The conference was great. We got there without sliding off the road, and are now back home again. (Turns out there were some debris-related delays on Saturday afternoon, so points to us for lounging at home rather than getting stuck on the road.)
Highpoints of the event were:
1) Walking into every session room and finding it full of mostly middle-aged (or older) attendees, almost universally gray-haired, glasses-wearing, and more pudgy than not, most with their nose in a book as they waited for things to get rolling. Ahhhh, kindred spirits! I felt right at home.
2) Meeting Donna Andrews and Hallie Ephron and making new friends Sunny Frazier (Fools Rush In) and Cindy Sample (Dying for a Date) and Debra Purdy Kong (Taxed to Death, Fatal Encryption).
3) Meeting everyone else I had the chance to chat with, of both the author and fan variety.
4) Going way, way, way over budget in the bookstore (and that's on top of all the freebies). I won't be wanting for anything to read for a very long time.
5) Dinner with my beloved at Roy's. Every time we eat there we set a new personal record for how much we've spent on dinner for two, and it's always worth it.
6) Upgrading to an ocean-view room.
7) Receiving lots of compliments on my wardrobe. Even nicer than usual because I'd made those things myself.
Toastmaster Lee Goldberg (of Monk fame) was consistently hilarious, and much fuss was made over Guest of Honor Barry Eisler, widely considered hot and handsome, but really it's all about the hair. My husband meant to get a haircut pre-conference, but forgot, which I think put him in BE territory in the sexy-shaggy-locks department. I admit I'm biased.
Being the at-best-half-assed blogger that I am, I didn't take any photos.
Sorry.
Friday, March 13, 2009
Saturday, March 7, 2009
Rain delay
I thought I'd be halfway to the Left Coast Crime conference in Waikoloa right now, but 18 hours of heavy rain have made the northern route (2 hour drive) iffy.
flickr.com
The other option is the southern route, but that's about a 4-hour drive in good conditions and it's raining just as hard (maybe harder) down there. So the hell with it. We'll go tomorrow. Or even Monday.
It's a spectacular drive in good weather, and can be a hellacious one when it rains like this. The belt highway curves through three huge gulches with practically vertical sides, and when the ground's saturated rocks and debris start coming down.
flickr.com
At 1 pm Civil defense said the road is technically still open (i.e., yes, there are rocks and debris landing in the road but not so much, yet, that they're not letting anyone through). Nevertheless, drivers are cautioned to stay off the road if they have that option.
Being halfway to Waikoloa would be great. Getting stuck halfway to Waikoloa would be a major pain.
Last time we drove in conditions like this it was Waikoloa to Hilo and a white-knuckler most of the way. We were lucky: the road wasn't closed by rock-fall until 30 minutes after we got through. Yeah, downtown Hilo was flooded when we got here, but that happens. At least in town you can detour around it. On many stretches of the the belt road your only choices are to sit there till the road is cleared (which can be an hour, or several hours, or many hours) or turn around and hope the road behind you is still open.
The other option is the southern route, but that's about a 4-hour drive in good conditions and it's raining just as hard (maybe harder) down there. So the hell with it. We'll go tomorrow. Or even Monday.
Of course, as soon as I'd alerted the hotel and our neighbs (bringing in mail, paper) to our change in plans, the rain let up here in Hilo. But I've been keeping my eye on the radar and it's still coming down strong on both the north and south ends of the island. I am truly glad not to be driving through this:
Which is wimpy of me, I guess, 'cause it was a lot worse a couple of hours ago. For Hawaii rain, not so bad.
* * * * *
Update: Rain lull was temporary, although now it's just a steady rain, not a roof-pounder. A flood advisory for East Hawaii (that's Hilo-side) was issued this afternoon, no saying when it will be lifted.
I've had some time on my hands this afternoon, whiled it away Googling Hilo rainfall and comparing real-rime radar images. One bit of trivia I've learned is that average March rainfall for Hilo is 14.35". We've had almost 9" in the last 24 hours, and it's not expected to stop anytime soon. Gosh I love the Internet! I can deal with rain delays, it's the thunderstorms and power outtages that take me offline that are hardest on the psyche.
If you think 9" of rain in 24 hours is a lot, keep in mind that Hilo "has long been recognized as the wettest population center in the US" (found that quote on a tourist info site, gee, they might want to downplay that!). Our average annual rainfall is a measly 129" or so (only about 3.5 times Seattle's 36"), but we had to hit 211" in one year a while back to set a record.
And consider this:
11/02/2000: "According to the National Weather Service, the massive storm set a record in Hilo where 27.83 inches of rain fell at the airport in the 24-hour period ending at 11 a.m. Thursday. The previous record for a 24-hour period was 22.30 inches set in 1979. If Hilo wasn't wet enough, the most rainfall happened over Kapapala Ranch in north Ka'u. Between 2 p.m. Wednesday and 2 p.m. Thursday the recorded rainfall totalled of 36.68 inches. "
Geeze, I hope we don't get that much!
Good news is the west side of the island should be a bit drier tomorrow. As of 7pm, any hopes for safe driving of the northern route tomorrow are out the window, so we may take the long way 'round. Hoping for a morning departure ("isolated showers") before things pick up again in the afternoon ("scattered showers" expected).
Secret confession of the day: I really don't mind missing some of the conference. This shindig goes on for 4-1/2 days, which, in my experience, is a at least one day longer than my conference stamina. Cutting that down to size is a fine idea. I am sorry to miss "Desserts to Die For" this evening though (one of my other blog personas is Cake Junkie: I take desserts seriously, gleefully, and frequently). Especially after spending an extra $30 so hubbie could indulge, too. I guess I owe him a cake. If we don't go until Monday I'll be out another $40 for his ticket to the luau... starting to add up to enough reason to hit the road.
Sunday, March 1, 2009
inputting edits...
...gah, what a boring chore. Since my last post, I've done an out loud readthrough of the hard copy and a silent edit of same, and then the fun began. Ugh. Typing in the hard-copy tweaks and scribbles. What a deadly-dull task that is, but it must be done. So much easier to edit on-screen, but a print-out looks and reads differently. A font prints slightly differently than it displays, and minor punctuation glitches (comma instead of period, extra space between words) show up on the paper page that are sometimes difficult or impossible to see on the screen.
Anyway, that's finally done. Took forever and a half because I set it aside for a bit to tackle end-of-year bookkeeping for our various businesses. Fingers crossed incorporating last year ends up saving the significant money predicted by our accountant, 'cause sheesh it's been a lot of extra work. Not so horribly much now that it's all set up and systems are in place, but those only do so much good when I get caught up trying to meet a novel contest deadline and let the bookkeeping slide for a couple of months.
So here it is, March first already. Saturday afternoon we drive over to Waikoloa for the Left Coast Crime conference. Looking forward to that, but got a few things to cross of the "to do" list before then. Including finding somewhere/way to insert one more "Rose" incident in this draft (that will make sense when the book is published and you read it), and crafting some kind of elevator pitch: a two-sentence answer to the question, "What's your book about?" This is the kind of thing that brings me to my knees. I find it harder to write a pithy description than to write the entire book, which is why I've let the entire past month go by without sitting down to tackle it. If/when I get a good (or even barely acceptable) one put together I'll post it here.
In the meantime, I've got a few wardrobe issues to finish up: one and a half of the four (yes, that's 4) skirts I sewed last week still need to be hemmed. And there's one more casual top I might see if I can whip up before next weekend. That's all over at my sewing blog.
Anyway, that's finally done. Took forever and a half because I set it aside for a bit to tackle end-of-year bookkeeping for our various businesses. Fingers crossed incorporating last year ends up saving the significant money predicted by our accountant, 'cause sheesh it's been a lot of extra work. Not so horribly much now that it's all set up and systems are in place, but those only do so much good when I get caught up trying to meet a novel contest deadline and let the bookkeeping slide for a couple of months.
So here it is, March first already. Saturday afternoon we drive over to Waikoloa for the Left Coast Crime conference. Looking forward to that, but got a few things to cross of the "to do" list before then. Including finding somewhere/way to insert one more "Rose" incident in this draft (that will make sense when the book is published and you read it), and crafting some kind of elevator pitch: a two-sentence answer to the question, "What's your book about?" This is the kind of thing that brings me to my knees. I find it harder to write a pithy description than to write the entire book, which is why I've let the entire past month go by without sitting down to tackle it. If/when I get a good (or even barely acceptable) one put together I'll post it here.
In the meantime, I've got a few wardrobe issues to finish up: one and a half of the four (yes, that's 4) skirts I sewed last week still need to be hemmed. And there's one more casual top I might see if I can whip up before next weekend. That's all over at my sewing blog.
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