Tuesday, August 4, 2009

My Review of REI Adventure Dog Pack - Large

REI

Give your best friend a real treat with our REI Adventure Dog Pack. Ideally sized for weekend adventures and equipped for maximum comfort.


Great Idea...but

bluedog873 West Hartford, CT 8/4/2009

 

3 5

Gift: No

Pros: Good Value, Fun, Large Capacity

Cons: Adjustment, Straps, Not Durable

Best Uses: Younger Pets, Larger Pets

Describe Yourself: Long-time Pet Owner

I am almost a daily hiker. I average about 15 miles a week. My dogs are always with me and are off leash and romping through the woods constantly. I have a 100 pound Akita mix and a 45 lbs. Pointer mix.
I like the design and look. The straps allow for the load to be pulled over the shoulders, but as most have said, the straps lack the ability to hold tension for long periods. The large is a bit TOO large even for my 100 lbs. dog. Heavier loads tend to sag the bags below her belly, which impairs her range of motion.

The 45 lbs. Pointer wears a medium and it works great for her. I am on my second one with her as a snag through the woods started to pull the right bag away. I think the seams should be reinforced to keep from this happening.

I love the idea of the dog pack since they hold their own food when we hit the trail, but this product still needs some modifications to be right for the overnight trip. If you're an every now and again hiker or aren't worried about your dogs comfort over an extended hike, then this pack should be just fine. Besides, they look so dang cute wearing a pack. I think it makes them feel tougher too. Happy tails!

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Thursday, April 2, 2009

Neurobics?!

Since I just recently started to Google this, I thought I would put up an article related to it. I do agree that this makes a difference in how healthy our brains are.

Some specific types of sensory stimuli and activities, especially those that involve non-routine actions and thoughts, produce more of those chemicals that encourage growth of new dendrites and neurons in the brain. These are generally non-routine activities. Routines become so automatic that actions are done largely unconsciously (ever get up in the morning and walk to the bathroom before you're really conscious?). Such automated or unconscious actions require less activity in the brain, and exercise it less.

A neurobic activity, on the other hand, should do one or more of the following:

1. Involve one or more of your senses in a new context.

2. Involve your full attention, at least briefly.

3. Break your routine in some significant way.

Neurobics don't need to be complicated, or require that you set aside special times. In fact, if they follow the guidelines above, many simple brain exercises can be worked into your normal day.
Examples Of Neurobics

Spend time in a new environment. Go to a new park, or a new store. Travel, by the way, seems to slow age-related mental decline.

Smell new odors in the morning. Have new odors, like a bottle of mint extract ready to smell first thing in the morning, to "wake up" your brain.

Take a shower with your eyes closed. Your other senses become more active when you cannot see, and a shower engages several senses.

Try brushing your teeth with your non-dominant hand. This is difficult for some of us, and requires full attention the first time you try it.

Put on different clothes. Ever notice how you feel differently when you wear different clothes? You may think differently as well. Give it a try.

Learn to read braille. This is a tough one, but learning to read with your fingers definitely involves one of your senses in a new context.

Respond to a situation differently. Catch yourself in a normal and mostly unconscious response to a situation, and choose to respond in a different (and preferably better) way.

Find a new route to work. It doesn't have to be a longer route - just different. You may even find a faster way to work once you break your routine.

Act confidently. In a situation you are unsure about, choose to act confidently. You'll notice that your mind gets very active once you adopt the assumption that you will know what to do.

Distinguish coins using only your sense of touch. This brain exercise can be a way to kill time when waiting for an appointment. If you really want a challenge, see if you can distinguish paper currency denominations by touch.

Leave the lights off in the house. Get around your home by memory and feel. This certainly fully engages your attention, but be careful of course.

Following the simple guidelines above (full attention, use senses in a new context, break your routine), and you can invent your own neurobics routine. Have some fun with these brain exercises - having fun usually fully engages your attention.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Stop motion fun

Maybe they should call it "Anti-fun"! Wow. Stop motion filming takes forever. I have to say for my first time I think I did an alright job. It's definitely time intensive and you have to jot down notes for items within the film that you want to remember to move or not move and when. I recommend you try it at some point. So the project took me a total of 7 hours to make using my 10.1 casio exilim digital camera. I used Windows movie maker to compose it and I used cooledit Pro for the sound editing. Everything isn't spot on, but I just didn't have the time to get things to match any closer.

Either way it was a fun project and a big part of me is VERY glad that it's over. Next time I'll do some planning for it instead of just winging it last minute and finding out how labor intensive it actually is...Sigh!

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Non-Valentine's Day

Blog you say? On Valentines day? I'm ready to play.

I'm obviously ready to rhyme in time as well.

I don't believe in the spirit of this day. I do however believe in the pissing away of better spent money on frivolous things that don't last. Here's another list of things that your flower and dinner money could be better spent on:

  1. Me
  2. Pet food
  3. Some good movies
  4. A couple tanks of gas
  5. A really cheap hooker who's lonely for the evening
  6. Buy McDonalds for Dinner and pocket the rest of the cash for #5
  7. Charity
  8. Valentines day cards for everyone you know....but mail them to them throughout the year
  9. A few good books
  10. A pile of board games
  11. 1 video game
  12. Dog toys
  13. A cheap stay in a different city
  14. Maybe a whole plane ticket to somewhere else
  15. For all you ladies, A new pair of shoes!
  16. For all you men, A new lady that doesn't need a new pair of shoes!
  17. Omaha Steaks
  18. A fish Tank
  19. A suprise dinner with your mother or both parents
  20. Stuff it in a mattress.....When WWIII comes you'll be happy you did it.

Saturday, December 22, 2007

Life list additions

So the new Year is right around the corner and I have the full intention to mark lots of things off my life list. Here's a small list of things I would like to do this year or in the near future(organized in no particular order);

- Join the Polar Bear Clu officially......on Jan 1, 2008
- Snowboard out west
- Pay off my credit card debt
- Get my Fiat running again
- Fly a plane
- Fly a helicopter
- Cliff dive in Mexico
- Visit Micronesia
- Visit Bangkok
- Go to Canada
- Go rafting again
- Skydive again
- Do $100,000 in sales
- Find something I actually enjoy doing
- Start to learn spanish again and speak it fluently
- Build a capbinet
- Invent something useful
- Get my scuba diving license
- Grow a beard
- Tile a floor by myself
- Finish installing crown moulding
- Sand and finish my own floors
- Be able to lift 1/2 a ton!
- find a workout routine I actually enjoy
- Take another yoga class
- Fix my truck and sell the bastard!
- Build something substantial out of wood
- Get a safe and fill it with valuable stuff (gold/silver bars)
- Collect a bag full of precious gems
- Fill a large pool with something like Skittles and dive into it naked
- Survive one life threatening situation
- Tell my family members I love them as often as possible
- Learn as much as I can from my parents
- Continue to add things to this list...

Thanks for reading. Please comment with anything you think might be beneficial to my list.

Monday, November 5, 2007

Paprika and Hammers

I know I'm not the only one. You're out there! That, "What was it I needed again?" shopper that always has a fail-safe item to help the economy keep growing.

It's that itching in the back of your mind, gnawing at your insides, compulsion to buy something. Now I'm not talking about the kind of people that buy semi-automatic weapons and a new copy of the catcher in the rye every time election year comes around. No. I'm talking about those guys who hit Home Depot for some 12/3 wiring and end up leaving with a tractor, 1 half ton of stone dust and a shipment of pavers coming to the house.

What compels us to buy crap? My compulsion? Hammers. Thank god. I decided to go around the house and round up all the hammers I've bought over the years and it came in at a total of 12. None of them are broken. Some haven't even made contact with a nail. Now I'm not talking about the Ball Pein, Cross and Straight Pein, Cross Pein Pin, Rubber, Sledge, Joiner's, Club, Power or framing hammers. What I'm talking about is the good ole' fashioned Claw.

"Who needs 12 of those?" you might say? Definitely not me, but you won't find me putting them on craigslist or e-bay either. It's an unhealthy compulsion as is my need to purchase Paprika.

If you asked me to name 5 recipes with Paprika in them I couldn't. Some day somewhere in due time I'm going to have a hammer and Paprika party. I'll invite at least 12 of my closest friends over (12+ as I'll probably own more hammers at that point) where we'll enjoy the finest of Paprika related cuisine and everyone will get a claw hammer as a parting gift.

Invites to come. Keep your eye on the mail!