OK, nothing major. Just small things I did staying busy and productive... As I've said before "try to do something useful every day".
1. My clock/radio has a backup battery to keep the clock running in a few hours of power outage. One of those old-fashioned rectangular 9 volt types (its a very old clock radio but it still works). The last few times when there was a brief blip in the power, it failed. I get tired resetting it. So I turned over the clock/radio and found the battery. The plug-in attachment was broken. How something that does not move "breaks" is beyond me.
And it took a while to even see that "something was broken. My initial response was to buy a new rechargeable battery. But it would attach. That's when I discover part of the old battery was broken off in the plug.
I have a lot of good tools. One is a tiny, thin needlenose plier (and this one is really "needlenosed"). But I don't have the steadiest of hands these days. So it was really hard to get the plier to grab the old broken-off battery attachment. Sometimes I scream in frustration trying to work at tiny things! And the plug-in didn't offer any firm leverage.
It took 15 minutes to get the broken battery attachment loose from the plug-in. That may not sound like very long, but 15 minutes of frustration is like an hour of real time.
The tiny little bit of broken metal suddenly popped out! The new rechargeable (and newly charged) battery connected perfectly. I can't wait for a 1 minute power outage to see if it works.
2. Checked the snow-blower. That meant dragging out 150' of heavy-duty extension cord to reach the toolshed. And remembering to plug it into the outside outlet before I went, LOL. It has an electrical power-start which I love. I can't pull those damn "cord-pulls" like I used to.
We aren't forecast to have heavy snow this Winter, but surprises happen. So testing the snow-blower made sense. But it wouldn't start. OK, I tend to leave gas in equipment. Purists say to drain gas every month, mechanics say once every 6 months, and there are additives that extend gas life to a year. I don't do that. Most equipment starts when I want it to.
But the snow-blower didn't. I checked a few obvious things. Then looked in the gas tank. Couldn't see a thing! So I found a 3' bamboo stick and put it in to see if there was gas. No gas. I actually stored it properly (drained of most gas and then run til it stopped). I had forgotten that.
Added a little gas and pushed the priming button a dozen times. It started right up. So, I'm ready for any serious snow...
3. Filled the thistle seed birdfeeders ( a daily thing - I have a flock of about a dozen goldfinches here and I bet no neighbor can claim that) and the black oil sunflower birdfeeder (for the other songbirds). Filling the sunflower feeder is wearing me out. I need to drag over the 8' stepladder to reach the top to dump in a bucket of the seeds. It gets harder every year.
What I need is a pole that lowers and raises the sunflower seeder. I've looked for one to buy for years but I never find one. I think I'm going to have to build my own. I 'm thinking a pipe through the center with a rope through it, a couple of pulleys, and a small winch. I need to sit down and draw the details. But there is always something else higher on the To Do List.
4. Went shopping at Walmart. I go there for odd items. Or maybe I should say their "profit-losers". There are some things I buy there that are way under-priced compared to competitors. So I take advantage of that. Fancy Food canned cat food is cheap there. Tidy Litter is cheap there. Milk and Ice Cream is cheap there. Some other things aren't, so I buy them elsewhere. I have NO store loyalty.
5. Bought a steamship round roast at the meat.deli/liquor store. Roast beef is $7.99 a pound and too often "medium-to well" cooked. I like medium-rare. So I marinate and cook my own. I have an electric slicer and do my own sandwich-thin slicing (set into 2-day batches in zip-lock bags). And a few 1/2" slabs for different meals.
6. Took one of my 24"x6"x6" planting trays and dumped the soil into a bucket to mix it up with organic slow-release fertilizer . Put it back in the tray and planted more lettuce. I love salads, so I can't really have "too much" lettuce. Red leaf, green leaf, and romaine. And since lettuce has jumped from $2/pound to $4.50, that's a sensible thing to do.
7. I've been collecting fallen branches. I don't often have fires in the basement fireplace, but a short one would be nice to watch. Sadly, my little electric chainsaw is giving me problems. The chain just doesn't want to adjust in tension properly. A project for another day... But the fallen branches are small enough to cut with my "saws-all".
8. I use a drywall tape tool to scrape the litter boxes clean. It works great for cleaning the edges and loosening everything from the bottom for scooping after.
But it has always "caught" on the middle of one of the litter boxes. So I empties the litter into the other boxes and scrubbed it. There was a slight raised spots in the center.
Hurray for sharp chisels! I scraped away the high spot! Perfection in scraping is available again.
9. Sorted out a 10" stack of bills and notices. I have a very good system of file folders, but I am terrible at keeping up with the filing. I got 90% of them divided and filed in subjects. That was a relief. The other 10% is hard to decide where to file. And I only did it because of possible bad cat.vet records as you see below.
10. Looked up a lot of stuff on email and websites. First, I think my new vet was sent bad records from the old one. I don't yet want to say it was deliberate, but a lot of what the new vet is telling me doesn't match up with my mental recollections of annual visits for shots. I have the previous vet receipts on the dining table and will make a list on times and dates. Then I will bring that to the new vet so that we can compare records.
Second, some poster (elsewhere) suggested "diclophene" for knee problems. The stuff seems almost lethal. I'll stay with generic 4% lidocaine and Walmart 'Equate' equivalents.
11. Almost time to start planting some slow-growing perennial seeds. I mix my own starter-soil . Made a list of the parts I don't have enough of. Time to visit Lowe's or Home Depot.