Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Photographic History of Dave's Bike Rides

Missed the BWCA


Update 2024
In 2023, for medical reasons, I was unable to make even a single bike ride. Purgatory.
This spring (2024) I have been released.  So in humble appreciation I give you an updated Photographic History of Dave's Bike Rides.

This album will show you the myriad of places reachable by bicycle in the Twin Cities and surrounding area.  Hope you enjoy the tour.

Dave


I enjoy exploring on my bike. Some prefer motorcycle rides, but I prefer the slower pace. I almost always discover something new on every ride, even routes I have done many times.

Over the years I have done hundreds of rides, often alone but more fun with friends or even relatives. Usually I just ride for the joy of it, but occasionally, usually with a friend, we do a "theme" ride. Scenic overlooks, parks, museums, neighborhoods, lakes (there are a bunch), cemeteries, churches, re-purposed fire stations, bronze statues, historical preservation sites, river rides, colleges, bridges, interesting architecture, DQ's, polling places, street art - and I do the wonderful Schaar's Bluff trail 3 or 4 times a year.  

I always try to take at least one photo on every ride.  I have thousands. 

1957 Schwinn
So, I have been reviewing my bike ride photos and created an online album, a representative sampling of the totum, mainly for my own benefit, trying to remember the locations while I am still capable. 

If you're interested in a virtual tour of Mpls-St. Paul and surroundings you can find the album here: 

Photographic History of Dave's Bike Rides.

Note: Double-click a thumbnail for the full-size image and use arrows left-right to advance through the album.




Copyright ©  2021  Dave Hoplin

Thursday, March 25, 2021

Novel Defenses

Dominion Systems has filed a defamation suit against Sydney Powell for $1.3B for her accusations of voter fraud in the 2020 election, specifically calling out the Dominion voting machines.  Her defense is "no reasonable person would believe my conspiracy theories".  Wow.  I'm not sure what that says about her followers but if you buy that, it opens up a whole raft of possible "explanations" for criminal, civil or personal misconduct, although I'm not sure this one can be topped:  "Everyone knows I can't be trusted"   

But, here's a few more you can try out when it appears the hammer is coming down on you.

1) I was just having a bad day

2) I have a tumor pressing on my cortex

3) I had just eaten two packages of Twinkies

4) I just couldn't get to a phone

5) I had no idea what that pounding the garbage can was about

6) The devil made me do it

7) I have a lot of money so you should just drop it

8) I am broke so you should just drop it

9) I thought the flight was 8 PM not 8 AM

10) I'm dyslexic. I thought I was doing 60

11) I was on mute

12) I didn't have any clean underwear

13) Reddit/WallStreetBets said it was a sure thing

14) I was watching the Starship Enterprise docking at MSP

15) I was always told to ask for forgiveness instead of permission

When all else fails, admit guilt.

{Add your own favorite defense/excuse as a comment}

Copyright ©  2021  Dave Hoplin


Tuesday, March 9, 2021

Lowry Architectural Wondering

Here's an offering to my Lowry homies.

Architecturally, my little home town cannot complete with Athens or Rome, but we'd take them down when it comes to friendliness.  Usually, a small town has some ostentatious home or building that stands as a monument of success for some town swell, often the banker.  Lowry has many nice homes but none in the "mansion" category, perhaps a testimony to its egalitarianism.  Nevertheless, it does have some interesting structures.  

My grandparents home is an example of immigrant influence. 


Ole & Esther Hoplin home.  This traditional Swedish gambrel roof home was built in 1927-28, just in time for the depression. The mortgage was held by a pair of bachelor farmers and was not foreclosed due to their kindness. No payments during the 30's and not fully paid off until after WWII. The home had some forward looking features, including electricity, indoor plumbing and radio antenna wires for each room - never used however.  Another building to the east in the same design held the 1923 Overland and hay for the cow. Oh - and the basement was a mortuary and housed bodies in the winter waiting for the spring thaw. 



Lutheran Free Church

This home (204 Drury Ave) once was a Lutheran Free Church,  a separate Lutheran denomination from 1897 to 1970 when it merged with the American Lutheran Church (ALC).  Augsburg Seminary in Minneapolis was founded by the Free Church and the Wisconsin Norwegian Lutherans.  (I was unable to determine when this congregation was active in Lowry).  I remember it as the Clarence Hanson home.




Lowry Clinic once hosted 3 M.D.'s. Of course, now with centralized medicine, those days are long gone.  Dr. Lewellyn L. Gibbon was so beloved by my grandmother that that a Hoplin chid got that Welsh name in between his given name and surname. Dr. Bert was a legend. Dr. Nelson is a relative. Dr. Wright was the first black to live in Lowry - and he managed the Lowry baseball team. And Dr. Lee traveled from Glenwood in his TBird a couple days a week in the late 50's to deliver his special kind of care.  The clinic building is now a single family home.

  • LL Gibbon M.D.
  • BA McIver M.D.
  • Maynard Nelson M.D.
  • Bruce Jarvis M.D.
  • Matt Plasha M.D.
  • Beaumont Hagebak, DDS
  • Lawrence Wright, DDS
  • Gordon Lee MD



The Rink House.  This was built as a WPA project in the 1930's using local rock for the chimney and fireplace.  It served skaters for 50 years. In my day, Ed Flynn was the keeper of the fire and handed out the big snowplow skate behind shovels for us to clean the rink after snowfalls.







William Leslie home.  William Leslie was co-owner of the wildly successful Lowry Roller Mill during the 1920's & 30's,  producing "Lowry's Best" flour.  Glenwood Bakery used 60 bags per day. Sadly, in February 1937 a flour dust explosion sparked a fire and the mill burned to the ground.  The mill was not rebuilt.  The home was later owned by Donnie Dingwall, but I remember it as the Iver Femrite family home.





Iver Engebretson home.  Iver was the president of Lowry State Bank, holding that position from 1926 into the 1950's.  He was noted for serving in the Spanish-American war.





Lowry School.  The red brick 2 story school building housed grades 1-8 and four teachers. Lots of memories.  It's no longer there.






The Churches.
  The Lutherans, the Covenanters, Plymouth Brethren and the Catholics - but their church was out in the country so perhaps is ineligible. 







George McIver Home.  The McIver's were among the most prominent Lowry families.  Leaders of the Plymouth Brethren's. Founders of McIver's Store, the local grocery and mercantile. Dr. Bert McIver was a renowned physician.  Truly an exemplary family.  In my day, the George McIver home was that of Howard & Mary Lysen.








The Jaegers
were Latvian Displaced Persons, living in Lowry in the late 40's, sponsored by area Lutheran churches.  Theirs was a fascinating story if you've got time to read it. Angie was a MD and Vera a pharmacist. Their brother Julius was a renowned artist. The cared for a young boy, Alberts Vigants on their escape from the Russians at the end of WWII.  They lived in the upstairs apartment on Aurora Ave.




Ben Rice Shoe Repair.  These were the days when we fixed things rather than sending them to the landfill.

Lowry Creamery.  I remember walking to the creamery to get a milk bottle filled with sweet cream.  Ray Hayenga was the creamery man and benefactor of the Lowry Leghorn BB team, so he is golden in my memory.  He also organized a memorable trip to the Boundary Waters for Lowry boys which included almost burning up my father's pickup - a story for another day.





Pure Oil station
.  This classic gas station was located on a side street unseen from Highway 55.  I remember it as operated by Bob Bennet and in it's modernized look. It's now gone and in it's place is Lowry Mfg.







Lowry Flats.
Lowry's version of New York's The Dakota.  Cheaper rent.  Several businesses along main street had apartments in thire upper level. McIver's Store, Dahl House, Dave Chan's Tavern, Telephone Office ..






The Depot.  Up and through the 60's, the railroad was the life blood of small towns, delivering mail, freight and providing passenger service.  Two trains a day stopped in Lowry.  Jim Robieson served as the station master 





The Town Hall. The hub off community activity.  Fire House, Polling Station, Council Meetings, Water Works, Smelt fries, basketball court, Memorial Day speeches, School Christmas programs, Lowry Citizen of the Year honoring ceremonies, ... those were the days.



Copyright ©  2021  
Dave Hoplin

Monday, March 1, 2021

What's The Big Idea

Once in awhile I read something that awakens the latent wanna-be philosopher in me (see Philosopher For Hire).  An article in the The Atlantic titled "American's Innovation Engine is Slowing" is a case in point. 

When I was a kid, my mother would occasionally say to me “What’s the big idea?”.  I knew then I had done something stupid or reckless - and I should be worried.  Now I ask: "America, what’s the big idea?"

Some thinkers believe that the good old U S of A is in trouble because of the dearth of “big ideas”.  The Economist had a cover story with Rodin’s Thinker sitting on a toilet, captioned: “Will we ever invent anything this useful again?”  
 
The premise is that transformational breakthroughs are in our past.  The advances that characterized the industrial age have not happened in the modern era. The internal combustion engine, the airplane, electrical power, the telephone/telegraph, refrigeration all dramatically changed millions of lives. Nowadays, innovation in America is “... somewhere between dire straits and dead” according to PayPal founder Peter Thiel.  Some economists have pegged this era as the “Great Stagnation”. Innovation has become  incremental rather than transformational.  


Yes, we have better cars, better airplanes, better TVs, better computers, better buildings, better appliances, reusable rockets .. better most things than 50 or a 100 years ago - but functionally they have not changed all that much.  We still ship goods mainly by cargo ship, rail and truck.  We still sit on the couch and watch the “tube”, albeit a flat-screen incarnation and streamed content.  We still drive our cars at roughly the same speed as 1950.  We still cook and prepare food much as grandmother did.  

The promises and predictions of the SciFi writers have not been realized.  Where is my flying car, my "beam me up" transporter, my bionic body and especially the Star Trek Enterprise?  Instead I get Segway, holograms, Siri, e-cigarettes, veggie burgers,  virtual reality video games, and worst of all, narcissistic and personal attacks on social media with 280 characters of text - really?  It is true, we have created the internet, transformational for the world, but its impact is a mixed bag.

America's reputation as the world’s leading innovator is built upon the vibrant research and development capabilities of our great universities, often funded by government grants. But our universities are in trouble. The pandemic has increased isolation, government funded research is reduced and lower student numbers all contribute. The number of talented people from around the world studying here on student visas is dropping. Our immigration policies are sending the message that says we don't want you. Our melting pot has a cover on it. Students with foreign citizenship currently comprise the majority of our science-based graduate programs.  And most, when their study is complete, want to remain in the US to further their research, work for American companies or create their own businesses. 

Where are the American grad students?  Well, they are there, just not in great numbers in STEM related research. They are in commerce, finance and business schools, hedge funds and crypto-currency. The American obsession with wealth is leading the best minds to “follow the money”. (Note - this is opinion, my own.)  Couple that with the epidemic of science denial, the disparagement and dismissal of science and education in general, and you have a prescription for losing the technology race to China.

So, have we run out of ideas?  Is America on the downslope?  

I chose a hopeful view.  In 1800, Thomas Malthus predicted that everyone in the world would starve.  It would be just impossible to produce enough food. World population is now 7x that of Malthus’ time, and while hunger is still certainly a global problem, most people eat better than 200 years ago.  And,  hey, we survived the Mayan end-of-the-world prophecy and asteroid flybys, so perhaps there is hope. 

Where do we look for breakthrough advances that might dramatically improve the lives of people?

> Medical research. Perhaps the most hopeful of fields, as shown by the rapid Covid vaccine developments, CRISPR & gene therapies, DNA sequencing, non-invasive neurosurgery using sound waves, smart pacemakers, the application of Artificial Intelligence to medical diagnosis and image processing ... can a cancer cure be far behind?

> Space Exploration. The amazing landing of the Mars Rover after a 40 million mile ride and landing perfectly on a football field size target with Mars spinning at 800 mph is perhaps a sign that we are still capable of great endeavors. 
 Space initiatives have historically led to breakthroughs both intentional and  serendipitous. But when the government tries support innovation ... well, you know... politics.  

> Computer Technology.  Virtual reality, Quantum computing, Robotics, Artificial Intelligence ..
Caveat. Artificial Intelligence offers both great potential for good in many areas, but like many technologies, its application can be perverted. We must be watchful.  The military industrial complex is looking hard at AI.  Imagine autonomous weapons, waves of smart drones. AI is not human and will not exhibit human empathy.  

> Climate Change. I suggest it is time for the US to quit being spectators and drive worldwide cooperation attacking climate change.  Follow the lessons of Pascal’s Wager - believe and do something about it rather than just debate it. The time for that is long over. Climate change is real and if we continue to ignore it, I shudder to think.  This is not a problem that can be handled by last minute quick fixes. By now the US should have been leading the world, mobilizing another "Manhattan Project-like" effort.  But instead the fossil fuel interests and their servants in Congress delay, filling the air with disinformation. Trillions for war but lemonade stands for climate, a crisis that will affect all our children and grandchildren’s quality of life and perhaps put their lives at risk. Does it take melting Greenland and Antartica to deliver the message? What is wrong with us?
(see: A Hot War)  

If you have made it to here, you have my thanks for reading and allowing me to vent. I’ve just had it with science deniers.

Copyright ©  2021  Dave Hoplin