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11/25/19 01:45 PM #17186    

 

David Cordell

Thanks for the info, Sandra. I'm not sure where a gas fireplace falls on the continuum. Let's see, the gas furnace generates 1/6 pound and the uncertified wood stove is 244 pounds. Presumably, a vented gas fireplace is less efficient than a gas furnace, and a wood-burning fireplace is less efficient than an uncertified wood stove. In any case, the gas fireplace is bound to be a lot less polluting than the wood version, plus it doesn't require  the effort of bringing wood inside and dealing with ashes. I wonder how much per hour it costs to run a gas fireplace at a moderate level. Probably less than the cost of firewood.


11/25/19 01:54 PM #17187    

 

David Cordell

Aha! Here is an answer: https://blog.constellation.com/2017/02/24/gas-wood-fireplace-comparison/

 


11/25/19 03:54 PM #17188    

 

Sandra Spieker (Ringo)

David,

Sadly, we have an all electric home and the fireplace is designed for wood only.  We have over 200 trees on our property.  Some are over 50 years old (we know because a few of them have died of Oak wilt.)  I have two huge trees that are now dead wood and need to come down.  Those will become a firewood pile.  We burned one huge tree a couple of years ago, it took two years to use the wood pile it created.  The bad news is, hiring someone to take it down is quite expensive.  We do own a nice chain saw and plan to use it soon.  Oak decline, or Oak wilt is pretty common over here. 


11/25/19 04:53 PM #17189    

 

David Cordell

Sandra, this comes under the heading of none-of-my-damn-business, but I don't think someone with a serious back issue should work with chainsaws and logs!!! 


11/25/19 06:13 PM #17190    

 

Jerry May

Well it's Monday night......are you ready for some....BLUES?

Can't help but like this guy~



 


11/26/19 07:44 AM #17191    

 

Sandra Spieker (Ringo)

David,

You are absolutely correct!  Anyone with back issues should never work with chainsaws and logs!  He doesn't.  Aaron does mainly and I help.  Last time we had a huge tree die, we hired a company called, "Firefighters Lawncare".  As promised the guy who gave us the quote was a firefighter.  Nice, strong and young (in his thirties).  I expected to see a team of firefighters come to the house to take down the tree.  I waited, camera in hand for young, eager, muscled young firefiighters to tackle our tree.  Not so. We did get two able bodied, acrobatic, tree climbing (it was 40 feet tall), daredevils, who were spry, lithe, hispanic men, and who, most likely, never put out a fire in their lives.  One climbed to the top of the monster tree in question with chain saw in hand and lopped off the higher branches.  It was spectacular.  Just not the beefcake I expected.  They left all of the branches and logs in the yard as requested.  WE, meaning Aaron and I, separated it all, dragged load after load of branches to the fire pit we have, broke them down so they would fit, and placed wheelbarrel loads of logs, neatly stacked, near our back fence.  It took one long day for us to accomplish this.  Danny cooked.

Aaron inspected the newest dead tree.  Part of the bark was peeling off, so he looked underneath it to reveal a nice juicey scorpion taking refuge from the cold weather there.  So the next challenge for anyone tackling this tree is not just back issues, but arachnids lurking on every branch, waiting for a healthy finger to latch onto.  WE, will wait for a very cold day and then think about it.


11/26/19 09:08 AM #17192    

 

Lowell Tuttle

Rock Rant

There were a lot of pretenders.  Elvis, The Beatles, Chuck Berry, Led Zepellin....but, the fullest commmittment to the life of a Rock Star to me is Pete Townshend...as part of The Who.

They blew me away...or at least that is what I am thinking after listenting to this with my wife peeking in  disdainfully. ...(see...rock is only for rockers...)


11/26/19 11:46 AM #17193    

 

Yvette Doran (Mouser)

We, too, have an all electric home, Sandra, with a wood burning fireplace; however, we no longer burn wood in it.  Instead, we have used multiple pillar candles and now have an artificial electric firelog that still gives the room a cozy feeling.  


11/26/19 05:15 PM #17194    

 

Lowell Tuttle

Aha!

Eminence front....it's a put on...

appropo Sue

 


11/26/19 05:17 PM #17195    

 

Lowell Tuttle

Another one of my fav''s....




11/26/19 09:49 PM #17196    

 

David Cordell

My sister-in-law is visiting and she wanted to watch Field of Dreams. As I have mentioned, my wife and I visited the Field of Dreams in Iowa in 2018. Anyway, it is high on my list of baseball movies. Here is an article on someone's list of favorite baseball movies. Any thoughts?

These are the 25 best baseball movies

By Will Leitch  @williamfleitch

March 11, 2019

Baseball is older than the movies themselves, and the first baseball movies featured well-recognized baseball players as the stars themselves; in many ways, they were our first movie stars. Right Off the Bat, widely considered the first baseball flick ever made, came out in 1915, the same year as the morally loathsome but cinematically groundbreaking The Birth of a Nation, and it starred John "Mugsy" McGraw as himself. McGraw actually appeared in dozens of movies that decade. The film industry was trying to capture America, and nothing was more American than baseball.

In the more than 100 years since, some of the most beloved movies made have been about baseball, and why not? Baseball's story is the story of our times, with heroes and villains, glory and scandal, triumph and failure, comedy and tragedy. It remains the most cinematic of our sports because it is, at its core, about human beings and their frailties and their glories. If baseball had never existed, the movies would have had to invent it.

Thus, sitting down to make a list of the best 25 baseball movies ever made is quite the challenge. You must consider their historical importance in the annals of cinematic lore ... but also, hey, it's baseball: This is supposed to be fun. I'm sure there are movies not on here that might make your list. But to me, these are the 25 baseball movies that best reflect what the sport is, both on screen and in the real world. Remember: There is no crying in baseball, but sometimes, there is crying in baseball movies.

1. Bull Durham (1988)
The conversations on the mound. The tricks for getting out of a slump. The managerial motivational tactics. Which hand to swing with in a fight. Bull Durham is a movie that understands the romance and madness of baseball better than any movie ever has, and it has an all-timer cast. The only thing better than watching this movie is watching an actual baseball game. And only barely.

2. A League of Their Own (1992)
A movie that has baseball in its bones as few other movies do, and one that tells a terrific story that few people even knew about. The cast is terrific top to bottom -- even Madonna is good in it! -- and the movie has the good fortune of having Tom Hanks as the crusty manager just before he became the biggest movie star in the world.

3. The Pride of the Yankees (1942)
Gary Cooper is an instantly iconic Lou Gehrig -- people to this day still think Gehrig looked like Cooper -- and don't forget the terrific portrayal of Babe Ruth by ... Babe Ruth!

4. Field of Dreams (1989)
Dads and their kids will cry every time they hear "have a catch" for the rest of time because of this movie.

5. Eight Men Out (1988)
Writer-director John Sayles' story of the Black Sox takes a literary, smart look at what remains the worst scandal in baseball's history.

6. Moneyball (2011)
The movie about math and data in baseball has a cheerful love of the sport, too, and Brad Pitt and Jonah Hill are an oddly perfect team.

7. The Natural (1984)
Director Barry Levinson changed the ending to let Roy Hobbs be the hero Robert Redford played him as, and while the book might have more tragic resonance, the movie sure does hit the romantic sweet spot.

8. The Sandlot (1993)
The kids classic sneaked up on people when it was released, but its nostalgia is even more powerful now. And it has the one quote you'll surely see on a T-shirt every time you go to a game: "You're killin' me, Smalls!"

9. Everybody Wants Some!! (2016)
Underappreciated when it came out a few years ago (many people thought Richard Linklater's follow-up to Boyhood was going to be far more serious than it was) this is one of the most purely fun, and quietly moving, looks at what it means to be on a college baseball team there has ever been. And we'll be looking at this cast in 20 years the way we look at the cast of Dazed and Confused now.

10. Major League (1989)
This is absolutely the movie that every baseball player you know probably puts at No. 1.

11. The Bad News Bears (1976)
The classic raucous Little League comedy with Walter Matthau got an unfortunate remake 29 years later, but the original still packs a punch today. Kelly Leak forever!

12. Bang the Drum Slowly (1973)
One of the best baseball weepies out there, this features a then-unknown Robert De Niro as a good-hearted but dim catcher who contracts a terminal illness and develops a friendship with the team's intellectual star pitcher.

13. The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings (1976)
This period piece about a group of Negro League stars putting together a traveling team that takes the country by storm in the 1930s has an almost cartoonishly awesome cast: Billy Dee Williams, James Earl Jones and Richard Pryor.

14. The Rookie (2002)
This story of Jim Morris, the high school science teacher who ended up making the big leagues at the age of 35, is a classic underdog tale that has the useful advantage of being based on a true story.

15. Take Me Out to the Ball Game (1949)
An old-school Technicolor musical directed by Busby Berkeley, starring Gene Kelly, Esther Williams and Frank Sinatra. Why haven't you seen this yet?

16. Damn Yankees (1958)
The classic musical about a man who loves his Washington Senators so much he'll sell his soul to the devil for them to beat the Yankees got a rousing film version as well. People still call the Yankees this 60 years later.

17. Sugar (2008)
This independent drama about a Dominican baseball player and his struggles to both survive and acclimate himself in the Minor Leagues is one of the more underappreciated movies of the last decade.

18. Fear Strikes Out (1957)
Anthony Perkins might look like he'd never touched a baseball in his life before this movie, but his portrayal of former Red Sox star Jimmy Piersall's battles with mental illness is excellent, and the film is rather daring for its time.

19. 42 (2013)
The story of Jackie Robinson's and Branch Rickey's battles to integrate baseball benefits greatly from its stars, Harrison Ford and a pre-Black Panther Chadwick Boseman.

20. Rookie of the Year (1993)
Having your favorite team -- the Cubs, no less! -- just pick you from the stands and have you pitch for them is a childhood fantasy that any kid can relate to.

21. Mr. 3000 (2004)
This raucous comedy featuring Bernie Mac as a retired player who comes back to the game years after retiring to get his 3,000th hit has a little more emotional resonance than you might have suspected.

22. Angels in the Outfield (1994)
I'm showing my age here, but I prefer the silly Christopher Lloyd remake for Disney (with a young Joseph Gordon-Levitt!) than the original with Janet Leigh.

23. 61* (2001)
Billy Crystal's ode to the home run chase between Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris is basically Baby Boomer catnip.

24. Cobb (1994)
Tommy Lee Jones plays the Tiger, both his warts and his ... well, also his warts. There has been some historical revisionism on Cobb in recent years, but Jones is Cobb at his worst: cruel, ornery and, of course, as great at baseball as anyone who ever played.

25. For Love of the Game (1999)
One of three Kevin Costner baseball movies, this is definitely the worst of them but still has its moments: I will think about it every time a veteran pitcher takes a no-hitter late into the game, for the rest of my life. Plus: John C. Reilly was born to play a catcher.


11/27/19 05:49 AM #17197    

 

David Cordell

WOW! Stephen F. Austin University beat Duke on Duke's home court! How does that happen??

Since The Who has been mentioned a couple of times and since we are approaching Christmas, I will re-post this photo of my son Christopher with The Who's front man, Roger Daltrey, after they made a commercial for A Chritmas Carol at Madison Square Garden, a musical by Alan Menken and Lynn Ahrens.


11/27/19 06:28 AM #17198    

 

Steve Keene

David,

Of movies of late, I like The Million Dollar Arm.


11/27/19 10:17 AM #17199    

 

Sandra Spieker (Ringo)

David,

If you get a chance watch Fever Pitch, it is a funny, romantic baseball movie.  Jimmy Fallon and Drew Barrymore are the stars.  

Edited to add this:  I also love, "Trouble with the Curve", a Clint Eastwood film. 


11/27/19 03:48 PM #17200    

 

Sandra Spieker (Ringo)

Sue,

Clint also writes the music for his films.  He is pretty good at that too!


11/27/19 03:49 PM #17201    

 

Steve Keene

Sue

I like to keep that movie around, too.  For snakes and such.


11/27/19 09:30 PM #17202    

 

David Cordell

Coincidence. I saw the last thirty minutes of Unforgiven this afternoon. Powerful movie. 

I really enjoyed Trouble with the Curve, also. I like Amy Adams, and I thought Justin Timberlake was very good. Of course, Clint is Clint. Haven't seen Fever Pitch.

Larson's perfect game in the 1956 World Series?? Unbelievable!!!


11/28/19 09:56 AM #17203    

 

Lowell Tuttle

Sue, I was gonna say...afterall, it was a "perfect" game...


11/28/19 10:11 AM #17204    

 

David Cordell

Here is a trivia question that shouldn't be too hard for baseball junkies. During the year of the quest for 61 (1961), the Yankees had a starter whose brother was a starter on a National League team. Name both players and the team (at that time) of the brother.


11/28/19 11:11 AM #17205    

 

Hull Barbee

Easy ........ it was the Boyer brothers .... Clete for the Yankees and Ken for the Cardinals 


11/28/19 05:10 PM #17206    

 

Lowell Tuttle

Not calling both of the remaining time outs as time ran out in the first half may have cost Cowboy's coach his job.

Also, Wramblin Wrecks, 8th grade RSI.  Charlie Williams double reverse hand off to left handed wingback, Lowell Tuttle, going left around the end half back pass to Bubba Bostick....just like those Bills today...

I am not sure if it was a TD though, can't remember.  Maybe Bubba and remember.


11/28/19 06:16 PM #17207    

 

Steve Keene

Cowboys stinking it up like the guest bathroom after Thanksgiving dinner.  Maybe we will get to be thankful for a new coach next year.  I kind of like Mike Leach.


11/28/19 07:50 PM #17208    

 

David Cordell

Cowboys are pathetic. I'm depressed. I'm about to watch the "double secret probation" edition of Animal House. That might cheer me up.


11/29/19 10:14 AM #17209    

Don Chester

Best possible outcome happened today

Time to reload and get an intense and smart HC


11/29/19 02:41 PM #17210    

 

David Cordell

Finally, the Horns win! 

Now, for some serious shopping.

 

 

 


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