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    February 28

    A roller-coaster week

    It has been a tumultuous week for me and my family.  We buried my father's ashes on Saturday at a graveside cemetary.  We survived two snowstorms and successfully navigated volatile roads in Montana.  We took an unplanned detour to my sister's home in Montana and spent a couple days with them.  The stock market crashed yesterday.  A big snowstorm blew through the area today, dumping a bunch of snow on us.  It's definitely been a tumultuous week for us, but fortunately, we arrived back in Idaho safely.  We return to the Washington, D.C. area on Saturday. 
    February 22

    Should we stay or should we go?

    Dear Reader, what would you do?  Right now, a snowstorm is passing through where we're staying and heading east.  It will dump four to six inches of snow in the lowlands, probably much more on the mountain passes.  Between now and 2 p.m. on Saturday we need to travel east to Great Falls, Montana, where a memorial service will be held for my father.  We must cross three mountain passes en route to Great Falls.  Right now all passes are open, but the storm just began.  Click here for a webcam shot of Lookout Pass' current road conditions.  It looks navigatible as I write, but I anticipate that road conditions will worsen over the next 24 hours.  It's possible but not likely that one or more of the passes will be closed or very treacherous (the descent on Lookout Pass can be unnerving when driving in snow).  We planned to leave tomorrow morning, but that will be immediately following the storm.  The weather is supposed to improve by Saturday. 
     
    What would you do?  Would you spend 13 hours on a Greyhound bus?  Would you buy a plane ticket?  Ticket prices start at $741 per ticket.  We're planning to rent a compact car?  What will I do?  Oh, probably upgrade to a heavier vehicle and press on if the passes aren't closed.  No matter what, it won't be a fun experience driving during wintertime in Idaho and Montana.
    February 20

    Travel update

    Dear Reader, you have probably lost track of where we are now.  I don't blame you--I can barely keep up.  I'm so busy keeping up with myself that I can hardly remember other people's plans.  You know, whenever you meet a good friend, they expect you to remember their own plans, and you spend a few moments trying to recall every scrap of information they told you about their intentions.  Anyway, we are now in Idaho again staying with my parents.  We stayed in Seattle for about six days.  The visit was much too short.  We wish we had been able to stay a couple more days, but then we would have had to shorten our visit with my parents.  We will stay in Idaho for the remainder of the month except for a short visit to family in Montana.  By early March, we will be back in Washington, D.C. for four months.  Korea now seems so long ago.  People said it would be like a dream--good or bad depending on your prespective.  It's definitely starting to fade into memory, and Paraguay is starting to loom larger.
    February 18

    Happy Year of the Golden Fire on Water Pig

    Happy Chinese New Year and Seol Nal!  (Seol Nal is the Korean name for the lunar new year.)  This is the Year of the Pig, but not just any ol' Pig Year.  Depending on who you talk to, it's either the Year of the Golden Pig, Year of the Fire Pig, or Year of the Fire Pig that falls on a water element.  It is such a special lunar year that no one can say for sure whether it happens every 60 years or 600 years or every 12 years.  Either way, it's a special year, and a lot more babies will be born in Greater China, on the Korean Peninsula, and their respective diasporas.  Many Chinese and Koreans believe this will be the most special year to bear children since the Year of the Dragon seven years ago, and hospitals are expecting a spike in birthrate.  Births will undoubtedly increase as East Asian parents rush to have children who will be recipients of the good fortune lavished on them by this auspicious Zodiac sign. 
     
    Why?  According to an article published by AsianAvenue.com
    Supposedly children born in the year of the Golden Pig will make a lot of money. The Pig sign represents everything that makes us plump—health, fertility, and money. And the fact that this year’s pig is golden only adds to the material wealth. But the pig has bad traits as well—it’s also a symbol of greed, laziness, filth, and stupidity. But for many couples, this seems to be a small tradeoff for an early retirement.
    However, no consensus has emerged on the special significance of this year.  After all, the Year of the Pig occurs every 12 years, but this year is being touted as a special one by many people, especially merchants hoping to generate additional sales by promoting the "Year of the Golden Pig."  According to Korean broadcasting company, KBS:
    People who believe in the year of the golden pig say the special year comes every 600 years. They came to this conclusion through calculations, using a combination of the Chinese zodiac and the yin and yang theory. However, a folklore professor, Joo Young-ha, at the Academy of Korean Studies rebuts the theory. He explained that if the year 2007 is the golden pig year which comes every 600 years, there should be records about the special year written in the ‘Taejong Sillok,’ archives of King Taejong. King Taejong ruled the Joseon Dynasty 600 years ago. But there are no such records, which makes him believe the myth was made not long ago.
    This Year of the Pig may not be so special after all.  According to Asia Times Online:
    This lunar year...is fraught with an especially strong dose of astrological Viagra because it is believed to be the Year of the Golden Pig, which - depending on the astrologer you consult - comes once every 60 or 600 years. Either way, it's a rare pig.  Or is it? Serious Hong Kong practitioners of the ancient art of feng shui, or geomancy, have debunked the notion that this is a golden year, writing it off as a commercial invention fostered by shopkeepers to boost business. The next golden pig year, they say, will not come around until 2031.

    This is a fire-pig year, according to feng shui masters such as Raymond Lo and Peter So. It is only golden in the fired imaginations of shopkeepers scheming for additional profit. But those merchants have succeeded in duping the general public.  Before the crass intervention of commerce, here, by most accounts, is how the Chinese astrological system was supposed to work: each year in the lunar calendar is represented by one of the 12 animals of the zodiac, which then rotates through five earthly elements - metal, wood, water, fire and earth.  This year's pig is matched up not with gold but with fire and, significantly, the fire sits on water. The elements are therefore in conflict - a theme not particularly popular with merchants and mall decorators - and the year ahead will be full of turbulence.  It would be better if this year's flame were a yang fire, which symbolizes the warmth of the sun, politeness and optimism. But instead, it's yin fire, and that signifies the spark of tension, conflict and even war.  

    From what I gather--and I am no scholar in Chinese astrology--this is really the Year of the Fire Pig on Water.  So what are the sociological implications of this combination?  Well, it seems to portend that children born in 2007 will be hotheaded but prone to being all wet.

    February 16

    Days and nights all around

    One of the unpleasant side effects of long-term travel to multiple destinations is the affect travel has on one's biological clock.  While most often referred to in the context of pregnancy, the biological clock also governs one's ability to manage sleep.  Traveling over multiple time zones in a short period of time messes this up, leaving one's body wondering whether a given moment is morning, noon, afternoon, or night.  I am writing this at 5:40 a.m.  I should not be writing right now; I should be in bed sleeping, getting ready for another day of fun-filled vacation.  Instead, I cannot sleep, because I have so hopelessly confused my body as to what time it is at a given moment. 
     
    Over two weeks ago, we left Korea and headed to Hawai'i, a difference of -19 hours.  Noon on Sunday in Korea is 7 p.m. on Saturday in Hawai'i.  A couple days ago, we arrived in Seattle, entering the Pacific Standard Time Zone.  We two hours ahead of Hawai'i and 17 hours behind Korea.  We will stay on Pacific Time until early March, when we fly to the Eastern Time Zone and move to Virginia, three hours ahead of Seattle and 14 hours behind Korea.  Someone once told me that it takes one day for each hour of time difference to fully recover from time zone changes.  That may or may not be true, but when you move from one place to -19 hours for two weeks, then -17 hours for another weeks, then finally -14 hours one month later, it can be a bit brutal convincing your body to get with the program.  I don't think I will fully adjust to the time change in Seattle, but I'm positive that we will recover from the time change in Idaho when we arrive on Monday.  So with that, I'll trudge off to bed again and try to get a couple hours' sleep.  Good night!
    February 12

    Tortured by Barney

    Dear Reader, I don't have much time to write today, because we're getting ready to leave Hawai'i tomorrow.  Consequently, I thought I would share a random, drive-by thought with you.  Could you imagine being incessantly subjected to the voice of Barney, 24/7?  All hours of the day, non-stop?  I was sitting with my son this morning watching children's television.  We initially watched "Barney & Friends" featuring Barney the Dinosaur.  In my humble opinion, Barney's voice has to be one of the most annoying voices of all time, ranking right up there with Jar Jar Binks of Star Wars fame.  What do children see or hear in this purple anthropomorphic Tyrannosaurus Rex dinosaur that they enjoy so much?  I would rather be subjected to The Wiggles for an entire week than Barney for five minutes.  I even read that Barney's voice has been used as a method of torture "lite" (whatever that means) in Guantanamo Bay's prisons.  Enough said.
     
    I couldn't help but wonder who does the voiceover for Barney, so I did a little investigating via Wikipedia.  According to Wikipedia, Bob West provided the voice of Barney until 2002, when he was replaced by Dean Wendt.  I wondered, how can these guys live with themselves?  How do the ones they love put up with hearing their voices when they sound so much like Barney the Dinosaur?  While I realize that these actors do voiceovers of Barney and contort their voices to become the verbal manifestation of that annoying pain in the Jurassic, I can't help but think that their real voices must not be much different from Barney's (like Pee Wee Herman, aka Paul Reubens).  Do they realize how much how much pain their voices elicit in the name of entertaining children?  It's a Faustian bargain, I tell you.
    February 09

    The "wow" factor

    I have an unscientific way to measure satisfaction with a travel destination that I call the "wow" factor.  What's the "wow" factor?  It's how many times you say "wow" during a given trip at a given location.  Kaua'i Island thus far has elicited more "wow"'s from us than any other destination we have been to since we traveled to Egypt in early 2002.  The island is absolutely fabulous, and we haven't even seen the two most famous natural attractions, Waimea Canyon and the Na Pali Coast.  We'll see those tomorrow and Saturday.  Today we headed north up the coast to Princeville and the end of Highway 56.  The scenery was breathtaking.  While I am still partial to the Big Island, I am growing more and more impressed with this island.  It is well deserving of the name "The Garden Island."  I will post some photos in the next few days.  Suffice it to say, I/we said "wow" at least a couple dozen times in the span of two hours.  The lush foliage and dramatic landscape is quite a sight to behold. 
     
    We may yet develop "Yet another" syndrome, a condition where you are no longer impressed with what was once impressive.  For example, in Egypt, we developed "yet another 5,000 artifact" syndrome, and on Maui Island, we fell victim to "yet another pretty waterfall" syndrome.  I doubt we will experience this feeling on Kaua'i Island.  We won't be here long enough, and the scenery yet to come is legendary for being some of the most beautiful and dramatic in the world.  Just watch "Jurassic Park" or "King Kong" for a peak of what is to come.
    February 08

    Kaua'i is cool

    Dear Reader, we arrived in Kaua'i Island this morning and will stay for three days.  We really appreciate my brother and sister-in-law putting up with us for the past week while we lounged around their house and neighborhood.  Kaua'i is meant to feel more like a vacation.  We're staying at the Aloha Beach Resort in Kaap'a, a town north of Lihue, Kaua'i's largest city.  Tomorrow we plan to drive along the north shore of the island, and on Friday we will drive south to Port Allen and take a catamaran cruise along the Na Pali (western) Coast of the island.  Some of the best scenery on Kaua'i Island is located along the Na Pali Coast, and it's inaccessible by car.  I really wanted to visit Ni'ihau Island, the forbidden island off the west coast of Kaua'i, but we won't have time to take a cruise there on this trip.  On Saturday, we will end our trip to Kaua'i by visiting Waimea Canyon, the most famous attraction on the island.  
     
    We haven't seen much of the island, but my initial impression is that it feels more rural and secluded than O'ahu, Maui, or the Big Island.  It's also much cooler here in eastern Kaua'i than on O'ahu, perhaps because this is the windward (rainy) side of the island, and the island features the wettest spot on earth.  It certainly is lush, but believe it or not, my Hawai'ian shirts and sandals just aren't warm enough to keep me warm.  Excuse me while I leave this breezy outdoor lounge and head to my warm room!  
    February 05

    For the shutterbugs

    Dear Reader, I haven't had much time to blog while on vacation in Hawaí'i.  It has to do with having wireless access for my laptop in the guest bedroom.  Í haven't spent much time there, so I haven't been online very much.  That's OK--I'm on vacation.  I have however found time to take photos, organize them, and shrink them for the Web.  I posted four new photo albums for you viewing pleasure.  Three are from goodbye parties--The Nunchuks' farewell concert on January 21, our son's goodbye party on January 27, and our Noraebang Night on the evening of January 27.  I also posted about four dozen photos from our recent trip to the Polynesian Cultural Center on O'ahu Island, Hawai'i.  Enjoy!
     
    Blog Note:  Bob, thanks for reminding me I still have a blog reader.  Sorry, we won't be back in Virginia until March; we're on the road throughout February.  See you in March (I hope)!  Also, Dear Reader, I wanted to give you a public service message--15 power sunscreen is not enough for a day on the beach!  Try 45.  My face is very red.  In addition to my Hawai'ian shirts, I now look like a tourist more than ever! 
    February 01

    Aloha, Hawai'i

    Dear Reader, we made it to Hawai'i after a long, arduous packout and move.  We arrived yesterday and still have not quite adjusted to the time difference (+4 hours).  Jetlag hit us less than it would have if we had flown directly to the Continental U.S.  Hopefully by stopping halfway in Hawai'i we will ease into the time transition.  Well, so here we are...in paradise.  The weather isn't so good here right now with rain and high wind warnings, but it feels good to me.  While the locals bundle up, we're dressing in shorts and cheesy tropical, floral Hawai'ian shirts.  Some homes on the Windward side of O'ahu Island lost their roof, but otherwise, things don't seem too out of the ordinary to me.  A large palm frond landed in the green space outside my brother's apartment, but fortunately no one was hurt.  I'll take bad weather in paradise anyday over a nice winter day in Korea any day.
     
    What a difference two years makes.  Two years ago we arrived here for a week's vacation on our way to Korea for a two-year tour.  Two years ago, we arrived sick and with bad memories of Delta Airlines (check the February 2005 archives to read about our ordeal).  Two years later, we feel much best and have a lifetime of memories from Korea.  People say that returning from a multi-year assignment can feel like a dream--you lived it, but the memories leave you feeling like you were never there.  It's especially true returning to the same place you left just two years ago.  Korea is quickly becoming like a dream; a good and bad dream, but a dream nonetheless.  And it's only been two days since we left!