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David’s Gaggia Fund

Tuesday, August 16, 2005

So here’s the plan: I currently drink maybe four coffees a week from one or other of the cafes within walking distance of the office. I rotate my choices, based on a range of factors. If I also need a breakfast burrito, then it’s the Meridien (where they wisely offer a cyclists’ discount if you’ve come on the bike).

If I riding, but have already breakfasted, then I’ll swing by the Holy Spirit coffee stand round the corner from the Eldorado Hotel, and carefully ride through the Plaza with my coffee stuck in the bottle cage.

If I’m on foot, it’ll maybe be Sage’s coffee stand on Marcy, and now the new Caffe e Gelato place near the library (although I haven’t made up my mind about the quality there).

At each place, I’ll drop $2.50 – $3.00 maybe on the coffee, which got me thinking. If I cut it down to one or two coffees a week and put the difference in David’s Gaggia Fund, then pretty soon I’ll be on the way to something nice for the kitchen at home (plus a burr grinder which my new friends at coffeegeek.com assure me is almost as important as the espresso machine itself).

Of course I could just go out and buy the damn machine, stop drinking coffee out altogether, and have recouped my outlay even quicker, but the saving up somehow seems more moral, especially as your own espresso machine is such a ridiculous luxury anyway. I have to earn it somehow.

Posted by David in • Life

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Coffee and submarines

Monday, August 15, 2005

Although I’m currently on a decaf kick (helps me wake at odd hours of the night, when Fionnuala calls), I’ve always had a yen for a good espresso machine.

Over at Engagdet, there’s some spirited debate on the topic.

It seems the Rancilio Silva (shown) has a lot of admirers. And it looks like a bit of an Italian submarine. Which is interesting, given the rather spectacular efforts now underway to move just such an item from Cremona to downtown Milan.

But given the Euro/Dollar exchange rate, it sure is pricey (the espresso machine, that is, not the submarine).

Update: I think I may have got into something I can’t stop: http://www.coffeegeek.com/

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It’s not even green

Friday, July 22, 2005

So there was something good in the mail today, when we came back from lunch at Counter Culture, the locals’ haunt.

From Mesquite, Texas came my Green Card. I’m now a permanent US resident for the next two years, if that makes any sense.

(It’s actually a conditional green card, the condition being that Buendia still says she’ll support me in two years’ time. 90 days before it expires, we send away to get it turned into an unconditional green card.)

The first thing to note about it is that it’s not green.

It is a card, though, and there’s a flash of green on the back, next to a weird panel that looks like undeveloped film, but has my name and photo and other stuff sublimated in it somehow. The front is white and pretty straightforward, though – photo, fingerprint and the like.

So that’s me converted from my spousal visa to the heady status of green card holder. If I were younger, this would mean I’d have to register to be called up if there was ever a draft (weird how legal aliens can’t vote in the US, but they can die for their adoptive country). Fortunately, being older and a family man and all that, they’re not going to ask me any time soon. (Although Buendia and I met a guy from Limerick in The Palace in Dublin who had come over to work in the US and ended up serving in Vietnam. He then returned to Ireland, and must have been the only student ever to go through the University of Limerick on the GI Bill).

Now if it would only stop being ridiculously hot here. The monsoon rains are over two weeks late, and it’s been in the 90s for longer than that (that’s 30-something in Euro temps).

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What did you do today?

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Here’s what I did today: walked down the driveway, along the road about 20 yards and collected the mail from the box.

That’s it.

I also changed Fionnuala a few times, and burped her a few times, made lunch and watched some bad daytime TV, but that’s really stretching it.

And with Buendia here too that’s pretty much the sum total of all our efforts, since about 7am this morning.

Change of pace

I’m not entirely sure what happened to all those hours, but for two people so used to be reasonably productive, this is quite a change.

Consider the last three years. In that time, either together or apart, we’ve:

  • met in Italy
  • carried on an intra-continental relationship
  • got engaged
  • published two books and all but written a third
  • cycled 2000 miles down the Mississippi
  • moved to live in another country twice
  • started two businesses
  • got married
  • been pregnant, and had a baby

And now the six-pound mistress of the house thwarts us in our modest plan to all head into town and eat ice-cream on the Plaza.

And the weird thing is, we don’t really care.

Posted by David in • Life

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Tour baby

Monday, July 04, 2005

So the Tour de France has started, and myself and Fionnuala have fallen into a nice early morning routine. Live coverage on TV here starts at 6.30am, and so yesterday and this morning saw myself and Finn on the couch watching Lance go for seven.

It’s not so crucial if I don’t catch the first hour or so of the stages, and with us downstairs Marci gets a chance to snooze on her own, after a night interrupted by feedings (I do the odd change, and hold Finn more or less upright for a while after each feeding to help everything settle down, but it’s not quite as arduous as being the milk provider).

So far Finn’s not shown much interest, scarcely even stirring from sleep when Lance blew past Jan Ullrich in the time trial yesterday, or when O’Grady and McEwan literally butted heads at 60km/h yards from the finish in today’s sprint.

We’ll see if she wakes up for the team time trial tomorrow. And if we both manage to sleep through it, OLN repeats each stage seemingly half a dozen times throughout the day, so we can catch it later. Dunno if they make baby-sized Lance bands though.

Posted by David in • Life

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Sleeping like a baby

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

Now that’s Finn’s home, we’re adjusting the new reality of having a baby in the house, which is a lot nicer than having a baby in intensive care, but with about as little rest.

Whoever started that standard simile about ‘sleeping like a baby’ clearly knew nothing about babies. For every five minutes of blissful ‘quiet sleep’ there’s at least as long with the frantic ‘active sleep’, where Finn’s bashing herself on the head with her hands and throwing off her carefully-arranged burrito blanket.

Throw in the wails of hunger, the nappy-changing thrash and the frantic ‘where’s the breast?’ feeding routine, and repeat the whole thing every two to three hours (more frequently at night), and that’s what sleeping like a baby really means.

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Announcing the arrival of Fionnuala Grace Moore

Saturday, June 11, 2005

Just a quick note to announce the birth of Fionnuala Grace Moore – our first child.

She arrived over a month early amid much excitement and worry (details on request), but she and Buendia are both doing well. Finn is in the Special Care unit at UNM Hospital in Albuquerque, but she weighs 4 pounds and is in good form, so she’s not in any danger, and should soon be leaving (with perhaps a brief stay at St Vincents in Santa Fe, nearer home).

(A quick note on her name (especially for those outside Ireland) – Fionnuala is pronounced Finoola (more or less) and is an Irish name meaning ‘fair shouldered one’ – we’ll probably shorten it to Finn most of the time).

More news early next week, when I’ll be back in Santa Fe for a at least some of the time.

Obligatory cute photos to follow. 

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Vegas, Maybe!

Thursday, June 02, 2005

Vegas, maybe

Buendia and I were recently in Las Vegas, Nevada recently (not to be confused with Las Vegas, New Mexico – a very nice town just up the road from here).

Before you go, there’s lots of things you know about Vegas – it’s hot, in a desert, has lots of gambling, a seedy reputation and is about as lacking in authenticity as anywhere in the world.

And guess what? It’s exactly like that in real life. Only worse.

First, there’s the fact that it shouldn’t be there at all. By dint of the Hoover Dam, what should be a dry speck in the desert is now madly over-watered and luxuriant. Pond and pools and trees and sprinklers are everywhere, part of the massive act of will that’s made this nothing into something very bizarre.

Venice, Schmenice

A lot of the casinos have moved upmarket recently, hitching their wagons to a range of supposedly classy themes. So the Venetian has a mock Doge’s Palace out front, and an indoor set of canals, complete with singing gondoliers. The ceiling high above is painted to resemble the sky, and the clatter of shops purport to be an Italian-style street.

Of course the effect is so faky that it’s laughable, and even the mini St Mark’s Square doesn’t impress. When you see power sockets in the supposed-to-look-ancient-but-only-built-last-year stonework, you know something’s not right.

Over at Paris, there’s an Eiffel Tower, a Louvre knock-off and a Musee d’Orsay wannabe, and they use the classic art-deco metro entrance to cover another bank of chattering slot machines.

Real fake paintings

The Bellagio across the road is suppose to be a little more select, but when you’ve seen one marble-clad den of iniquity, you’ve seen them all. Although the Bellagio does manage the cute trick of making real paintings work seem fake. They’ve got an art gallery currently showing a visiting impressionist exhibition. But the whole atmosphere of the place is so venally artificial that I couldn’t bring myself to pay the money to see some real stuff.

And of course, separating you from your money is what the whole city is about. If you don’t fancy gambling in the giant dimly-lit halls of usury, you can go shopping in giant Italianate shopping malls, like the Forum Shoppes in Caesar’s Palace, where they trump the Venetian’s sky vault by having the sun set and then rise again every couple of hours.

There are shops of almost every imaginable type, spread out in malls attached to every casino. But in my three days of wandering, I didn’t see one bookshop.

Inside, or on the patio?

Given the mad temperatures (over 100F when we were there), there’s a strange Tardis-like thing going on. You enter the casino, and have no idea of the interior scale of it. And given the complete absence of windows, any sense of the inside having a relationship with the outside is forgotten. We walked for 20 minutes inside the MGM Grand to reach Buendia’s alumni party.

Restaurants in the casinos often flank the main gaming halls, but in ‘buildings’ that separate them from what tables and slots. So in New York, New York, we were offered a choice of eating inside or ‘on the patio’, which was of course just as inside as the inside, but with a higher ceiling.

Vegas, baby! Yeah!

And then you fill the centre of the city with three types of people. Firstly the conference delegates (20,000 architects, for example). A few of them might welcome the chance to live a little dangerously and go to a strip show, or pick up one of the call-girl cards that are constantly snapped in your face as you walk the Strip. A few more might have one too many mai-tais and cop off with another delegate (‘what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas, remember?’. But most are just there for the conference, and aren’t that impressed by the excess of the place.

The second group is the people that actually chose to come here. As well as a lot of English tourists, there’s groups of lads on stag weekends who walk the casinos in shorts and sandals, clutching some overpriced cocktail in what looks like a big blue glass bong. Then there’s the steel-haired pensioners putting their quarters in the slots while their eyes glaze over.

The third group is the people who have moved to Vegas for work. You might end up as a ‘dealertainer’, running a texas hold-em table while dressed like Rod Stewart or one of the Blues Brothers. But even if you’re working in the Gucci or Prada stores, most of your customers are in one or other of the above groups, so it’s a world away from working in those stores in the real New York or Paris (as opposed to the faky Vegas versions).

I knew Bellagio, I’ve stayed in Bellagio, and you sir are no Bellagio

Some of what’s there is kind of awe-inspiring, but absolutely none of it’s cool. Where’s the Brat Pack themed casino, or the Roppongi district Tokyo future city place?

And it’s even more weird if you’ve actually been to the places so mercilessly ripped off. I’ve been to Bellagio, on the shores of Lake Como, and it’s an elegant and cultured place in a beautiful setting. If I was the town, I’d sue.

So from this you can probably tell that I won’t be going back to Vegas in a hurry. Or maybe never.

Posted by David in • Life

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Email from the past

Thursday, May 05, 2005

faith brothers :: eventideSometimes the Internet can be scary. I woke up with a song in my head, from the British late 80s band The Faith Brothers.

These days, not many people might know much about The Faith Brothers’ album, ‘Eventide’ (except my schoolfriends Shomit and Dale), but for a while it was on heavy rotation in our rooms, and I loved the songs, and the delivery of lead singer Billy Franks. He burned with an earnestness that was so much better than most of the synth-pop nonsense of the time, and tracks like ‘Whistling in the Dark’ and ‘Daydreamer’s Philosophy’ really left an impression. 

As you can tell, since nearly 20 years later I wake up in Santa Fe singing them. At the office, a ridiculously easy piece of internet detective work reveals that Billy’s still going strong, doing some film work and offering some of his latest songs for download.

And here’s where it gets weird. ‘Eventide’ has long since been deleted, so I email Billy to ask him if he knows how I could get hold of a copy. And he replies within a couple of hours.

Now I’m a grown up, and have published a book and all, so I shouldn’t be surprised that there’s actually a real person behind the art. But this is the guy from the Faith Brothers, and the passage of time and my ignorance of what he’s done since then makes it particularly striking that he’s now sending me email.

The good news is that he can get me the CD I’m looking for (my old tape version is in rag order).

And the better news is that his new stuff is good too.

But Billy’s email is like getting a phone call from your favourite footballer when you were growing up.

Posted by David in • Arts reviewsLife

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‘Cycling in the rain, sorting his head out’

Thursday, May 05, 2005

Irish novelist Dermot Bolger has written what I reckon is the best review of ‘The Accidental Pilgrim’ yet.

He’s writer in residence for the South Dublin Libraries and his one of his diaries, he gives his view of the book.

(UPDATE: Dermot was kind enough to email me and let me know the review originally appeared in the Evening Herald)

Here’s the full text:

The first thing to be said about his The Accidental Pilgrim: Travels with a Celtic Saint is that it is a surprisingly good read. I say this as someone with a jaundiced view of what passes for deliberately quirky travel writing ? be it an alternative English comedian playing tennis for a bet against the soccer stars of an impoverished nation or hitching around Ireland with a fringe or even Peter Carey?s recent Wrong about Japan where he simply admitted to making up characters to jolly the plot along.

On the surface, we seemed in for another dose of staged quirkiness with The Accidental Pilgrim as David Moore ? English born of an Irish family and Trinity educated ? returns to Dublin after working in (and profitably fleeing before the crash came) the Silicon Valley dot-com tech bubble. Relatively young, relatively cash-rich, at a relative loose-end and with no real idea of what he wants to do, Moore decides to cycle two thousand kilometres across eight European countries to retrace the footsteps of Saint Columbanus, an opinionated, hard-nosed and hard-line sixth century Irish missionary who founded monasteries and took lip from neither kings or commoners. 

Moore sees Columbanus as the sort of original Irish ex-pat, constantly in search of new horizons and constantly bringing his Irish baggage with him. While recognising the ludicrousness of comparisons between Dark Age ecclesiastical history and modern soccer, he also depicts him as the Roy Keane of the early church, uncompromising and principled to the point of self-destruction, with both being sent home early ? even if Columbanus managed to get himself shipwrecked so that he could flee back into Europe and found yet another monastery.

If this sounds rather too neat a conceit, the book works because of Moore?s sheer absence of cleverness. He possesses no religious belief and recognises that the interest in Columbanus for his college days and this long trip across Europe are primarily an excuse to postpone the future. He is doing this because it alleviates the need to be doing something else. It is a way to put his life on hold.

The nice thing about the book is that nothing much happens. He descends a few hairpin bends at dangerous speeds, lusts after but never manages to bed the odd passing waitress, and spends a lot of time cycling in the rain and sorting his head out. He has a dry wit and is very aware both of the importance of the pilgrimage for himself and how it is slightly ridiculous. He travels alone but in this writing is a surprisingly good companion. David Moore now lives in Dublin, is married and cycles to work. He has never got a puncture, which shows that even agnostics have someone looking after them.

Review from here (in ‘Dermot’s Diary, Feb 8th, 2005)

Posted by David in • Accidental Pilgrim

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