The Daily Courier

Only Yoda can predict when animals attack

- N. Preen, Kelowna

Re: “Westside Road is not so bad,” (Letters, Feb 16)

DEAR EDITOR:

In the most kindest regards to Peter Warner’s rebutal and his signalling out of myself by my full name ... I do not really think, Peter, that you really know or comprehend what I meant or what the original story gatherer was hinting at either.

Let's try and paint a vivid picture for you and say a very small handful of others too...with so few guard rails in place in so many areas of the awful tight stretches up so high, what happens when a deer runs out in front of you very suddenly or a bighorn sheep? It thus becomes zero time to react, and the ultimate possibilit­y of just driving over the edge! This was edited out in my original letter to the editor the other day where I did try and mention the deer and Bighorn Sheep which are very evident in this area.

Your words really had no relevance of just slowing down and enjoying the view! I never even drive fast, ever, period! Pointing that out was so very silly.

As far as I know, and since I was a baby even, and still to this day...I cannot simply predict wildlife running out at such unexpected times. Am I Yoda? No, are you? No.

With such few guard rails in place still, and the lack of road maintenanc­e in the Kelowna area in general. I’m shocked, really, that we do not hear of tons more people driving over the edge, even on the best of days!

Factor in some snow and ice and wind, (the elements), and this awful road is YES still a big problem!

Not too many people care enough though and just would rather brush it off!

Like you Peter, yes?

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The huge parachute used by NASA’s Perseveran­ce rover to land on Mars contained a secret message, thanks to a puzzle lover on the spacecraft team.

Systems engineer Ian Clark used a binary code to spell out “Dare Mighty Things” in the orange and white strips of the 70-foot parachute. He also included the GPS co-ordinates for the mission’s headquarte­rs at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

Clark, a crossword hobbyist, came up with the idea two years ago. Engineers wanted an unusual pattern in the nylon fabric to know how the parachute was oriented during descent. Turning it into a secret message was “super fun,” he said Tuesday.

Only about six people knew about the encoded message before Thursday’s landing, according to Clark. They waited until the parachute images came back before putting out a teaser during a televised news conference Monday.

It took just a few hours for space fans to figure it out,

Clark said. Next time, he noted, “I’ll have to be a little bit more creative.”

“Dare Mighty Things” — a line from President Theodore Roosevelt — is a mantra at JPL and adorns many of the centre’s walls. The trick was "trying to come up with a way of encoding it but not making it too obvious,” Clark said.

As for the GPS co-ordinates, the spot is 10 feet from the entrance to JPL’s visitor centre.

Another added touch not widely known until touchdown: Perseveran­ce bears a plaque depicting all five of NASA’s Mars rovers in increasing size over the years — similar to the family car decals seen on Earth.

Deputy project manager Matt Wallace promises more socalled hidden Easter eggs. They should be visible once Perseveran­ce’s 7-foot arm is deployed in a few days and starts photograph­ing under the vehicle, and again when the rover is driving in a couple weeks.

“Definitely, definitely should keep a good lookout,” he urged.

CALGARY — Plans to curl in a bubble had to include how to relax and recharge between draws, since the athletes in the Canadian women’s curling championsh­ip are confined to the arena and their hotel.

With the Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Calgary being held without spectators to prevent the spread of the COVID-19 virus, the women have more free time than they would normally have.

There are no autograph sessions with the public.

The Heart Stop Lounge, where curlers engage with fans via question-and-answer sessions, and where they might grab a beverage on a night off, isn’t part of the experience this year.

Shopping, sightseein­g, restaurant meals out with family and friends, or socializin­g with other teams at the hotel aren’t either.

Puzzles, books, watching and streaming their favourite shows, board and digital games with teammates and video calls with family and friends who can’t be in the Markin MacPhail Centre are common down-time diversions.

Quebec skip Laurie St-Georges’ quest for a mental break from curling has forced her into a relationsh­ip taboo.

“My boyfriend isn’t going to be happy, but I’m going to watch my show. It’s “Trailer Park Boys,”“she declared. “I’m going to watch it without him.”

Northwest Territorie­s lead Shona Barbour polished off a puzzle on opening weekend, says skip Kerry Galusha.

The Jennifer Jones team declared lead Lisa Weagle the queen of “Yahtzee”.

When Alberta skip Laura Walker returns to her hotel room, husband Geoff, who plays lead for Brad Gushue in the upcoming men’s national championsh­ip, and their infant son Liam are there.

“We’re just keeping a baby alive every day is what I’m here doing and curling in between,” Walker said. “If he wasn’t here, I’d probably be just lounging around watching “Free Britney” documentar­ies.”

Kerri Einarson, skip of Team Canada, is catching up on the show “Yellowston­e”, while “Grey’s Anatomy” is the go-to for Saskatchew­an second Chaelynn Kitz.

Ontario second Sarah Wilkes says she’s over 200 pages into author Delia Owens’ “Where the Crawdads Sing.”

“We’ve got a couple puzzles kicking around,” Newfoundla­nd and Labrador skip Sarah Hill said. “I think everyone has a book or two to read. Trying to keep it as casual as we can in our down time to just mentally step aside from curling for an hour or two so we don’t have to do it all day long.”

Saskatchew­an skip Sherry Anderson and third Nancy Martin play crib. Anderson misses the social aspect of the tournament in her eighth Tournament of Hearts.

“There’s so much more to the Scotties besides curling on the ice,” Anderson said. “There’s fans, there’s the autograph sessions. You meet people, you see people from years past that have been going and watching for decades. You get to have conversati­ons with some of the other curlers. We’re not getting really any of that. We meet in the hallway and you might say ‘hi’.

“You feel you can’t do anything more than just say ‘hi’ and you don’t even know who it is because they have a mask on.”

But Ontario skip Rachel Homan is fine with just putting her feet up between draws because she’s in her third trimester of pregnancy.

“There is a little bit more down time,” Homan said. “Personally, it’s not a bad thing that we don’t have to run around from restaurant­s to different requiremen­ts.

“We wish friends and family could be here. That’s definitely something we’re all missing right now.”

A dearth of televised curling games this winter because of the pandemic has Einarson’s second Shannon Birchard tuning into other games when she’s not on the ice.

“It’s fun to have curling on TV when we’re back in our hotel rooms,” Birchard said. “Just watching that is something that we’ve missed a lot. Even that is something that just brings up your mood.”

Curlers who don’t make the championsh­ip round will exit the bubble Friday and those who aren’t among the three playoff teams head home Sunday. The semifinal and final are Sunday.

For those playing in a Tournament of Hearts for the first time in their lives, a bubble provides a less intimidati­ng introducti­on for rookies.

“We’ve never been here before so we don’t really know about the autographs and fans in the stands,” Quebec third Hailey Armstrong said.

“It’s nice to have some down time in the hotel. We’re all students, so we have lots of homework to do as well.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? This image from video made available by NASA shows the parachute deployed during the descent of the Mars Perseveran­ce rover as it approaches the surface of the planet.
The Associated Press This image from video made available by NASA shows the parachute deployed during the descent of the Mars Perseveran­ce rover as it approaches the surface of the planet.
 ?? The Associated Press ?? Team Wild Card 3 skip Beth Peterson lines up a shot in front of cardboard fan cutouts at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Calgary on Saturday.
The Associated Press Team Wild Card 3 skip Beth Peterson lines up a shot in front of cardboard fan cutouts at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Calgary on Saturday.

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