Here’s to hoping

Well that was fun! I got up from laying on the couch for several hours and sleeping, and went up to the room I have. Just as I entered, my phone started ringing!

Great timing, cause it was the HR person at one of the places I applied for a job at. She was friendly and had also lived in California, and we had a pleasant conversation. I did unfortunately have to mention that currently it appears I’m only going to be both temporary and part-time, if used, so that might be a deal-killer, I think. I hope not, it’d be good to have something temporary.

Though, if they want someone really good for 6 months before having to settle for less (Yeah Right!) come look my way.

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Back to Job Checking

And with that, the casual notice when searching craigslist: Any job offer that asks for a credit check immediately (especially if its in a non-flight and non-financial field), is likely a scam. Especially when they link to a certain website at which to check your credit.

But it’d be nice to get some income going. Hopefully something pans out. I’ll have to keep checking daily now. Oh well.

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Oldest beer in America sounds Chinese, but isn’t.

I had a pretty good beer with dinner tonight, a Black and Tan by Yuengling Brewery. First I’ve had of it, and it was good. However, I noticed on the bottle it said it was America’s oldest brewery, from 1829, and I had to chuckle a bit at the thought of the oldest American beer possibly being Chinese, as that’s what the name would be.

Nope, it’s German, once I looked it up. No fascinating backstory about a Chinese worker from the railroads (I figured the year might be off anyways, but had to check) starting a brewery, though that’d be amazing. It’s simply what was the american version of the German words for “young man.” Looked at it again, and sure enough, it looks like how you’d say youngling.

And now another fun fact from Wikipedia on this brewery. It makes our current president, Barack Obama’s, favorite beer.

Always interesting to learn a piece of history. And to enjoy a good brew.

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A week of lag

Getting used to another coast does take some effort.

Especially when you’re the kind of person that’s used to going to sleep just after midnight, Pacific time. Even with some incredible amounts of exhaustion (no forcefully staying awake and trying to use that to sleep at the “normal” time to try and reset), getting a sleep schedule is a pain. About 3 or 4 in the morning here is what would be the best time of night in CA. Well, it took about 3 days of sleeping whenever, and 3 days of forcefully waking up earlier, to start getting used to it. Still, it’s almost like the days of work used to be, giving me a rather dull fog for a while. Still, far better than driving, sleeping a couple hours, and driving again.

My total journey from Sacramento, CA, to New Jersey, took just under 70 hours, from Friday at 1 PM EST and arrived Monday at 8 AM EST. I slept Friday night for 6, Saturday night for 3, and napped a couple times Sunday during the day for about 2 hours a piece, and must have been on the road at least 10 hours straight throughout the night, mostly passing through Pennsylvania from 1 AM to 8 AM, around there, give or take.

It’s not something I’d care to repeat, that’s for sure. It takes a pretty big toll on you. But it was interesting to do. You learn a bit, and I could see it being somewhat fun to go across the country, just not in the form of going across the I-80 in record time. Or using I-80 for much of anything, since Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, Kansas, Iowa, and Pennsylvania all have a grand total of maybe 5 places to stop and go see if you don’t want to stray more than 10 miles from I-80, not much to see otherwise.

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A few states down

Well I took off yesterday, about 11 MST, and arrived at Salt Lake City around 9 MST, and decided that for the first day, at the very least, I’d try sleeping in a cheap hotel room. It was still tough to find something below 70$ to sleep at, ridiculous as it is, but it was decent for getting some access to the internet and sleeping in a bed. Though it appears I’m not one to adjust to random beds easily, so the sleep wasn’t the greatest, though still better than a couch pull-out bed.

Yesterday I got through the end of California and all of Nevada. Leaving CA looks pretty nice, green forests, high roads that are at a constant incline, etc.

Nevada, on the other hand, is just terrible. It was long, boring, and brown, incredibly brown. The entire place is a desert, especially the area around the I80 apparently. My goal for yesterday was to get through all of Nevada, so that’s down. It was to also get through Utah, and now that I look at a map, getting to SLC is actually pretty decent. There’s much less of Utah to get through, it’s a good thing I pushed through last night. Truthfully, going through Nevada and Utah at night would be pretty awful, the freeway is long and has no lights on it. Also it can seem at times there is no one around, though every so often you get to pass by some truckers.

Up next is Wyoming and Nebraska. To get from here to Omaha, NE, is 933 miles, or 14 hours of driving. Though I’ve got a bit of cheap food, it looks like staying at the Days Inn means a free breakfast. This place isn’t bad, though a bit outta the way. Though I wont get a start on driving till after 9:30 or so, I should still be able to make decent progress on getting to Omaha. Depending on the conditions I may drive later into the night than yesterday, now that I’m used to it.

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