Monday, July 24, 2023

Yardwork

I have too many unwanted sapling trees and too many weeds.  And I have invasive periwinkle vines, wild blackberries, English Ivy, and Poison Ivy.  So I decided that yesterday would be a good day to use the hedge trimmer to go around cutting some of the smaller stuff with the hedge trimmer so that I could get at the saplings with the pruning blade of the Saws-All.  

I had the cordless hedge trimmer battery all charged up, so I expected an hour's worth of clearing small stuff.  So, of course, it immediately stopped working.  Dead.  Fini.  Kaput!

Tried the charger again, but it said the battery was charged.  So it was the trimmer itself that had failed.  Well, it is like 20 years old.  And the cutters are probably dulled.  So time to buy a new one!

Naturally, I went to Consumer Reports website.  I get the monthly print issue, but subscribe online too.  I found several top-rated models there and like 3 of them for the combination of power, battery time, and safety.  Well, one thing that sometimes annoys me about Consumer Reports is that you can never find the exact model they recommend anywhere.

Amazon never seems to offer them and they are usually not available at Home Depot or Lowe's.  I don't entirely blame Consumer Reports.  By the time they test something and get the results printed or websited, the manufactures have created a dozen new slightly different models.  

I'm not into conspiracy theories, but sometimes I suspect that any model that Consumer Reports gives a poor rating gets renumbered to confuse buyers...  *sigh*

So I spent 3 hours today (when I was hoping to work in the yard) trying to find the best 3 models of hedge trimmers, in stock, at any place I recognized as legitimate and would deliver in less than a week without ridiculous shipping chargers.  

An aside:  I once almost placed an order for a small product and barely noticed a $100 shipping charge, LOL!  

So after going back and forth between various sites selling various CR recommended models, I finally ordered one.  It will arrive in 4-6 days.  I'll be happy to receive it.  Maybe I can push in and cut down the unwanted saplings in the meantime.  

Saturday, July 22, 2023

Unwanted Tree Saplings And Garden

I'm not as young as I used to be.  And parts of me don't work as well as they used to, either.  Between falling off the extension ladder and general aging problems with both knees, I get calf, thigh and rib cramps and finger clenches.  And sometimes lower back stiffness.  

Getting old isn't for sissies (as Mom often said).  So, these days I do what I can.  Aspercreme and Ibuprophen help.  As does sitting in the tub with hot shower water falling on me in the morning (to wake me up and get me more mobile).  I wish I was 60 again, LOL!

But I have gotten more active again lately.  I caught up on the veggie garden, though it has less than I used to grow.   Most of the crops I used to grow are now easy to find at the grocery store and at a decent price.  But there are still some things I can't get.  So I focus on growing them.

Heirloom tomatoes are still at the top of my list.  The grocery store does sell them (at $5 a pound) but the fools chill them for storage-life, and that kills the enzymes that produce the great flavor.  So buying those is pointless.  I have 14 heirloom tomatoes growing well.  They are behind schedule, but catching up rapidly in this warm weather and rain every few days.

Next is Italian flat beans.  I've never seen any in the grocery store or even a local farmer's market.  They have a better "deeper" taste than regular green beans.  I have 20 plants of those starting to climb the trellis.  I can find them canned sometimes, but they are very soft and usually highly-seasoned.

It is time to plant some Fall crops.  My favorite Spring and Fall crop is Snow Peas.  I've never seen those at the grocery store either.

I have trays of lettuces, celery, and bok choy on the deck.  You've never seen real red lettuce unless you grow it yourself.  And I grow red romaine lettuce too.  My green leaf lettuce is nearly lime-colored.  Makes an appealing salad.  


I grow bok choy and celery for the leaves (I don't get actual "stalks).  The bok choy leaves are great for making egg rolls.  They preventing the raw veggies inside from poking through the wrappers and add flavor.  Celery leaves are strong-tasting and add some "bite" to my salads.

But those are all planted now.

GOT to cut down all the unwanted saplings this weekend!  Job #1 now that the veggies (and flowers) are all planted.


Nothing much to see there yet, but "soon"...

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

New Camera

So seeing that the old camera was getting colors a bit "orangey" and "too dark" on the low-light setting but "too bright and uneven" on flash, I bought a new one in May.  And then just let it sit for 2 months...

So I decided to set it up yesterday.  Reconsidering, I shouldn't have chosen it.  I was looking for a simple camera and this one said "for kids and seniors" and it was cheap.  Since I only use a camera for blog pics, that sounded fine.  I probably should have read the specifications more carefully.

There are some oddities about it.  No "low-light" setting.  No semi-click while it focuses.  And the buttons are annoyingly monochrome silver, which makes them difficult to read.  

It takes surprisingly large pictures.  The only choices are 24/36/44 MB.  I have no use for that. I reduce everything to 200-300 KB anyway.

But all that may not matter.  I took a few test pictures around the house and outside.  I haven't tried to process any yet (I don't want 2 different series of sequentially-numbered pics in my folders).  The camera display does show them as accurate in color and single-click works (the pics show as clear.  

I'll take pictures of identical scenes with both cameras and compare them.  Flash and low-light using the old one and normal (the only choice) with the new one.  If the new one results in better pics than the old one I will start using that one.  

I save originals at full size and processed ones at 200-300 (see above).  But I'm sure not going to save originals at 24 MB!  So I would have to reduce the size of the originals too.  Actually, I'm not sure why I save originals.  I suppose because I have the space to do it.  I may have to rethink that.  

I think the new camera will produce better pictures.  We'll see...


Saturday, July 15, 2023

Yard, Flowers

Pics of yard and flowers...

Yucca bloomed!  Doesn't happen every year.

The tomatoes are growing fast after finally getting planted a few weeks ago.




I dug this up.  It was probably lost while the house was built 37 years ago.


I spread seeds from flowerheads last Fall in the pollinator bed.  They grew like crazy.  

Apparently, they like the spot...



Cllose-up...

The daylillies are blooming...


And the hydrangeas are still blooming.


The Stokes Asters are still blooming after 20+ years.

But fewer this year.  I should divide and refresh them.

The new butterfly weed has returned again for a 3rd year.  I planted 6 once, but this one loves the spot and keeping showing up.

And there are more coming along in the yard and deck.  But they are not in full bloom yet, so I will wait to show them. 

Meanwhile, I have a Fall crop of flat italian beans emerging for Fall harvest. Need to plant snow peas, broccoli and garlic soon.

Sunday, July 9, 2023

A Productive Day

Some days, I get up, make lunch, read several days of newspapers,  check computer stuff, pay a few bills, putter around until dinner, and then watch TV afterwards and go back to bed.  But usually I am more active.  

This was an active day.  I actually got up in time to make breakfast.  A pancake with 2 soft-fried eggs on top (so the yolk mixed with the pancake, 2 sausages, a mug of cocoa (OK, OK, Nestle's Quick in warmed milk), a mug of green tea, and some Coke for fizz.

I read the newspaper fast (editorials and comics) and decided to work in the yard.  The Weather Channel said I had 3 hours before some "possible" moderate rain.  And I had bought 3 small pots of coleus to plant in 3 hanging pots.  I wanted to get that done because it was the last of the flowers to plant and Fall veggies will need to be planted soon.

It of course immediately started to rain hard!  So I spent the afternoon in the basement.  It is a mess!  So it wasn't wasted time.  Cleaned litter pans (always a daily priority).  I've been using Tidy Cats for years.  But it is sticky to the sides of the pans.  I had bought a box of Arm&Hammer "Slide" to try it out and it is easier to scoop and doesn't stick as much.  

Tidy Cats is the size of sand.  A&H is more like sugar-sized.  I like it better.  But it is more expensive.  Something like 57 cents per ounce vs 80 cents per ounce.  But it does scoop more easily.  I'm still deciding which to use regularly.  The Mews don't seem to care.  

So that down for the day, I went around the basement just cleaning, arranging, and fixing stuff while it rained.

First thing was to make a small LED Mag-lite flashlight magnetically-attachable to the metal basement door.  I had an old flashlight that was pathetically dim even with new batteries, but it had a magnetic attachment.  It took a few minutes to figure out how to get the magnet off.  Pounding it didn't work, but a screwdriver tapped in under the magnet pried it right off.

I tried superglue and clamps on the Mag to start.  Superglue just does not hold to plastic.  So I tried contact cement.  I'll know if that works tomorrow.  

Second, I had 12 really heavy-duty boxes from wine shipments and was saving them because they were so sturdy and just seemed useful.  But I wasn't using them and they were taking up space.  But I value large pieces of cardboard for smothering weeds in garden paths and unplanted areas in the flowerbeds.  So I took out the 6-pack dividers and stacked them up, and saved the big 2 boxes the 12 came in to cut open later.

I have an invasive periwinkle vine that is taking over the yard.  Roundup doesn't kill it (waxy leaves).  But covering it with the cardboard will, eventually.  And this heavy box cardboard should last long enough to smother them.  And I think I will cover the cardboard with black plastic to make it last a couple years.

I have too much junk.  I actually have 2 dead microwave ovens, a dead wet/dry vaccuum, and an old chair in the garage.  I have a 20 year-old computer and some dead monitors sitting in a closet.  I have an entire closet of stuff I will never fit into again.  I collected all the electronic (recyclable) stuff in a corner of the garage.  I can't dump it in the general recycling bin, but the County Landfill has a special place to leave that kind of stuff for free.  

Some of the clothes are quite fine, just will never fit me again.  They go to Goodwill.  But I could easily gain 4' of closet space at no loss.

After that comes actual junk.  2 ancient cheap chairs (I save the swivel bottoms - oddly useful things).  I got them in the 90s and I loved them.  Took some work to get them too.  Light rocker/swivel chairs were kind of hard to find then.  And the place I found them had the in peach, aqua, and lavender.  And those wouldn't work in my dark red TV room with black equipment.  

But I really liked the chair.  So I contacted the manufacturer and asked if I could get 2 in black.  They were pleased that I liked their chair so much.  They said that if I would sent them fabric (I seem to recall it was about 13 yards), they would make 2 just with it just for me.  Plus shipping of course.  But the fabric (good or bad) was my choice to send.  It took a week to find a fabric store that had that much jet black fabric.  

I loved those chairs for 20 years.  But they were actually cheap chairs and wore out at the springs.  I got rid of the worst one years ago, got the one remained in the garage.  Time to let it go!

I spent an hour sorting out planting pots, plant labels by type of plant, and arranging my potting bench for starting Fall crops.  After that, I divided up a mosquito BT killer donut and spread it around in the small pond and a few trap jars I keep.  The stuff works well and a pack of a dozen lasts a Summer for $13.

I collected all of my tool chargers in one spot.  I needed to see how many there really were and how much room they would take.  I plan to make a dedicated charger shelf soon, but at least I managed to write the tool on each charger for future reference.  Why chargers don't come with the name of the tool they are intended for is annoying and should be a standard practice.

Swept the basement floor.  I have a wet/dry vacuum, but the noise annoys me.  Sweeping is sort of "zen".  And you wouldn't believe the amount of cat-hair in the basement,  It all seems to gradually float down the stairs and collect there.  I would compost it, but there is always uncompostable stuff mixed in.  Bits of wire clippings, scraps of plastic, etc.  I don't want small sharp stuff to end up in the garden soil while I handle it while planting.

A very good 4 hours work.  And ironically, the rain stopped exactly when The Weather Channel predicted it would start.  LOL!

So I made dinner.  Pork smothered in sauteed red and green bell peppers, and ear of corn, and 2 home-made shrimp eggrolls...



Saturday, July 8, 2023

A Weird Event

Well, I had a minor scare the other day.   Maybe more like a confusion...  I have 2 identical sets of keys.  Doors, sheds, trailer lock, etc.  But one on each is a car key.  And it being modern car, it is really just a remote control.  An expensive remote control.  I've read they cost about $200 to replace.   And I suddenly couldn't find one of the sets.

I checked all the usual places, pant pockets in the laundry hamper, all horizontal surfaces, on the floor, workbench, under the car seats, etc.  No luck!  I was really confused.  Decades ago, when I shared apartments with roommates, I even always knew where their keys (and other small stuff) was!  Well, I'm just generally observant and I have a good visual memory.  So I was baffled, but figured theyy would turn up "someplace".  

Then a horrible thought struck me!  I keep a small bowl in the front passenger seat for small rechargeable recyclable batteries.  I use a lot of them around the house and "rechargeable doesn't mean "forever".  SO When I visit a DIY store, I usually have some to drop in the recycling bin.  I had done that 2 days before.  And I just put them in my pants pockets because this time I had too many to easily hold in hand.

I also routinely put a set of keys in each front pocket.  And so the batteries were in a pocket with a set of car keys.  So at the store, I grabbed everything in my pocket and dumped it in the bin.  And then couldn't find one set on keys.  I decided I must have dumped them in with the batteries!

I immediately drove to the store, and they checked the battery bin.  It was empty!  And it all goes to a regular recycling center...  So I figured I was out of luck.  

A slight aside...  I have 2 boxes next to the front door with LED light fixtures to replace the tube fluorescents currently in my gardening light stand.  I had enveloped a couple of bills not payable online.  On the boxes were the envelopes.  On the envelopes was my lost set of keys!

What a relief!  ðŸ˜ƒ


Tuesday, July 4, 2023

July 4th

Happy Independence Day, USA.  It never gets old...  My usual routine this day is to read The Declaration Of Independence on the deck (quietly, to myself).  Then I will break out the small hibatchi and cook a steak over hard lump charcoal and hickory (doesn't take much), roast an ear of bi-color corn, and a potato.  

In the evening, I'll watch a baseball game and/or watch fireworks on the TV.  I would go watch local fireworks live, but parking is difficult and getting out  of the parking lots is worse.

A couple of decades ago, I went to the National Mall a couple of times.  It was spectacular!  But the crowds were a mess and getting home took hours...  And I sort of want to be at home to comfort The Mews on what is to them "a scary night".

So I watch on TV now.  And the HD TV is pretty impressive!  And I can change channels and see the fireworks in other cities.  The performance acts are not my favorite part, I don't need to watch a band play, so I switch around.

I do enjoy the standard patriotic songs and I will stay on a station while those are being played.  But, you know, my favorite song for the day is Neil Diamond's 'Coming To America'.  I'd provide a link, but there are many versions (and some good covers by other artists) so just do a search and listen to a few.  :)

Still, the meaning of the day isn't just the fireworks and songs.  I think about our US history more on this day than any other.  I mentioned reading The Declaration Of Independence, but I also have a DVD about the creation of it. and I usually watch that sometime during the day.

So some images for today...

The Declaration.

A History of the Declaration of Independence

Fireworks

4th of July Fireworks: A Complete Guide 2022 | History, Safety, Best Shows

Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown.

Surrender of Lord Cornwallis to George Washington Painting by Severino ...

The original 13.

Americana+ — mapsontheweb: The US on July 4th, 1776

North America in 1776.

DobbinsTechnologyCafe - In 1776 | Us map, Map, Thirteen colonies


The Dream...

Statue of Liberty Historical Facts and Pictures | The History Hub

And I'll add more, after these few hours...  

There were people here before most of us.  I recognize that.  And I recognizw that many did not come voluntarily.  The past has been harsh.  History and human migrations can be cruel.  

But today I celebrate what has progressed.  Desperate people came here to seek freedom.  It wasn't easy.  Many died for an idea of a better place.  Some cane with their possessions in a cardboard box.

For many many centuries, some people have fled oppression and given up their normal lives to seek a better life wherever it seemed better.  It takes a lot of courage to do that!  

For a few centuries, that has been the US.  I can't see images of desperate immigrants at Ellis Island and not try to imagine what they felt seeing the Statue Of Liberty without feeling that they hoped they found that "right place".

And generally, they were right.  I don't want that to change. Some of the best of us are new-comers.  It has always been that way.

There is probably a child who crosses our border who will earn a Nobel Prize someday.,  Or will become teachers, firefighters, or inventors.  

I personally welcome them all.

"Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,

With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.

"Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries she
With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!


What ideals are these....

""Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"

It is the bravest who leave home behind and seek out freedom and opportunity.   And we here should welcome them... 

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