The foreclosed hose next door has had contractors there for 3 or 4 months now. I appreciated the clearing of some trees. The original contractors wouldn't tell me who the owner is. OK, I don't blame them. They might get in trouble.
But this week, they painted the bricks on the front of the house. Its a color I'm not sure how to describe. "Dried Blood" seems closest.
Then they planted some evergreens in the front. 2' away from the foundation and 3' apart. After they left, I saw the labels were still on the plants. Arborvitae Smarang or something like that. It will grow 15' tall and 5' wide. LOL!
I really can't wait to meet this person. Either they are a totally whacko, or they may be the most "interesting" neighbor ever.
And I say that cautiously because the lady next door on the other side has metallic frizzy purple hair and wears only black.
There has been pounding going on there for 2 months. I haven't been able to think of any renovation requiring 2 months of hammering. The truck in the driveway always says "Cabinets". Maybe they are digging down and building a really fancy "end of world" shelter complete with rec room, LOL!.
The tree-cutting was interesting. First, the workers cut all the branches of the overgrown apple tree below 10'. And then a couple scrub trees (that weren't shading my yard).
Then a week later they cut it down entirely. I tried to ask them for them if I could have the wood (apple wood, smoker grill, good flavor) but none of them spoke English.
Somewhere in there, the owner must have been around, but I couldn't just stand there shouting "hello" all day. When whoever it is moves in, I'll probably recognize he/she/them. Oh for all I know it will be the cabinet truck guy doing work for himself..
No problem, just I'd like to talk to the owner before they get all settled and decide they love that tree I want cut.
Sunday, October 1, 2017
Saturday, September 30, 2017
A Week In The Life.
Some of you know that I don't live a regulary-scheduled life, LOL!
So here is the past Tuesday through Saturday:
1. Stayed up all night Tuesday 8pm - Thursday 8 am visiting cat blogs, processing camera pictures, and shifting between a gardening forum and an atheist forum. Yeah, that 36 hours. Went through a 1.5 l bottle of wine and 4 packs of cigs (hey, it WAS 36 hours).
2. Visiting my cat-friends takes about 2 hours, and then I get email notifications to new posts and I comment. I always comment.
3. I love reading posts at the gardening site and spent a total of a few hours there. Sometimes there are questions I know something about and I answer. I've been veggie and flower gardening for a few decades, so I have some experience. I I have a good library to consult when I'm not sure. I consulted my Peterson Guide of Eastern Trees when somewhere was trying to identify the specific one in her back yard. It was one I have never seen, but the leaf shape was unique, so I mentioned it.
Sometimes there is new information I value. Sometimes I ask questions. I am new to growing Venus Fly Traps (for example) , so I'm the one asking questions there.
4. The atheist forum takes a lot of time. There are atheists, agnostics, and theists there, and many of the posts are long and factual. It takes some time to reply to those well. I probably spend a lot of time there. I joined this forum October last year and have over 4500 posts there now.
Mostly, I discuss everyday events with other atheists. Yes, atheists discuss almost everything from politics to cooking, to movies. But it does mean we don't have a religious view on them. Atheists may have a more reality-based approach to life, but we also love sci-fi and can do the "willing suspension of disbelief" as well as anyone if not better.
5. I tend to switch back between the gardening and atheist forums. I use up all the threads in one and go back to the other. I don't mean that I post fast. I give a lot of thought to each. My interest is to answer posts carefully, well, and in detail without be overly long.
You can always tell tell the theists' posts by length. They go on forever before they start quoting religious texts to get to their point. I treat them kindly, with facts. They can decide whether to change their minds if they want.
6. After a long time on the computer, I usually feed the cats (yes I fed them regularly before) but always make sure to feed them a good meal before I go to bed. Because staying up that long means I'll sleep 12 hours after.
7. When I got up Friday, I started on making a hinged top for the new compost bin. Sometimes you build things by measurement. But having the compost bin built, I simply put boards on the top and marked the edges for cutting. Friday, I cut a lot of boards to size. I glued and clamped some but even with mosquito repellent all over me, they were fierce around my eyes and fingers. I worked fast and ran.
8. Saturday afternoon (after another 12 hours in bed- I did have to catch up) I went out to complete the top. Fortunately, it was windy and the mosquitoes have trouble with winds over 10 mph. I got the entire top structure completed. OK, not the screening, the wood structure. The hinging was perfect. The 2 bins now have tops that lift up smoothly. All I have to do now is attach 1/2 wire mesh to the top and add a few spacer boards under it. That will leave no space for even a mouse to get inside.
9. Added a lot more garden stuff into the old toolshed with the new shelves. Every day, I will clear more basement space. Weeded the Fall garden a bit. Not many weeds left. A year of weeding as removed most and I suspect there aren't many viable weed seeds left there. Which means I can FINALLY tackle the part of the backyard overgrown with wild blackberries soon.
There is always SOMETHING that needed attention "last year", and I am always behind on some part of the yard. On the other hand, suppose I caught up with everything? What would I do? OK, fix up the house better...
I'll do that when Winter arrives...
So here is the past Tuesday through Saturday:
1. Stayed up all night Tuesday 8pm - Thursday 8 am visiting cat blogs, processing camera pictures, and shifting between a gardening forum and an atheist forum. Yeah, that 36 hours. Went through a 1.5 l bottle of wine and 4 packs of cigs (hey, it WAS 36 hours).
2. Visiting my cat-friends takes about 2 hours, and then I get email notifications to new posts and I comment. I always comment.
3. I love reading posts at the gardening site and spent a total of a few hours there. Sometimes there are questions I know something about and I answer. I've been veggie and flower gardening for a few decades, so I have some experience. I I have a good library to consult when I'm not sure. I consulted my Peterson Guide of Eastern Trees when somewhere was trying to identify the specific one in her back yard. It was one I have never seen, but the leaf shape was unique, so I mentioned it.
Sometimes there is new information I value. Sometimes I ask questions. I am new to growing Venus Fly Traps (for example) , so I'm the one asking questions there.
4. The atheist forum takes a lot of time. There are atheists, agnostics, and theists there, and many of the posts are long and factual. It takes some time to reply to those well. I probably spend a lot of time there. I joined this forum October last year and have over 4500 posts there now.
Mostly, I discuss everyday events with other atheists. Yes, atheists discuss almost everything from politics to cooking, to movies. But it does mean we don't have a religious view on them. Atheists may have a more reality-based approach to life, but we also love sci-fi and can do the "willing suspension of disbelief" as well as anyone if not better.
5. I tend to switch back between the gardening and atheist forums. I use up all the threads in one and go back to the other. I don't mean that I post fast. I give a lot of thought to each. My interest is to answer posts carefully, well, and in detail without be overly long.
You can always tell tell the theists' posts by length. They go on forever before they start quoting religious texts to get to their point. I treat them kindly, with facts. They can decide whether to change their minds if they want.
6. After a long time on the computer, I usually feed the cats (yes I fed them regularly before) but always make sure to feed them a good meal before I go to bed. Because staying up that long means I'll sleep 12 hours after.
7. When I got up Friday, I started on making a hinged top for the new compost bin. Sometimes you build things by measurement. But having the compost bin built, I simply put boards on the top and marked the edges for cutting. Friday, I cut a lot of boards to size. I glued and clamped some but even with mosquito repellent all over me, they were fierce around my eyes and fingers. I worked fast and ran.
8. Saturday afternoon (after another 12 hours in bed- I did have to catch up) I went out to complete the top. Fortunately, it was windy and the mosquitoes have trouble with winds over 10 mph. I got the entire top structure completed. OK, not the screening, the wood structure. The hinging was perfect. The 2 bins now have tops that lift up smoothly. All I have to do now is attach 1/2 wire mesh to the top and add a few spacer boards under it. That will leave no space for even a mouse to get inside.
9. Added a lot more garden stuff into the old toolshed with the new shelves. Every day, I will clear more basement space. Weeded the Fall garden a bit. Not many weeds left. A year of weeding as removed most and I suspect there aren't many viable weed seeds left there. Which means I can FINALLY tackle the part of the backyard overgrown with wild blackberries soon.
There is always SOMETHING that needed attention "last year", and I am always behind on some part of the yard. On the other hand, suppose I caught up with everything? What would I do? OK, fix up the house better...
I'll do that when Winter arrives...
Thursday, September 28, 2017
Projects
Well, I got the toolshed shelves finished. Sometimes you have to stop seeking perfection and "just do it"!
I got the shelves to match up in the corners. The bottom left shelf ended up 1/4" out of level. But its a 25+ year old shed, nothing about it is level or square anymore, and it needs a new roof. So I'm not going to worry about it.
I had to put 2x4 boards behind the shelves to keep small items falling out the back (the sheves are on exposed 4" studs). I would have used 1x4 boards, but I bought 10" wide boards instead of 12" wide boards and the brackets would have stuck out otherwise and not allowed me to use the front screw hole in the tip of the bracket. A 10" bracket IS 10" long; a 10" board is only 9 1/2".
Just moving some pots to the new shelves gained me 16 sq ft of basement space, and I have lots of garden stuff still to move. I expect to recover about 50 sq ft when I transfer more "stuff" from the basement to the shelves. And there will be more shed floorspace to store power equipment I seldom use (but use a lot when I need it) when I take small amounts of some stuff out of large boxes and add them to the shelves.
That will make more sense when I fill the shelves and get some of the equipment stored in there. I'll take pictures.
In 30 years, I've accumulated a lot of equipment. Snow-blower, tiller, chipper/shredder, lawn-roller, aerator...
Those things are cluttering up the garage and the REAL shed. Yes, I have 2 sheds. More importantly though, it frees up room in the basement for woodworking, and I am determined to make the basement easier to do work in.
And with Winter coming on, I have some wood-working projects in mind to occupy my time
I got the shelves to match up in the corners. The bottom left shelf ended up 1/4" out of level. But its a 25+ year old shed, nothing about it is level or square anymore, and it needs a new roof. So I'm not going to worry about it.
I had to put 2x4 boards behind the shelves to keep small items falling out the back (the sheves are on exposed 4" studs). I would have used 1x4 boards, but I bought 10" wide boards instead of 12" wide boards and the brackets would have stuck out otherwise and not allowed me to use the front screw hole in the tip of the bracket. A 10" bracket IS 10" long; a 10" board is only 9 1/2".
Just moving some pots to the new shelves gained me 16 sq ft of basement space, and I have lots of garden stuff still to move. I expect to recover about 50 sq ft when I transfer more "stuff" from the basement to the shelves. And there will be more shed floorspace to store power equipment I seldom use (but use a lot when I need it) when I take small amounts of some stuff out of large boxes and add them to the shelves.
That will make more sense when I fill the shelves and get some of the equipment stored in there. I'll take pictures.
In 30 years, I've accumulated a lot of equipment. Snow-blower, tiller, chipper/shredder, lawn-roller, aerator...
Those things are cluttering up the garage and the REAL shed. Yes, I have 2 sheds. More importantly though, it frees up room in the basement for woodworking, and I am determined to make the basement easier to do work in.
And with Winter coming on, I have some wood-working projects in mind to occupy my time
Saturday, September 23, 2017
Fall Plants
I went to Walmart today. I am perfectly happy shopping at Walmart for brand-name stuff and AFAICT, their generic stuff is just fine. They buy their generic dishwashing liquid and aspirin from the major manufacturers anyway. On the other hand, they also sell the cheapest appliances (like M/W ovens that are near the bottom of the Consumer Reports ratings and I don't buy those.
And they usually have cheap plants and yard supplies. The same brand of Product X is typically 10-20% cheaper at Walmart than at Home Depot or Lowes and I want to reward cheaper prices. My cardinals can't tell where I buy black oil sunflower seed and the cats can't tell where I get the Tidy Cats litter buckets from. And keep in mind it is not a question of small local stores versus Walmart. The small local stores are all gone. It is between Walmart, Home Depot, Lowe's, and sometimes Safeway around here. I would mention Giant Food, but I buy mostly fresh produce abnd Giant's is pathetic.
So I wanted Mums and pansies and various odd stuff today. I saw that Safeway was selling 1 gallon Mums for $9.99. Home Depot and Lowe's (between which is never a penny of difference) $10.98, and Walmart $3.99. Guess where I bought 4 pots?
They didn't have pansies yet. Next month...
The Mums were beautiful and healthy. I already had 2 orange from last year. Now I also have 2 yellow and 2 red.
The deck pots of Summer Marigolds and Salvia have been great this year...
The Salvia have been so good this year, the hummingbirds visit them first and only "top off" at my nectar feeders. Next year, I will have lots more Salvia.
Now, THIS is where Walmart fails. I want nice pots to set the plain black plastic ones into until I plant them in more permanent spots in November. Walmart was done with planters in August. They have Christmas stuff up now!
Well, I have saucers to hold rainwater. and I water the deck plants every other day when there is not 1" of rain. Tjey should look great until dormancy and planting.
And they usually have cheap plants and yard supplies. The same brand of Product X is typically 10-20% cheaper at Walmart than at Home Depot or Lowes and I want to reward cheaper prices. My cardinals can't tell where I buy black oil sunflower seed and the cats can't tell where I get the Tidy Cats litter buckets from. And keep in mind it is not a question of small local stores versus Walmart. The small local stores are all gone. It is between Walmart, Home Depot, Lowe's, and sometimes Safeway around here. I would mention Giant Food, but I buy mostly fresh produce abnd Giant's is pathetic.
So I wanted Mums and pansies and various odd stuff today. I saw that Safeway was selling 1 gallon Mums for $9.99. Home Depot and Lowe's (between which is never a penny of difference) $10.98, and Walmart $3.99. Guess where I bought 4 pots?
They didn't have pansies yet. Next month...
The Mums were beautiful and healthy. I already had 2 orange from last year. Now I also have 2 yellow and 2 red.
The deck pots of Summer Marigolds and Salvia have been great this year...
The Salvia have been so good this year, the hummingbirds visit them first and only "top off" at my nectar feeders. Next year, I will have lots more Salvia.
Now, THIS is where Walmart fails. I want nice pots to set the plain black plastic ones into until I plant them in more permanent spots in November. Walmart was done with planters in August. They have Christmas stuff up now!
Well, I have saucers to hold rainwater. and I water the deck plants every other day when there is not 1" of rain. Tjey should look great until dormancy and planting.
Friday, September 22, 2017
Those Toolshed Shelves
Those shelves are becoming annoying. I mentioned last post that I made a template to rest on the floor from a scrap board, thinking that I couldn't possibly have any problems knowing where it drill in the exposed studs to make the shelves perfectly level.
After I got the shelf boards cut a little shorter than the narrow wall of the shed, they all went onto the template-installed brackets beautifully (after I flipped it to account for some brackets having holes on the left instead of the right like the bracket I used to make the template. I had checked the level on the floor under them first, and it was fine.
So yesterday from the project for the day. I set about installing 2 more shelves abbutting the new ones. I predrilled holes just like in the first, accounting for the number of brackets I had remaining. The shelving boards were nice and flat, how could anything go wrong?
The cruelty of the Universe is SUBTLE and unending...
I attached the 40 shelf brackets. I placed the shelf board on the brackets. To assure the shelves abutted the previous ones, I clamped the ends together. The shelf was 1/2" above the bracket nearest the previous shelf.
HUH? How was that possible?
I placed the board template next to the bracket; it was in the right place. All 4 brackets were. I was frustrated. It is possible to be both frustrated and patient at the same tie. "Frustrated" is a momentary annoyance, "patience" is long term. Patience usually solves frustrations.
I removed the brackets. I physically held a bracket up under the shelf and marked new spots to drill. I drilled. I reinstalled the bracket. Then I checked the shelf for level with a 4' long level. It was 1/2" off. Worse, it leaned forward a bit.
Frustrating. I'm not obsessively perfectionist, but I do want shelves to be pretty much level. So redid the brackets, changing exchanging the left-hole brackets for right-hole ones to make the holes a bit apart so the lag screws wouldnt get into the wrong holes.
Then I loosened the clamps holding the shelf to the previous one. It popped down 1/2".
ARGGGGHHHH!
I went away from the toolshed for the day. Trying to solve problems when you are frustrated is not a good idea!
So I went back at it this afternoon. Well, I should mention something about the shed. It was built almost 30 years ago. Because local property assessment laws said a ground-contact outbuilding would be taxed but a "temporary" one (such as a shed set on cinder blocks would not), I built it that way.
Over the years, apparently, the cinder blocks have settled a bit, and the shed (basically just an empty box with a floor and roof) had slowly twisted to adjust. The floor is no longer level. The wall studs are no longer perfectly vertical. Nothing about it, in fact, is still square!
Damn! Well, the structure is still sound. I do not intend to rebuilt it just to make the shelves level! But I still wanted the shelves to be level. So with the new shelf board clamped to the previous new shelf, propped the far end of the new shelf to were it was level lengthwise and and narrow-wise.
Surely the brackets would fit squarely under the shelf... HA!
Well, I have some packets of shims. These were as long as the brackets, going from 1/4" to 0. Holding the shim against the stud and holding the bracket to the shim, it was utterly, perfectly level!
I glued the shim to the stud and went off to weed the garden for 30 minutes while the glue dried. I went back, knowing I would see the bracket fit perfectly under the shelf! How could it be otherwise?
HA!
It was 1/4" off.
The cruelty of the Universe is subtle and UNENDING...
I can't make shelves level in both directions in a shed box that isn't square in any dimensions. I'm sure a professional could, but apparently I can't!
I'm going to just put the last 2 shelves on as best I can, screw a 1"x2" board on the front of the shelves so nothing can fall off, and call it done. Declare victory and walk away.
I have too many other things to do...
And I should mention that I have a newer real toolshed next to it. Concrete floor, build like a small house, solid. Yes, I have that much gardening stuff to need the old one too. I think I'll have some company build a 2nd like it to store the stuff in the old one and be rid of it.
But I still want the old one until then. I have 1/4 of my basement filled with stuff that belongs in a garden shed. And until THAT stuff is removed, I can't set up my shop equipment without crawling over stuff everytime I want to use a tool.
Fill the old shed with stuff from the basement, organize the basement, do woodworking over the Winter. That's the plan...
But I still can't believe how frustrating just adding level shelves were...
After I got the shelf boards cut a little shorter than the narrow wall of the shed, they all went onto the template-installed brackets beautifully (after I flipped it to account for some brackets having holes on the left instead of the right like the bracket I used to make the template. I had checked the level on the floor under them first, and it was fine.
So yesterday from the project for the day. I set about installing 2 more shelves abbutting the new ones. I predrilled holes just like in the first, accounting for the number of brackets I had remaining. The shelving boards were nice and flat, how could anything go wrong?
The cruelty of the Universe is SUBTLE and unending...
I attached the 40 shelf brackets. I placed the shelf board on the brackets. To assure the shelves abutted the previous ones, I clamped the ends together. The shelf was 1/2" above the bracket nearest the previous shelf.
HUH? How was that possible?
I placed the board template next to the bracket; it was in the right place. All 4 brackets were. I was frustrated. It is possible to be both frustrated and patient at the same tie. "Frustrated" is a momentary annoyance, "patience" is long term. Patience usually solves frustrations.
I removed the brackets. I physically held a bracket up under the shelf and marked new spots to drill. I drilled. I reinstalled the bracket. Then I checked the shelf for level with a 4' long level. It was 1/2" off. Worse, it leaned forward a bit.
Frustrating. I'm not obsessively perfectionist, but I do want shelves to be pretty much level. So redid the brackets, changing exchanging the left-hole brackets for right-hole ones to make the holes a bit apart so the lag screws wouldnt get into the wrong holes.
Then I loosened the clamps holding the shelf to the previous one. It popped down 1/2".
ARGGGGHHHH!
I went away from the toolshed for the day. Trying to solve problems when you are frustrated is not a good idea!
So I went back at it this afternoon. Well, I should mention something about the shed. It was built almost 30 years ago. Because local property assessment laws said a ground-contact outbuilding would be taxed but a "temporary" one (such as a shed set on cinder blocks would not), I built it that way.
Over the years, apparently, the cinder blocks have settled a bit, and the shed (basically just an empty box with a floor and roof) had slowly twisted to adjust. The floor is no longer level. The wall studs are no longer perfectly vertical. Nothing about it, in fact, is still square!
Damn! Well, the structure is still sound. I do not intend to rebuilt it just to make the shelves level! But I still wanted the shelves to be level. So with the new shelf board clamped to the previous new shelf, propped the far end of the new shelf to were it was level lengthwise and and narrow-wise.
Surely the brackets would fit squarely under the shelf... HA!
Well, I have some packets of shims. These were as long as the brackets, going from 1/4" to 0. Holding the shim against the stud and holding the bracket to the shim, it was utterly, perfectly level!
I glued the shim to the stud and went off to weed the garden for 30 minutes while the glue dried. I went back, knowing I would see the bracket fit perfectly under the shelf! How could it be otherwise?
HA!
It was 1/4" off.
The cruelty of the Universe is subtle and UNENDING...
I can't make shelves level in both directions in a shed box that isn't square in any dimensions. I'm sure a professional could, but apparently I can't!
I'm going to just put the last 2 shelves on as best I can, screw a 1"x2" board on the front of the shelves so nothing can fall off, and call it done. Declare victory and walk away.
I have too many other things to do...
And I should mention that I have a newer real toolshed next to it. Concrete floor, build like a small house, solid. Yes, I have that much gardening stuff to need the old one too. I think I'll have some company build a 2nd like it to store the stuff in the old one and be rid of it.
But I still want the old one until then. I have 1/4 of my basement filled with stuff that belongs in a garden shed. And until THAT stuff is removed, I can't set up my shop equipment without crawling over stuff everytime I want to use a tool.
Fill the old shed with stuff from the basement, organize the basement, do woodworking over the Winter. That's the plan...
But I still can't believe how frustrating just adding level shelves were...
Tuesday, September 19, 2017
Shelves Et Al
I made a template for brackets for the shelves in the toolshed. It didn't work. The brackets had offset holes. But it turned out some were on the left and some were on the right. So I still had tpo "wing it". Worked.
An 8'x12' toolshed doesn't mean the INSIDES are that size. I went crazy cutting the shelves down to lenth to fit. And 1/4" short so they could expand from humidity.
I saw a groundhog at the far end of the yard yesterday. He saw me too and went to his borrow. Under the toolshed! I have to chase it out.
But first, I have to clear 50'x50' of brambles. Several possibilities. Hire someone (tried that and failed. Too small an area for them to bother with). Tried cutting them with a hedge trimmer then a chain saw. The brambles just kept falling on me with difficukty getting loose of them.
It looks like I am finally going to have to use the gas weed whacker with the steel blades. It scares me, but if I am careful...
I'll make sure the neighbor is available in case of an accident.
Saw a picture of a cool way to make a circular saw 45 degree angle cutter in a woodworking magazine. Cheap materials but great results. Bought the hardboard piece today. If it works, I'll show pictures.
An 8'x12' toolshed doesn't mean the INSIDES are that size. I went crazy cutting the shelves down to lenth to fit. And 1/4" short so they could expand from humidity.
I saw a groundhog at the far end of the yard yesterday. He saw me too and went to his borrow. Under the toolshed! I have to chase it out.
But first, I have to clear 50'x50' of brambles. Several possibilities. Hire someone (tried that and failed. Too small an area for them to bother with). Tried cutting them with a hedge trimmer then a chain saw. The brambles just kept falling on me with difficukty getting loose of them.
It looks like I am finally going to have to use the gas weed whacker with the steel blades. It scares me, but if I am careful...
I'll make sure the neighbor is available in case of an accident.
Saw a picture of a cool way to make a circular saw 45 degree angle cutter in a woodworking magazine. Cheap materials but great results. Bought the hardboard piece today. If it works, I'll show pictures.
Friday, September 15, 2017
The Neighbor
I have to laugh. I have not yet met the new neighbor. But he/she has a lot of contractors doing a LOT of outside and inside work. Which is good I suppose; means they care about the property
But I had to laugh because the contractors first trimmed up the trees 12" high. OK, a little more light in my yard.
But then they came back and cut down every single tree in the yard (trimmed before or not) EXCEPT the only ones that shaded my yard. It is to cry...
BUT, a little positive manipulation... I talked to the Boss worker. Told him he might score some points about this one tree. A mulberry tree. The berries fall on the ground. You step on them and you stain the bottoms of your shoes. Then you do inside and it stains the carpet.
That's true. It is why I cut down mine years ago and where their's came from. He said he would tell the owner.
If that doesn't work, I will point out to the new owner that the berries attract mice and rats. Not that we HAVE rats around here, but the new owner won't know that.
I am only slightly embarrassed about telling a fib. OK, a lie. But I sure would like that tree to be gone.
I wonder if I could bribe the workers... Somewhere between $20 and $50? $100? They get paid by the hour for their work anyway... And the more hours the better, right?
But I had to laugh because the contractors first trimmed up the trees 12" high. OK, a little more light in my yard.
But then they came back and cut down every single tree in the yard (trimmed before or not) EXCEPT the only ones that shaded my yard. It is to cry...
BUT, a little positive manipulation... I talked to the Boss worker. Told him he might score some points about this one tree. A mulberry tree. The berries fall on the ground. You step on them and you stain the bottoms of your shoes. Then you do inside and it stains the carpet.
That's true. It is why I cut down mine years ago and where their's came from. He said he would tell the owner.
If that doesn't work, I will point out to the new owner that the berries attract mice and rats. Not that we HAVE rats around here, but the new owner won't know that.
I am only slightly embarrassed about telling a fib. OK, a lie. But I sure would like that tree to be gone.
I wonder if I could bribe the workers... Somewhere between $20 and $50? $100? They get paid by the hour for their work anyway... And the more hours the better, right?
Thursday, September 14, 2017
The Car
Well, the dealership got the metal spout of the gas can pulled out. The ticket manager I spoke to didn't have all the details, but she said they used some hydraulic "puller" to get it out. The mechanic who did the work wasn't available at the timer. Probably laughing his ass off to hard...
I suppose it doesn't matter what they used. *I* sure didn't have one and never will. What are the chances that would ever happen again? I know for sure I will never make that mistake again.
She WAS pretty sure they had never had to make that exact repair before.
They also said I should replace a timing belt. A mere $1,050. I asked why and they said "age". Well, yeah, the car is a 2005 and I bought it new, but it only has 27,975 miles on it. I don't drive much. They seem to have just seen the years and saw "timing belt" on their list.
But great, now I have to worry about that every time I drive...
I've been trying to make this car last until I can get a functional hydrogen fuel vehicle. I probably can't make it last that long. Low mileage or not, age DOES matter. I don't really need an SUV. I could go for a hybrid mostly, but I do have to haul a trailer sometimes. I may be stuck with at least a wagon.
I'm not sure I can sit in a car that low anymore. So I may be stuck with an SUV. I had to rent a sedan for a week a few years ago, and the visual perspective was SO WEIRD! Habits form...
I had a timing belt fail once. By great luck, I was right next to a service station. It took 3 hours of sitting around. They had other cars they were already working on. But it was only a few hundred dollars. I think I will take my chances on the timing belt lasting a while.
And the new vehicles are coming out in the next couple months...
I don't like all the fancy stuff on the new cars. I'm not a heavy internet person. This desktop does about all I need. So having internet access in a car is not a deal for me, and I'm not sure I'm ready for a car that decides on it's own to stop suddenly.
I usded to laugh at people who bothered with manual transmissions because they liked the "control" it gave them. I may be doing the same, but I don't think so. The new stuff is more proactive.
I've kept cars a reasonably long time. Oh I don't men like some guy who loved his 20 year old car and kept it running 200,000 miles. But my last cars have lasted 10 years, 8 years, and 12 years. Maybe it IS time for a change. Mileage isn't "everything". I don't like a car I can't trust.
Maybe I'm talking myself into a new car...
Bet I'm looking at Consumer Reports magazine about SUVs tomorrow!
I suppose it doesn't matter what they used. *I* sure didn't have one and never will. What are the chances that would ever happen again? I know for sure I will never make that mistake again.
She WAS pretty sure they had never had to make that exact repair before.
They also said I should replace a timing belt. A mere $1,050. I asked why and they said "age". Well, yeah, the car is a 2005 and I bought it new, but it only has 27,975 miles on it. I don't drive much. They seem to have just seen the years and saw "timing belt" on their list.
But great, now I have to worry about that every time I drive...
I've been trying to make this car last until I can get a functional hydrogen fuel vehicle. I probably can't make it last that long. Low mileage or not, age DOES matter. I don't really need an SUV. I could go for a hybrid mostly, but I do have to haul a trailer sometimes. I may be stuck with at least a wagon.
I'm not sure I can sit in a car that low anymore. So I may be stuck with an SUV. I had to rent a sedan for a week a few years ago, and the visual perspective was SO WEIRD! Habits form...
I had a timing belt fail once. By great luck, I was right next to a service station. It took 3 hours of sitting around. They had other cars they were already working on. But it was only a few hundred dollars. I think I will take my chances on the timing belt lasting a while.
And the new vehicles are coming out in the next couple months...
I don't like all the fancy stuff on the new cars. I'm not a heavy internet person. This desktop does about all I need. So having internet access in a car is not a deal for me, and I'm not sure I'm ready for a car that decides on it's own to stop suddenly.
I usded to laugh at people who bothered with manual transmissions because they liked the "control" it gave them. I may be doing the same, but I don't think so. The new stuff is more proactive.
I've kept cars a reasonably long time. Oh I don't men like some guy who loved his 20 year old car and kept it running 200,000 miles. But my last cars have lasted 10 years, 8 years, and 12 years. Maybe it IS time for a change. Mileage isn't "everything". I don't like a car I can't trust.
Maybe I'm talking myself into a new car...
Bet I'm looking at Consumer Reports magazine about SUVs tomorrow!
Monday, September 11, 2017
9-11
Forever and always, never forgive and never forget...
I didn't see the 1st WTC tower fall. I saw the 2nd. I FELT the Pentagon explosion right up through the floor where I worked in Washington DC. I didn't know the cause of the THUD at the time, but I learned soon enough.
Everyone was evacuated. I saw the traffic jams outside, so I stood on the roof of the building while there were rumors of another suicide plane. It crashed in Pennsylvania due to the bravery of the passengers. I won't forget that either.
When the traffic vanished, I drove home.
"Embedded in the memories of everyone who lived through it, this was the day four jet planes were hijacked and crashed into the New York World Trade Center and the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, causing the deaths of 2,977 people. The fourth plane (United Airlines Flight 93) was directed at Washington DC, but its passengers bravely attempted to take back control and it crashed into a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania."
Never forgive, never forget...
I didn't see the 1st WTC tower fall. I saw the 2nd. I FELT the Pentagon explosion right up through the floor where I worked in Washington DC. I didn't know the cause of the THUD at the time, but I learned soon enough.
Everyone was evacuated. I saw the traffic jams outside, so I stood on the roof of the building while there were rumors of another suicide plane. It crashed in Pennsylvania due to the bravery of the passengers. I won't forget that either.
When the traffic vanished, I drove home.
"Embedded in the memories of everyone who lived through it, this was the day four jet planes were hijacked and crashed into the New York World Trade Center and the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, causing the deaths of 2,977 people. The fourth plane (United Airlines Flight 93) was directed at Washington DC, but its passengers bravely attempted to take back control and it crashed into a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania."
Never forgive, never forget...
Thursday, September 7, 2017
Random Thoughts And Observations
It has been so rainy here lately, the slugs are crawling up on the front steps to get out of the wet.
The moquito larvae are drowning in the grass.
Rice is growing wild in the lawn.
I used an umbrella to get the mail 3 days ago and set the umbrella to dry in the garage. It is still wet.
The cats found a fish hiding in the basement!
My Civ2 game declared all my land units drowned. But I have lots of Subs.
The local gas station is giving away free water with every fill-up. And if you take away 5 gallons, they give you a gallon of gas free.
The local dowser turned his forked stick upside down trying to find dry spots.
A dry spot appeared in the sky and everyone cheered. And took pictures.
Local Republicans are acknowledging "Climate Change" and blaming local Democrats for not doing something about it. Local Democrats are denying they ever liked "rain" and proposed a Bill banning it. President Trump is denying it is raining. He says it is "fake news".
The cats insisted on going outside but they got tired of swimming in the lawn and came back inside.
The moquito larvae are drowning in the grass.
Rice is growing wild in the lawn.
I used an umbrella to get the mail 3 days ago and set the umbrella to dry in the garage. It is still wet.
The cats found a fish hiding in the basement!
My Civ2 game declared all my land units drowned. But I have lots of Subs.
The local gas station is giving away free water with every fill-up. And if you take away 5 gallons, they give you a gallon of gas free.
The local dowser turned his forked stick upside down trying to find dry spots.
A dry spot appeared in the sky and everyone cheered. And took pictures.
Local Republicans are acknowledging "Climate Change" and blaming local Democrats for not doing something about it. Local Democrats are denying they ever liked "rain" and proposed a Bill banning it. President Trump is denying it is raining. He says it is "fake news".
The cats insisted on going outside but they got tired of swimming in the lawn and came back inside.
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Election
Well, I guess I'm ready to vote. Most of my choices were settled months ago, but there were some local elections and ballot questions ...