Old Fourlegs

Some links regarding the coelacanth:

Coelacanth Rescue Mission: Dino Fish

Australian Museum Online

BBC News

The Washington Post

Wiki

The Observer

Marinebio.org

pbs.org – Anatomy of a Coelacanth, Moment of Discovery

South African Coastal Information Centre

Pieter Venter – Diving for Coelocanths

African Coelocanth Ecosystem Programme

Jun G. Inoue

A Fossil Comes to Life – Edwin H. Colbert

Natural History Museum of London

Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History 

We’re Brothers Forever

I am your brother, mister Reynaldo Lapuz.

Thank you for giving hope to those who are in “despairs”.

Some interesting comments regarding Reynaldo Lapuz’s American Idol audition:

the 405

This is the site that I visit before I leave for work every morning:

http://www.sigalert.com

Here’s what usually happens at least once a week:

10-30-07_la_tijera_accident.png

This traffic jam after work was from Halloween, 2007:

10-31-07_halloween_eod_traffic.png

Moving away from Long Beach will suck, but it’s better than chronic, tense lower legs, nervous breakdowns, and fear of being hit on the 405 freeway.

It’s really not worth it living 28 miles away from work.

What I don’t like the most is, when people at work think I’m just late because I’m lazy.

Not true at all.

The 405 freeway, coming from Long Beach, upwards north to the 110 intersection, the 91 intersection, the 105 intersection, and the La Cienega Boulevard exit are four BIG reasons why I can’t exactly predict what time I’ll arrive at work.

Here’s a typical scenario:

This morning, I went into the Bellflower ramp to go into the north-bound 405 freeway, headed for Culver City. I breezed it all the way to the Avalon exit, in Carson (it tooks me 7 minutes to get there from my home in Long Beach), and by the time I was nearing the 110 junction, all lanes halted, literally.

After about 40 minutes of stop-and-go traffic from the 110 junction, I was able to exit on La Cienega Boulevard, which is the only straightforward road that I can take to work.

However, the traffic, peoples’ driving habits, and mishaps on that boulevard are nothing BUT easygoing or straightforward.

This may be a paranoia of mine, but I will encounter at least 8 people tail-gating me on the way to work. This young woman in a new Jeep  harassed me on the SLOWEST lane, and kept on trying to force me to speed up.

I then changed lanes to the right lane while she blew past everybody else.

I mean, there’s nothing wrong with that, but I encounter this every fricking day, every work day, and week night.

Physically, my lower legs are chronically fatigued. On top of this, I am nervous all the time when I’m on the 405, even though I never have any caffeine in the morning.

If I do have green tea in the morning, I usually don’t hop on the 405 freeway.

The 10 freeway must be worse than the 405…

plans to move closer to work

I texted my roomates this morning while at work, telling them briefly about my plans to move by January 2008. Kitiwiti has been corresponding with the owner of the rental, so it looks like we have a good shot at it.

After looking through Craigslist ads in Los Angeles, the prospect of moving to Kitiwiti’s lead is starting to go in our favor, as some apartment units have stiff down payments and snotty landlords.

I’m looking forward to meeting the owner in December.

[EDIT: WE ARE FINALLY MOVING 2 miles away from work! Move in date: 06/27/09]

~ kenohki

Roadside Assistance – ANYWHERE

Thank goodness for Amex’s Roadside Assitance.