Monthly Archives: April 2011

Buck Rogers and the Price of Gasoline

When I was a kid, around 10 or 11 years old, I loved Buck Rogers. Not just any old Buck Rogers, mind you, but the NBC series from 1979.

It may have lacked the sheer wonder of the 1939 Buster Crabbe serial or the imagination-inspiring inventiveness of the character’s 1928 Amazing Stories debut, but for many of my generation it was, like it or not, our first exposure to the mythos. And while I could have done without Twiki (not to mention the whole second season), for the most part I enjoyed the hell out of the show. Gil Gerard was the man—here’s a little clip of Gil being awesome as Buck.

And because I was a big reader, especially of science fiction, it was no surprise that at some point in the early 80s I ended up reading the Dell novelization of the show, titled appropriately Buck Rogers in the 24th Century, by Addison E. Steele (one of many pen names used by writer Richard A. Lupoff).

I can’t remember exactly when I read it, and I can’t really remember anything specific about the story—other than it opened in the then far-off year of 1987, a time when, according to the story, gas went for a whopping $4 a gallon.

At the time I appreciated such a wild prediction, even though with real-world gas prices hovering around $1 a gallon, I couldn’t help but be amused by it. So 1987 came and gas did not even come close to reaching such an exorbitant price.

But 24 years later … here we are.

Gas Prices on the Rise

But even $4 a gallon isn’t too bad, considering the prices for some of the other liquids we routinely buy:

Gas vs. Other Liquids

The fine folks over at Good released this informative infographic (small version there to the left) detailing just where gas falls in the common liquids price matrix (hint: pretty near the bottom).

Now I don’t think my man Buck had any prescient commentary about the price or popularity of Starbucks in 1987. For that, you’d need to revisit Battlestar Galactica.

Sunday Project: Observation Hive

As you may or may not know, I keep bees. I’ve been interested in the hobby of beekeeping for a long time—my grandfather had 20-plus hives on his farm in Wisconsin when I was coming up. My brother and I often helped him harvest the honey each summer; a great job for young boys—and great fun. So it seems, once beekeeping gets in your blood, it’s there to stay.

I belong to a great urban beekeeping support group, a Los Angeles-based organization that goes by the name of Backwards Beekeepers. “Backwards” because in contrast to commercial beekeepers, we tend our bees with very minimal interference on behalf of the beekeeper. Instead, we let the bees call the shots. For the most part, this works out just fine for both the bees and the beekeepers.

Over the past year or so, the organization had been steadily growing and currently boasts more than 550 members. Because of this rapid growth, however, some of the group’s resources can be hard to come by. Observation hives, for example.

We only have one observation hive for the group—and that one is frequently out on loan. Now I see that as a good thing, because it means a lot of new people get exposed to beekeeping through talks, lectures, and other public events. But it can certainly be frustrating if you need an observation hive to do a talk, lecture, or some other public event.

And since I have two such talks in my near future, today, I decided to build my own observation hive.

Sunday Project: Observation Hive.

A hive fit for observation.

It’s nothing too fancy (and now that this first one is done, I have a few ideas on how to improve the design), but for now it does what it needs to.