Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
Hail the gift of memory in this fifty-second state. Who sold me down the river and shafts me while he waits. Outside the gates of Eden, star spangled and so late.
The States Largest Electrical Utility Devoted Friday to Customer Appreciation that included food and giveaways, Electric Bucket Rides and a display of one of the helicopters they use to check on the grid. Later in the afternoon the annual meeting was held. It had its own electrifying moment as a stirring rendition of the National Anthem was sung by a talented young person.
Kieri Dot Tuttle, an Anchorage high school student, who has won awards in various performing arts related completions as well as having starred in community musicals, sang the National Anthem to open the annual Membership Meeting of Alaska’s largest utility, Chugach Electric Association.
Link to a Memorable and Impressive Singing of the National Anthem:
Seven members of a Lithuanian Mountain Climbing Team had come to Alaska to Climb North America’s tallest peak, Mt. McKinley a/k/a Denali. Three of those members spent last night on the mountain after having reached the summit. One of the team was airlifted off the mountain after being injured in a fall close to the summit in a saddle between two peaks. With a break in the weather a high altitude helicopter was able to dangle a life line. The remaining three members died in that fall with their recovery effort ongoing.
Near one-third of the hundreds of climbers who attempt to climb the 20,310 foot high Mt. McKinley each year similarly come from foreign countries. More than 130 people have died climbing Mt. McKinley.
By comparison, the world’s tallest mountain, 29,031 foot high Mt Everest has had over 346 people die climbing it. One of those climbers was Ray Genet who was the first mountain guide on Mt. McKinley and had set a record of climbing McKinley 25 times. In 1979, in my fourth year as a new lawyer, I had interviewed Ray in a deposition just shortly before he left Alaska for that fatal climb. He was a witness in a case I was handling and his testimony was being preserved for an upcoming trial. As I recall he had lamented off the record how he hadn’t been able to do the full extent of training he had desired to do before tackling Everest.
Ray had made it to the summit of Everest but despite the pleadings of the Sherpa guides felt too tired to descend to a base camp. He spent the night on Mt. Everest and never woke. Hypothermia was the cause of death.
A little over a dozen years prior to Ray Genet’s death from hypothermia, I had spent an unintended night on a mountain.
It was in 1966 just after I had just graduated from high school when I found myself spending a month on Sugarloaf Island, one of Alaska’s Barren Islands located between Homer and Kodiak. Two school teachers, myself and another teenager were on Sugarloaf hunting and skinning sea animals for pelts that would be sold to Russia for making fur hats.
Late one day after our hunting and skinning had been completed, we two youths decided to climb to the top of the island’s mountain. While its elevation was less than 1,000 feet, it took us longer than expected to reach the summit. At that point we realized there was insufficient light to safely find our way down the mountain and the only option was to stay the night on the mountain until the morning light.
The word hypothermia was not in our vocabulary and it only after 1966 that the general public became aware of hypothermia as a danger to hikers and campers in the wild. In that year a widely distributed medical journal article popularized the risk to persons in circumstances as we found ourselves in on the night we were on the mountain.
Today it is recognized that Hypothermia becomes a dangerous medical condition once the body temperature falls to 95 degrees F. At even that relatively high temperature the body already is beginning to lose heat at a rate greater than it can produce it. This was not appreciated prior to the studies outlined in the 1966 medical journal reporting. Once hypothermia begins to set in there is impaired brain and organ function.
Fortuitously we took steps to protect ourselves from the falling night temperatures by locating a small cave like depression in which we could huddle ourselves until the sun came out in the early morning.
Mt. Fuji, another mountain that I have attempted to climb, has had its measure of fatalities. Although only reaching 12,388 feet in height, 4-10 people die each year climbing it. Hypothermia is listed as one of the causes of death on Mt. Fuji.
While I (along with my son Curtis) spent the night on Mt. Fuji, we were protected from the falling night temperatures by staying in a shelter approximately two-thirds of the way up. To watch the Rising Sun in the Land of the Rising Sun while high up on the side of Mt Fuji is held to be an experience as cherished as that of reaching the summit.
This below linked video from Friday begins with a US Air Force F-22 Raptor Fighter Jet as it returns to Anchorage Alaska’s Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson (JBER).
Then seen is a misted over Mt McKinley and the scenic shore of Cook Inlet,
Link to Video including a Zoom in on Friday's Cloud-Covered Mt. McKinley as the three remaining Lithuanian Climbers descend from their climb to its summit:
My 1st visit to Stonehenge was 1976 when I was in the Navy. You could walk through the area with no restrictions. When I visited the again in 1988 there were ropes preventing visitors from walking through the and leaning against or even just touching the large stones. Things change over time. It is a great place to visit even if it is roped off to visitors.
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
Comments
"When they can't find anything wrong with you, they create it!"
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
"When they can't find anything wrong with you, they create it!"
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
!
My Honda 500 that Appeared in "Banacek:"
"My" [Borrowed] Mercedes that Appeared in "Hawaii Five-0:"
My Character at the Party in Hawaii Five-0
My Character Exiting the Party Bus:
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
Tis a good day to kick back 😉
DO NOT ATTEMPT THIS PEOPLE
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
15 days until.......

.
EARTH... the trailer park of the universe, Mars Attacks! (1996) Martians Attack Trailer Park
INYNWHWeTrust-TexasNationals,ajaan,blu62vette
coinJP, Outhaul ,illini420,MICHAELDIXON, Fade to Black,epcjimi1,19Lyds,SNMAN,JerseyJoe, bigjpst, DMWJR , lordmarcovan, Weiss,Mfriday4962,UtahCoin,Downtown1974,pitboss,RichieURich,Bullsitter,JDsCoins,toyz4geo,jshaulis, mustanggt, SNMAN, MWallace, ms71, lordmarcovan,JWP,dantheman984,olah_in_MA,USMC_6115
I just watched the trailer and can't wait to see the movie....watch the trailer when you get time.....
.

Looks like a winner.
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
Im not really liking father time 😕
Growing old sure beats the alternative.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
My photos of Drew Barrymore on set in Alaska for filming of "Big Miracle"
My photo of Nicolas Cage on set in Alaska for filming of "The Frozen Ground"
Hail the gift of memory in this fifty-second state. Who sold me down the river and shafts me while he waits. Outside the gates of Eden, star spangled and so late.
BST transactions: dbldie55, jayPem, 78saen, UltraHighRelief, nibanny, liefgold, FallGuy, lkeigwin, mbogoman, Sandman70gt, keets, joeykoins, ianrussell (@GC), EagleEye, ThePennyLady, GRANDAM, Ilikecolor, Gluggo, okiedude, Voyageur, LJenkins11, fastfreddie, ms70, pursuitofliberty, ZoidMeister,Coin Finder, GotTheBug, edwardjulio, Coinnmore, Nickpatton, Namvet69,...
Acquired a couple Hemingray CD 196's a few weeks ago.............and seeing they reminded me of spaceships......

.
"When they can't find anything wrong with you, they create it!"
And my dog Oliver - Before, during, and after I gave him his yearly haircut collage...............
"When they can't find anything wrong with you, they create it!"
Thats a cute family member. Here's mine.
Jim
When a man who is honestly mistaken hears the truth, he will either quit being mistaken or cease to be honest....Abraham Lincoln
Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.....Mark Twain
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
INYNWHWeTrust-TexasNationals,ajaan,blu62vette
coinJP, Outhaul ,illini420,MICHAELDIXON, Fade to Black,epcjimi1,19Lyds,SNMAN,JerseyJoe, bigjpst, DMWJR , lordmarcovan, Weiss,Mfriday4962,UtahCoin,Downtown1974,pitboss,RichieURich,Bullsitter,JDsCoins,toyz4geo,jshaulis, mustanggt, SNMAN, MWallace, ms71, lordmarcovan,JWP,dantheman984,olah_in_MA,USMC_6115
.
Awww, what a sweet little dog!
"When they can't find anything wrong with you, they create it!"
AN ELECTRIFYING FRIDAY
The States Largest Electrical Utility Devoted Friday to Customer Appreciation that included food and giveaways, Electric Bucket Rides and a display of one of the helicopters they use to check on the grid. Later in the afternoon the annual meeting was held. It had its own electrifying moment as a stirring rendition of the National Anthem was sung by a talented young person.
Kieri Dot Tuttle, an Anchorage high school student, who has won awards in various performing arts related completions as well as having starred in community musicals, sang the National Anthem to open the annual Membership Meeting of Alaska’s largest utility, Chugach Electric Association.
Link to a Memorable and Impressive Singing of the National Anthem:
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/fdS-ztLKeAs
Concurrent Screenshots and Photos:
A NIGHT ON THE MOUNTAIN & DISCOVERING HYPOTHERMIA
Seven members of a Lithuanian Mountain Climbing Team had come to Alaska to Climb North America’s tallest peak, Mt. McKinley a/k/a Denali. Three of those members spent last night on the mountain after having reached the summit. One of the team was airlifted off the mountain after being injured in a fall close to the summit in a saddle between two peaks. With a break in the weather a high altitude helicopter was able to dangle a life line. The remaining three members died in that fall with their recovery effort ongoing.
Near one-third of the hundreds of climbers who attempt to climb the 20,310 foot high Mt. McKinley each year similarly come from foreign countries. More than 130 people have died climbing Mt. McKinley.
By comparison, the world’s tallest mountain, 29,031 foot high Mt Everest has had over 346 people die climbing it. One of those climbers was Ray Genet who was the first mountain guide on Mt. McKinley and had set a record of climbing McKinley 25 times. In 1979, in my fourth year as a new lawyer, I had interviewed Ray in a deposition just shortly before he left Alaska for that fatal climb. He was a witness in a case I was handling and his testimony was being preserved for an upcoming trial. As I recall he had lamented off the record how he hadn’t been able to do the full extent of training he had desired to do before tackling Everest.
Ray had made it to the summit of Everest but despite the pleadings of the Sherpa guides felt too tired to descend to a base camp. He spent the night on Mt. Everest and never woke. Hypothermia was the cause of death.
A little over a dozen years prior to Ray Genet’s death from hypothermia, I had spent an unintended night on a mountain.
It was in 1966 just after I had just graduated from high school when I found myself spending a month on Sugarloaf Island, one of Alaska’s Barren Islands located between Homer and Kodiak. Two school teachers, myself and another teenager were on Sugarloaf hunting and skinning sea animals for pelts that would be sold to Russia for making fur hats.
Late one day after our hunting and skinning had been completed, we two youths decided to climb to the top of the island’s mountain. While its elevation was less than 1,000 feet, it took us longer than expected to reach the summit. At that point we realized there was insufficient light to safely find our way down the mountain and the only option was to stay the night on the mountain until the morning light.
The word hypothermia was not in our vocabulary and it only after 1966 that the general public became aware of hypothermia as a danger to hikers and campers in the wild. In that year a widely distributed medical journal article popularized the risk to persons in circumstances as we found ourselves in on the night we were on the mountain.
Today it is recognized that Hypothermia becomes a dangerous medical condition once the body temperature falls to 95 degrees F. At even that relatively high temperature the body already is beginning to lose heat at a rate greater than it can produce it. This was not appreciated prior to the studies outlined in the 1966 medical journal reporting. Once hypothermia begins to set in there is impaired brain and organ function.
Fortuitously we took steps to protect ourselves from the falling night temperatures by locating a small cave like depression in which we could huddle ourselves until the sun came out in the early morning.
Mt. Fuji, another mountain that I have attempted to climb, has had its measure of fatalities. Although only reaching 12,388 feet in height, 4-10 people die each year climbing it. Hypothermia is listed as one of the causes of death on Mt. Fuji.
While I (along with my son Curtis) spent the night on Mt. Fuji, we were protected from the falling night temperatures by staying in a shelter approximately two-thirds of the way up. To watch the Rising Sun in the Land of the Rising Sun while high up on the side of Mt Fuji is held to be an experience as cherished as that of reaching the summit.
This below linked video from Friday begins with a US Air Force F-22 Raptor Fighter Jet as it returns to Anchorage Alaska’s Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson (JBER).
Then seen is a misted over Mt McKinley and the scenic shore of Cook Inlet,
Link to Video including a Zoom in on Friday's Cloud-Covered Mt. McKinley as the three remaining Lithuanian Climbers descend from their climb to its summit:
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/OEAm-JRoekU
Related Photos:
Pictured while on Sugarloaf Island in 1966:
The peaks of Mt. McKinley as I photgraphed them while flying above Mt. McKinley circa 1965:
Friday's Cloud-Covered Mt. McKinley as I photographed it Friday from Anchorage Alaska:
The Rising Sun in the Land of the Rising Sun as recently photographed it lighting Mt. Fuji:
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
My 1st visit to Stonehenge was 1976 when I was in the Navy. You could walk through the area with no restrictions. When I visited the again in 1988 there were ropes preventing visitors from walking through the and leaning against or even just touching the large stones. Things change over time. It is a great place to visit even if it is roped off to visitors.
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
INYNWHWeTrust-TexasNationals,ajaan,blu62vette
coinJP, Outhaul ,illini420,MICHAELDIXON, Fade to Black,epcjimi1,19Lyds,SNMAN,JerseyJoe, bigjpst, DMWJR , lordmarcovan, Weiss,Mfriday4962,UtahCoin,Downtown1974,pitboss,RichieURich,Bullsitter,JDsCoins,toyz4geo,jshaulis, mustanggt, SNMAN, MWallace, ms71, lordmarcovan,JWP,dantheman984,olah_in_MA,USMC_6115
INYNWHWeTrust-TexasNationals,ajaan,blu62vette
coinJP, Outhaul ,illini420,MICHAELDIXON, Fade to Black,epcjimi1,19Lyds,SNMAN,JerseyJoe, bigjpst, DMWJR , lordmarcovan, Weiss,Mfriday4962,UtahCoin,Downtown1974,pitboss,RichieURich,Bullsitter,JDsCoins,toyz4geo,jshaulis, mustanggt, SNMAN, MWallace, ms71, lordmarcovan,JWP,dantheman984,olah_in_MA,USMC_6115