Year: 2015

Resolution

It is here. I had the usual disorientation this holiday season. I lost the day after Christmas- I think. Or it could have been one of the other anonymous days not fraught with significance. This one comes with the obligation to make resolutions to make 2016 a better year, with all the necessary improvements to […]

Phishing Expedition

OK, at dinner last night at the prestigious 1921 Room at the new Army-Navy Country Club we talked about the Stones of the District plans to nail the last unvisited stone- that being SE9. We didn’t know that a family member was in a really bad situation, but knowing wouldn’t make anything any better. That […]

Internet Alert

Gentle readers, I intended to continue the District Stones saga this morning, but the following from an old shipmate startled me enough to change the production schedule. For those of you affected by the OPM data hack (as are most of the folks I know), please read the following horror story. I have frozen all […]

Stones of the District

(Curiously, SW9 is the only one of the stones to be a National Historic Landmark. It is named for Benjamin Banneker, and is an “Intermediate Stone,” unlike the four which mark the cardinal points of direction. What is left is a one foot square sandstone block, extending about 18 inches above ground and probably about […]

Stoned

(This is what is left of SW9, and is illustrative of just how hard it would be to find the pesky things if they were just the little stubs. Thankfully, the Daughters of the American Revolution provided the distinctive cage to protect whatever was left, and that is the signature the discerning stone seeker learners […]

Stones of the District

It is kind of a relief to not start out on the fantail of an ancient Dreadnaught, preparing to be irradiated by scientists who did not appreciate the magnitude of the forces with which they were playing. That said, it was a grand ride and now here we are again in the Present, with all […]

Climb Mount Niitaka

(His Imperial Japanese Majesty’s Ship Nagato. Photo USN). On 26 November, 1941, the Combined Fleet and its Kidō Butai (also known as the Carrier Striking Task Force) set sail from Hittokapu Bay in Japan’s Kurile Islands under the overall command of Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto. He had personally selected the battleship Nagato as his flagship, the […]

FUBAR

(Deck Department conducting decontamination drill on one of the support ships after the BAKER Test at Bikini Atoll. Photo USN). There is a corollary to the term “SNAFU.” It is “FUBAR,” which is usually the end-state of a SNAFU that goes beyond the normal regime. That was precisely the situation in the lagoon at Bikini […]

At the Crossroads

Nagato seemed all right after the Baker blast, though the Radiological Control officers told us it was unsafe to go aboard. We circled her in the land craft, and it was hard to believe that our erstwhile home was now emitting dangerous radiation. She appeared a little lower in the water, as if some seams […]

BAKER’s Dozen

“Warfare, perhaps civilization itself, has been brought to a turning point by this revolutionary weapon.” – Vice Admiral W. H. P. Blandy, USN, Commander of Operation CROSSROADS (Combat Artist Grant Powers painted this striking image of USS Arkansas starting to go vertical into the BAKER water column. We watched in amazement from USS Mount McKinley […]