your Daily Dose of Weather (If You Dare)

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Washington Tweets: Special Heatwave Edition

Washington tweets. A lot. The Washington Tweets column is a collection of the most interesting, recent Washington-area tweets. These tweets reveal a candid and fascinating portrait of what is on our collective minds: Twitter gives a snapshot of what we're doing, thinking and hoping for as a group. Washington Tweets is Washington in the raw. Bill Adler tweets at @billadler

This is a special heatwave edition of Washington Tweets. The heat and the humidity and the bad air is pretty much all that we're tweeting about. And we're tweeting a lot because being at one's computer beats being outdoors.



In DC we shut down for 2 inches of snow, but keep working when it's so hot and humid it's literally unhealthy to be outside.

Washington, D.C. - heat epicenter - highest heat index in US
Why do people like summer? 100 degrees in DC at almost 5 PM.Heat index 121. Nothing to like about this.

I approve of this name for the DC heatwave: "Sweat Ceiling"

Beat the heat: DC Housing Authority hosting senior cooling centers - http://bit.ly/DCSrCooling

Best remedy for dc #heatwave: Magic Hat #9

This pathetic little DC air conditioner is NOT cutting it #heatwave #slowlymelting

Even my mother...who lives in ARIZONA is appalled at the temp/heat index/humidity levels in DC right now.

Weather forecast for today for the DC area: THERE IS A DEATH LASER IN THE SKY

This guy sitting next to me on the bus is sweating on my arm...from his armpit! #dc #heatwave

If you see a homeless person in the #DC heat w/o water/shelter, call 800-535-7252 and report location so they can get help

Heatwave isn't over, but impressed that #DC area power is hanging in there for most folks. Storm's coming, good luck @PepcoConnect!

Dulles and BWI airports had record high temperatures and the heat index hit 121 in Washington, DC today as a #heatwave peaked.

I'm oddly happy I'll be driving through CA/AZ desert later today where it'll be COOLER than the #DC swamp I live in. #heatwave

#DC #heatwave tip: dollar store Chinese fan 99 cents. Instant, no-power cooling Priceless.

Folks - this is not ordinary "july" DC weather: heat and humidity combo will be highest in years and potentially dangerous

With the hot weather in #dc this week, here's a cool-down snack suggestion for y'all. Watermelon and feta. You're welcome.

Mitchum clinical strength antiperspirant was on sale. Expected it to FAIL w/DC heat/humidity. Surprise, 12 hrs, STILL working!

The Heatwave

Indoors versus outdoors yesterday. Nobody wanted to be outdoors. And we're not over the heatwave yet.


Your Daily Dose of Weather (and You Don't Want a Dose Today)

Friday, July 22, 2011

Still Life with Robin:Indescribably Delicious

by Peggy Robin

Two weeks ago I wrote in this space about my quest to achieve the highest badge that Trip Advisor awards to its most frequent consumer reviewers of hotels, restaurants, and other destinations for travelers and diners. My main point in that column was the inherent silliness of the pursuit of a badge of the highest color, though I was doggedly determined to get one, all the same. I now have a bright green badge outlined in yellow -- that’s the second highest level. I have just 20 reviews to go until I achieve the final badge, which, due to some quirky choice in Trip Advisor’s marketing department, is an unappetizing dandelion yellow. Not gold. Not blue, like a blue ribbon. Call it lemon rind yellow, perhaps. No matter the color, I still want it.

So for the past few weeks I’ve been eating out far more often than I normally would just to have more places to review. There are, I have found, three problems with this strategy. Number one: I’ve already reviewed all my favorite restaurants, and of course, all the Cleveland Park restaurants, which means that I’m going all over town looking for new restaurants to review -- not the wisest budgetary choice for someone who normally values frugality. Number two: To achieve the right quantity of reviews, there's been a corresponding drop in quality. That is to say, I've picked a few restaurants I wouldn't have bothered to visit ordinarily, except that it was someplace that was fairly empty on a Saturday night, or it was near where I happened to be around dinner time, and it was a place I had not already reviewed.

And then there’s problem number three, which is what's currently tripping me up (so to speak) on Trip Advisor: I’m running out of words to describe food, cooking, service, and anything else that needs to be written up in the typical restaurant review. I mean, how many ways are there to say delicious? While the thesaurus lists forty-some synonyms, there are only about eight or nine that you can actually use without feeling ridiculous, overwrought, pretentious, or idiotic. I haven’t yet had to worry about exhausting my negative food vocabulary, mainly because all the restaurants I've chosen so far have provided meals worthy of at least a word or two of praise. Faint praise, in a few cases, but in no cases, have I sought to drive customers away. Just the opposite: I've been struck by how mean-spirited some of the other reviewers are; so to make up for some of the online nastiness, I do my best to be generous and give the benefit of the doubt.)

Enter Our Heatwave Photo Contest


We're giving away a new Quantaray Pro camera bag to whomever takes a photograph between now and Monday, July 25 that best shows how hot and miserable this heat wave is. Fire up your camera or camera phone and snap photos of people or things that are hot, humid, melting, withering, or crisped.

We'll select the best Washington, DC area photo and post it on All Life Is Local. To enter, email your heatwave photograph to us at hothothot@fastmail.net (hothothot @ fastmail.net). Include your contact information and tell us something about the photo, including where it was taken.

This contest is being cosponsored with our companion email list, the Cleveland Park Listserv.

Code Red: Be Kind to the Air Today

It's not just the heat and the humidity. Friday is a Code Red air quality day. (And Saturday is expected to be, too.) The outdoor air is unhealthy for everyone. High concentrations of ground level ozone means that we all should limit time outdoors, drive only if necessary, not use gas powered lawn mowers and leaf blowers, and not use chemicals on lawns. Today's concentrations of ground level ozone can reduce lung function even in healthy adults, as well as inflame the lung's lining and cause other health problems. For the latest air quality forecast, visit the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments' website, where you can also read about the health effects of unhealthy air. 

Your Daily Dose of Weather

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Best Hot Weather Tips You Don't Know About


Antarctic iceberg photo by Bill Adler.
Think cool, it might help.

We all know the basic guidelines for coping with the "dome of heat" that's over us and will continue to make our lives miserable for days to come.  Basically, it's: Don't. Go. Outside.  The Capital Weather Gang sums up what we're in store for us this way, "A potentially deadly combination of heat and humidity is upon us. We have not seen a combination of heat and humidity this intense in a number of years."

While staying indoors is the best prescription, followed closely by jettisoning your suit for work this week, here are three other lesser known, but also very helpful tips for surviving the next few days:

1. If you have to drive, deploy this trick for cooling your car quickly: Open one window all the way. Then rapidly open and close the car door that's opposite that window. Doing this will expel the super heated air that's in your car. How hot can it get inside a car that's left in the sun? Try over 140 degrees on a 90 degree day. You can read more about this terrific tip on Lifehacker.

2. Keep your cell phone alive by keeping it cool. The iPhone's maximum operating temperature is 95 degrees, and other smartphones also have temperatures above which they become very unhappy. If you're going to be out in the heat for a prolonged period of time, think about powering off your phone entirely. There's more about how heat and smartphones don't always get along here.

3. If the summer gods aren't smiling on you and cause your air conditioner to break. Or if Pepco decides that you're on their blackout list, you can make a single-room air cooler that will keep you sane until everything is working again. All you need to do is fill a Styrofoam cooler with ice, cut a hole in the top, place a battery powered fan on top of the cooler and punch a few holes in the cooler's sides for air intake. You can read the details about how to make an emergency air conditioner in 5 minutes here: http://bit.ly/emergencyac . Have a cooler and a battery operated fan on hand just in case.

4. Power down your PC or laptop when you're not using it. Computers get hot --over 100 degrees or hotter is normal-- and that heat has to go somewhere. Thinking of your computer as a space heater will give you incentive to flip off the power switch.

5. If you are traveling about by foot, make pit stops in cool places. We were wandering around Metro Center last night, trying to figure out where to have dinner. Standing on the sidewalk, we were consulting Yelp and TripAdvisor and OpenTable on our iPhones, when we had an epiphany: We could do the same thing inside with air conditioning. And by the way, flower shops are kept very cool.

Battery Powered Fans Can Save a Summer's Day

Sponsored post:

It's happened to everyone in Washington, DC at some time or another: A summer power outage. (And they do seem to be getting more frequent.)  Your house or apartment can start cooking pretty fast when the electricity goes out. So what can you do to prevent your brain from turning into mush?

The solution: A powerful, battery operated fan. The O2 indoor/outdoor fan should be in every Washingtonians' home: With a battery life of 72 hours, the fan should keep you cool for the length of almost any power outage. The 02 also works on AC power, so you can use it as a regular fan when electricity is a thumbs up.

Fabulous Food Finds: Chocolate Mousse at Lavandou

Fabulous Food Finds: We're not reviewing restaurants -- there are lots of great sites for that. Fabulous Food Finds features tempting tasty morsels that we find in and around Washington, DC.

Today's fabulous food find: Chocolate mousse from Lavandou in Cleveland Park. Slippery and silky, rich and chocolaty. There's no better way to finish a fabulous French meal. 

Fabulous Food Finds are written by Bill Adler, whom you can follow on Twitter @billadler.


Your Daily Dose of Weather

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Ask Kelli: The Ex Is Back; Sex Ed Worries; Email Addiction


Advice columnist Kelli Miller is on vacation this week. Here's some good advice from a past column.

Dear Kelli,

The father of my children opted out of the picture many, many years ago. Since then I remarried and my current husband adopted our kids. Now my ex-husband wants to see the kids again. He obviously has no legal rights. But should I still allow him to see them? He’s not a bad guy (no drug issues or anything). And my kids do know their current father is not their biological father.

Signed,
One Big Happy Family



Dear One Big Happy Family,

You sound like a compassionate person. I really respect that.

You didn’t mention how old your kids are. That’s a big factor. So depending on their ages, you could get their opinion on how they feel about seeing their biological dad.

If they are okay with it, I believe the safest bet is to have a get-together every once in awhile with all of you. Your ex, your current husband, you, and the kids. You can do it at a public place, like a park, or if you are comfortable with inviting your ex over, at your house for brunch or a family meal. That way, it’s on your turf and you can call the shots.

Good luck,
Kelli

Palisades Library Sidewalk Book Sale on July 23

Photo by Stewart Butterfield
The Friends of Palisades Library will host a sidewalk used book sale at the library on Saturday, July 23 from 10 am to 4 pm at 4901 V Street NW (at the corner of MacArthur Boulevard).

You'll find plenty of relaxing fiction and nonfiction for reading at the beach, in the airport, or on your backyard hammock.

Hardbacks - $1.00; paperbacks - 50 cents. In addition, you can enter a fun contest to win free books!

Proceeds benefit the Palisades branch library to support special programs and the purchase of library equipment and materials not covered by the DC Public Library budget. Questions? Email FriendsofPalisadesLibrary @ gmail.com. 



Your Daily Dose of Weather

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

DC Adopt-a-Tree Program Gives Away Tree Watering Bags

With a predicted heat wave on the way and temperatures expected to hit perhaps as high as 100 degrees, newly planted trees will be in dire need of water. To encourage people to water these trees, the DC government is giving away watering bags. To receive the free 20-25 gallon bags, you must read and sign the Canopy Keeper Agreement. You can submit the signed form by scanning it and sending it as an email attachment to regina.richardson @ dc.gov or by printing and mailing the form to:


Urban Forestry Administration
District Department of Transportation
55 M Street, SE, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20003


You can adopt as many as four trees. Along with watering bags you will also receive printed instructions about how often to water and other tree care tips. You can learn more about the Adopt-a-Tree program by clicking here.






Public Meeting on Health Insurance Reform on July 21

The DC government has organized a public meeting on Thursday, July 21, to let people know how health insurance reform will affect them and their communities.  Here's the announcement with all the details:

A One City Insured Public Meeting: Health Insurance You Can Afford

The Mayor’s Health Reform Implementation Committee (HRIC) cordially invites you to a community dialogue on the “future of health care in the District of Columbia.” This meeting, which is open to the community, will be Thursday, July 21, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Pennsylvania Avenue Baptist Church at 3000 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. Parking is available.

President Barack Obama signed the health care reform bill into law in March 2010, and the HRIC is heading the effort to implement the law in the District. The HRIC wants to know from you how the District’s health insurance marketplace should operate; who should it serve; and to get your input on affordability.

DIY Emergency Air Conditioner

If (when?) the power goes out or if your air conditioner goes on the blink, you could be in for long, hot day or week. Fans are okay, but blowing around 95-degree air just isn't as cool and comfortable as an air conditioner's chilled air.

Fortunately, it's easy and inexpensive to make a DIY air conditioner that will cool a small room and could make the difference between being able to sleep at night or turning your bed into something that looks like Lake Erie, after you've sweated all night long.

Here's how: Fill a Styrofoam cooler with ice. Don't have any ice? Run to 7-11 and grab a bag or two. Cut a large hole in the top and place a battery-powered fan over the hole. If you don't have a battery-powered fan, order one today -- they have plenty of uses. The 02 fan works either plugged in or on battery power, and the batteries last for up to 72 hours.

Poke a few holes in the side to act as a return, replenishing the now cold air that the fan is now pushing into your room. When the ice runs out, just replenish the bag. This DIY air conditioner will operate and keep you cool until Pepco restores your power or your air conditioning system can be fixed.

Thanks for Lifehacker for this incredibly useful tip.