Kilts and tartan and sheep, oh my!

On Saturday, we packed up our kids, along with our friend Tammy and her daughter Shelby, and drove to Montgomery for the Alabama Highland Games. The weather was beautiful, with blue skies filled with fluffy white clouds. There was a 30% chance of isolated thunderstorms, but they must have decided to do their thirty percenting over some other area. It was a bit warm, though. I don’t know what the official high for the day was, but we were all pretty much drenched in sweat by the time we left, somewhere around 4pm. Fortunately, since Clan Campbell was the Honored Clan, our booth was set up next to the grandstand, under the shade of several large trees.

The bands this year were excellent. They had Smithfield Fair and Slainte Mhath (pronounced “slawncha va”, Gaelic for “good health to you”). We really got a kick out of Slainte Mhath’s bagpipe rendition of the Rick James hit “Superfreak”.

We have no idea what the official numbers were, but it seemed to us from casual observation that there were a few less vendors and clan booths this year than there were last year. But we think this is probably due to a couple of factors: 1) last year, there was a good bit of rain just before the Games, so the grounds were muddy and it was extremely humid. So some of the people might have been discouraged from returning. 2) some of the vendors and groups might have been from the areas recently hit by Hurricane Isabel, and so had higher priorities to take care of. In any case, we still didn’t have time to look at all the things we would like to have seen.

Anyhow, a good time was had by all. Though I think we might try attending another event that occurs during cooler weather one of these days. The Stone Mountain Highland Games look pretty promising. Mid-October in the Atlanta area is probably noticably cooler than late-September in central/south Alabama. Maybe we can give that a try next year.

Alabama Bloggers

Hey, cool! The Montgomery Advertiser has an article about Alabama bloggers, and it mentions yours truly (along with a lot of other, probably more interesting, bloggers).

I was disappointed that PossumBlog isn’t mentioned, because Terry’s writing style leaves me in stitches everytime I visit his site. I’m also surprised that they didn’t mention The World Around You, which is where I learned about the article. Kristopher is a bit more liberal than myself (I tend to be just on the conservative side of moderate, for most issues), but his opinions are usually very well reasoned, and I enjoy reading his site to keep up with state politics.

Back to being a land lubber

All the piratey goings-on yesterday were great fun. Judging by how slow the Talk Like a Pirate Day web site was running yesterday, it must have been a great success all around. My whole family, from my kids all the way up to my in-laws, spoke like pirates. And our teenaged niece told us that a bunch of the kids at her school were into it.

In case you missed the fun here on geek ramblings, I have a way you can view the site in pirate mode. I have some other versions available, as well: Jive, Swedish Chef, Kraut, and Fudd.

I still have to make some adjustments to the filters, as they can break some of the HTML. The Fudd filter in particular is bad about that because it changes ‘<a href=”…”>’ into ‘<a hwef=”…”>’ Doh!

Problem with comments fixed

Yesterday, my wife informed me that when you clicked the comments links on posts, it wasn’t showing the comments, or the form to enter new comments. Oddly enough, this only appeared to be happening in Internet Explorer 6, which is why I hadn’t noticed it, because I use Mozilla as my primary web browser. I’ve been poking around in the code as time allows, and still haven’t figured out why this was happening. But I have implemented a work-around, so you IE users should be able to view and contribute comments now.