Sunday, November 24, 2019

State No. 27 - Wyoming

I apologize for the post delay.  I had some issues to take care of when I got home, but I think they are good now.

So it was an interesting start to the trip, which took place Nov. 7 - Nov. 10.  I flew in using American Airlines to Cheyenne via Dallas-Fort Worth.  Sadly, #thecurseofthetravelingKEC struck again, this time early.  While I made it to Cheyenne personally without a problem, my checked bag did not.  Now, they did find the bag quickly at Dallas-Fort Worth.  However, since Wyoming is a small airport (one terminal, only one way into the airport area in general) & American only flies once a day on this route, I had to wait until Friday 1pm local time for the next day's plane to bring my bag.  American was helpful as best they could throughout, giving me a bag of toiletries to use for the night while waiting for my checked bag to come in.  It should be noted, however, that the spare underwear, socks, & shirt in my carry-on saved me from further problems.

As an aside, the trend of everyone using roller bags as carry-ons really slow down getting on the plane.  It is of course, a byproduct of most airlines charging for checked bags & most people trying not to deal with the problems of checked bags in general (lost bag problem above, baggage mishandling).  Hopefully, I can resume flying Southwest at some point, even if it is only return flights, & not have to pay to check a bag.

I did take a photo while waiting for the American Airline Ticket Agent to finish the baggage handling from the flight (yes, ticket agent apparently does do that at CYS) of one of the many boots setup all over Cheyenne.  Cheyenne has an interesting program to set up development all over the City, & their project theme is, "If this boot could talk, what story would it tell?"

This hunt was similar to the Hunt for the Garfield Statues & the Hunt for the (I)ndy Statues in 2016. So there are 25 known boot sculptures on the map. One of them, #8, was in storage due to the area being under construction. However, I did find a bonus boot that was not on the guidemap.  The guidemap claims that the boots do change locations from time to time, but an 8 foot tall, 8.5 foot long, & 2.5 foot wide boot is much heavier & harder to move than than the (I)ndy Statues.

Guide map & other information about the boot hunt below, including the $5,000 cost for a boot.


https://www.cheyenne.org/listing/cheyenne-big-boots/263/


They also provide a telephone number you can call to hear the artist tell stories about 18 of the boots they made.  The lettered boots have not been added to the audio tour yet & neither has the bonus boot that I found.





Boot No. 11 - Blue Skies over Cheyenne - CYS Airport - by John Guthrie

Might as well start the hunt while waiting for the whereabouts of my checked bag.


Boot No. 18 - Milestones - Chamber 100th Anniversary aka We've Worked Hard to Get Here - in front of Cheyenne Depot Museum - by Jill Pope

Jill Pope had some funny stories about this & at least one of the other boots she made, including her dog running over the boot & spreading paint all over her living room floor!  I think she is now one of the two contacts involved if a business wants to commision a boot.



Boot No. 14 - Where the Deer & the Antelope Play - Cheyenne Depot Plaza - by Liz Gnagy
These two would fit in with my college friends playing spades & pitch!


Boot No. 03 - Licensed to Boot - Wyoming State Museum - Carey Junior High Art Club 
I have to admit, when I saw the title, my first thought was, "Is this a parody of a James Bond movie?"  However, this is obviously based on License Plates. 
  

Add. Boot G - Happy Birthday Cheyenne! - near the Cheyenne Municipal Court - Ross Lampshire
I found a knight parking post near here too.


Bonus Boot - Title Unknown - Wyoming Trust & Bank - near Boot No. 02 - artist unknown
This was the bonus boot I found while having difficulties finding one of the boors on the map.



Add. Boot F - Walmart Boot - Walmart Distribution Center - Amber Kubot
Location Note: Google Maps takes you down the truck entrance driveway.  Don't go there.  Use the associate/visitor driveway instead.



Boot No. 04 - Atmospheric Research aka NCAR Boot - National Center for Atmospheric Research Supercomputing Center - Ross Lampshire
Images based om computer generated images of atmospheric events like Hurricane Katrina.  More on this location in a bit.



Boot No. 02 - Springtime in Cheyenne - Random Businesses near the Bonus Boot - Rose Burrows
I had a very hard time finding this boot as it blended in and was hidden.


Boot No. 10 - Outlaws of Wyoming - Holliday Park - Cheyenne Artist Guild
22 members painted this. (!)


Boot No. 07 - LCCC Eagle Eye of the Future - Laramie County Community College, South Side of Campus - Ross Lampshire
Same location as the Wyoming Open Chess Tournament, school mascot.

It should be noted that Boot No. 08, LCCC 40 Years of Excellence, was in storage as the area on the north side of Campus was under construction.

There were a few other interesting pieces of artwork that I remember seeing during the Hunt for the Boots.

Artwork on a Traffic Signal Controller - George Cox Parking Facility


Knight post, Cheyenne Municipal Court (Near Add. G)

So, I did visit the National Center for Atmospheric Research Supercomputing Center during the Hunt for the Boots.  It was a fascinating place that explained how they used supercomputers to do calculations of atmospheric events from the past & how they try to model atmospheric events of the future.  While the museum part itself was not very large, they still had numerous stations explaining the atmosphere, the sciences behind the research, the calculation powers required, the methods of cooling the supercomputers to prevent overheating, & the supercomputers themselves.  They are in the process of taking the old supercomputer out, with the current one from 2017 fully in, & a newer supercomputer is scheduled for 2021 +/-.  I was unlucky that particular Friday as the main tour guides were traveling to do a presentation somewhere else and there might not have been a tour on that particular day, but the security guard told me that if you call ahead, sometimes they can do a tour on fridays at noon to bring you into the same room as the supercomputers.  And yes, there were actual people handling the process of the removal of the supercomputer when I was there.  

My original plan was to do the CrossFit Open 20.5 WOD at CrossFit Cheyenne at the 12pm local time frame.  However, since my athletic gear was in the checked bag, & I had to wait until 1 pm to retrieve said checked bag, this delayed my try at the WOD to the 4pm local time spot.  Coach King was very nice to me, reminding me that working out at elevation (Cheyenne is approximately 6000 feet above sea level), may cause additional difficulties.  

So I did 20.5 Scaled

Partitioned anyway you want.
40 muscle-ups pullups
80-cal. row
120 wall-ball shots

Ladies 14-lb. ball to 9 ft.  10#
Gentlemen 20-lb. ball to 10 ft.  14#

Time cap: 20 minutes
Tiebreak time awarded when you finish both the 80 calories & the 120 wallballs.

In this workout, there are many ways to attack this.  I chose this method: (15 Wallballs, 10 Calories, 15 WB, 10 Calories, 10 Pullups) x 4 Rounds

This gives your legs a rest while still doing work. If you struggle with 10 pullups, then stop and continue with next set of WB calories to try to reach your tiebreak time.

When doing this, A) I forgot about the pullups and kept struggling rather than advancing to the next wallballs, & B) the elevation took out my legs as the rowing was more difficult than it should have been.  I finished with 195 reps.

[I redid this when I got home & got 232 scaled reps with a tiebreak time of 16:20.  When I dropped off the pullup bar in the early sets, I went straight to the next set of Wallballs to eventually earn the tiebreak & then chip away at pullups.  I ended up doing 24 of the 32 pullups within that 3:40 remaining.]

The downside of working out so late in the day was that my first round started at 7pm, so I had very little time to shower & down some food before play started.  I remember my heart rate increasing when I had a hard time finding the tournament room at Laramie County Community College, but that's because there was an unintentional error & the wrong room was posted!  Luckily I called the TD Brian & he helped me out to get to the room.

I didn't play well at all in the tournament (Result Link: https://www.wyomingchess.com/2019WyoOpen.html), struggling to win the two games that I won in Rounds 3 & 4.  The TD admitted to wanting to publish my Round 1 loss when I said "Ouch." when I got checkmated by the top seed & eventual tournament winner, so I'll let him publish that.

This trip's game is from Round 3.  I just tried to use his dark squares against him & there wasn't much of an answer.



I didn't think that I won a prize after coughing up the first two rounds, but the TD emailed me on Monday after I returned saying he needed my address.  So I gave him that & received a small prize check.


And this updates the win-loss state map.  Once I'm done with the original 50 states, I will make revisiting the states in red a top priority, saving New York & Pennsylvania for the last two (both are negative double digit differentials).

There's nothing more to report from Wyoming, so unless I take a quick trip somewhere else, I'll see you in Parsippany, NJ in 2020 for the 50th World Amateur Team/US Amateur Team East Tournament!

Note: 2020 may have less states than normal due to some obligations that may take up a big chunk of time.  I will still try to go to at least 2 states, but not likely to hit my normal 4 states that I visited in the last several years.

Sunday, August 11, 2019

States No. 25 & 26 - Oklahoma & Kansas

This was a 10-day trip spanning Oklahoma & Kansas.  I'm very late (for reasons I shall not discuss), so let's do this.

I went to Crossfit OKC on Friday afternoon.  Coach Ginny was very good, checked on the athletes as we were doing the strength & then the metcon.  Programming made sense, movements made sense, strength & metcon were pretty good.  Staff & other athletes made me feel welcome.  This place was so good I revisited on Monday with a different coach & got the same results.  If you are in the area, I suggest you drop in!

At the Jerry Spann Memorial, the Tournament Theme was opposite color Bishops.  Each of my last 3 rounds had opposite color Bishops featuring prominently into the decision of the game, & one of the other games that affected the distribution of the Top A prize also had opposite color bishops.

(Note: For some reason, I am having difficulty getting the code to work with my game on the same page.  It has something to do with my annotations where part of the game will publish on my page & then cut off.  Please use the links to view the game in its entirety.  If I get a chance to fix this for good, I will.)

Round 5 - Jerry Spann Memorial, Oklahoma City, OK
http://view.chessbase.com/cbreader/2019/8/11/Game639909343.html

Oklahoma City National Memorial Museum.  This museum has exhibits, pictures, & videos detailing the attack that happened on April 19, 1995.  There is a lot of information covering the days before, the day of, the recovery, & the time period after the event.  One of the criticisms I did have of the museum was that a majority of the videos were too long.  There were at least three videos that I thought circulated more than ten minutes, & that seemed too long if you wanted to watch the entire videos.  I did see the Survivor Tree, the tree that survived the attack, but there weren't many good pictures I could take because museum staff was fixing a display about the tree.





There were quite a few murals & other pieces of artwork in the Bricktown section of Oklahoma City, but I only captured 1 mural & one bridge on my phone.



I encourage you to visit & see these & more.  Miniature golf is nearby, & if you hit a hole in one on #18, you get a free game of laser tag.  If you can, however, please change out of a lime green shirt.  It stands out alot in the dark...

On the next day (Tuesday) I traveled a bit on US Route 66, visiting the Nut House & the Blue Whale of Catoosa.  I picked up a new, neutral hat so I can go back to places where Giants & Knicks hats are not welcome. 

Useful for visiting places like Cream Cheese City, which is decidedly not friendly to Giants & Knicks items.
I also picked up a piece or two of some really good fudge.  Pretty good selection there & plenty of other fun items centered around US Route 66, make sure you drop in. 

The Blue Whale is best to bring kids around to climb up into the structure.  The only thing that would interest adults is the multiple town mileposts.



I just realized I have been to three towns on this post.




I would have liked to continue farther northeast to Mickey Mantle's Childhood Home & the Dairy King as other items/places to visit along US Route 66, but I knew the driving would have been too long for me on that day (6 hours minimum total, not including stops for food & such) & I was battling remnants of an illness. 

On Wednesday, I visited the Sedgwick County Zoo, the Nifty Nut House, & Crossfit Wichita.  For the zoo, a private tour was arranged by an acquaintance.  I loved the Zoo - I thought the zoo staff was delightful in explaining things. 

The Nifty Nut House  had all the main nuts in the center of the shop.  Workers would let you sample one, & then if you liked it, they would measure out in weight how much of the particular nut you wanted.  Warning: Lots & lots of nuts.  I didn't think 3/4 of the combinations I saw were possible.

CrossFit Wichita had a strange warmup: Row once, trying to get the display to stop at 125 meters exactly.  If you are off, the difference is the number of wallballs you have to do (e.g. 113 - do 12 wallballs because you are 12 away from 125).  Row twice, but blind - try to stop exactly at 125 without looking at the screen while rowing.  I was 15 over while sighted & 13 under blind.  Shows how much more I need to know for rowing.

For Thursday, the next stop on the trip was the Museum of World Treasures in Wichita, KS.

So there were interesting dinosaur skeletons that were found within the midwest in the first part of the first floor.  First floor also happened to have a section of the Berlin Wall, artifacts from the Chinese, Hindu, Buddhist, African, Egyptian, & Greek Cultures.  The second floor contained mostly items from various wars, & the US Presidents.  The third floor had items from the old west, but the sports & pop culture sections were sadly not there.

I didn't feel like the organization of the groups that they had was great...the timeline skipped & jumped in quite a few places.  Also, the disappearance of the sports & pop culture sections really was a letdown when I reached the third floor.


I did see an early version of the Kansas State Seal, which was fascinating.


The Keeper of the Plains is a 44-Foot Tall steel sculpture where the Big & Little Arkansas Rivers join together in downtown Wichita.  Recent Renovations, including two new pedestrian foot bridges, help people come to see the daily Ring of Fire show.  The Keeper of the Plains manually lights up for about 15 minutes at night & the scene is beautiful.

If you watched The Lion King back in the 1990s, you should know that the song came to mind when I saw this.

Daytime view of the Keeper of the Plains

Nighttime view, before the lighting

What a sight!


Even from the pedestrian bridge, you can feel the heat!

I struggled quite a bit in the second tournament.  I lost a pawn in Round 1 & had to fight hard to win that game against the same opponent who drew against me in Round 4 in Oklahoma City. 

Round 1 - Kansas State Open, Wichita, KS
http://view.chessbase.com/cbreader/2019/8/11/Game639982343.html

I got thoroughly destroyed in Round 2, using the Petroff Defense, as my kingside was ripped asunder & I lost in 22 moves.  I hung a pawn in Round 3, eventually losing, & may have stolen a theoretical draw in Round 4 in a Rook ending.  I was so tired from the remnants of the illness & my extended play that I offered a draw in Round 5 when I may have had an advantage!

I'll try to remember to put my reviews on Yelp in the next few days.  While I thought Raising Cane's was a disappointment, it should not have surprised me as I think Carl's Jr. & Hardee's have the same parent company.  However, I really liked

Hideaway Pizza, Oklahoma City, within a mile of the Memorial.

An appropriate use of Comic Sans Font!

Maui Magic with Parmesan-Herb Shake Added
Ziggy's, College Hill, Wichita.  Ordered the Costanzwich & loved it.  Also finished a pizza from someone else.

A specific size & the best 'Za in 'Ta?  I think so.

This is a nice piece of art.

Braum's, South of the Tournament, Wichita.  The chocolate Milkshake was heaven.  This is the fast food restaurant that I believe is better than: Raising Cane's, Hardee's, Carl's Jr., In-N-Out, McDonald's, White Castle, Wendy's, & Whataburger.  


Since I have passed the 25th state mark (actually 26), I will conclude this post with my normal updated map & a new map.

Updated #fiftystatesofchess map


New Map - States by Win-Loss Differential

And now onto State No 27, which I would like to do before Southwest Airlines leaves Newark International Airport in November, but the list of new states I can visit is pretty low and the dates I can do it are tight...

Monday, May 27, 2019

State No. 24 - Tennessee

Edit: I want to apologize for this taking so long, but things happen & you don't always get to sit down and tell the story when you want to.

So, the first place I went to was the Arcade Restaurant.  It is Memphis's oldest cafe, & it is turning 100 this year!  The food, while not must-visit quality, was still pretty good.  They had an interesting sign to remind employees & visitors that they do keep their customers in mind, so I thought I would show that here.



National Civil Rights Museum

I visited the National Civil Rights Museum during my stay here.  Unfortunately, due to their social media policies and the fact that I am (however loosely this is defined) a blogger, I'm not allowed to post pictures I took from inside the museum.  To be safe, especially since I don't feel like fighting any legal troubles, I won't post any pictures too much from this part of the trip, even though I do want to.

The museum is really divided into two parts: the Lorraine Motel, which mostly covers the years up to 1968, & then the Legacy, which covers the time after 1968.  The Legacy goes behind the circumstances surrounding Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s death & additional civil rights issues from more current times.

Metabolic CrossFit

I dropped in at Metabolic CrossFit on April 19.  Coach Chuck was pretty enthusiastic, & made sure to welcome me in.  I really felt like I was at home, & he gave additional pointers to help out on the clean & jerk.  There was a bit of a temporary snafu with the fact that they had run out of shirts, but Coach Cathy eventually sent me a shirt once their stock was refilled.


Ultimate Ballroom Studio
https://www.facebook.com/UltimateBallroom/

The only thing I forgot to do was take a few pictures here.  This was an amazing place to visit.  The social that I visited was about 1 hour & 15 minutes long.  All of my partners here were good, even if one or two admitted not knowing a few steps I led them through.  The interesting thing is, at the end of this social, they play an entire song for a traveling dance & the ladies line up in a corner.  The men pick up the ladies & travel one circle around the floor, then drop off to pick up the next lady waiting for a turn.  This cycle repeats until the last song ends.  It's an interesting custom that I had not seen before.

Games from the Bluff City Open have been published on the website below for my Rounds 1, 2, & 5.

http://www.memphischess.com/games2019b.html

Mr. Gary Pylant ran a pretty good tournament.  Games started close to schedule & the atmosphere was very similar to the good memories I had at one of my first rated tournaments.  I say close to schedule because there was a humorous delay I think on Saturday where they were trying to wrap up the U1000 section with blitz game tiebreakers.  The blitz went one win & one draw for each player, so they had to go to a fourth tiebreaker with black having draw odds.

I didn't play well at the beginning of the tournament as I had some headaches that bothered me through the first day.

Since Rounds 1, 2, & 5 are published, I'll do a light version of commentary from Round 3 instead.

As I don't quite know why the paste code isn't working, the game will open in a new tab in the link below.

http://view.chessbase.com/cbreader/2019/5/27/Game800933312.html

That concludes State No. 24