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  • Harry Reid Caves To Lieberman On Healthcare Reform

    harry reid tbi

    So there’s no public option, and now there’s no medicare buy-in. Yep, healthcare reform is getting flense in the name of partisan unity and compromise

    NYT: Senate Democratic leaders said Monday that they were prepared to drop a proposed expansion of Medicare and make other changes in sweeping health legislation as they tried to rally their caucus in hopes of passing the bill before Christmas.

    After a tense 90-minute meeting on Monday evening, Senator Max Baucus, Democrat of Montana and chairman of the Finance Committee, was asked if Democrats were likely to jettison the Medicare proposal.

    “It’s looking like that’s the case,” Mr. Baucus said, indicating that the provision might be scrapped as a way of “getting support from 60 senators.”

    Read the whole thing >>

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  • Unbelievable! Samung Omnia Pro for only £295 !!

    samsungomniaprolandscape

    The Samsung Omnia Pro is one of the best business-focussed Windows Mobile phones available now, and the current deal available at Clove simply blows the mind.

    The Samsung Omnia Pro, which offers an AMOLED WVGA screen and 800 Mhz processor is available for only £295 excluding VAT (less than $480).  The Quadband device unfortunately does not have 3G on AT&T frequencies, but is an exceptional buy and value for money for the rest of the world.

    To take advantage of the deal read more at Clove here.


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  • Shrimp Yule Logs

    My classic recipe adapted to reduce the carbohydrates but you and your guests would never notice. A crispy fried roll of phyllo dough filled with a savory shrimp mousseline scented with dry sherry. My original version was a very thin stick made with several layers of phyllo but this version is more substantial since the filling is very low in carbs and only uses a half a sheet of phyllo dough and thus its new name came into being. Easy to prepare and beautiful to look at, this dish is appropriate for a hearty hors d’oeuvre or even with a starter course for your Christmas dinner as it would pair nicely with soup or salad. I hope you enjoy.

    Shrimp Yule Logs

    Ingredients:

    20 ounces shrimp, cleaned and deveined with tail removed
    1/4 cup heavy cream
    2 tsp. chives, chopped fine
    1 tsp. garlic, chopped
    2 tsp. shallots, chopped fine
    1/3 cup egg whites, lightly beaten
    2 Tbsp. dry sherry
    1/4 tsp. white pepper
    9 sheets of phyllo dough, defrosted according to manufacturers directions and cut in half through the center
    1 Tbsp. unsalted butter, melted
    canola oil for frying

    Pulse shrimp and all ingredients, except the phyllo and butter, in the bowl of a food processor until it is a smooth paste. You may need to do this in small batches. Transfer shrimp paste to a small bowl that is set inside a larger bowl filled with ice. It is very important to keep the shrimp mixture very cold to eliminate any food safety concerns.

    Place phyllo dough on a sheet tray and cover it with a lightly dampened, clean kitchen towel or paper towel.

    You may want to prepare these in small batches right through the frying process to keep the filled phyllo from becoming soggy and possibly sticking. If they do stick a bit or break before they are fried have no fear. They will cook up the same and still be delicious. It will only give them a more rustic look, which is fine. Remember to always refrigerate any mixture not being used until you are ready for it.

    Pipe a line of filling with a 1/2" tip or spread about 1 1/2 to 2 tablespoons of shrimp mixture across the bottom of the phyllo dough, allowing for about a half inch border on the bottom and sides. Lightly brush the top 1/2" with melted butter and roll to close. Make sure it is sealed well on the top and use an extra dab of melted butter if needed. Set on a sheet tray lined with parchment or wax paper and cover with a lightly dampened towel.

    Pour canola oil into a large dutch oven or any other heavy bottomed pot. Attach a thermometer to the edge and make sure the bottom of it does not touch the bottom of the pot for an accurate reading. Heat the oil on medium high to high heat to 365′. Carefully place a few shrimp logs into the oil at a time, using a slotted spoon if necessary. Watch carefully, turning once or twice while frying to make sure that all sides are golden brown, as they cook quickly. Remove with spider or slotted spoon and transfer to a cooling rack that has been placed inside a paper towel lined sheet pan. Repeat process until all shrimp paste is used and logs have been fried. They are best if being served right away but if not they can be kept warm and crispy in a 200′ oven.

    Nutrition Facts
    18 Servings
    Amount Per Serving
    Calories 76.4
    Total Fat 2.8 g
    Saturated Fat 1.4 g
    Polyunsaturated Fat 0.3 g
    Monounsaturated Fat 0.8 g
    Cholesterol 54.1 mg
    Sodium 88.2 mg
    Potassium 75.6 mg
    Total Carbohydrate 4.4 g
    Dietary Fiber 0.1 g
    Sugars 0.0 g
    Protein 7.5

  • ReliOn Home A1c Kit @ Walmart

    $10 at Wal*Mart. (Good price whether you have insurance or not!)

    Have you used it?

    Do you like it?

    Do you feel that it is relatively accurate?

    I would make this a poll but don’t know how.

  • Relics in the Basilica of San Dominico

    Bologna, Italy | Relics and Reliquaries

    This celebrated baroque Basilica is quite large, and as one wanders the echoing church they will find a number of relics sprinkled throughout.

    The relic of St. Dominic is found in the form of his skull, encased in a decorative gold reliquary atop an alter. At the far end of the church lays the spectacularly fresh looking Blessed James of Ulm.

    At first, the full figure in the glass coffin appears to be the very fresh face of an mummified relic, but he is in fact a wax figure. His true remains are kept in a discrete urn nearby. To the left of the coffin, hanging on the wall is what also appears to be actual mummified remains, in this case of Ven. Serafino Capponi, a noted theologian. Capponi is posed with his head tilted lifelessly to one side, holding a cross in his brown withered hands. But this too is an illusion. The bust is actually papier-maché, although it is said to cover his true remains.

    However the church is not without true relics, in fact it has a whole room full of them. At the back of the church is a small reliquary museum full of real bodily bits of saints. The glass cases are full with mummified finger relics in fantastically ornate reliquaries, alongside a wide collection of stunning monstrances, chalices and works of macabre bone art.

  • Blaster Master, Earthworm Jim 2, more up on VC

    Two more classics in the form of Blaster Master and Earthworm Jim 2 head off to the Virtual Console just in time for the holidays, as well as several more puzzle games to keep you preoccupied until

  • Diabulimia??? Explain it to me.

    Ok, so I love BB’ing (bodybuilding). Been at it for about 5 years. I keep hearing about professional Diabetic BBers going into ketosis, or basically skipping shots (diabulimia) to get cutt before a show.

    My concern with this is, wont it eat up hard earned muscle? Or will it target fat first? I know this is a touchy subject but we might as well talk about it. I know its unhealthy but I want to know how it works.

  • Artichoke soup! with mushrooms …

    This does not seem to be a traditional way of treating artichokes (never saw it in an "authentic" cookbook), but the flavors are Greek-to-Middle Eastern … and wonderful! Found it in Dana Carpender’s 500 Low Carb recipes … and then I added the mushrooms.

    1/2 med onion (more or less)
    2 stalks celery
    1 clove garlic
    8 oz mushrooms, sliced
    2 – 4 TBS butter

    1 can artichoke hearts
    1 qt broth (chicken or veg, something mild)
    juice of 1/2 lemon
    1 c 1/2 and 1/2 or 1/2 c cream

    salt, pepper, cayenne, possibly dill?

    Chop and saute the vegetables in the butter in stockpot.

    Run artichoke hearts and 1/2 – 1 cup broth in blender till pureed. Add puree and remainder of broth to stockpot.

    Add cream. Add lemon juice. Mine curdled but with pureed hearts the texture was still okay (I used half and half).

    Can be served hot (with mushrooms), or cold. The dill would be a nice addition to a cold version.

    Dana’s recipe points out that much of the carb in artichokes is inulin, which is not digested.

  • How to Make Sure Your House Doesn’t Sell

    In a tough market, a house needs to be in tip top shape to sell. Even one little nitpicky thing can have potential buyers hurrying back to their cars to check out the next house. So, you’d assume everyone is doing his or her best to keep the house immaculate, right? That’s not always the case. Perhaps the potential sellers don’t really want to move or maybe they’re just overwhelmed. Whatever the reason, I’ve seen a whole lot of houses that have given me some wonderful material for a list of ways to make sure your house doesn’t sell.

    how not to sell a house

    • Leave dirty dishes in the sink. Not ordinarily dirty ones. Make sure they’re covered with old food and a little colorful mold. To top off the appealing display, leave smears of something not quite identifiable on the countertops. You get bonus points if you have something like a failed sprouting experiment on the counter, too.
    • Make sure your toilet isn’t very clean and leave the seat up. Encourage someone to do his daily showering, shaving and tooth brushing routine without cleaning up. Nothing says, “Don’t buy my house!” like dirty undergarments on the floor and beard stubble and toothpaste globs in the sink.
    • Tell the kids it is okay to play hooky on days the realtor will be showing the house. Suggest they slouch around looking angry and slightly violent in dirty clothes. Give them a raise in their allowance if they curse more than a stand up comic while the realtor and the prospective buyers are there.
    • Don’t worry about repairing the door after someone broke in. It creates a nice, welcoming feel.
    • Be sure all bedrooms have unmade beds and more outfits on the floor than in the closet. To really ramp things up, make sure the walk in closet ceiling has been replaced by a tarp and leave a note telling the realtor you are taking care of the leaky roof.

    To really heighten the shock value, you should be sure to only bother with these things in houses that say “Shows well” or “Will go fast” in the realtor’s notes. He or she will be so embarrassed that the potential buyer’s time was wasted that you’ll probably be rid of the realtor and all future buyers for good.

    Seriously, though, am I the only one who sees this kind of stuff when I look at houses? I’m not talking houses for rehab, which I’d expect this stuff in. I’m talking the ones listed as being in move in condition.

    Photo: SXC

    Post from: Blisstree

    How to Make Sure Your House Doesn’t Sell

  • UFC Undisputed 2010 debut trailer released

    Coming staright from the 2009 Spike Video Game Awards, THQ has finally released the first trailer of UFC Undisputed 2010, the sequel of the best-selling MMA game in history.
     

  • Private Equity Firm That Bought EMI Sues Citigroup For Misleading It Into Deal

    You had to be pretty clueless in 2007 not to recognize that the major record labels were seriously struggling. Still, we thought that the decision by private equity firm Terra Firma to buy EMI in 2007 might actually be an opportunity for a major record label to change, since the new bosses did not come from the recording industry, and weren’t saddled with silly preconceived notions about how a major record label had to do business. And, early on, things actually looked positive. New boss Guy Hands was quick to embrace Radiohead’s experiment and let everyone at EMI know that they needed to learn from it, rather than deny it or freak out about it. He also threatened to leave both the IFPI and the RIAA if they didn’t stop suing fans (eventually he stuck with both, but cut their allowance). On top of that, he hired some smart outsiders to help.

    Since then, however, everything has pretty much collapsed. While they weren’t saddled with preconceived notions, they were saddled with dreadful contracts, and every attempt to change them resulted in charges from EMI’s biggest artists that the company was trying to screw them over. On top of that, the company started giving really mixed messages. At times it seemed to be embracing the new, and at other times, it would try to personally bankrupt the CEOs of innovative startups. It didn’t take long for the tech experts EMI brought in to quit. Then, there were stories of infighting at Terra Firma, with arguments over what to do with EMI altogether, which could explain some of the contradictory strategy decisions.

    Either way, Terra Firma has now decided to sue Citigroup for misleading it into the deal. Again, given the state of the recording industry, it’s hard to see how they thought it was going to be a good deal in the first place, but Terra Firma claims that Citigroup lied to Terra Firma about other bidders to get the firm to pay more and pay now — noting that Citi had a major conflict of interest in acting both as an advisor and a financier of the deal. Of course, that’s how investment banks make their money anyway. They want deal flow, so they have a neat little script that always encourages more deal flow. At times, they talk about synergies, and why companies need to buy each other, and then once they get big, they talk about spinning off parts to “unlock shareholder value.” You can’t trust those guys for an honest assessment of such a deal, and if Terra Firma did so, it seems like it should be the firm’s own fault.

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  • From tonight’s presentation…


    Some, research sketches, for the, Exterior Design class

  • Sega appeals Alien vs. Predator RC by Aussie Classification Board

    Alien vs. Predator was awarded with a RC classification (Refused Classification) by the Australian Classification Review Board earlier this month. As you know, getting an RC from the Board is tantamount to having the game banned in

  • pumps and marathons

    i just finished a 1/2 marathon. I am 40 years old and ran it in 2:21. I took my pump off for the entire race and maintained a BGR of 140 throughout the entire race. I am afraid to take it off for the entire marathon in Janurary. Which will take 5 hrs i hope. i used hammer gel packets and cliff power blocks with great success, i just don’t want to stress my body out too much with out the pump. any suggestions? i have pushed myself in a number of things, but unlike a marathon, in those i could stop and check and make adjustments…..thanks
  • Detroit Preview: 2011 Mercedes-Benz E-Class Cabriolet

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    2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class Cabriolet – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The 2011 Mercedes-Benz E-Class Cabriolet is ready for its close-up at the Detroit Auto Show, but before the shindig in Michigan gets underway next month, Mercedes has dropped all the official details on its CLK convertible replacement.

    Like the coupe on which it’s based, the Cabrio is a step up from its predecessor and comes packing a choice of powerplants: a 3.5-liter V6 putting out 268 horsepower and 258 pound-feet of torque in E350 guise or a 5.5-liter V8 churning out 382 hp and 391 lb-ft of torque in the E550 cab.

    Unlike some of its competition, the E-Class Convertible doesn’t employ a retractable hard-top, but rather a 0.9-inch cloth roof that pays dividends in the capacity department. With the top up, the trunk is good for nearly 14 cubic feet of space and cut down to just over three cubic feet when the top is dropped and stowed behind the rear passengers. There’s also a pass-through underneath the roof’s enclosure — similar to the recently released Audi A5 convertible — that should make schlepping longer parcels a bit easier.

    The real party piece on the convertible E-Class is the new AirCap system, which includes a 2.4-inch wind deflector that extends from the windshield, along with a draft-stop mounted behind the rear seats. According to Mercedes, this limits the amount of wind intrusion into the passenger compartment up to speeds of 100 mph, keeping your perfectly coifed hair in check and making conversations easier when storming the autobahn.

    Other tech includes the Mercedes Airscarf, which blows warm air around the neck of the front seat passengers (originally seen on the SL) and Mercedes’ first application of head airbags in a convertible. If you’re champing at the bit to get your hands on the 2011 E-Class Convertible, you’ll have to wait until May, but in the meantime, you can scope out all the details in the press release below the fold.

    Continue reading Detroit Preview: 2011 Mercedes-Benz E-Class Cabriolet

    Detroit Preview: 2011 Mercedes-Benz E-Class Cabriolet originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 14 Dec 2009 19:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Acarbose AND bolus?

    The subject of Acarbose has come up now and again. Despite the nasty side effects I am ready to try it, as carbs of any kind are making me really spike. When I bolus for the spike I end up with unpleasant lows. I’m starting slowly – one a day for the first week, 2 a day for the second, and 3 a day from then on. If it works, and if my husband hasn’t threatened divorce by then 🙂 I’ll carry on! Do any of you bolus AND take Acarbose? Would love to hear from you if you do.
  • The Garrett, Watts Report (December 14th, 2009)

     

    garrett-watts1

    To Our Clients, Colleagues and Friends, 

    • A friend wrote us that there are tons of openings at FDIC.gov.  If you’re interested in doing failed bank clean-up work, you should also check out the contractors they use.  One of them is Solomon, Edwards (solomonedwards.com), and there are others as well.  We hear that it’s much easier to get hired by one of the contractors than by the FDIC.
    • This photo is a fake, but it’s still pretty cool.  The setting is under San Francisco ’s Golden Gate Bridge .
      joe1
    • If you’re a Husky, you can be proud that of all the public colleges and universities in the United States , University of Washington alums have been awarded more Congressional Medals of Honor than any other school.   And next to Cal , their students rank #2 in students who join the Peace Corps. The University of Washington was a pretty good (but not great) University for years, till they made a stunningly brilliant move.  Some number of years ago they appointed Bill Gates’ mom to their Board of Trustees, and over the years, tons of Microsoft dollars flowed to the campus.  It’s now gone from pretty good to very, very good.  Their medical school is considered one of the ten best in the nation.
    • Remember our mentioning Tightwad Bank as being in the Hall of Fame of Great Bank Names?  Well, there really is such a bank (www.tightwadbank.net), and, no surprise, it’s located in Tightwad, Missouri . The town has a population of 66 people. And one bank.
    • What is a Brooks Machine? From a friend at the BofA:  “I hate to admit it, but I know what a Brooks machine is. It’s a machine that would print out TIL information. I remember loans like GPM’s and the tapes the machines generated to show the loan payment stream. Those tapes were a mile long.”     Debbie Lane from Monarch Mortgage in Virginia Beach wrote about the machine and its inventor and several others also wrote in with similar comments.
    • The comment from our friend refers above to GPM’s.  If you never heard of them, they were Graduated Payment Mortgages. We used to like calling them gyp ‘ems. And speaking of giving names to loans or securities, when the 30 year Treasury bond was at 10%, we used to refer to them as Bo’s, as in Bo Derrick.  Actually, you might have been in middle school then, but 25-30 years ago Bo Derrick was the drop-dead beautiful star of a movie called, simply, “10’, as in ‘”On a scale of one to ten, she’s a ten.”  We all called a 10% bond a Bo, and we all thought we were terribly sophisticated and wildly clever.
    • We got an e-mail from Jeff McCalmon, one of the owners of Tightwad Bank telling us “We do enjoy the amusement of the name.” 
    • We’re always hammering on clients to calculate their exact cost-to-originate every month, and not estimates (“It costs us about $1,200 to originate a loan” is not good enough). You need to know it precisely, and in bps.  You need to be able to say “Our cost-to-originate was 127 bps last month, it’s 117 bps year-to-date, and it’s 113 bps year-to-date in our Manchester office and 142 bps in our Concord office.”
    • You need just as much specificity in calculating your gain on sale.  You need to be able to say that “Our gain-on-sale was 155 bps last month and 147 year to date v. 163 for all of last year.  So far this year it’s running 132 with conventionals, 188 with FHA, 193 for VA, and 201 for USDA.  Our loan officer, John Galt, is our highest producer by volume this year, but the gain-on-sale on his loans has only been 83 bps, and the 2nd highest producer by volume, Hank Reardon, has been averaging a gain-on-sale of 153 bps.”  Get the picture?
      If you can’t spit out numbers like this, you’re not managing your business in a way that lets you make the best decisions. And the crazy thing is that all this data is in your system somewhere.  It’s just a matter of extracting it and presenting it.  We were at Monarch Bank subsidiary Monarch Mortgage, and they have all this!  They really have their numbers down. It wasn’t a surprise that they are also highly profitable, and it’s always that way.  The companies that know the metrics of their business best are the ones that are the most profitable.  And vice versa.
    • And how about that Bernie Madoff?  Only 148 years and five months left on his sentence.
    • Here’s from someone we did a FOCIS-plus for, after she started tracking these metrics as we suggested:  “We’re tracking the things you told us to track, and we’ve found that some of our highest producers are our worst performers for profitability and loan quality…”
    • Do first impressions really matter when important guests visit your office?  We say they do and former warehouse lender Bob Murray agrees, providing this mental checklist: “What does the office look like?  Is it spartan or decked out in all cherry wood paneling?  Is the office clean and orderly, or is paper piled everywhere?  Is the overall environment (the facility, staff, and tone) professional and understated or over the top?  Good companies are busy but organized and they keep overhead down…. While these are only initial impressions, they often prove to be indicative of how owners/managers run the business.”
    • We still think you’d really enjoy Brothers. Toby McGuire was excellent, as was Natalie Portman.  By the way, the Harvard educated Portman has a very interesting YouTube video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v8e6-IeQ0aw.  If you’re easily offended by a bit of foul language, do not watch this!  But if you can handle it, it’s pretty hilarious given her squeaky clean, Ivy-educated image.
    • We wrote about the Schwab Bank portfolio of HELLOCS, and we got the following from a Schwab official. “I believe that in our case a much better measurement in terms of understanding both the concentration of risk and our basic approach to bank lending is to look at HELOCs as a percentage of total bank assets, not as a percentage of our loan book.  Our client loan book is small relative to assets.  Bank assets here tend to be concentrated more in securities, particularly government backed….. In addition, there is a high concentration among Schwab Bank clientele of Schwab brokerage clients, hence our high average FICO scores, and low default rates.”  That makes us feel lot better as we’ve always thought of Schwab as a really well run company.
    • We were wrong.  Indy Mac was not seized on a Thursday, but apparently Wamu was.  Someone wrote us that it was on July 11 that Indy Mac was closed, and isn’t 7-11 supposed to be a lucky number?
    • It looks like BAC sent loans to Freddie with a Bailee letter stating that the funds were to be wired to BAC as collateral agent, with Freddie ignoring it and wiring them to Taylor Bean’s account at Colonial. BAC is now being sued by the warehouse lenders. 
    • Possible the best mortgage newsletter is written by Rob Chrisman, and he reported recently mortgage brokers are originating less than 13% of residential loans.  Wow.  Remember when it was running at 60%?  Most of our wholesale clients have spent the last year or two moving into retail, but interesting, we also have some who don’t feel the need to move big time into retail.  We think there were always be wholesale, and we admire those mortgage bankers who are committed to staying in wholesale and seeing that it works.
    • Sport Quote of the week, from Joe Morgenstern of the Wall Street Journal:  “Soccer is a gentlemen’s game played by hooligans. Rugby is a hooligan’s game played by gentlemen.”  Don’t you wish you’d come up with that line?

    With so many of us sending our kids off to college, it’s only normal to think about what we owe children for these first 18 years or so.  It seems that we owe them love, a set of good values, a safe environment, and an education. Can you think of anything else?

    Garrett, Watts & Co.   

    Today’s special: The Seven Habits of Highly Ineffective Mortgage Bankers!

    Helping mortgage lenders increase revenues, control costs, and better manage risk.

  • Apple & Audiobook Firms Insist On DRM

    We’ve been discussing the trouble that’s been going on in the world of ebooks, as publishers are still coming to terms with the ebook era, and it seems that there are similar problems in the older world of audiobooks. TorrentFreak points us to an article by Cory Doctorow at Publisher’s Weekly, where he discusses the difficulty he has had in publishing a DRM-free audiobook. Even once his publisher got on board, there were problems. First it was with Audible, the main audiobook seller — who flat out refused. Yet on a more recent book, Audible was willing to go DRM-free, but Apple turned them down. Yes, Apple. The company that at one point claimed DRM was bad and should be ditched, and convinced the record labels to ditch DRM. Yet, as we’ve noted in the past, outside of music, Apple is still a huge DRM supporter. So it is with audiobooks apparently. When Doctorow, his publisher and Audible all told Apple they wanted to put a DRM-free copy of his audiobook in iTunes, he was told no. Other audiobook publishers are just as bad, if not worse, apparently requiring ridiculous license agreements, DRM and even software downloads. One of these days, the audiobook world is going to have to come to terms with what pretty much every other digital content provider has realized: making life more difficult for customers is not a way to succeed long term.

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  • VIDEO: The Michael Winslow of engine impressionists

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    The engine impressionist (warning: NSFW language) — Click above to watch video

    Remember Michael Winslow, the guy from the Police Academy movies and The Man of 10,000 Effects? When it comes to cars, this gent could be his follow-up act, having worked out his own technique for imitating a number of powerplants.

    There are a selection of engine sounds on offer, including a convincing import four-cylinder, two-stroke motorbike, a V6, and a Weedwacker among others – and what else are you going to do while the xBox loads up a game? You can check out his repertoire in the video after the jump. *WARNING: NSFW language. Thanks for the tip, Duy!

    [Source: YouTube]

    Continue reading VIDEO: The Michael Winslow of engine impressionists

    VIDEO: The Michael Winslow of engine impressionists originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 14 Dec 2009 19:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Dry Tortugas

    Key West, Florida | Watery Wonders

    Juan Ponce de Leon first stumbled upon this stretch of islands in 1513, back when they were nothing more than clusters of coral inhabited by sea turtles. Upon his discovery, de Leon named the islands “Las Tortugas” (meaning “the turtles”), and is said to have subsisted off 160 of these very animals while on his journey through the high seas. (“Dry” was later added to the islands’ name as an attempt to warn mariners of the lack of freshwater in the area.)

    After de Leon’s discovery, the Dry Tortugas became a fixture on Spanish ship maps for merchants and explorers going to and from the Gulf Coast. Seventy miles west of the Florida Keys, and in a prime location between the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean, the Dry Tortugas soon became a popular shipping corridor.

    Despite the passageway’s popularity, the Dry Tortugas also became the site of hundreds of shipwrecks. The seasonal shallow waters and hazardous weather conditions lent to the corridor’s infamous title as the “ship trap.” To this day, a large collection of sunken treasures still lies beneath the surface waters. Seventeenth-century vessel remains, cannons, and glassware are among some of the maritime relics.

    Of all the Dry Tortugas treasures, though, Fort Jefferson perhaps remains the crown jewel. Once Florida was acquisitioned from Spain in 1822, the United States began plans to erect a naval station that would help combat piracy in the Caribbean. Eventually, the U.S. Navy agreed on the Dry Tortugas as the site for their fortress, arguing that U.S. shipping in the Gulf Coast would be in jeopardy if a hostile power were to take over the islands.

    In 1847, after seventeen years of extensive planning, Fort Jefferson began construction on the Garden Key Island. The design plans called for a practically indestructible hexagonal fortress, complete with a massive 420 heavy-gun platform. Two sides of the fort measured 325 feet and four sides measured 477 feet. The structure stood 45-feet above sea level, surrounded entirely by a wall and a 70-foot wide moat. Though construction lasted for roughly thirty years, Fort Jefferson was never fully completed. Despite this, 16 million bricks were laid, making it one of the largest coastal forts ever built.

    During the Civil War the fort was also used as a prison, mainly for Union deserters. The most famous inmate, however, was Dr. Samuel Mudd, who was convicted of conspiracy in the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln. After shooting President Lincoln, John Wilkes Booth jumped from the theater box, broke one of his legs, and immediately fled to Dr. Mudd’s farm where he received medical assistance.

    In 1865, Dr. Mudd was sentenced to life in prison and sent to the remote fortress. Two years later, a yellow fever outbreak occurred at Fort Jefferson. The outbreak took a number of lives, including the lone doctor who had been stationed at the fort. Dr. Mudd agreed to step in as a replacement and, as a result, many lives were saved. Consequently, the soldiers started a petition demanding Dr. Mudd’s release; a petition which President Andrew Jackson granted only four years into Dr. Mudd’s life sentence.

    The fort was abandoned by the Army in 1874. In later years it served as a coaling station, quarantine hospital and, in 1935, it was registered by President Roosevelt as a National Monument. Today it operates as part of the Dry Tortugas National Park. Accessible only by boat or seaplane, the Dry Tortugas are considered to be one of America’s most remote and least visited national parks.