Thursday, July 29, 2010

Wow that went fast


I write this during the last week of this stint. Last weekend, we went to one of our favorite places, the Lodge at Suttle Lake, where we have been a few times before, but again the first time during summer. As we approach the lake we are reminded by the massive forest fire that occured here in 2003, burning whole mountains full of trees, including the former lodge. The dead, burned out trees are much more obvious during the summer with the contrasting greenery which is missing during the winter. Thesc charred giants, slowly discintigrate while their little seedlings strive to replace them in covering this glorious scenery with evergreen. Our former pictures of Suttle Lake were made with ice on the lake. These early morning pics give us that "clear as glass" reflection image. The water that runs in the creek away from the lake is crystal clear. Check out this "petunia wagon" near Leavitt's Western Wear in Sisters.  After browsing a little in Sisters and snapping a few more pics of the 3 Sisters (mountains) we asked our new Garmin to guide us to Portland so Georgia could catch the plane to Indy Monday morning before I went back to the last week of work. (Feeling much better, but a bit lonely). We were a little surprised when Garmin took us, not up I-5, but through berry country via Oregon City, a delightful "side" trip. The only bummer was that we didn't have any way to handle berrys so we didn't stop, though we were really tempted. Somewhere on the trip, we hit something and I noticed the car shimmied a bit around 60 while driving back to Corvallis. Think I found a trustworthy auto shop. They have our car and have diagnosed a blown strut. I'll let you know later how that works out. One of the "summer" things we didn't get to do was visit "Mary's Peak", a nearby mountain in the coastal range that is the highest point on the coastal range. I decided that since I was going home alone anyway, and the sky was clear, I should trek up there Monday nite. Including filling up with gas, it only took me about an hour to reach the peak after work.  Wow. Although it was fantastic, by the time I got up there there were clouds forming over some of the things I wanted to see. Supposedly you can actually see the coast (about 40 miles away), several of the cascade peaks (100 miles) and Mount Hood east of Portland and even Mount Adams and some other peaks in the state of Washington. The most recognizable peak I saw was Mout Jefferson, near Sisters. However the clouds covered it before I coud get a picture. I tried to capture the grandure, but don't think I came close. As I was leaving, people were gathering to watch the sunset... I wasn't up to driving down the twisty-turney in the dark, so came on down. Hard to believe that majestic view is so close to Corvallis.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

First week for this trip

Our 5th trip to Corvallis and our first one in July. I was only here about 2 days when I started with upper respiratory signs. Actually it lasted for about 2 weeks with 3 sleepless nights due to coughing. Since this county boasts as being the "Grass Seed Capitol of the World" and we have seen mountains of grass seed in piles, fields of gold in various stages from standing crops replete with seeds to fresh cut, to windrows to fields full of bails of various shapes and sizes, I had assumed that I had succumbed to the scourge of the northwest; allergy...  As I look back, I think I picked up someone's summer bug on the way out. That aside, when we came here last June, we got a glimpse of Oregon in bloom. Here in July we see more of the glory. Roadsides filled with Foxgloves and Sweet Peas and all kinds of yellow and white daisy types. I have seen more nasturtiums on the coast than I've ever seen.  And we have seen beautiful flowers that are completely foreign to us.. but the crowning glory, I think are the butterfly bushes that are 15 to 20 feet tall and blue hydrangias that are nearly azure, rather than the pale blue we sometimes see in the midwest. Our first weekend was spent on the coast. We returned to the Ocean House B&B in Newport for the overnight. Got to walk a bit at Lost Creek Beach where people were playing and walking and building sandcastles. Georgia found some black rocks.... lots of black rocks. We ate at "Nana's Irish Pub" in Newport, run by an Irish mother and daughter.... cool place, good food. http://nanasirishpub.com/ 
Sunday we headed north to Depoe Bay, Boiler Bay, and Lincoln City. (Whale sighting country).. Georgia who loves mistery stories, found an article in a local rag about this local author (Ronald P. Lovell ) a retired Oregon State University faculty member who was signing books in Lincoln City. To make a long story shorter, we found a recommended Bob's Beach Books and bought a couple of Lovell's books then made our way to Captain Dan's Pirate Pastry shop in Lincoln City where we found Mr. Lovell and a friend sitting at a table with several copies of his new book... Georgia got her books signed and her picture taken with the author. On the way back, she got some pictures of people flying kites along the ocean beach.. After stopping at Tidal Raves in Depoe Bay for a late lunch, we made it back before dark, ready for the second week.

Monday, July 12, 2010

July 2010 Wyoming to Corvallis

This post picks up were we left you in Gothenberg, Nebraska. We did make it to Rock Springs. Got a good night's sleep, then decided we had time to take the "Pilot Butte Wild Horse Loop". http://www.wyomingtourism.org/overview/Wild-Horses-Loop-Tour-/30913
Although the locals, all the pubs, etc. promised exciting experiences with "the most likely place in America to see wild horses".... the further we went, the more we got, "if you don't encounter wild horses, you still can take in the natural beauty"... It is worth the trip, just to see the terrain from that viewpoint, looking down across the valley onto Rock Springs and Green River, WY... and so much more. We saw lots of "road apples", some rather fresh. Antelope, mucho sagebrush, lots of really nice wild flowers, but the horses must have been elsewhere this day. There were a few other folks on the same hunt, including a family from Michigan who even called the agency number and got no help. You can see their vehicle in one of the pictures traveling the gravel roads that spider-web out from Sweetwater County road 53. Some of the places require 4-wheel drive, and some required more than we felt we had, but we did make it up the trail about halfway up Pilot Butte which is an impressive landmark that guided early travelers (thus Pilot). You can see from some of the pictures on the markers along the road that we are where horses have been... hence the poop piles. We could have gone back to Rock Springs to see some that they have penned up so you can really see a wild horse if you miss the free running ones.... as Georgia says,"I can see penned up horses anytime I want." As we made our way into Utah we were taken with the green mountains. It reminded us of pictures we have seen of Ireland.. We spent the next night in Twin Falls, Idaho where we had stopped in January 08, but this time there was a new Hilton Garden Inn... Nice place! From there our destination was Oregon. We had planned to go to Burns, Oregon which would have divided our remaining driving time in half, but there was some kind of festival there and no rooms. So we tried Bend, another 2 hours west... Two large festivals there including a music festival.... no rooms. We discussed it and decided to try for Sisters.. If you have read our past posts, you should see Sisters, Oregon several times. One of our "favs".. We called Five Pine Lodge to find out that there was a Quilt Festival for that day. http://www.sistersoutdoorquiltshow.org/  but she suggested that the Best Western Ponderosa might have a room.  Oh oh... We have been staying in places where we felt safe from surprises... But in our experience, with Best Western, you don't really know what you will get... We didn't want to go down the west side of the Cascades in the dark.... been there, done that... Called the Best Western and got a really nice suite for the night.. upper level and all. So we wondered and worried about what we would run into. When we left Interstate 84 in Ontario, Oregon and headed across the "Central Oregon Highway" (which by the way goes from Ontario to Newport (on the coast)), we knew we were facing lots of "nothing".. When we came across in January 08, it was snowy and bleak, and getting dark fast. This time much of it was green since they do a lot of irrigation on the east and west sides of the expanse. We saw our first fields of potatoes (yes in Oregon, not Idaho).. Lavender, Onions, and lots of alfalfa. It was 120 miles of "nothing" to Burns, then 90 miles more of the same to Bend.. Then all of a sudden, we were in the Cascades. Got into Sisters and stopped to eat at the Three Creek Brewery... See previous posts... we'd been there before.. I got a fantastic sausage sandwich and the best cup of gazpacho soup I had ever had... If Chess Adams reads this.... his was good, but this was just fantastic. After eating, we got to the Ponderosa Lodge and it was just great. http://www.bestwesternsisters.com/tour.htm Since the lodge borders a national forest, on the way to breakfast this morning, I saw some birds I had never seen before that make a really strange sound. The staff identified them as "Pinyon Jays".. http://identify.whatbird.com/obj/80/_/Pinyon_Jay.aspx   Today, we finished the trip and set up housekeeping at 800 SW Washington in Corvallis. I get to see what the OSU vet students assigned to Radiology remember from my teaching in winter quarter of 09.. and feel like a contributor to education again for a short time. Next weekend, we hopt to hit the coast and say hello to the Pacific Ocean.... Whales???? who knows. Hopefully they haven't heard from the White Mountain Wild Horse heard that we are coming!

Thursday, July 8, 2010

reposting of first posts

Here is the text from when this blog began. I did recover a few of the pictures, but not too clear. I had thought I needed to keep the volume down, so had removed the early ones... I find that isn't true, so here they are again.. But without all the pictures.
Interfaces archive

January 26, 2008
Continuous Learning

Maybe old dogs can learn new tricks, as long as the tricks are simple. So, here is yet another adventure into the unknown. I happen to be one of those people who know just enough about computers to be dangerous. Through the years, I have gotten fairly proficient at Adobe Photoshop, knowing that I have just scratched the surface of that great (and expensive) program. My latest effort was to try to help a student understand the radiographic diagnosis of canine hip dysplasia... I took the original radiograph, cut out the femoral heads, and moved them to where they should be.... coloring diagnostic differences. Watcha think??? Steve Martin, move over.





January 30 Interfaces explained
These images may not be right where they belong, but hopefully they will help convey the concepts. So, it's early in the morning. (Well it was when I started this.) I've had my shower and a great Hampton Inn breakfast. After braving a 50 degree drop in temperature and ungodly wind while driving to this place, we were whipped when we arrived. Weather looks promising today, including snow maybe all day long. That thought brought joy to the heart of my bride of 44 years… Her dream is to get snowed in, just like we did at home in northern Indiana as kids. Another long story for another time. Anyway, she isn't quite ready to brave the day yet, so I thought I would take the time to explain the name of this site; interfaces.  In my work trying to help veterinary students understand radiographs (x-rays to you non-medical folk), there are now several thousand veterinarians who have had the concept of interfaces beat into their heads by yours truly… How's that for a sentence?
All body parts fall into opacity categories based on their ability to stop x-rays. The more "dense" things like bones stop more rays (opaque to rays = radio-opaque), leaving a white area on the film to represent the bone, while less "dense" things which are less radio-opaque are represented by more dark grey or black areas of the film. In radiology (the study of x-ray) there are 5 different opacity categories;
Gas (in the lungs, stomach, and intestine… ie. Impending farts)
Fat (we all know where that is)
Soft tissue and fluid This is muscle, organs such as kidneys, heart, and liver as well as fluids such as blood and urine.

Bone
Metal (such as bone plates or screws)

Looking at the first image, notice the marbling (fat) in the steak. Why would we think that the top radiograph was taken in the summer or the south? (See the fish-hook?)

Now if all of these things were the same opacity, we would not be able to see anything on a radiograph. However it is the INTERFACE between these things of different opacity that allows us to see that they are actually there. In the very thin dog or cat, for instance, you cannot see the edges of the liver or kidneys because there is no interface as all of these soft tissue structures are lying against each other. Most dogs and cats (especially today) have deposited enough fat in their abdomen (belly) that there is fat surrounding nearly all organs. It is this fat/soft tissue interface that allows us to see these organs.
This last radiograph is of a young bulldog who loved to chew on things. You can see the gas in the stomach and bowels. You can barely make out the kidneys as there is just enough fat around them to provide interfaces for their visualization. If you look in her gas filled stomach, you can see a "GI Joe" running toward you. He is made of plastic which in this case is somewhere between soft tissue and mineral opacity interafacing with the gas. There you go with your first lesson in radiographic interpretation. You can see that without opacity interfaces, medical x-rays would be impossible to interpret. We depend on them… And interfaces between people are inevitable. Let's try to keep them as positive as we can. I hope some people get some benefit from this, my feeble attempt to interface with you. Skk

January 31,2008 Two Ply Toilet Paper

This morning I recieved yet another lesson from the most basic source. I got the opportunity to load a new roll of toilet paper in our "home" on the road. Somehow I got it started "between" the 2 plys and I wasted quite a bit before I got it on track. Surely you've faced this dilemma. If not, perhaps you've been rushing through wrapping a present and all of a sudden, the Scotch tape tears obliquely and you lose the end. As you scratch and swear, you're throwing away tape because you can't find the beginning... My experience with the toilet paper reminded me that to some of you whom I have invited to share this interface space, as well as those of you that unsuspectingly stumbled to this place, I have placed you between the plys, and you have not idea where I'm coming from, or going.
After Over 30 years of teaching veterinary radiology in veterinary colleges, I have recently retired. During that time, there were 2 parts of my work that "turned me on". First is the "I got it" expression of students to whom I am attempting to impart understanding of this exciting subject of veterinary radiology. The second most favorite part of my work has been the thrill of the hunt. A radiologist gets to do the discovery work in figuring out what is ailing a patient, while the primary clinician "gets" to manage the case. When I retired, 2 things spurred me to get into the "locum" business. First, I feel I still have something to offer, and second, we want to travel (even outside the USA) and that will take money...
Now I have to take you through another hoop. I am a second generation veterinary radiologist. The pioneers who taught me were the first veterinarians to specialize, creating the first specialty group in the American Veterinary Medical Association, the ACVR. http://www.acvr.org/

During the early portion of my career, veterinary specialists were all in the veterinary colleges, just as many of my collegues are today. About 20 years ago, veterinary specialists, including radiologists began leaving the "hallowed halls" and setting up private specialty practices. These have fluorished doing 2 thing. First they offer specialty veterinary medicine to clients all over the nation (in fact world) in locations far from veterinary colleges. The second affect was that at present veterinary colleges are having considerable difficulty attracting veterinary specialists because private practice is more lucrative and to those who are not driven by the bent to teach or do research, there are fewer "headaches". This is the situation that places me where I am now. At my retirement, I offered myself to veterinary colleges to fill in doing locums *there's that word again. Time for another side trip.
Locum Tenens (shortened to locum) is temporary employment for physicians (and veterinarians?) It's usually a temporary position where you're filling until the position can be filled permanently. However at many veterinary colleges, these positions are filled by a parade of people like myself who are able to move about. So far since June, I have had the opportunity to work at some very neet places, like Purdue University, the University of Illinois and Michigan State University.
Now my bride and I (A term I borrowed from the great veterinary radiologist "Tim" O'Brien) are heading to Oregon State University where we will spend 6 weeks in a locum in addition to finishing a basic radiology course to their students which I started (by remote, web based learning) One fupaw I may have committed is that the first time these students see me in person, I will be administering their first test.... poor planning on my part; hopefully they will get over it.
While we are gone our great neighbors and our children will be watching and somewhat occupying our home.
There, do you feel like you are back at the correct starting place on the roll?

As I started this, I realized that I was at a serious crossroads in which I was about to counter one of my life commandments. I explained the need to bring you up to speed so that you weren't starting in the middle of the movie. However, to some of you, I have broken my "no repeat" rule. There are few movies or TV shows that I can tolerate watching again. A few that slip through for me are "a Christmas Story", "Blazing Saddles", and "Young Frankenstein". Those I can handle. Oh Yes, also "The Villian" ( http://www.imbd.com/title/tt0080097/.
So those of you who already knew all of this are now saying, "why didn't you put that in the beginning so I wouldn't have to read through all of that to find out something I already knew. Hey, I'm just learning. I will share one little experience. Here on the western side of CST, it doesn't get daylight until after 7:30 am on January 31.
For another perspective on our travels, see: http://georgia-wintersong.blogspot.com/

January 31, 2008 Plans interrupted produce blessings
After the long drive yesterday, we got a bit of a late start today. Everything was clicking along just great. We had reservations in Rock Springs, Wyoming, which would have put us ahead of our goal and deep into the mountains. We could take our time and not worry about getting a room, etc.. Then we stopped to fill up and grab a bite on the west side of Laramie... Although we had been listening to traffic radio, we were't prepared to hear that I-80 was closed.. So finding there was a Hampton Inn in Laramie, we called, reserved a room and asked them to cancel our reservation in Rock Springs. I'll let Georgia fill in the details, but we were directed to Grand Avenue Pizza in Laramie.... Wow! was that good. Now we're settling in hoping to get a good start tomorrow (Friday). Here are some pics captured from the web to let you know what we almost got into. That's it.. no wit, just the facts, skk aarrgghh!!! I'm tired of fighting placement of these pics, Sorry, they're going to have to stay as they are

February