Header image
Agriculture, skepticism, politics

AXO

| Posted on

Tonight I leave for Kansas City to start teaching the Auction Technology Specialist course tomorrow morning. Robert Mayo and I made a ton of progress on Wednesday whipping the course material into shape. I’m really excited and honored to get to teach this first, innaugural class.

headed to eat with the family
Erica and mom are in town this morning
AXO charity auction tonight
my friend Ron Clark and I are going to have us a time

Tuesday drive

| Posted on

Now that Moses is dead, can we finally repeal the second commandment?

I wrote this on Tuesday.

Going to Kansas City this morning to work on stuff for the NAA. I spent a ton of time working on the new auction technology specialist course, only to ave the majority of my changes not included in the final version.

It really needs edited. One slide has “Website” and “website” in the same title, while another discusses including “bio’s” on a site.

We went to Wildcat Creek on Sunday after playing golf on the Xbox for three hours to try to play golf in real life. I still haven’t swung my set of Ping irons since I got it last summer. While the course was already closed, we did hit the driving range. I put a hurt on the guy driving the ball sucker truck, as my 100 yard line drive doinked him square in the drivers door. I felt bad, not because I was trying to hit him, but because it was the best shot I had all day.

After the golf, we hit the batting cage. i haven’t swung a bat since I played base ball in high school, and while I today can’t lean over to tie my shoe without horrific pain, doing so felt so good I may go back.

Diane and I watched the Kansas v. Memphis game last night on our new 56″ 1080p HDTV with a standard-definition signal. It made me want to cry, knowing how good the screen could look had we purchased HD cable.

Saturday Nights and Sunday Mornings

| Posted on

I’m not a fan of commercials. I know that not really anyone is, but I’m pretty good at being immune to any and all forms of direct and indirect product placement. Yesterday on Facebook, however, I got my ass kicked.

Facebook has been experimenting with different kinds of advertising techniques with varying degrees of success and to various amounts of fanfare, ridicule and outright protest from its users. The most ire earned so far has been related to ways they’ve tracked users and based the ads delivered on the data from such tracking. I don’t really mind companies watching what I do, as I gave up on the concept of Internet privacy many years ago. I figure that if someone cares enough about what I’m doing to record it and use the data, I feel just a little bit more important and my head gets a little bit bigger.

I logged in at the suggestion of an email sent by someone at Facebook to tell me that somebody I couldn’t remember added me as his or her friend. Facebook has a view that lists the recent activities of each of your friends, and I often find myself reviewing it since it’s really the only way I can find out anything about my friends with actually talking to them directly. Removing the requirement of human interaction is one of the most staggering modern conveniences.

In any case, I’ve noticed recently that the second or third entry is usually an advertisement. I usually skip right over it, but this time it caught my eye. There, listed right along with friends adding applications and joining groups, was the news that the Counting Crows not only had a new album, but that it was already in stores.

While most of my music purchases are now from Amazon and it’s one-click access to its DRM-free selection, there are some purchases that I want to be able to display prominantly at the top of the cardboard box of CDs that I keep in my tool shed. Reminding myself that I needed to eat an extra helping of cranberries as punishment for not paying closer attention to my favorite band, I quickly left my office and left to find a copy.

After striking out at WalMart among its selection of about 12 artists, I found my prize at Hastings. I was profoundly disappointed at the lack of a jewel case, but that disappointment quickly faded as I inserted into the CD player in my truck the tracks to which I will be listening exclusively for the next six months.

We had one hell of a show last night at O’Brien’s Pit Stop in Norton, Kansas. Our good friend Rex Striggow, previously of the Mad Cows and the Blaine Younger Band and now from the relatively newly-formed Carbon Cowboys, joined Lucas, Dave and me for the show by rocking the green bass. The crowd was fantastic, making us play 45 minutes longer than we planned and yelling “one more song” very loudly in unison about thrice after we finally quit.

I’m sitting at Maddy’s house in Norton. We’re making calls to everyone in the area who might have some alcohol to put in Lucas’s brother’s new racing go-kart. Two fat, grown musicians trying to get a tiny go-kart with a small engine running on gasoline is probably a sight to see, especially when they realize after it’s finally running that the engine is tuned for pure alcohol instead of the gasoline. I don’t know if we’ll get the alcohol in time before we have to head south for Hays, but I’ll grab some pictures if we do.

O'Briens

| Posted on

O’Briens
Norton, Kansas

Professor's Steak House

| Posted on

Professor’s Steak House

521 E 11th St, Hays, KS

countrykansas.com on air

| Posted on

We’re now broadcasing the show over at countrykansas.com

Click it. Chat with us.

Live broadcast tonight

| Posted on

Don’t forget that tonight’s show at Bobby T’s will be broadcast at aarontraffas.com. It’s surely no substitute for actually attending the show, but if you can’t make it, now you can watch it.

Saturday live broadcast

| Posted on

We’ll be streaming video from the Bobby T’s show on Saturday night at aarontraffas.com. Simply come to the site and you’ll be able to view the video feed. It’s the first time we’ve done it, but we’re looking forward to being able to provide a new way for those of you who can’t make it to the show to be able to see it.