Day 180 of 1000
My admiration for the unsurpassed beauty of the state of Oregon does not diminish my admiration for the beauty of Virginia and the Carolinas. I have been criss-crossing all three states continually since the beginning of January to the tune of about $1500 of car reimbursement per month at 45¢ per mile. It looks like I will be running in this mode through April or May. I hope I slow down after that, but I have been thoroughly enjoying the places I visit and the people I meet.
I gave a talk on my research and development work to a group of engineers and technicians at a large French tire company near Columbia, South Carolina on Thursday. It made me think of one of my favorite characters in all of literature, the ugly American (a retired American engineer trying to help out in a fictional Southeast Asian country) from the book, the Ugly American. I met engineers from the U.S., France, Columbian (Medellin–how cool is that. He even complimented me on my Spanish.), and Puerto Rico (The University of Mayaguez where our friend Carlos B. studied). There are no cultural barriers when engineers are talking together about technology and solving problems.
I will contnue to write as often as possible. I am accumulating some good material and I need to get it written down before I forget it.
I feel very sorry for people who do not “get” Oregon. That includes the people who live in places like Lake Oswego and Cary (sister cities in spirit, decadence, and tackiness–the people in those towns are not from there even if they are, if you know what I mean). Oregon is a state of mind and today is Oregon’s birthday. My great, great grandfather had lived in Oregon for thirteen years before she became a state on Valentine’s Day of
In my day job, I am working on a product that performs three dimensional scans of all kinds of stuff with a product called a
We love North Carolina, but they are WAY out of their depth when it comes to organizing and/or participating in a running event, they need to send the organizers and participants out to Oregon to see how it is done. That being said, the kids had fun and raised money for a good charity, which was the purpose of the race. Still, people here really need to lighten up, have a good time, get into the event. Still, the kids got their doughnuts (I refuse to use the word donut as if it is a real word), t-shirts, and bib. I was particularly proud of Kelly. She whistled, hollered, and winked at every cute guy in a gladiator suit that ran by.
On Monday and Tuesday last week I drove from Raleigh to Charlotte and back. On Wednesday I drove from Raleigh to Wilmington, NC to Elizabethtown, NC, and back to Ralieigh. On Thursday, the biggest day, I drove from Raleigh to Roanoke, VA to Blacksburg, VA, and back to Raliegh. I drove over 1500 miles, visited five customers, and spent my customary two days in the home office. The driving got a little tedious, but I really enjoyed it. I found out that Roanoke, VA is a beautiful city–at least it was beautiful the day I was there. I think I am only going to have to drive this much for a month or two longer. Then I will back off to a couple of trips per month. That will be just about right.


