Sunday, October 21, 2007

As She Handed Me a Sweet-Smelling Glass of Cucumber Water...

My hot-stone massage therapist Rosa asked in heavily-accented English:

"Are you in the service?"

I paused, smiled and leaned in for my response:

"Air Force."

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Fish Tacos...

The jury's still out.

Sunday, July 08, 2007

On Squirrels

The fall of 1902 found budding New York naturalist Francis Fogg on a mission to prove a rather remarkable theory: The common grey tree squirrel is the only mammal in North America that does not urinate.

Fogg conjectured that the tree squirrel's diet of bark and thistles, coupled with the relatively low humidity levels of its habitat range, allowed the arboreal mammal to secrete its waste in the form of wooden pellets from its salivary glands.

Laughed out of the offices of National Geographic, Fogg spent seven years raising funds for a four-month expedition to the wilds of Delaware. The money finally raised, he spent another six months assembling a 50-man team of drunkards, beggars and thieves. Fogg, an experimental cobbler by trade, knew he had neither the skill nor the emotional wherewithal to lead his men into darkest Delaware. There was only one man for that task: Stuart Longrain Coffee, the finest guide in Staten Island.

Fogg knew that Coffee would take some convincing and the price for his services would be high. So on a muggy September morning, Fogg arranged a meeting with the wizened old tracker. Fogg, hoping to appeal to Coffee's sense of adventure and hatred of immigrants, was struck down and killed by a motorized tramsicle not 50 feet from his door.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

On Whittling

In his self-titled autobiography, Harry Hearnstable recounts with characteristic clarity his surprise at the difficulty in getting whittling recognized as an Olympic event: "Where am I?" 1

Yet, for the time-crunched urbanite, whittling combines the time honored enjoyment of woodwork with cardio benefits of macramé. Indeed, an hour of even casual whittling can burn up to 4 calories.

The current whittling renaissance has been fueled by such celebrity devotees as Harrison Ford and Kelly Rippa, whose DVD "Whittling My Way," is available on amazon.com.

1 Whittling first and last appeared at the 1956 Winter Olympics in Haute-Savoie, France. Hungarian-born Bennett Canvas, representing the Ivory Coast, was awarded the Gold medal after he whittled a five-foot elm branch into splinters in under seven hours. 2

2 Canvas was posthumously stripped of his medal when his cadaver tested positive for cornmeal.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

On Irony

Although the Common Fig is the national fruit of Malta, the tiny yet densely populated archipelago of Mediterranean islands produces and consumes fewer figs per capita than any nation in the Northern Hemisphere.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

On Anti-Bacterial Soap

Though popularized by the dramatic writings of Sir Peirce Noël Coward, the origins of unscented anti-bacterial soap can be traced back to 19th century Finland and the prodigious work of the noted astrobiologist and Arctic theologian, Heinz Carlsbad.

Carlsbad, whose lifelong dream of becoming the first amateur sous-chef to reach the Northern Pole of Inaccessibility was shattered by a freak dogsled accident in the summer of 1892, was experimenting with the thermal properties of common legumes when he stumbled across a startling paradox: When pressurized to 98.0665 kilopascals and combined with paraffin wax, peanut oil separates into two compounds — arginine, an amino acid that the body uses to produce nitric oxide, and hydrojuglone, a sweet-smelling bio-toxin which kills approximately 99 percent of all household germs.

Blinded by love and crippled with a rare form of social anxiety disorder, Carlsbad misjudged the cultural significance of his discovery and poured his lifesavings into the development, manufacture and distribution of the wildly unpopular, arginine-based soft drink of his own design, Virvoitusjuoma.

Carlsbad died penniless and alone at the age of 52.

Monday, May 14, 2007

On Hummingbirds

Contrary to popular belief, the hummingbird (Thecostraca Cirripedia), neither hums nor is a bird.

Incorrectly classified in 1823 by Lars Pridbjørn, last surviving member of the aptly named and ill-fated HMS Pettycoat, "hummingbird" is a trans-literal translation of the Danish "hommingbaerd" -- "bearded marsupial."

The name stuck however and became increasingly popular with sailors of the day, who kept the winged marsupials aboard their vessels for their milk.