Quality

We (as individuals) are responsible for our actions.  That being said, we also own their knock on affects.  Every action we have affects others, directly or indirectly.  Simple physics, “for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.”  The world around us is changed by our presence in it.

Pause, and consider the gravity….

Not too long, we do not want sucked into a black hole.

In construction there is a saying, “Today’s quality is tomorrow’s safety.”  People that are building nuclear facilities say things like that, well..,we hope.  We should all carefully consider the quality of our actions before executing them, because we are ultimately defined by our actions, not our sentiment.  The road to hell was paved, by masons, w/ good intentions.

I am a hurricane survivor and so is my motorcycle.  My motorcycle (a KLR 650) was nearly perfect before hurricane Harvey.  It had 2300 miles on it and not a chip of beautiful orange paint was missing.  When the system was spinning up into a cat 3, I decided I would be spending my hurricane days in Mexico (surfing).  The storm shifted, so all of the Texas surf was going to be blown out by gale force on shore winds.  No reason for me to stick around (and Mex was firing off), so I “secured” my things.  As any (first world) natural disaster survivor knows, the best way to “secure” is to insure.  (I should probably trademark that one.)  I know that now, but pre-Harvey I didn’t.  The bike was uninsured (liability) and unsecured, but physically I did what I could.  I put it in a 7’x7′ Lowes plastic shed next to my 38′ 5th wheel and locked the door.  This, my friends, is NOT secure.  Harvey whipped up into a real nasty little creature, and I went surfing in Mexico.  As I was traveling out of town, the storm started tracking more easterly (towards mi casa).  Less than ideal.

Before leaving, I had the bike in the shed and next to the porch.  I had several boards outside, and “secured” under the camper.  I decided to up my level of security for the boards.  I put 5 boards in my bathroom and shut the door.  My longboard went in the shed w/ the bike.
When the storm blew through, it flopped my 5th wheel over and onto my shed, presumably crushing my beautiful, orange, uninsured, dual sport.  Again, our actions dictate a lot of things, and some things we would/could never consider.


Texas is not known for surf.  I tell people I surf in Texas and they ask, “is there a ocean in Texas?”  I don’t get into the whole geography thing, and how Americans are notoriously poor at it, as are Australians, but I do mention that the Gulf of Mexico touches Texas.
Anyone who surfs the Gulf of Mexico appreciates longboards and their necessity.  I got mine in Galveston (the stoke in this town is incredible).  It was shaped by Mark Wooster.   I bought the board off a used rack at a local place, and the shop owner bragged on Mark and his boards.  He said that Mark took care in building a solid board.  Quality.  The shop owner was right, and Mark is a stand up guy.

Mark Wooster saved my KLR.

When the storm knocked my 5th wheel onto the shed, the 5th wheel contacted the northwest corner of the shed first.  That is where the elevated nose of my board was.  As the shed crushed from the weight of the trailer, it rotated the board counter clockwise and lined the board up perpendicular to the shed, spanning over the bike like a joist carrying the trailer’s weight, and keeping it off the bike.


To the layman, it looked like a pile of crushed rubbish, but after some creative rigging and tow truck operator finesse, the bike was recovered virtually unscathed.


I dressed the bike out w/ panniers and a surfboard rack, and now it resides in Mexico.  It is great transport, but every time I see it, my heart thanks Mark and his attention to detail.  I am convinced, a lesser board would not have taken this load.  The board did sustain some damage to its fin box, but is still rideable, and so is the KLR.

Thanks Mark.  You do good work, and I appreciate that.

Edgar~

The AK 47 Philosophy

The AK 47 is a gas-operated assault rifle developed in the late 1940s.  It was the brain child of
Mikhail Kalashnikov.  He was a self-taught tinkerer, and at 26 he built this masterpiece.

The AK 47 was designed as a weapon of defense, but it has played a major role, on varying sides, in almost every military conflict since its invention.

I know a lot of shooters who turn their nose up at the AK 47.  Usually for the same reasons: it isn’t accurate; it is clunky; it has quality issues.  For AK owners, those are difficult arguments to dispel.  Two things can not be taken from this rifle. It is cheap (in bulk or individually). It is reliable (before and after abuse).  The soldier has to have reliability, and the provider has to be able to afford them.  For these two reasons, the AK 47 works.  Things that work are wonderful, and function can be more important than form. This is the first part of the two-part AK 47 philosophy.

When I look at the gear I have (and keep), it has one thing in common; above all else it is functional. If it does not work, it does not stay. Why would it?

I don’t want to hang out on the beach w/a sexy hot rod short board while some mushy surf is firing off.  I wanna paddle out and ride that slop! I want a board that will work for me, even if it is not as cool to carry around.

It is the same way w/my motorcycle (KLR 650), truck (93 Toyota Landcruiser), snowboard (beautiful 165cm kona wood Element), etc.  Some of my gear looks cool; some of it looks mean; and some of it just looks used, and that is the point.  This is the second piece of the AK 47 philosophy.  Tis better to participate than to contemplate.

This does not advocate hopping in w/out thought. It is very important (and fun) to plan and scheme and consider consequence, but life is dynamic, and waiting on perfection can lead to no execution.  No execution is not consistent w/an adventurer’s heart.

In the age of the consumer, it is easy to loose focus. Ads and articles swirl around telling us what we need to spend our money on, so they can increase their profit margin.  I hate to sound jaded, but some of these manufactures may not care about us as individuals.  So we need to look after ourselves and our own philosophies.

My suggestion, look at your budget, understand your needs, and get products that work.
Keep your end game in mind.  It is very easy to get stalled out on the shopping section, but don’t.

Get your gear, and go do!
See you on the battlefield.

Edgar~