Monday, January 12, 2015
Taking public transit to the January ASHRAE meeting
I paid $3 to take three buses and one light rail to my meeting today. I was lucky a bus route went right past the banquet center, I only had to walk about 100 yards after I stepped off the last bus. I took Metrobus 56 to Shrewsbury station, Metrolink to Brentwood I-64 station, Metrobus 57X to Ballas transfer center, and Metrobus 98 to 1970 Craig. The total trip from Energy-PE, LLC world headquarters to Spazio's banquet center took about one-and-one-half hours. Nice that it was mostly sunny and not very cold. The Ballas transfer center has a small electricity-heated building in which to wait, with drinking fountains. Metro's equipment is always clean, but the bus stops seem really far apart.
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
A Geothermal Experience
We spent the night of 2014-03-22 at the Springs Hotel in Hot Springs, AR, on our way home from Fort Worth, TX. This was my younger daughter's spring break college tour (Central Methodist Univ., Univ. of Tulsa, TCU). Drove all day from Fort Worth and had a half hour before the NPS visitor center at the former Fordyce Bathhouse closed, then walked south on the promenade along the hillside above and behind the bathhouses after stopping at the restored open spring on the way up. I washed my hands and face in hot water coming out of a rock there before we even checked in.
The next morning, after about an inch of rain the night before, we found hot water overflowing a storm drain up the hill behind the bathhouses, down the hill from the 43 capped springs, the NPS sources for the potable hot water fixtures. Vapor was rising from a storm drain at the bottom near the Hot Water Cascades, where hot water runs out of the bottom of the hill into descending pools, then into the sewer, and I washed my hands and face at the top pool. After we checked out, I filled my water bottle at a hot spring public drinking fountain and quaffed the elixir while driving home, instead of while strolling down Central.
The next morning, after about an inch of rain the night before, we found hot water overflowing a storm drain up the hill behind the bathhouses, down the hill from the 43 capped springs, the NPS sources for the potable hot water fixtures. Vapor was rising from a storm drain at the bottom near the Hot Water Cascades, where hot water runs out of the bottom of the hill into descending pools, then into the sewer, and I washed my hands and face at the top pool. After we checked out, I filled my water bottle at a hot spring public drinking fountain and quaffed the elixir while driving home, instead of while strolling down Central.
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Not really what I expected to be Energy-PE's first post, but I just read that about 17,500 NASA employees are staying home today. Out of 18,000 NASA employees. I was at first surprised by how small the number was, then immediately felt reassured, that when the anarchists in Congress are finally put in their place, and the American community returns to making the world a better place, a relatively tiny contingent of 17,500 NASA employees will also return to providing our country with what must be one of the best returns on investment in the history of astronomical science.
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