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It might get above freezing today and everybody’s happy. January 2009 is ovah. It’s been a pretty good month readership-wise here at the Chronicle. The holiday slump is behind us and we will have the most visitors since last August. I know it’s hard to remember August, but it looked like this:

harley-fest-5002

Consequently, the numbers of visitors for Harley Fest and the run-up to Harley Fest will be hard to beat for a while. But we’re moving solidly in the right direction. The Chronicle has cracked the top 13,000 ranking at Technorati as well at 12,901. That may not sound like much, but Boots and Sabers, which is the local media standard for what  blogs are supposed to be, is ranked at 36,000.  So thank you for a successful month. Hurry, Spring.

Not that I don’t appreciate it, but I’m getting a lot of what I would call unwarranted links from other blogs just in the past 12 hours. I say unwarranted because the other blog’s post cited doesn’t refer to anything I have posted in any way, for instance this post from Ol’ Broad.

Update: And now, 2 hours later, all of those incoming links have been deleted and it looks like it’s back to normal. To whomever is watching, I wasn’t complaining.

So says none other than the best known Waukesha blogger, James Wigderson. I blush because I don’t think of the Chronicle as particularly political. Thanks for the plug, James.

As for the pseudonym, if it is a pseudonym, I began the blog using it because I didn’t think my name was particularly important. The vast majority, upon hearing my name, would have the same response: “Who?” Then came the affair with the alderman selectee with the criminal record. When I began receiving vile, hateful comments and e-mails from someone purporting to be his wife accusing me of being a racist (to this day, I swear I don’t know what race the guy is, nor does it matter) I decided that anonymity forevermore was the better part of valor. It’s not like I’m getting paid to do this, it’s really not worth any stress. If you say, “Well, then you shouldn’t be on the internet.” I say take it up with Al Gore.

In case you’ve wondered, Huckleberry Dumbell comes from an episode in Season 2 of M*A*S*H called “For the Good of the Outfit”.  Hawkeye refers to Trapper by that name.

Give them what they want:

All Time

Search Views
marilyn monroe 8,807
maria sharapova 8,556
amanda tapping 4,882
spring city chronicle 2,136
liza minelli 1,230
waukesha spring city chronicles 1,218
sharapova 1,149
erin burnett 851
jarvis universal purchase company 801
becky quick 792

The first post was about a old guy who shot a cross-dressing insurance man to death and it’s been hopefully uphill from there. Business is good, despite the fact that I’m not selling anything but an old man’s opinion. Last August, for the entire month, I had 3087 visitors who looked at 4715 pages. As of today, halfway through this August, I’ve had 4000 visitors who have viewed 5224 pages. Yesterday was a now typical weekday with 333 visitors, a third of them returning visitors and 461 page views. This represents a 100% increase in visitors and page views and an increase in returning visitors of a third over last year. I suspect that with a Presidential election coming, readership will continue to grow. That’s not too bad for a blog which is mostly concerned with what happens in a couple of zip codes.

Thank you to you, all my readers. This is fun. Let’s go to work.

  • The Freeman polled Waukesha aldermen on the Northwest League Proposal for Frame Park. I heard once that there was a formula that members of congress use to gauge public opinion. If you get “X” number of calls for or against an issue, that translates to “Y” number of voters. Alderman Payne ought to get his hands on that formula:

“I’ve gotten about 15 calls from all over the city,” Alderman Eric Payne said. “Everyone who has called has been against it. I haven’t gotten one call in support.”

Despite the number of negative calls he has received, Payne said he will vote in support of the plan.

  • The Freeman says that 100 people showed up for last night’s Friends of Frame Park-sponsored walk. That’s pretty good for a last-minute thing. Passing by Frame last night, the park was very busy, even without the walkers. I think there may have been many citizens who just went to the park to show their support, without wanting to be part of anything organized. The Journal Sentinel did not cover the event.
  • How come Moreland Blvd. was closed from North St. to White Rock last evening? I’ll bet it had something to with those dang trains again.
  • Here’s an article of the sushi place downtown. Tell them about Bob before they open.
  • The Waukesha BID is still working to get 90% of businesses occupied by 2011. We could use a shoe store or a surplus store.
  • Sound Off has opinions both pro and con about the Northwoods proposal. I would support a city-wide referendum on the November ballot because I’m not really sure what the results would be.
  • The Freeman editorial board speaks out on the Northwoods League proposal:

There will be a play at the plate Tuesday when the Waukesha Common Council votes on a controversial proposal to allow an amateur baseball team to make Frame Park its home.

The plan, touted by Mayor Larry Nelson as a “perfect public-private partnership,” will allow the Northwoods League to play 34 home games during the June through mid-August season. The team would be made up of college players.

Chad Bauer, co-owner of the Green Bay Bullfrogs, would be an owner of the Waukesha team. Bauer says the footprint of the existing Frame Park diamond would not change. He said he would invest more than $1 million in upgrades. The new stadium would initially have seating for 1,700. In the future, the stadium seating could be expanded to 3,500, but that would require council approval.

In addition to increased seating, the new Frame Park stadium would include a pavilion, ticket booth, concessions, bathrooms and a children’s play area.

Bauer wants a decision by September so renovations can get on track and be completed by the next baseball season.

Frame Park is treasured by this community and the prospect of allowing a commercial enterprise to run an operation like this in the park is horrifying to many. In fact, a group of citizens has formed to fight the proposal.

But proponents of baseball in Frame Park point out that the plan could save the city money and in a tight budget year, that could be very helpful. The city estimates the plan could make or save Waukesha $155,000 next year alone. The city says savings and revenue could top $401,000 over 10 years. The mayor deserves credit for seeking outside-the-box ways to save taxpayers money.

However, even if the plan for Frame Park does offer the prospect of saving money, that can’t be the only factor taken into consideration.

There is significant doubt about whether people would attend these games. Yes, the league has teams that seem to be thriving in other cities around the state. But that doesn’t mean it will work here. As you’ve noticed, there is a lot to do around here in the summer. Many of us are having a hard enough time getting to all the events we already have in southeastern Wisconsin. Will there be time to get to see baseball at Frame Park, too?

Concerns have also been raised about parking, noise and even fly balls bonking people on the head. But the larger question is very simple: Does the community want to allow its treasured Frame Park to be used in this way by a private enterprise? We say absolutely not.

It’s one thing to hold an annual festival in the park, but it is something else entirely to allow a business to set up shop in this manner.

We think the mayor has good intentions in trying to bring the baseball league to Frame Park. The mayor thinks the new baseball facility will enhance the park. He also sees the baseball team as one piece of an overall vision for Waukesha that includes several other developments around town such as the Clarke Hotel project.

But even though the plan has some promising aspects, it poses too much of a threat to the park’s character.

The park is seen as a jewel – elegant and classy. Many local citizens have put their heart and soul into making Frame Park the beautiful place it is. Let’s not mess with it.

Ultimately, Frame Park belongs to our community. City leaders need to listen to community members and carry out the wishes of their constituents. That is their job. On Tuesday the council needs to go to bat for the citizens of Waukesha.

– Freeman editorial board

If you use Firefox, clear your caches, cookies and stuff (Go to Tools, Options, Privacy, Clear Now) and reboot. That’s probably overkill but it works.

Monday morning papers rarely have anything of note in them, so like Wile E. Coyote, I’ve come up with a new plan. On Saturdays, I’m going to try and restrict myself to linking only to the Freeman opinion columns and save most of the other stuff for Mondays. Since there isn’t much in this morning’s Freeman and I can’t access JSOnline at all, it appears to be a good plan.

  • The Freeman talks to former Waukesha County exec and current Milwaukee Public museum exec, Dan Finley about his current, and so far highly successful, role. Here’s part one. Here’s the conclusion.
  • Representative Mark Gundrum talks to the Freeman from Iraq.
  • You are now officially living in a disaster area. I wonder if it would pay for a snow blower make-over? The Craftsman took a beating this year.
  • Some bloggy stuff: I’m late in mentioning that readership of the Chronicle in March was the best since last November. Thank you. Provided I keep writing and you keep reading, April looks like it very well may be the biggest readership the Chronicle has ever had in terms of the number of visitors, the number of returning visitors and the number of pages of the Chronicle all those readers … um … read.
  • Also, this week’s BlogNetNews ranking of “Wisconsin’s Most Influential Political Blogs” has the Chronicle ranked 13th. All fame is fleeting, however. If you click on that same link next Sunday, the Chronicle may not be there at all. I haven’t figured out how they measure “influence” but it has something to do with the number of posts you make during the week, the number of times you are linked to by other blogs and possibly the ranking of which blogs are linking to you. Since I’m not selling anything and all you see here comes out of my pocket, there doesn’t seem to be much point in trying to chase a ranking. I only want good-looking, well-balanced, intelligent readers like you. Praise for the Chronicle is also gratefully, and hopefully humbly, accepted. Thank you again.
  • Go give some blood. It doesn’t hurt. It doesn’t cost you anything. Your body will make more. You may, heaven forbid, get it back.
  • With the run-up in metals prices, it’s good we are recycling in Waukesha, as I can’t imagine they’re not still making more money than the program costs.
  • The bad side of the run-up in metals prices is that there are unscrupulous people who strip construction sites of anything copper and raid some factories for scrap metal of any kind. The only reason they do this is that some unscrupulous place will buy it. This leads to onerous bureaucracy and understandable concerns about invasions of our privacy. After all, if you can’t trust that your social security number won’t be on the envelope of some mailing from the State of Wisconsin, how can you trust the people who work at Joe’s Metal Salvaging?
  • No matter what kind of Great Lakes Compact is ultimately approved, the federal government will just ignore it. Just a prediction.
  • Speaking of water, in the May issue of Wired Magazine (it’s not on line yet) there’s an article called “Thirst of Nations” about water problems in the world and it’s predictably gloomy, otherwise there would be no story. However, one of the featured locations is Chandler, AZ, a former agricultural community and former Spring home of the Milwaukee Brewers south of Phoenix, which has exploded into a sprawl of 250,000 residents. There are also three massive Intel semi-conductor plants, which use a colossal amount of water daily. You would think that all of that would suck the Colorado River dry. Nay, nay, old parched-breath nay-sayer. Through recycling and desalinization of the waste water, Chandler and Intel are able to pump water into their deep aquifer which is now rising several feet per year. Though their solution is expensive, my point is that our aquifer is not necessarily doomed. Man and his science will find a way. They just need a new plan.

From the Arizona Star of Tucson:

Bloggers becoming a potent force in politics

Firefox 3 Beta 4 is available for download. Pretty cool.

A visitor from Jarvis Universal Purchase Co. set some kind of record here at the Chronicle today with 237 page views in 8 minutes. Speed reader.

leapyear.jpg

Thinking of blogging? No matter what you write, someone will take it wrong and be offended. I’ve come to understand that I can’t change what a reader thinks. I can’t even guess how you’re going to take what I write because you and I are living in parallel universes. I can never know for certain whether you are seeing the same color red I see when we both look at the same apple. Some of you are even seeing Granny Smiths.

The Chronicle posts are just an opinion of mine in that moment of time. The opinions are not meant to be either permanent or immutable. Anything you read here is neither totally fact nor totally fiction, it just is. My advice, don’t take it so seriously. Remember it’s being written by a guy who goes to the Pick N Save and the automatic doors won’t open for him.

  • Have you seen the Altoids’ commercial with the medieval office drones and the jammed copy machine? Good one.
  • Water continues to be a subject of discussion. Half of the people think that the Great Lakes compact will doom us, the other half thinks that not approving the Great Lakes compact will doom us.  Doom us to what, I’m not sure. No one seems to have an answer for what Waukesha is supposed to do without water from somewhere else.
  • Not even the Town of Waukesha wants us to have water.
  • Watching the Badgers is like watching a pile driver at a construction site. It’s basketball by the numbers: A then B then C then A then B then C then A then … On and on, over and over and in the end, the other team looks 4 inches shorter than when they walked in the building. They remind me of the 1985 Villanova team which won the NCAA beating Patrick Ewing and Georgetown in the final.
  • At least I know who I’m going to ask to replace my driveway. Good karma is its own reward.
  • Sound Off is explained by the Freeman’s editor.

WordPress added a feature which gives me the totals for search terms which have found the Chronicle. I’ve totaled all the terms which were just spelled differently and got:

  1. Maria Sharapova (5742)
  2. Marilyn Monroe (5367)
  3. Amanda Tapping (4802)
  4. Spring City Chronicle (1995)
  5. Liza Minelli (1230)
  6. Charisma Carpenter (526)
  7. Jordan XX2 commercial featuring Mozart’s Requiem (512)
  8. Target commercial featuring the song Hello, Goodbye (475)
  9. Erin Burnett (354)
  10. Mandy Jenkins (268)

Other notables: Deanna Favre (80), Jessica McBride (64), Pete Kennedy (58), Faith Hill (55) and Wiggy is not listed.

And out of nowhere, while I’m off eating my Dijon Chicken salad in a whole wheat pocket bread for lunch, I receive 57 articles I had mailed to myself starting on January 5th.

E-Mail the Chronicle

Contact owner, writer and editor Huckleberry Dumbell at: springcityblog@att.net

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