A Year Ago on Just a Little Further - Oct. 21-27th

What a difference a year makes!  What Nine of Cups and Crew were doing a year ago this week (click on links for full posts):

 

davids ticket

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Our Day in Court

"To test the legal system, David got a speeding ticket on the way back to Kettering formally known as a Tasmanian Police Infringement Notice. The constable was courteous, but stern. He issued a “conditional caution”, so David is now “in the system”."

 

margate train shops

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Margate Train

"Did you ever pass by something along the road, kind of wonder what it was, but never stop. That’s how it was with the Margate Train. Margate is a little town we pass through along the Channel Highway every time we head to Kingston to grocery shop. The train is not a replica; it’s the real thing and every time we went by, we said “We should stop there..."

 

tulips

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bloomin' Tasmania

"David can be very crafty. So this morning when he said “How about going to the Botanical Gardens today? I’ve already reserved the courtesy van”, I was immediately suspicious.

“Sure”, I said.

“It’s right on the way to Bunnings (a la Home Depot) and ENZED for more hydraulic fittings” he responded without so much as a sneaky grin."

A Year Ago on Just a Little Further - Oct. 14th-20th

Each Wednesday we feature interesting and favorite posts from a year ago this week.  Click the link to view the whole post.

 

making beer on the boat

Brew-meister at Work

"He gathered together all the ingredients. It’s pretty much a kit, but this still took over an hour since things got “put away” six months ago when we left for the States and now finding them again is challenging… some things may never be found."

 

hydraulic hose

Patience and the Un-virtuous Woman

"I can wait for a weather window and not complain much. I can wait in a doctor’s office and read the year-old magazines without too much grimacing. Waiting in a check-out line at the supermarket starts my stomach churning. This nasty trait is most evident, however, when we’re hunting for boat parts."

 

tasmanian devil

A Devil of a Day

"But what about potoroos, pandemelons, bandicoots and quolls? I’ve never even heard of these critters. Have you? My spell checker certainly hasn’t. And of course, we’d yet to encounter the famed, but elusive icon of Tasmania, a Tasmanian Devil (and I don’t mean Looney Tunes’ Taz)."

Back It Up!

corrupt photo  

Oh, man … my computer just crashed. Have you ever lost any data or photos because your computer crashed or failed? Or perhaps there was some operator error involved? Makes no difference the reason, if you lose data, it's lost. Unless, of course, you've been diligent about backing everything up.

Diligent … that's a tough word. I wouldn't say we're exactly diligent. It's more like whenever we think of it (which is rarely), we mention to each other that we should back up our computers soon. Then one of the computers starts acting funky and we actually do a backup … post haste. I'm always very pleased with myself right after I complete a backup, but I have a short term memory and it just doesn't occur to me to do it again until something happens. This time, I was lucky. I recovered most everything. In times past, however, I haven't been as lucky and lost lots of data. When the data is photos, it's a heartbreaker.

I used to back up everything on CDs and then later DVDs. When trying to access some of the old media, however, I've found several corrupted disks and photos that were irrecoverable. We have several USB-driven hard drives aboard now and we've purchased a couple of new ones since we've been back in the States. Data storage is pretty cheap nowadays. I remember thinking 250GB would be overkill for what I needed. We tend to download movies which are data hogs, so now we have several 1TB hard drives (TB = terabyte, for those who are living in the last century). That's 1000GB or a trillion bytes … a trillion! What comes next? Actually, petabytes, then exabytes, then zettabytes, then ... Sorry, I digress.

I've copied all of our old CDs and DVDs to external hard drives and now I tend to save all my photos and important documents on two separate drives … just in case one craps out. Yes, we've heard of on-line memory and the cloud, but internet access is often a problem. When we're at sea, we have no internet access at all, and in many places, internet access is slow and is charged by the byte, so online backup options just don't work for us. It seems there's no totally safe media when you're on a boat. Beyond the backups, anything that's important gets sent back home on memory sticks or discs for safekeeping. Remembering that the salt environment is corrosive and hostile to most things … crew excepted ... keeps us more aware of our data vulnerability. (Right!)