Taking my morning stroll around the pool deck in my role as lifeguard for the previous night's four legged swimmers, one of our young raccoons was in the ivy on the east retaining wall. Going to have to have a chat with my better half because he actually crawled closer to me grunting and wagging his tail when I went to shoo him off. (Of course he might have been rabid and getting ready to attack my ankles)
Some crazy squirrel with absolutely no taste buds chewed into my 2 cycle fuel container I've had for many years. The new containers have the auto-closure mechanisms that have endeared them to outdoor equipment users everywhere. Kind of anti-Darwin :)
Bathing suits? Check. Properly inflated boat from Amazon? Check. Oars to paddle boat? Check. Large, warm body of water to test the seaworthiness? Good thing we are on the Gulf of Mexico.
First sea trials were very successful.....many more to follow I'm sure.
Extending out on a platform from the port bow of the USS Carl Vinson, I noticed something I didn't realize were mounted on carriers---surface to air missiles. The automated Phalanx systems are for up close defense but the newer RAM missile systems can reach out much farther.
At least 4 Los Angeles class attack submarines are docked in San Diego this past week. None with numbers to identify but one with a cover which leads one to believe it to be "Special Ops". The entire harbor was alive with a military presence with the USS Carl Vinson at rest. Typically, a least a couple of the subs stay with the carrier group when it deploys. Hats off to the team for receiving Seal Team 6 a few weeks ago!!!
On the north end of the Coronado peninsula, there appears to be a bone yard of Hornets-most without their radar and with the cockpits covered. The extensive naval facility is located across the harbor from San Diego and is home to the USS Ronald Reagan and the USS Carl Vinson. The Vinson was in port across the bay from the the USS Midway, which is decommissioned and serving as a museum.