Thursday, March 25, 2021

The East Frisian Page -- March 21, 2021

East Frisia is a small coastal region in northwestern Germany, bordering the Netherlands.

1. If East Frisia were a country, its annual consumption of tea at 300 liters per capita would be the highest in the world. But it's not a country. So, let's ask this question: at 290 liters tea per capita which country is in first place?

__ India
__ England
__ Ireland
__ Turkey
__ Kuwait

Link here

From Wiki, East Frisia.

In an otherwise coffee drinking country (Germany), East Frisia is noted for its consumption of tea and its tea culture.

Per capita, the East Frisian people drink more tea than any other people group, about 300 litres per person every year.

Nearly 75 percent of all tea imported to Germany is consumed in this region.

Strong black tea is served whenever there are visitors to an East Frisian home or other gathering, as well as with breakfast, in mid-afternoon and mid-evening.

The tea is sweetened with kluntjes, a rock candy sugar that melts slowly, allowing multiple cups to be sweetened.

Heavy cream is also used to flavour the tea. The tea is generally served in traditional small cups, with little cookies during the week and cake during special occasions or on weekends as a special treat. Some of the most common traditional cakes and pastries to accompany tea are apple strudel, black forest cake, and other cakes flavored with chocolate and hazlenut.

2. Name the breed of horse Zorro rode in The Mask of Zorro (1998) and The Legend of Zorro (2005).
__ Arabian
__ Friesian
__ Morgan
__ Budweiser Clydesdales

Answer at wiki if I forget to provide answer later. 

3. From germangirlinamerica

What else is East Frisia "famous" for?

The birthplace of the Mennonites. Their founder was Menno Simons, 1496 - 1561.

Saturday, March 20, 2021

11983

I was intrigued by your mention of "This is what the Bakken is all about" -  the Charlson well from 1988 that's been reentered twice.  Obviously, since it's listed as a USA well, I knew it'd be near the south shore of the Lake, but I wanted to know the neighborhood.

It's in the SE quarter of the SE quarter of Section 5.  The lake shore is 1 mile north of that.  Running parallel to the shore, there's about a 2 1/2 mile deep buffer owned by USA or ND Game and Fish.  Immediately south of that buffer are old time family names of Jellesed, Norby, Mogen, Moberg.  A childhood friend is married to a Jellesed, so I've been on that place.  Further south are the families of Wisness and Washburn.

The late Arnel Jellesed was born around 1910 or 1915.  He's been dead for years.  His widow, Lillian, had a nice obituary - great ND story.  Anyway, Jellesed's hit some of the first oil around.  1950's or 1960's.  Arnel bought an airplane and flew it into Watford so he could take flying lessons.  (;>)

The farmstead is on nice, flat land, but their "backyard" gets rough real quick and runs down to the Lake.  Their oldest son, Arne, was born in 1952, and he claims to remember the water backing up to fill the dam.  Their house is on Section 21, so that's 2 miles south and a mile east of this well.  The Swenson homestead would be 2 miles further south and a mile further east.  (;>)

Here's Lillian's obituary:


Arnel was a good operator.  Apparently the Jellesed's sold draft horses to the homesteaders (one generation before Arnel).  There's quite a big, landmark barn on the place.  So, he had some extra money in his pocket even before oil.  Many years after he died, the family was still discovering mineral rights that he'd bought.  A typical scenario was that he'd been in a bar in Ray, somebody had a good poker hand and needed $100 to call the pot.  Arnel would advance the cash and pick up a few mineral acres.  (;>)  Or somebody's wife needed surgery and Arnel would pay the bill in exchange for some minerals.  I think they found stuff in several counties and even into Montana.  They didn't find it when they settled the estate - it only showed up when someone was running title to get leases signed when the Bakken heated up about 10 years ago.  At that time, he'd probably been dead for 15 years or so.  Quite a legacy.  I never knew him.  I did know Lillian and really enjoyed her.  Her kitchen was the best of ND farm kitchens.  When they added on to the house, she just bumped the kitchen out about 10 or 12 feet.  So, that side of the house had a wall of windows along the south side.  She left in place the original lower cupboards, creating an island that must have been 12 feet long.  Then, there was just another set of cupboards attached on the other side.  So, it was a marvelous place to cook and drink coffee.  Typical in that the bedrooms were smallish by today's standards, and they could have used another bathroom.  Not nearly enough closet space by today's standards, but, oh that comfy kitchen

And, Lillian's boys, Arne and Leif are both very good dancers!  I credited her with that, and she just beamed.  Those Grassy Butte dances were a blast.


Anyway, one of the entries on the DMR website says that 11983's oil is collected by Paradigm.  Remember that 3 Affiliated Tribes owns 12% of the 91 mile long, newish, pipeline that runs under the Van Hook Arm of the Lake.  As near as I can tell, that pipe would be 8 or 10 miles east of this well.  It's hard to tell exactly where the pipeline runs (I guess they like keeping Jane Fonda in suspense - ha!)  But, that's one of the reasons they'll keep refreshing these wells - they can move the gas and oil easily.
 

Sacagawea Pipeline - Paradigm Midstream

Thursday, March 18, 2021

Schwab Wine Tasting Event -- March 18, 2021

 “The softer the cheese, the lighter the wine.”

Wine Tasting: Schwab — Webex Events

Panelists

  • Lori Cajimat
  • *Alpana Singh
  • Donald Klein
  • *Gerald Moran
  • Jason Meeks


Text continues below the photos.



Ethel M Chocolates: Duos

  • Website here.
  • Gourmet premium chocolate: Henderson (Las Vegas), Nevada; wiki here;
  • Other brands: M&Ms; MARS
  • Ethel M is owned by Mars, Incorporated; and, was named after the mother of Forrest Mars, Sr.
  • created in 1978; opened in 1980, as a project to cure the boredom he experienced after retiring;
  • selected Nevada because it was one of the few states that allowed the sale of liqueur-filled cordials;

At Amazon.




Wine Chips

  • Manchego: Rosé Bubbly (website here -- SOLD OUT -- tell me again this is a bad economy)
  • Ribeye: Wine - Red (website here)

Champagne: Nicolas Feuillatte, rosé, Choiully, France

  • Nicolas Feuillatte
  • Chouilley, France
  • ripe berry fruit —
  • before, with dinner, and after dinner, dessert
  • great with chocolate
  • French dishes
    • for rich, creamy dishes
    • great against fat, salty, and sweet
    • risotto: creamy Italian rice dish
    • mushroom sauce
    • crême beurre
  • goes with Indian food
  • Samosas: really delicious from Central Market, Southlake, TX; fried or bake pastry filled with a savory filling;
  • 
fried chicken
  • chips
  • Vietnamese food
  • perfect for a BYOB wine
  • perfect for a house-warming gift
  • proper glass
    • tulip type; not a flute
  • must be chilled
    • fastest way to chill: bucket of ice with tons of salt
    • 
but not too cold
  • 7 - 10% sugar, sweet
  • demi-sec = 1/2 sweet
  • brut: least sweet

Chardonnay: Kosta Browne, 2018, One-Sixteen, Russian River Valley

  • “cab”
well-balanced “oaky” and buttery

  • Kosta Browne
  • 2018
  • One-Sixteen
  • Russian River Valley
  • chardonnay
  • warmer climes
  • lower acid levels
  • more buttery
  • Chardonnay Food pairings
    • serve with foods served with drawn butter (think seafood)
good with cream, classic French sauces
    • cheesy, cream, sauce
    • Triple Creme cheese
    • Roquefort
    • Popcorn
  • Lambrusco -- wiki; lambruco?
  • levels of sweetness
  • charcuterie (salami) — picnic -- wiki;
  • with Riunite — Lini 910
  • Fumé blanc: sauvignon blanc made in the US; has likely gone through some oak aging;
  • 1970’s term
  • aged in oak


Zinfandel: Ridge Lytton Springs, 2018, Dry Creek Valley
72% zinfandel, 18% petite sirah, 8% carignane, 2% mataro — grape varieties

Cabernet Sauvignon: La Jota Vineyard Co; Howell Moutain Estate; Napa Valley;

  • the wine of prestige
  • La Jota Vineyard: makes the best merlot; more sensitive
  • Napa Valley
  • 2015 Howell Mountain
  • The Rock Star
  • tannins
  • can stand on its own
  • CAB: measure one's worth by CAB
  • prestige factor
  • good level cab: $100; over $200 level — stars!
  • the story matters and goes into the price point
  • food pairings
    • “slab and a cab”; steak
    • braised meat: pot roast, stake taco
    • chili
  • needs umami: why it matters;
  • manchego cheese
  • gouda 
  • parmeson
  • dry — no residual sugar
  • sweetness: only felt with tip of tongue
  • can be subtle and everyday and can also be a rock star

TAKEAWAY

Bruce: "So what would you like with your steak tonight?"

May:  "A Zin. You know, the great American wine."

Bruce: "Any particular one?"

May: "Maybe a Ridge Lyttone Springs, if you have it."

Bruce: "How about a 2018?"

Monday, March 15, 2021

Brian Williams Is Really, Really Bad At Math -- March 15, 2021

Bad math: on the way to looking up something else late last night, I noted this. Do you remember that YouTube video in which Brian Williams and a New York Times editor completely blew it doing simple math? That video had millions of views and I posted it a number of times on the blog.

I noted last night that YouTube had removed that video. It was taken down at my posts where I had posted it. I was able to find it again -- this one was posted March 5, 2020 -- so it was one "they" missed -- note it has only 12,000 views over the past year.

Speaks volumes about YouTube. If this one is pulled there are others that are still there and others will be re-posted, but NBC/NY Times/Brian Williams are doing what they can to pull this video. LOL.

Here's the link. Embedded:


Other links:


 

 

Monday, March 8, 2021

British Royalty -- How It Works -- A Primer -- British Royalty 101 -- For Meghan -- March 8, 2021

From a reader:

If anyone watches / watched the "When Harry Met Meghan" interview with Oprah the other night, supposedly she complained that her son doesn't have a royal title.  I say "supposedly" because I wouldn't watch Oprah unless Charlie Russell were resurrected and appeared on her show.

Anyway, that dimwit needs a history lesson:
Peter Phillips is the Queen's first grandchild (son of Her Highness, Anne, The Princess Royal).  The Queen's first grandchild doesn't have a royal title.  Neither do any other of Princess Anne's children.  Princess Anne married a commoner.  Meghan is a commoner.  

And, then, there's this:

(Note that Sophie and Prince Edward were married in 1999 - apparently neither Meghan nor Oprah have a clue as to the precedent.  Or, facts interfere with their story and they rely on their fans to be sufficiently ill-informed to not dispute their stupidity)

In the UK there are very specific rules regarding who is entitled to be a Prince or Princess. Most of these rules come from Letters Patent issued in 1917 by King George V, in which the King accords the Princely title to all children of the Sovereign, to the Sovereign’s male-line grandchildren and to the eldest living of the Prince of Wales’s eldest son.

However, when the Law of Succession changed to absolute primogeniture in 2012, The Queen issued new Letters Patent to make sure that all children of the Prince of Wales’s eldest son were entitled to be Princes and Princesses. That change was necessary because if the Duchess of Cambridge’s firstborn had been a girl, she would be ahead of any younger brother in the succession, but still be titled as a Lady, while her younger brother would be a Prince.

Now, why are Prince Edward’s children not titled as Prince and Princess? As male-line grandchildren of Queen Elizabeth II, they have as much right to a princely title as the children of Prince Charles or Prince Andrew.

Just as happened on Prince Harry’s wedding day, when Buckingham Palace released a statement to announce his future titles, the same happened on the day Prince Edward wed Sophie Rhys-Jones.

Prince Edward’s statement, however, came with many surprises. First of all, it broke with a centuries-old tradition that children of the monarch were created Dukes upon marriage. Prince Edward became Earl of Wessex, but the statement made clear that the Royal Family intended for him to be created Duke of Edinburgh after both Charles’s accession and Prince Philip’s death.

It also announced that The Queen decided, with the consent of both Edward and Sophie, that any children the couple might have together would not be given the style His or Her Royal Highness, but instead be styled as children of an Earl. That makes Prince Edward’s children The Queen’s first male-line descendants not to have royal titles, and in accordance with Her Majesty’s 1960 Order-in-Council, they are the firsts to be allowed the proper use of the Mountbatten-Windsor family name.

As a result, their daughter is The Lady Louise Mountbatten-Windsor, as opposed to HRH Princess Louise of Wessex, and their son is James, Viscount Severn, who uses his father’s subsidiary title as a courtesy and is not HRH Prince James of Wessex.

Sunday, March 7, 2021

EVs -- From A Reader -- March 7, 2021

As an engineer I love the electric vehicle technology However, I have been troubled for a longtime by the fact that the electrical energy to keep the batteries charged has to come from the grid and that means more power generation and a huge increase in the distribution infrastructure Whether generated from coal, gas, oil, wind or sun, installed generation capacity is limited A friend sent me the following that says it very well. You should all take a look at this short article.



IF ELECTRIC CARS DO NOT USE GASOLINE, THEY WILL NOT PARTICIPATE IN PAYING A GASOLINE TAX ON EVERY GALLON THAT IS SOLD FOR AUTOMOBILES, WHICH WAS ENACTED SOME YEARS AGO TO HELP TO MAINTAIN OUR ROADS AND BRIDGES. THEY WILL USE THE ROADS, BUT WILL NOT PAY FOR THEIR MAINTENANCE!

In case you were thinking of buying hybrid or an electric car:

Ever since the advent of electric cars, the REAL cost per mile of those things has never been discussed. All you ever heard was the mpg in terms of gasoline, with nary a mention of the cost of electricity to run it. This is the first article I've ever seen and tells the story pretty much as I expected it to.

Electricity has to be one of the least efficient ways to power things yet they're being shoved down our throats. Glad somebody finally put engineering and math to paper.

At a neighborhood BBQ I was talking to a neighbor, a BC Hydro Executive. I asked him how that renewable thing was doing. He laughed, then got serious.

If you really intend to adopt electric vehicles, he pointed out, you had to face certain realities. For example, a home charging system for a Tesla requires 75 amp service. The average house is equipped with 100 amp service. On our small street (approximately 25 homes), the electrical infrastructure would be unable to carry more than three houses with a single Tesla, each. For even half the homes to have electric vehicles, the system would be wildly over-loaded.

This is the elephant in the room with electric vehicles. Our residential infrastructure cannot bear the load. So as our genius elected officials promote this nonsense, not only are we being urged to buy these things and replace our reliable, cheap generating systems with expensive, new windmills and solar cells, but we will also have to renovate our entire delivery system! This latter "investment" will not be revealed until we're so far down this dead end road that it will be presented with an 'OOPS...!' and a shrug.

If you want to argue with a green person over cars that are eco-friendly, just read the following. Note: If you ARE a green person, read it anyway. It's enlightening.

Eric test drove the Chevy Volt at the invitation of General Motors and he writes, "For four days in a row, the fully charged battery lasted only 25 miles before the Volt switched to the reserve gasoline engine ". Eric calculated the car got 30 mpg including the 25 miles it ran on the battery. So, the range including the 9-gallon gas tank and the 16 kwh battery is approximately 270 miles.

It will take you 4.5 hours to drive 270 miles at 60 mph. Then add 10 hours to charge the battery and you have a total trip time of 14.5 hours. In a typical road trip your average speed (including charging time) would be 20 mph.

According to General Motors, the Volt battery holds 16 kwh of electricity. It takes a full 10 hours to charge a drained battery. The cost for the electricity to charge the Volt is never mentioned, so I looked up what I pay for electricity.

I pay approximately (it varies with amount used and the seasons) $1.16 per kwh. 16 kwh x $1.16 per kwh = $18.56 to charge the battery. $18.56 per charge divided by 25 miles = $0.74 per mile to operate the Volt using the battery. Compare this to a similar size car with a gasoline engine that gets only 32 mpg. $3.19 per gallon divided by 32 Mpg = $0.10 per mile.

The gasoline powered car costs about $25,000 while the Volt costs $46,000 plus. So the Canadian Government wants loyal Canadians not to do the math, but simply pay twice as much for a car, that costs more than seven times as much to run, and takes three times longer to drive across the country.

WAKE UP NORTH AMERICA!!!!!!!

Saturday, March 6, 2021

With Apologies to Fleetwood Mac -- March 6, 2021

Following you
Isn't the right thing to do
How can we ever change things
That we feel

If we could
Maybe we'd believe you
How can we
When you want us to double mask

You can go your own way
Go your own way
You can call it a day
Tell us to double mask
You can go your own way
Go your own way

Tell me why
You keep changing your advice
No mask, single mask,
Now double masking is all you want to do

If I could,
Dr Fauci, I'd forget you,
Open up,
Everyone's waiting for you

You can go your own way
Go your own way
You can call it a day
Tell us to double mask
You can go your own way
Go your own way

Repeat. Ad nauseam. 

Ad nauseum.