I was a young reader and loved reading books as a child. I always needed more books to read. The first document I ever owned was a library card.By the time I was 12, I had read the entire family encyclopedia of 25 volumes and several of my parents' saved textbooks. I had gone through the entire local library's "young adult" section (defined as age 12-15 or something close to that). I had to get permission from my parents and the librarian to check out more adult books.
My parents approved, but I vaguely recall the librarian asking questions about the difference between information and fiction. I don't recall my answers the least bit, but apparently, when it was clear I understood the difference between William and Clark exploring Western North America and Isaac Asimov and Buck Rogers, I was allowed to read more adult books.
In the years afterwards, I spent a LOT of money buying both science fiction AND information books. So I love books and cherish the enjoyment of reading and the real information at my fingertips.
10 years ago, I packed half of my sci-books into boxes to clear some shelf space. It was the half I thought the least of. A few years ago, I went through my shelves and removed those "information books"I thought had little value. Those got tossed after I learned the local library didn't want my kind of books.
I've started a de-clutterring project. Today, I went through the information books and tossed most of them into the recycling bin and put more in boxes in the garage because the recycling bin was filled.
The era of information books is over. The internet provides all the information I can use. I skimmed through many of the books and I couldn't find anything in them that wasn't easier to find on the internet. Basically, the internet (in this regard) is a bigger faster library a few keywords away.
And books go obsolete so quickly sometimes. Or even were decades ago. I looked at one World History book and it was written in 1937! So I got brutal about it. Any information book that seemed overcome by new information (historical, scientific, or repair) went.
I kept books like 'The Peter Principle' and 'Murphy's Laws' and 'Flatland' and Human and Cat evolution. And those may go in the some future weeding.
Six 3' shelves became one. Some I'll keep because their information doesn't age much (backyard landscaping projects or linguistic explanations). And some books went because I'm not sure why I bought them in the first place.
But I bet I tossed out books that cost me $5,000 originally. And a shelf of National Geographic maps; Google does that better. I got rid of 10 years of various magazines a few months ago. I got rid of books of Poe stories and Kipling verses. I even tossed al dozen Ayn Rand books I thought I would read and never did after 20 years.
I hesitated before doing this today, but I thought about the last time I did a few years ago and couldn't recall a single book of them. Obviously, I did not miss them. I bet I won't miss these either.
It was hard to start tossing them, but easy to continue once I realized I wasn't losing information, just accepting that there was a better way to get at it that didn't fill up physical bookcases.
OK, so books had their time. I guess I just went screaming and kicking into the 21st century today. One day centuries ago, a storyteller started reciting a memorized tale of some hero, and the King said "I have that book, and others. You're fired".
Things change. And I'm not done tossing books. The recycle bin is mostly filled and very heavy. So tomorrow I'll pile more in boxes and stack them in the garage for the next recycle pickup. I'm keeping every sci book I own. Those don't actually become obsolete.
Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Wednesday, August 7, 2019
Strange Flower
I have planted a lot of flowers over the years. I usually recognize them when I see them. I appreciate some (like Brown-Eyed Susans) that self-sow in places they like better than where I originally planted a few a decade ago. I have a lot of those now in clumps scaterred around a corner of the yard.
I've been planting other self-sowers in other spots (seems efficient). If they survive like the Susans and spread around, it will be interesting. When I plant annuals, I tend to be very geometric, but these I will let wander where they may. In fact, I'll snip the flower heads, rub the seedheads in my hand into a bowl to separate the seeds and just scatter them everywhere I don't mow.
If it works, great - Flowers Everywhere. If not, no loss...
I know it works in general, because last Fall, I collected seedheads from the Pollinator Bed and scatterred them back in and added a thin layer of leaf compost to cover lightly. I got mostly just one kind though. I don't know what it is, but orange flowers are nice and the bees love them.
But the strange flower is this...
I've never seen that in the yard, and I've sure never planted anything like that. It's 16" tall. The flower lasted 2 days and I don't see another bloom coming.
I may take a walk around the neighborhood to see if someone is growing those to ask what it is. Of course, if anyone here recognizes it, that would be good...
I've been planting other self-sowers in other spots (seems efficient). If they survive like the Susans and spread around, it will be interesting. When I plant annuals, I tend to be very geometric, but these I will let wander where they may. In fact, I'll snip the flower heads, rub the seedheads in my hand into a bowl to separate the seeds and just scatter them everywhere I don't mow.
If it works, great - Flowers Everywhere. If not, no loss...
I know it works in general, because last Fall, I collected seedheads from the Pollinator Bed and scatterred them back in and added a thin layer of leaf compost to cover lightly. I got mostly just one kind though. I don't know what it is, but orange flowers are nice and the bees love them.
But the strange flower is this...
I've never seen that in the yard, and I've sure never planted anything like that. It's 16" tall. The flower lasted 2 days and I don't see another bloom coming.
I may take a walk around the neighborhood to see if someone is growing those to ask what it is. Of course, if anyone here recognizes it, that would be good...
Tuesday, August 6, 2019
Broken Cinder Block Wall
OK, some of this might sound technical but it isn't really.
My sunken patio cinder block retainer wall broke a month ago. I originally thought it was due to rain, but now I think it was just coincidence. There was no flooding against the wall. Even the soil behind it is not expanded.
I had a masonry guy come out and he said he would rebuild it in a trench all around for $16,000. Um, no not what I needed. A couple other people returned calls, but I couldn't understand a word they said. So I gave up and considered how I could do it myself.
I tried levering the wall back in place. Wood beams are not as strong as cinderblock weight. They bent first. I needed a better lever. I came across a "motorcycle lift", basically a wide scissor jack like you might have in your car for lifting it to change a tire. But wider and more stable and up to 1100 pounds lift. You turn a large handle, and the lift slowly spreads. Cost $80.
I bought one. It took a few days to figure out an immovable object from which to push the wall. The house foundation was obvious, but I didn't have anything long enough to reach the broken wall. But there were 6'x6" posts concreted 3' down and anchored to the foundation above.
And I had a 4"x4" post that just came a foot short. Perfect! But the angle from the deck post wasn't exactly at the angle of the broken wall. So I used some scrap wood and a dozen serious clamps to make it so. That left "just" enough room for the motorcycle lift to fit in.
Let's just say that to avoid any boards moving around, I also clamped some wood to the posts to prevent that. No supporting structure could move. So I started to turn the handle of the motorcycle lift. And no, there was no damage to the deck posts or anything else. I had all possible movements prevented.
The broken cinder block wall MOVED! I actually jumped for joy... I got it 9" of 12" back in place before the lift was fully extended. But then the angle was changed and it slipped sideways under pressure. Nothing sudden, just that the pressure sideways was greater the the pressure forwards.
GRUMPH!
It's at the point where I only need to move it 3 more inches in order to use some masonry construction adhesive between the broken edges (stronger that grout, it claims). But it only has a 20 minute window before hardening. So I had to know I could push the 2 edges quickly enough.
And I don't have posts that match the distance! Arghhh... I have some ideas about using bricks, wood chunks, loose solid cinder block caps. But until I'm absolutely sure there is no angle of pressure that won't cause them to suddenly pop loose dangerously, I won't proceed.
I THINK two clamped 2"by12" boards across the 2 deck posts with be strong enough (a 4"x4" post just bends), but I want to think of a stronger and safer arrangement.
And I should mention that the handle on the motorcycle lift is just a small 6" metal rod attached to a hex drive that fits over the screw that turns the jack. It hurt my hands to put enough pressure on it to turn it when things got heavy. Well, it just occurred to me while writing this that I have a ratchet drive set with longer handles and sockets and one of them is for loosening/tightening the lug nuts of truck wheels (that I've never had need of before), so I can get more leverage...
But I'm getting there... Half the fun of doing difficult things is figuring out HOW to do the things.
;)
My sunken patio cinder block retainer wall broke a month ago. I originally thought it was due to rain, but now I think it was just coincidence. There was no flooding against the wall. Even the soil behind it is not expanded.
I had a masonry guy come out and he said he would rebuild it in a trench all around for $16,000. Um, no not what I needed. A couple other people returned calls, but I couldn't understand a word they said. So I gave up and considered how I could do it myself.
I tried levering the wall back in place. Wood beams are not as strong as cinderblock weight. They bent first. I needed a better lever. I came across a "motorcycle lift", basically a wide scissor jack like you might have in your car for lifting it to change a tire. But wider and more stable and up to 1100 pounds lift. You turn a large handle, and the lift slowly spreads. Cost $80.
I bought one. It took a few days to figure out an immovable object from which to push the wall. The house foundation was obvious, but I didn't have anything long enough to reach the broken wall. But there were 6'x6" posts concreted 3' down and anchored to the foundation above.
And I had a 4"x4" post that just came a foot short. Perfect! But the angle from the deck post wasn't exactly at the angle of the broken wall. So I used some scrap wood and a dozen serious clamps to make it so. That left "just" enough room for the motorcycle lift to fit in.
Let's just say that to avoid any boards moving around, I also clamped some wood to the posts to prevent that. No supporting structure could move. So I started to turn the handle of the motorcycle lift. And no, there was no damage to the deck posts or anything else. I had all possible movements prevented.
The broken cinder block wall MOVED! I actually jumped for joy... I got it 9" of 12" back in place before the lift was fully extended. But then the angle was changed and it slipped sideways under pressure. Nothing sudden, just that the pressure sideways was greater the the pressure forwards.
GRUMPH!
It's at the point where I only need to move it 3 more inches in order to use some masonry construction adhesive between the broken edges (stronger that grout, it claims). But it only has a 20 minute window before hardening. So I had to know I could push the 2 edges quickly enough.
And I don't have posts that match the distance! Arghhh... I have some ideas about using bricks, wood chunks, loose solid cinder block caps. But until I'm absolutely sure there is no angle of pressure that won't cause them to suddenly pop loose dangerously, I won't proceed.
I THINK two clamped 2"by12" boards across the 2 deck posts with be strong enough (a 4"x4" post just bends), but I want to think of a stronger and safer arrangement.
And I should mention that the handle on the motorcycle lift is just a small 6" metal rod attached to a hex drive that fits over the screw that turns the jack. It hurt my hands to put enough pressure on it to turn it when things got heavy. Well, it just occurred to me while writing this that I have a ratchet drive set with longer handles and sockets and one of them is for loosening/tightening the lug nuts of truck wheels (that I've never had need of before), so I can get more leverage...
But I'm getting there... Half the fun of doing difficult things is figuring out HOW to do the things.
;)
Monday, August 5, 2019
Stuff
Nothing like returning from grocery-shopping and finding your driveway blocked by a big truck. It wasn't a freight truck (and I hadn't ordered anything requiring one lately). So I pulled the car off the road onto my lawn, put on my best smile, and asked what was up. There was a large firehose in one storm drain..
Sorry, I didn't take pictures. Which didn't matter, because there was nothing visible going on. Apparently, the storm drain clearing crew reported that one was half-filled with gravel and a specialized equipment crew does that. And I'm not criticizing. A lot of equipment only has a few experienced operators locally. The guy (I've never seen a woman among these crews) who can delicately manage a 1/2 tin bucket to scrape debris off a storm grate is NOT the same as the guy who can manuver a drone through a pipe to find a blockage, etc.
Anyway, they were there to flush the foot of gravel out of one storm drain to the other 90' away and from there to the outlet under the street. They suggested I move my car since the spray was fierce and some gravel would come out. I had raw meat in the car, so I demanded they let me get it into the refrigerator (they did) and I moved to car way up on the lawn (which they said was safe - and was).
When they put on their helmets and goggles, I decided the best place to be was in the house! They let loose the firehose. It wasn't Old Faithful, but it WAS pretty impressive. I think their eqipment could have watered my entire lawn an inch deep in about 5 minutes.
When the finally left, I went out and looked, the major storm drain was completely empty of gravel, the secondary one was nearly empty, and all the gravel was washed through the pipe under the street. I'm not sure how my neighbor there feels about it. He has more gravel in the easement leading to the swamp than before.
Nothing really special, but it IS a finale to the 6" of rain in 4 hours from about a month ago Monday...
Sorry, I didn't take pictures. Which didn't matter, because there was nothing visible going on. Apparently, the storm drain clearing crew reported that one was half-filled with gravel and a specialized equipment crew does that. And I'm not criticizing. A lot of equipment only has a few experienced operators locally. The guy (I've never seen a woman among these crews) who can delicately manage a 1/2 tin bucket to scrape debris off a storm grate is NOT the same as the guy who can manuver a drone through a pipe to find a blockage, etc.
Anyway, they were there to flush the foot of gravel out of one storm drain to the other 90' away and from there to the outlet under the street. They suggested I move my car since the spray was fierce and some gravel would come out. I had raw meat in the car, so I demanded they let me get it into the refrigerator (they did) and I moved to car way up on the lawn (which they said was safe - and was).
When they put on their helmets and goggles, I decided the best place to be was in the house! They let loose the firehose. It wasn't Old Faithful, but it WAS pretty impressive. I think their eqipment could have watered my entire lawn an inch deep in about 5 minutes.
When the finally left, I went out and looked, the major storm drain was completely empty of gravel, the secondary one was nearly empty, and all the gravel was washed through the pipe under the street. I'm not sure how my neighbor there feels about it. He has more gravel in the easement leading to the swamp than before.
Nothing really special, but it IS a finale to the 6" of rain in 4 hours from about a month ago Monday...
Thursday, August 1, 2019
I'm Back, I Guess
But I have some unfortunate habits. One is that when I stay up late on the computer, I drink and smoke too much and ruin my next day. If I get up at 10am one day and then stay up til 10 am the next, sleeping even just 8 hours brings me to dinnertime and a whole day is shot. Not to mention any normal sleeping schedule... So the next day is pretty well shot to hell, too.
I went offline in order to focus on some house improvements, some yard work, and some outside repairs. I did that because I was spending too many whole nights til dawn and beyond on very interesting computer sites (blogs, discussion boards, how-to sites, etc).
I was doing that more and more often the past few months and I decided to try to re-establish some normal schedule in order to get some work done. Don't get me wrong, the online hours are important to me. I enjoy blogging, I enjoy debating topics in discussion boards (and I'm not at crazy screaming adversarial sites - one is a gardening site and one is an atheist site where we just want freedom to discuss science and society without a lot of creationists arguing about Noah's ark and humans living with dinosaurs). And I play a computer game where you build a space-faring society from a single settler in an unknown location.
But that was using up a lot of time. And I have a lot of practical things to do that were getting away from me. And I have used the time away reasonably well. I spent a full day going around the house and listing all the things, by room, that needed attention. I've been here 32 years; the list is long. I did a few of the things on the list that I could do myself. A lot of them were small things not worth listing, that I had put off. Some were things that caught me by surprise, like the sudden regrowth of vines and underbrush that happened rather suddenly in June where I had cleared last Fall and seemed under control in May.
The County came out and cleared the storm drains that were buried under tree debris, clay, and gravel. That was good, but they weren't willing to dredge the drainage easement above the storm drain (they had in the past). New rules about being ultra-cautious around buried electrical and cable lines... I will have to hire a professional excavator. My neighbor is equally responsible for the drainage easement, but he doesn't care because his lawn is 1' higher than mine so all the flooding is on my side. And according to the County, that is not their concern.
Well, I can afford to hire an excavator to scoop out the washed-in gravel to improve the drainage. It would tear up the lawn some, but I know how to fix that. I might raise my front lawn at the same time to match the neighbor's. That's not a "competition", just making our lawns the same height. Practically speaking, raising my lawn height effectively makes the the drainage easement deeper, which solves a problem.
One problem I have is "too much stuff". There are things I bought and never used, things I bought that didn't do what I thought they would do, and things I bought that became useless when I changed a habit. I am making a list of things to sell. Two good examples are the bicycle I bought 8 years ago thinking I would ride it for getting back and forth to the car repair shop and the air compressor I bought 15 years ago that was way more powerful than a needed.
RIGHT after I bought the bicycle, the car dealership started a van service to bring customers home and back after repairs, so I don't need the bicycle to get back home and back. And recently, I bought a small air compressor that is all I need and I can even carry it around (the old -but more powerful one) is good for someone with greater demands.
OLD...
New...
So I am going to fill the garage with stuff to sell and leave the car outside for a coupe weeks. Good opportunity to wash the car, too... Once every couple years whether it needs it or not, LOL!
I'll be mentioning the outdoor and indoor projects as I get to them... I just can't stay away much longer. I'll find the time to describe them. The discussion boards will have to live without my brilliance for a while. ;)
Saturday, July 20, 2019
Taking A Break From A Break
I'm still trying to catch up with house and yard work. It's not going
well. But it's Friday night and there isn't much I can do right now and
I just can't stay out of communication forever. And not much I will be
doing outside Saturday or Sunday. It is going to reach 100F or close
both days.
1. My initial efforts to lever the broken cinderblock wall back into place failed. Levers are great, but I can't seem to get enough pressure to move either side of the broken wall. I have a scissor-jack on order to arrive tomorrow.
I'll put it on its side and place a 4"x4" post against the post at the house foundation and see if that works. It only cost $80 and it might save me several thousand. If I am able to push the broken cinderblock wall back toward straight, I will cover all the broken edges with construction adhesive and make the final push to press the edges together.
If THAT works, I will drill holes in the top to secure a board on the top to help hold the wall straight and cement and bolt a brick on the bottom. The one masonry repair person who visited said it wouldn't work. But he wanted to rebuild the entire patio and walls for $15,000 (saying "I ONLY do quality work"). Well, congratulations to him for having enough work to be fussy, but I don't need a whole new patio. I just need a repair job.
If my attempt doesn't work, I will hire a less-fussy repair mason. I called 5 repair companies (through a centralized repair website) asking for email contact. I had to provide a phone number to so. I got 2 responses by phone. Unfortunately, I could not understand what they were saying (which I expected and why I asked for email contact). I do not have a good ear for foreign accents (and I blame myself).
So, if my own efforts fail, I have to start again with contractors.
2. The 1/4 of the backyard that became a wild blackberry thicket after I removed a couple trees and that I cleared last Fall is driv8ng me crazy. All Spring, I went around weekly spraying the blackberries that regrew. It was a pleasure seeing them bend over and die a day later. And I had some piles of tree saplings to remove.
But I also had gardening and flower-planting to do and poison ivy to fight. And I did plant 4 specimen trees that would shade the area but not cast shade on my garden. So one day, I noticed that the entire cleared area wasn't clear anymore!
Not many wild blackberries, but lots of OTHER stuff. Some large plant with purple berries I can never remember the name of. Wild grape vines. Virginia Creeper vines. So it was time to use the brush mower again. Except I had to find the piles of sapling trunks and the garden hose buried under all the junk growth before I could use the brush mower.
I spent 3 days (30 minutes a day - it was HOT outside) using the cordless hedge trimmer to cut the junk down searching for the piles of saplings. I knew approximately where they were, but it took a lot of cutting. The hedge trimmer worked better than I expected. I pulled 2 of the 4 piles out to the lawn. Those are worth cutting into kindling for the fireplace.
The rest is too small to be worth burning and I started filling the 5'x8' trailer. Its piled higher than the top. The County has a site to deliver stuff like that and I can get free mulch (from mine and other residents' deliveries). I can use the processed mulch on flowerbeds, my compost bins, and garden paths. But I'm sure not going to attack the entire new overgrowth with a couple 100F days coming up. So I'll be working in the house.
3. My basement has become a clutterred mess! Well, I've seen worse where people just used the basement for storage, but mine is supposed to be a functional work area. Partly, I have stuff I need to get rid of. Not junk, stuff that has some value. Like an air compressor I haven't used in 10 years, the bicycle, the old shop vac I replaced with a better one, the boxes of newspapers I planned to use to smother weeds in the garden paths (more than I would ever need), an old refrigerator, etc, etc, etc.
There are also things down there for projects I've never gotten around to actually doing. Things like metal shelf that fit around and above a bathroom toilet, bolts for hanging heavy cast iron pans on a wall, shelves to install to hold seldom used kitchen appliances in the cat room (they won't mind), additional to-assemble bookcases for the computer room, etc.
The older I get, the harder these things are to do. I think I will leave the car out of the garage for a few days and collect all the stuff to sell in the garage. Craig's List works well for that. But I need it all in one space to make a list for posting.
We used to be able to donate that kind of stuff to charities, but the new tax laws don't count donations unless the get to many thousands of dollars, so it just makes sense to sell them for "something". I don't have enough for a yard sale, so individual sales are the only way I can get anything for them.
4. The house needs work. The computer room and cat room have cheap carpet from 32 years ago. I want linoleum for ease of rolling my office chair around and cleaning the cat fur. But to do that, I have to empty the rooms. So I've been saving wine boxes to put my books in (about as heavy as I want to lift and they are all the same size so stacking them is easy). Other boxes will hold original software disks and computer books. Others will hold random stuff.
The kitchen light fixture has got to go. It is tight to the ceiling and the heat from the attic makes it not work after a week of 90F. The TV room ceiling fan stopped working a few years ago. The Living room 2-bulb ceiling light is too dim and I have a nice stained glass replacement 3-bulb light. But the last time I messed with a ceiling light I almost electrocuted myself (only felt "pulses" as I was sitting on a wooden ladder, fortunately). And the kitchen faucet is leaking...
I want to tile the kitchen walls. And I'm not going to do that myself. 20 years ago, I would have. Not today. There are things I CAN'T do (plumbing). There are things I CAN do (most other things). And there are things I can do but just don't want do anymore (anything electrical).
I'm spending time trying to create a detailed list of things that need to be done. Some will be things I could do myself, but most are things I can't or don't want to do myself. I would be very happy if all the things on my list were done. I would like my home better and be happier here for another decade at least.
5. The drainage easement... In past years, the drainage easement (the water drainage from upper properties to the swamp below me) have brought tree debris and odd yard junk. This is usually clearable though sometimes the County has come out for serious intertwined branches and silt.
But Monday last week, we got something new. The storm drain was covered with gravel and clay and debris and the entire easement filled with gravel 40' up. Essentially, it no longer flows much and is almost at yar level. A future strorm would leave me with standing water in the front yard. And that is after having soil added to my front yard several years ago to raise it 1'.
The easement is a shared responsibility of my neighbor and I (8-12' not sure) from the storm drain. We need to have the easement dredged, but we can't tell what area until the County comes and does whatever they will around the storm drain (some crews do more than others). And I can't get them to tell me when they will come and do their part first.
So I'm frozen in place waiting for them to do their part. I've emailed them asking A) Are we currently on your schedule? B) If so, what is the scheduled date? C) If not, when will we be on your schedule? D) When our repair is scheduled, will we be advised of the scheduled date?
So I'm mostly doing inside stuff for a couple days but also outside stuff and I feel exhausted sometimes...
I'm letting the Mews outside at times in this hot weather (briefly), but calling them back inside after about 15 minutes and making sure they get water. The next couple days at 100F, they aren't going out at all. They'll hate that, but it is too hot for furries.
1. My initial efforts to lever the broken cinderblock wall back into place failed. Levers are great, but I can't seem to get enough pressure to move either side of the broken wall. I have a scissor-jack on order to arrive tomorrow.
I'll put it on its side and place a 4"x4" post against the post at the house foundation and see if that works. It only cost $80 and it might save me several thousand. If I am able to push the broken cinderblock wall back toward straight, I will cover all the broken edges with construction adhesive and make the final push to press the edges together.
If THAT works, I will drill holes in the top to secure a board on the top to help hold the wall straight and cement and bolt a brick on the bottom. The one masonry repair person who visited said it wouldn't work. But he wanted to rebuild the entire patio and walls for $15,000 (saying "I ONLY do quality work"). Well, congratulations to him for having enough work to be fussy, but I don't need a whole new patio. I just need a repair job.
If my attempt doesn't work, I will hire a less-fussy repair mason. I called 5 repair companies (through a centralized repair website) asking for email contact. I had to provide a phone number to so. I got 2 responses by phone. Unfortunately, I could not understand what they were saying (which I expected and why I asked for email contact). I do not have a good ear for foreign accents (and I blame myself).
So, if my own efforts fail, I have to start again with contractors.
2. The 1/4 of the backyard that became a wild blackberry thicket after I removed a couple trees and that I cleared last Fall is driv8ng me crazy. All Spring, I went around weekly spraying the blackberries that regrew. It was a pleasure seeing them bend over and die a day later. And I had some piles of tree saplings to remove.
But I also had gardening and flower-planting to do and poison ivy to fight. And I did plant 4 specimen trees that would shade the area but not cast shade on my garden. So one day, I noticed that the entire cleared area wasn't clear anymore!
Not many wild blackberries, but lots of OTHER stuff. Some large plant with purple berries I can never remember the name of. Wild grape vines. Virginia Creeper vines. So it was time to use the brush mower again. Except I had to find the piles of sapling trunks and the garden hose buried under all the junk growth before I could use the brush mower.
I spent 3 days (30 minutes a day - it was HOT outside) using the cordless hedge trimmer to cut the junk down searching for the piles of saplings. I knew approximately where they were, but it took a lot of cutting. The hedge trimmer worked better than I expected. I pulled 2 of the 4 piles out to the lawn. Those are worth cutting into kindling for the fireplace.
The rest is too small to be worth burning and I started filling the 5'x8' trailer. Its piled higher than the top. The County has a site to deliver stuff like that and I can get free mulch (from mine and other residents' deliveries). I can use the processed mulch on flowerbeds, my compost bins, and garden paths. But I'm sure not going to attack the entire new overgrowth with a couple 100F days coming up. So I'll be working in the house.
3. My basement has become a clutterred mess! Well, I've seen worse where people just used the basement for storage, but mine is supposed to be a functional work area. Partly, I have stuff I need to get rid of. Not junk, stuff that has some value. Like an air compressor I haven't used in 10 years, the bicycle, the old shop vac I replaced with a better one, the boxes of newspapers I planned to use to smother weeds in the garden paths (more than I would ever need), an old refrigerator, etc, etc, etc.
There are also things down there for projects I've never gotten around to actually doing. Things like metal shelf that fit around and above a bathroom toilet, bolts for hanging heavy cast iron pans on a wall, shelves to install to hold seldom used kitchen appliances in the cat room (they won't mind), additional to-assemble bookcases for the computer room, etc.
The older I get, the harder these things are to do. I think I will leave the car out of the garage for a few days and collect all the stuff to sell in the garage. Craig's List works well for that. But I need it all in one space to make a list for posting.
We used to be able to donate that kind of stuff to charities, but the new tax laws don't count donations unless the get to many thousands of dollars, so it just makes sense to sell them for "something". I don't have enough for a yard sale, so individual sales are the only way I can get anything for them.
4. The house needs work. The computer room and cat room have cheap carpet from 32 years ago. I want linoleum for ease of rolling my office chair around and cleaning the cat fur. But to do that, I have to empty the rooms. So I've been saving wine boxes to put my books in (about as heavy as I want to lift and they are all the same size so stacking them is easy). Other boxes will hold original software disks and computer books. Others will hold random stuff.
The kitchen light fixture has got to go. It is tight to the ceiling and the heat from the attic makes it not work after a week of 90F. The TV room ceiling fan stopped working a few years ago. The Living room 2-bulb ceiling light is too dim and I have a nice stained glass replacement 3-bulb light. But the last time I messed with a ceiling light I almost electrocuted myself (only felt "pulses" as I was sitting on a wooden ladder, fortunately). And the kitchen faucet is leaking...
I want to tile the kitchen walls. And I'm not going to do that myself. 20 years ago, I would have. Not today. There are things I CAN'T do (plumbing). There are things I CAN do (most other things). And there are things I can do but just don't want do anymore (anything electrical).
I'm spending time trying to create a detailed list of things that need to be done. Some will be things I could do myself, but most are things I can't or don't want to do myself. I would be very happy if all the things on my list were done. I would like my home better and be happier here for another decade at least.
5. The drainage easement... In past years, the drainage easement (the water drainage from upper properties to the swamp below me) have brought tree debris and odd yard junk. This is usually clearable though sometimes the County has come out for serious intertwined branches and silt.
But Monday last week, we got something new. The storm drain was covered with gravel and clay and debris and the entire easement filled with gravel 40' up. Essentially, it no longer flows much and is almost at yar level. A future strorm would leave me with standing water in the front yard. And that is after having soil added to my front yard several years ago to raise it 1'.
The easement is a shared responsibility of my neighbor and I (8-12' not sure) from the storm drain. We need to have the easement dredged, but we can't tell what area until the County comes and does whatever they will around the storm drain (some crews do more than others). And I can't get them to tell me when they will come and do their part first.
So I'm frozen in place waiting for them to do their part. I've emailed them asking A) Are we currently on your schedule? B) If so, what is the scheduled date? C) If not, when will we be on your schedule? D) When our repair is scheduled, will we be advised of the scheduled date?
So I'm mostly doing inside stuff for a couple days but also outside stuff and I feel exhausted sometimes...
I'm letting the Mews outside at times in this hot weather (briefly), but calling them back inside after about 15 minutes and making sure they get water. The next couple days at 100F, they aren't going out at all. They'll hate that, but it is too hot for furries.
Saturday, July 13, 2019
Friday, July 12, 2019
Surprises, And Not Good Ones
This is becoming a really difficult few weeks. Some of which I have mentioned, but it is worth listing all of it (and positively noting that none are matters of life and death)...
First, I got the riding mower back from the repair shop after a month with only half the work I THOUGHT I was getting done. Granted, they didn't try to charge me for what they didn't do, but they wanted another 3 weeks to get to get at it, so I passed. I CAN actually change the oil and filter and sharpen the blades (the undone work) myself but its a pain and they could have done it so easily while they had it. I had even called them later in the day I brought it to them to confirm it was on the repair list (they said yes).
Second, the monsoon damage (6"+ of sudden rain) Monday flooding the drainage easement. When I moved here almost 33 years ago, I knew my new street was at the bottom of a large sloped neighborhood, but it seemed that the drainage was well-managed with drainage easements and storm drains. I was wrong. Also, I was not aware that property owners were responsible for the drainage easement further than 6' from the storm drains.
Storms usually bring tree debris down that covers the storm drain grate. That can be removed easily sometimes, and the County willingly does it when stuff is all wedged together and called about it. This time was different. For reasons I do not know, cubic yards/meters of clay and gravel flowed down the easement for the first time ever. The storm drain grate was entirely covered with it.
The easement itself (which WAS almost 2' deep) is entirely filled to lawn level with gravel about 20' upslope and most of that is NOT County responsibility. I spoke to my neighbor about it (we are co-responsible for the easement maintenance). I have no idea what it would cost and return the easement to full functionality. My neighbor is upset because they are they are nearly broke. I can legally enforce shared costs, but I'm not looking forward to having to fight about it. But if it isn't dredged, future storms will make matters worse and they care less about their yard than I do.
Third, the monsoon damage again. My basement got soaked an inch. The builder did poor work on the sunken patio originally (no drainage), and I've had water in the basement several times over the years. I learned after the first time that if I dug a 4' deep ditch through the lawn downslope, all was well. But those fill in over time and I usually redig it each year before hurricane season.
We are getting heavier rains here earlier each year and I waited too long. Climate change is real. The last Spring frost of the year is about a day earlier each couple years and the first frost in Fall is later. The first heat wave of the year comes sooner and occurs later too.
I need to at least bury some perforated drainage pipe along the lawn edge of the patio and attach it to solid drainage pipe emptying into the lower front lawn. But it always seems there is something more immediately to do. So I didn't do it earlier this year or last year.
The basement was a real mess! This time I had a lot of boxes on the floor. The stuff like lawn fertilizer have plastic bags inside, so they weren't damaged, but I had some boards standing up against walls, cardboard boxes I was planning to use to store books while the computer room going to be changed from 32 year old carpet to linoleum. And Iza likes to poop outside the litter boxes, so that was a real mess.
I used the wet/dry shop vac to suck up most of the water and moved the litter boxes to dry area where Iza wouldn't "go" is the wet spots. Today, it dried enough for me to scrape the cement floor of all the kicked-out scoopable litter and poops. I love Iza dearly, but pooping in the litter boxes is not one of the things she does best...
After that, I mopped the whole litterbox area with soapy water, mopped it with clean water, and sucked up the remaining water with the shop vac. It wasn't a thrill. I rinsed out the mop frequently in the laundry tub, but it wasn't exactly dry, and I don't have a mop-wringer tub so I had to squeeze the mop dryish by hand.
I should mention that I was the oldest child at 15 when my younger sister was born. I changed a LOT of diapers. And that was when you had to slosh soiled cloth diapers around in the toilet before you could even put them in the bucket the diaper cleaning truck came by to pick them up for professional cleaning.
Fourth, monsoon damage again. I had a masonry repair company estimator here today. Here is what he told me after investigating all the broken cinder blocks and spaces around it...
The wall is a "retaining wall" (there is soil filled in behind it). A retaining wall should be set outside of the cement slab and 3' deep so that water pressure cannot push it in. The top caps need special grout to help hold the top solid. My retaining wall was built ON the cement slab and the tops were attached with regular grout.
He said the entire 2 1/2 sides needed to be removed, a 3' deep trench dug outside the cement slab, and that there was rebar involved and removal of the old cinderblocks.
Quick estimate - $15,000
And I should have a drain installed to prevent future basement next to the sliding glass doors $2,300.
I said no way! I could have my failing asphalt driveway removed, the foundation rebuilt and pounded solid, and a new concrete driveway installed for that. I have an estimate for that...
I asked about just forcing the existing cinder block wall force back into place, using construction adhesive against the broken edges and bolting a 2"x10" board or serious metal bar on top.
He said he wouldn't do that as a professional and that his insurance company wouldn't warranty the work if he did.
I thanked him for coming by to explain all that and that I understood his reasons for not doing some cheap patchwork and that I might be back in touch because the repair does really have to be done. I might add that contractors generally hate being the first ones on site because the customer learns things about what to ask the next estimator. And it's true... I learned a lot.
So after he left, I decided to see if I could lever the broken wall parts back in place. There are 2 6"x6" wooden deck support posts in the patio set 3' deep and surrounded by 2' wide in cement. I found a 4"x4" post that straddled them, and a 4x4 post that just reached cinderblock wall. I figured that with the right angle of leverage, I might be able to push the broken parts back in place after liberally covering the broken edges with construction adhesive. That stuff is stronger than the grout used between cinder blocks so it ought to hold.
I understand how levers work most effectively. The longer the lever, the more force is applied. I set 4x4 posts up as efficiently as possible. I couldn't move the wall at all! 30 minutes work at 92F and 95% humidity and pulling as hard as I could left me exhausted and drenched in sweat. I may take the car jack and see if I can get some better force tomorrow.
If that doesn't work, I think I will find some less-perfectionist company to suggest something less expensive.
I have several home renovation projects in mind. But given the numerous ones and these new problems, I think I might be better off combining them into a large list and hiring a general contractor. I did that once and the total cost was about half of the estimated costs from individual contractors. The downside of that is that I need to empty whole rooms (and OMC the cluttered basement!) at the same time (almost like moving out)...
I wish I had had the nerve to move away 5 years ago... Maybe I should consider that again and leave it as a fixer-upper. I get offers in the mail every day.
First, I got the riding mower back from the repair shop after a month with only half the work I THOUGHT I was getting done. Granted, they didn't try to charge me for what they didn't do, but they wanted another 3 weeks to get to get at it, so I passed. I CAN actually change the oil and filter and sharpen the blades (the undone work) myself but its a pain and they could have done it so easily while they had it. I had even called them later in the day I brought it to them to confirm it was on the repair list (they said yes).
Second, the monsoon damage (6"+ of sudden rain) Monday flooding the drainage easement. When I moved here almost 33 years ago, I knew my new street was at the bottom of a large sloped neighborhood, but it seemed that the drainage was well-managed with drainage easements and storm drains. I was wrong. Also, I was not aware that property owners were responsible for the drainage easement further than 6' from the storm drains.
Storms usually bring tree debris down that covers the storm drain grate. That can be removed easily sometimes, and the County willingly does it when stuff is all wedged together and called about it. This time was different. For reasons I do not know, cubic yards/meters of clay and gravel flowed down the easement for the first time ever. The storm drain grate was entirely covered with it.
The easement itself (which WAS almost 2' deep) is entirely filled to lawn level with gravel about 20' upslope and most of that is NOT County responsibility. I spoke to my neighbor about it (we are co-responsible for the easement maintenance). I have no idea what it would cost and return the easement to full functionality. My neighbor is upset because they are they are nearly broke. I can legally enforce shared costs, but I'm not looking forward to having to fight about it. But if it isn't dredged, future storms will make matters worse and they care less about their yard than I do.
Third, the monsoon damage again. My basement got soaked an inch. The builder did poor work on the sunken patio originally (no drainage), and I've had water in the basement several times over the years. I learned after the first time that if I dug a 4' deep ditch through the lawn downslope, all was well. But those fill in over time and I usually redig it each year before hurricane season.
We are getting heavier rains here earlier each year and I waited too long. Climate change is real. The last Spring frost of the year is about a day earlier each couple years and the first frost in Fall is later. The first heat wave of the year comes sooner and occurs later too.
I need to at least bury some perforated drainage pipe along the lawn edge of the patio and attach it to solid drainage pipe emptying into the lower front lawn. But it always seems there is something more immediately to do. So I didn't do it earlier this year or last year.
The basement was a real mess! This time I had a lot of boxes on the floor. The stuff like lawn fertilizer have plastic bags inside, so they weren't damaged, but I had some boards standing up against walls, cardboard boxes I was planning to use to store books while the computer room going to be changed from 32 year old carpet to linoleum. And Iza likes to poop outside the litter boxes, so that was a real mess.
I used the wet/dry shop vac to suck up most of the water and moved the litter boxes to dry area where Iza wouldn't "go" is the wet spots. Today, it dried enough for me to scrape the cement floor of all the kicked-out scoopable litter and poops. I love Iza dearly, but pooping in the litter boxes is not one of the things she does best...
After that, I mopped the whole litterbox area with soapy water, mopped it with clean water, and sucked up the remaining water with the shop vac. It wasn't a thrill. I rinsed out the mop frequently in the laundry tub, but it wasn't exactly dry, and I don't have a mop-wringer tub so I had to squeeze the mop dryish by hand.
I should mention that I was the oldest child at 15 when my younger sister was born. I changed a LOT of diapers. And that was when you had to slosh soiled cloth diapers around in the toilet before you could even put them in the bucket the diaper cleaning truck came by to pick them up for professional cleaning.
Fourth, monsoon damage again. I had a masonry repair company estimator here today. Here is what he told me after investigating all the broken cinder blocks and spaces around it...
The wall is a "retaining wall" (there is soil filled in behind it). A retaining wall should be set outside of the cement slab and 3' deep so that water pressure cannot push it in. The top caps need special grout to help hold the top solid. My retaining wall was built ON the cement slab and the tops were attached with regular grout.
He said the entire 2 1/2 sides needed to be removed, a 3' deep trench dug outside the cement slab, and that there was rebar involved and removal of the old cinderblocks.
Quick estimate - $15,000
And I should have a drain installed to prevent future basement next to the sliding glass doors $2,300.
I said no way! I could have my failing asphalt driveway removed, the foundation rebuilt and pounded solid, and a new concrete driveway installed for that. I have an estimate for that...
I asked about just forcing the existing cinder block wall force back into place, using construction adhesive against the broken edges and bolting a 2"x10" board or serious metal bar on top.
He said he wouldn't do that as a professional and that his insurance company wouldn't warranty the work if he did.
I thanked him for coming by to explain all that and that I understood his reasons for not doing some cheap patchwork and that I might be back in touch because the repair does really have to be done. I might add that contractors generally hate being the first ones on site because the customer learns things about what to ask the next estimator. And it's true... I learned a lot.
So after he left, I decided to see if I could lever the broken wall parts back in place. There are 2 6"x6" wooden deck support posts in the patio set 3' deep and surrounded by 2' wide in cement. I found a 4"x4" post that straddled them, and a 4x4 post that just reached cinderblock wall. I figured that with the right angle of leverage, I might be able to push the broken parts back in place after liberally covering the broken edges with construction adhesive. That stuff is stronger than the grout used between cinder blocks so it ought to hold.
I understand how levers work most effectively. The longer the lever, the more force is applied. I set 4x4 posts up as efficiently as possible. I couldn't move the wall at all! 30 minutes work at 92F and 95% humidity and pulling as hard as I could left me exhausted and drenched in sweat. I may take the car jack and see if I can get some better force tomorrow.
If that doesn't work, I think I will find some less-perfectionist company to suggest something less expensive.
I have several home renovation projects in mind. But given the numerous ones and these new problems, I think I might be better off combining them into a large list and hiring a general contractor. I did that once and the total cost was about half of the estimated costs from individual contractors. The downside of that is that I need to empty whole rooms (and OMC the cluttered basement!) at the same time (almost like moving out)...
I wish I had had the nerve to move away 5 years ago... Maybe I should consider that again and leave it as a fixer-upper. I get offers in the mail every day.
Tuesday, July 9, 2019
Monday Monsoon
I had stayed up late Sunday night (blog, Civilization2 game, a discussion forum). So I went to bed about 3 am. As I curled up in bed, it started to rain and I was happy to hear it. July and August are historically dry to the point where the soil cracks open, so rain is appreciated. Plus, I'm one of those people who find the sound comforting when I sleep.
So I had only positive thoughts hearing the rain...
Well, sometimes you are just plain wrong! When I got up about Noon, I looked out the window to see how much rain had fallen. I have a large rain gauge that tops out at 6" with large 1/4" markers and there is a floating red plastic button so you can see the level. I couldn't see the red button.
So I got dressed and went outside to check the rain gauge. The rain gauge was filled and the button was hidden under the top.
So I drained a little water out so you can see the button
I don't know how much MORE than 6" we got here...
I had gone out from the deck and gone back inside the same way. Then I went into the basement. Now, I've had wet basement problems, in the past (there is a 12'x10' sunken patio with a 3' high cinder block wall on 2 sides and sliding glass doors, and the patio was poorly built. It should have been very slightly sloped toward the lawn, but it isn't.
After a couple of hurricanes that caused rainfall to seep into the basement, I dug a 6" drainage trench downslope. It worked well, but they fill in eventually and you don't notice such gradual changes. Normally, in heavy rainfall, I check to make sure the water is draining through the trench. But I was asleep this time.
Rainwater got in. I don't mean a foot of water filled the basement, but 1/4" is bad enough. It gets everywhere. Have I mentioned that Iza has the bad habit of pooping just outside the litterboxes even when they are utterly clean. I often just pour a bit of clumping litter on the poops and scoop them up later. Guess what happens when water collects around kitty-poop covered with clumpable litter?
So I set one litter box in a dry spot and cleaned it every waking hour while the litter-poop dried (and The Mews have been VERY good about using that one). I used my wet/dry shop vac to collect most of the standing water (avoiding the poop mess until it dries).
So having done what I could in the basement, I went out and looked at the front yard. I have one storm drain on my property and one shared with a neighbor . I live at the bottom of a large downsloping neighborhood. The shared storm drain is almost the end of the line of several drainage easements from the higher lots (just before the last drainage into the swamp across the street).
There is actually a storm drain under this gravel!
It is routinely covered with plant and tree debris and when I can, I pull junk of the grate covering the drain. But it usually drains well enough. Any storm drain can be overwhelmed by enough water but what doesn't drain there flows across my front land near the street to the one actually ON my property. A few hours after even a hurricane the standing water is gone.
Not this time!
Usually, I get small tree debris. THIS TIME cubic yards of clay and gravel flowed over the storm grate and covered it completely. The lower 20' of the drainage easement was previously 3' wide and almost 2' deep. It is filled with gravel now, almost up to lawn level.
I met my neighbor there Monday afternoon. He had called the County Government about the problem. I took pictures and will email the County about it (pictures help). He is new here and was surprised. He is direct and used to contacting authorities. His SO (uncertain and he didn't volunteer) has been here about 10 years ( asked if she was the same person who was metalic red hair and black dresses and he smiled and said yes. I only aksed to make sure it was the same lady I had seen years before. He's cool. He admits they tend to stay by themselves... Well, so do I.
After I went back inside, I decided to check the basement (drying nicely) and went out the sunken patio glass doors.
AACCKKK!
The 3' high cinder block wall around it was broken in half like a potato chip and pushed out 1' in the middle! I was stunned. It wasn't like I had much flowing water over the surface. As best I can tell, it was just that the soil got SO saturated that it expanded and pushed the cinder block wall away. I'll call my insurance agent tomorrow, but I bet that is considered uncovered "flood damage" even though a tree that fell over from soil saturation would be covered.
See that board in the back? That was on top of the cinder block wall. That's how much it moved.
I'm going to try levering the pushed-out cinder block back in place and using construction adhesive to hold it in place. I'm going to wait a few days to allow the broken edges to dry. If that doesn't work, I will have a few masonry repair companies come by for cost quotes. And it may be time to have the patio drainage problem solved permanently. I had in mind to add perforated 4" pipe just below ground level with a regular pipe draining downslope but a professional might have some better solutions.
It has been a rather unhappy 36 hours. It could be worse. In the grand scheme of things, these are minor. But they sure are ANNOYING!
So I had only positive thoughts hearing the rain...
Well, sometimes you are just plain wrong! When I got up about Noon, I looked out the window to see how much rain had fallen. I have a large rain gauge that tops out at 6" with large 1/4" markers and there is a floating red plastic button so you can see the level. I couldn't see the red button.
So I got dressed and went outside to check the rain gauge. The rain gauge was filled and the button was hidden under the top.
So I drained a little water out so you can see the button
I don't know how much MORE than 6" we got here...
I had gone out from the deck and gone back inside the same way. Then I went into the basement. Now, I've had wet basement problems, in the past (there is a 12'x10' sunken patio with a 3' high cinder block wall on 2 sides and sliding glass doors, and the patio was poorly built. It should have been very slightly sloped toward the lawn, but it isn't.
After a couple of hurricanes that caused rainfall to seep into the basement, I dug a 6" drainage trench downslope. It worked well, but they fill in eventually and you don't notice such gradual changes. Normally, in heavy rainfall, I check to make sure the water is draining through the trench. But I was asleep this time.
Rainwater got in. I don't mean a foot of water filled the basement, but 1/4" is bad enough. It gets everywhere. Have I mentioned that Iza has the bad habit of pooping just outside the litterboxes even when they are utterly clean. I often just pour a bit of clumping litter on the poops and scoop them up later. Guess what happens when water collects around kitty-poop covered with clumpable litter?
So I set one litter box in a dry spot and cleaned it every waking hour while the litter-poop dried (and The Mews have been VERY good about using that one). I used my wet/dry shop vac to collect most of the standing water (avoiding the poop mess until it dries).
So having done what I could in the basement, I went out and looked at the front yard. I have one storm drain on my property and one shared with a neighbor . I live at the bottom of a large downsloping neighborhood. The shared storm drain is almost the end of the line of several drainage easements from the higher lots (just before the last drainage into the swamp across the street).
There is actually a storm drain under this gravel!
It is routinely covered with plant and tree debris and when I can, I pull junk of the grate covering the drain. But it usually drains well enough. Any storm drain can be overwhelmed by enough water but what doesn't drain there flows across my front land near the street to the one actually ON my property. A few hours after even a hurricane the standing water is gone.
Not this time!
Usually, I get small tree debris. THIS TIME cubic yards of clay and gravel flowed over the storm grate and covered it completely. The lower 20' of the drainage easement was previously 3' wide and almost 2' deep. It is filled with gravel now, almost up to lawn level.
I met my neighbor there Monday afternoon. He had called the County Government about the problem. I took pictures and will email the County about it (pictures help). He is new here and was surprised. He is direct and used to contacting authorities. His SO (uncertain and he didn't volunteer) has been here about 10 years ( asked if she was the same person who was metalic red hair and black dresses and he smiled and said yes. I only aksed to make sure it was the same lady I had seen years before. He's cool. He admits they tend to stay by themselves... Well, so do I.
After I went back inside, I decided to check the basement (drying nicely) and went out the sunken patio glass doors.
AACCKKK!
The 3' high cinder block wall around it was broken in half like a potato chip and pushed out 1' in the middle! I was stunned. It wasn't like I had much flowing water over the surface. As best I can tell, it was just that the soil got SO saturated that it expanded and pushed the cinder block wall away. I'll call my insurance agent tomorrow, but I bet that is considered uncovered "flood damage" even though a tree that fell over from soil saturation would be covered.
See that board in the back? That was on top of the cinder block wall. That's how much it moved.
I'm going to try levering the pushed-out cinder block back in place and using construction adhesive to hold it in place. I'm going to wait a few days to allow the broken edges to dry. If that doesn't work, I will have a few masonry repair companies come by for cost quotes. And it may be time to have the patio drainage problem solved permanently. I had in mind to add perforated 4" pipe just below ground level with a regular pipe draining downslope but a professional might have some better solutions.
It has been a rather unhappy 36 hours. It could be worse. In the grand scheme of things, these are minor. But they sure are ANNOYING!
Thursday, July 4, 2019
US Independence Day
Today is one of the most important holidays to me. It isn't the actual establishment of my country, it is the day we declared our INTENT to become one (and why). The difference matters. Upon the actual signing of The Declaration Of Independence (from Britain), it was an utterly uncertain thing. A bunch of unhappy British colonists complaining that they were represented in British Government and deciding that they were willing to fight about it.
And quite frankly, a bunch of rich colonists who were landowners and merchants who owed a lot of money to British banks and the Government and could conveniently be free of them if they got separated.
My first college textbook was 'The Economic Causes Of The Revolution' and while 'Government And Politic Science' was my major, history was my love.
But when push came to shove, it wasn't just the rich (indebted) landowners who fought. The colonists were of British descent (mostly) and shared a common past and social structure. A lot of poor colonists had little to gain except freedom from taxes they had no say about.
A lot of fighting went on, the British found less support over here than they expected, The French Navy turned up at a good point, and Britain discovered that fighting a war across an ocean using sailing ships didn't work very well.
Example: One British General asked for 950 horses. Half died on the way and most of the survivors were too ill to be useful.
Example: The British Generals decided that fighting the colonists in New England and the Mid Atlantic States wasn't working, so they went to the Southern colonies where people were "more British". Seldom was a worse decision ever made. The Southern colonists didn't fight stand-up battles like the British army was used to. They attacked in swamps, in woods, anyplace where there couldn't be a decisive battle.
Eventually, Britain decided it had more important places to fight about. And they were right, because the former colonists had few places to trade with but Britain and France and France wasn't the major trading power.
So why do I honor this day above almost all others?
Because of what we said in our Declaration Of Independence.
"When in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bonds which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.
Etc...
We have not met those goals completely; it is possible we never will. There will always be challenges. But they ARE goals we keep closer to our hearts than some realize.
In spite of occasional presidential flaws like Donald Trump (there have been some real fails in the past too), the majority of US citizenry holds to those goals. We will weather this current error and recover from it.
But for today, I mostly want to honor the start of the US, with some background...
And, as is my habit on this day, I will read the entire Declaration out loud on the deck (quietly)...
And quite frankly, a bunch of rich colonists who were landowners and merchants who owed a lot of money to British banks and the Government and could conveniently be free of them if they got separated.
My first college textbook was 'The Economic Causes Of The Revolution' and while 'Government And Politic Science' was my major, history was my love.
But when push came to shove, it wasn't just the rich (indebted) landowners who fought. The colonists were of British descent (mostly) and shared a common past and social structure. A lot of poor colonists had little to gain except freedom from taxes they had no say about.
A lot of fighting went on, the British found less support over here than they expected, The French Navy turned up at a good point, and Britain discovered that fighting a war across an ocean using sailing ships didn't work very well.
Example: One British General asked for 950 horses. Half died on the way and most of the survivors were too ill to be useful.
Example: The British Generals decided that fighting the colonists in New England and the Mid Atlantic States wasn't working, so they went to the Southern colonies where people were "more British". Seldom was a worse decision ever made. The Southern colonists didn't fight stand-up battles like the British army was used to. They attacked in swamps, in woods, anyplace where there couldn't be a decisive battle.
Eventually, Britain decided it had more important places to fight about. And they were right, because the former colonists had few places to trade with but Britain and France and France wasn't the major trading power.
So why do I honor this day above almost all others?
Because of what we said in our Declaration Of Independence.
"When in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bonds which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.
Etc...
We have not met those goals completely; it is possible we never will. There will always be challenges. But they ARE goals we keep closer to our hearts than some realize.
In spite of occasional presidential flaws like Donald Trump (there have been some real fails in the past too), the majority of US citizenry holds to those goals. We will weather this current error and recover from it.
But for today, I mostly want to honor the start of the US, with some background...
And, as is my habit on this day, I will read the entire Declaration out loud on the deck (quietly)...
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
Chili
I make some of the world's worst chili. Too bland, too hot, too many beans, not enough beans, too much or too little tomatoes. But I got it right tonight!
A true chili affectianado woudn't like it. I'm a New England boy and "hot spicy" is not part of growing up there. My favorite fast food chili comes from Wendy's, LOL
But this one was perfect for me. I think it was the leftover brown sugar carrots that I added. Go ahead and laugh. I had some scalp sweat...
A true chili affectianado woudn't like it. I'm a New England boy and "hot spicy" is not part of growing up there. My favorite fast food chili comes from Wendy's, LOL
But this one was perfect for me. I think it was the leftover brown sugar carrots that I added. Go ahead and laugh. I had some scalp sweat...
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