Here's what that looks like in the context of our overall spending:
This chart is the core of it:
This is what manufacturers were looking at when they decided to build today's cars. To figure out the target fuel economy for a vehicle you first calculate its "footprint", which is the area between the wheels. On our 2013 Honda Fit that's 4.8ft side-to-side and 8.2ft front-to-back, for a footprint of 39sqft. Then you ask if it's a car or truck. This tells you which curve to use, and where along it to look.
You must salt the water.
You must serve it mixed with the sauce.
I disagree on both.
I've been cooking pasta since I was a kid, and I prepare it the way my mother (who grew up in Rome) did:
I really like leaving airports on foot. There's something about it that feels like it shouldn't be possible: between an airplane and your destination there should be some other kind of vehicle, no? It reminds me of the first time I boarded a plane without using a jetway, where walking out on the tarmac just felt wrong.
I was in DC the past two days for meetings (my first time wearing a suit in a work context) and I was staying in Crystal City. I looked at Google Maps to see if I could walk:
It combines a saxophone mouthpiece with recorder fingering and a little nose to overblow an octave instead of a twelfth.
It's somewhere between a real instrument and a toy, and one of its bigger problems is that while it's great in C it gets harder to play the more sharps or flats you want. Since I mostly play contra music, typically in 2-3 sharps, this isn't ideal.
A Venova in D (two sharps) would be great, but I don't see this coming. If we're going to put in a bunch more work somehow, what if we went all the way to a double bore?
| Work | Secure Bio | |
| Band | Kingfisher | |
| Band | Free Raisins | |
| Band | Dandelion | |
| Board | Giving What We Can | |
| Spouse | Julia | |
| Child | Lily | |
| Child | Anna | |
| Child | Nora |