Monday, August 19, 2024

UPS Store

I had something to return to Amazon and I usually bring the box to UPS.  They create a return label from a QR code and I'm in and out in 5 minutes.  But the UPS Store closed!   The nearest one now is 5 miles further away and actually, I couldn't find it.  So I drove home and looked it up for directions.  And no wonder!  You can't actually see it from the official address road.

It's one of those deals where an entire mall has an address and some business are "around the back" so you can't see them.  And business don't display addresses large enough to read from the street anymore.  And I didn't see any sign that said UPS.  So now I have to go back (with detailed directions this time).

The sad thing is that the closed UPS location was conveniently on the way to several places I shop.  This now-closest location is most definitely not!  It is in a direction I never go shopping and the traffic is always bad in that area (it's close to a large regional shopping mall that I never go to).

I'll miss the old place...

Saturday, August 17, 2024

A Strange Week

 This week was weird 3 ways and it was all about the riding lawn mower.

Lawn Tractor | E130 | 22 HP | John Deere US

First was the flat front tire.  OK, that's not all that unusual.  I re-inflated it.  But the next morning it was flat again.  I tried to take it off, but there was no nut to loosen.  So I had to look it up on the internet.  Found a nice youtube video.  

Turns out there is a " Jesus clip".  It is actually called a C-clip, but it can result in bad words trying to get it off.  The video showed 10 ways to do it, most of them a bit complicated with special tools.  Fortunately, the easiest way worked.  A small tack hammer placed across the open part of the C, a tap with another small hammer, and it popped right off!  👍

Then I had to find the leak (hoping I could repair it with a cheap $5 repair kit.  No such luck.  I re-inflated it fine, and put the wheel into a tub of water.  The leak was around the valve stem.  I can't fix that!  

I called a local tire company and they said they could fix it.  I expected them to just replace the valve stem, but they put a tube in the tire.  I did that once and it was a real pain.  😠  So 30 minutes and $30 later I had a good tire again.  Re-installing it was easy.

Second I knew the mower was low on gas.  Fortunately, I had just refilled the car and the portable gas can.  So I drove the mower around front where the can was.  Gas wouldn't come out of the can spout!  I had to hold the inflow hole open manually and tilt the whole can to fill a large glass bottle and fill the mower from that.  Took several bottlefuls...

I took the spout off the can and looked for a blockage.  Couldn't find one and you can't open the top of the can.  And I sure wasn't going to go poking around with some metal tool!  So I will just keep back-pouring the gas into the bottle (and examining the gas carefully) until the can is empty.  Then I will leave to gas can open a few days until all the gas is evaporate.  Then I'll poke around inside and try to find what was blocking the gas flow.

Third So I mowed the lawn.  There is a shallow drainage easement on one side of the front yard.  After 38 years, it looks more like a natural creek with some erosion and plants filling it and the sides.  I misjudged where the edge was!  No, the mower didn't fall into the easement, but one front tire got into a depression on the side.  I could not back the mower out or push it out.  I finally had to drive the car onto the lawn behind the mower, tie the mower to the trailer hitch, and drag it backwards until it was free.  

Certainly not unsolvable problems, but 3 different things regarding the mower in just a couple of days was really weird!    

Monday, August 5, 2024

Tomorrow's Potato Salad

The local deli/store makes a wonderful potato salad they call "Nanna's Potato Salad".  At $5/lb.  I think I figured it out.  I think they suatee' the potato cubes lightly in bacon fat and add a small bit of "ground to dust" bacon itself.  I've made some this year with that idea in mind and I get the same flavor.  For about $1/lb.

So here is tomorrow's potato salad.  Forgot to put the vinegar sprinkler in the pic, though...



Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Good Deed

Well, I did my Good Deed for the day.   Package arrived at my front door.  And I saw my address on it.  So I opened it.  Stuff I couldn't imagine ordering...

Checked address.  It was mine alright.  But wrong name.  I looked up the name and found one just far down my street.  One digit off, LOL.  But I found a phone number that matched the name.  I called many times yesterday, but it was always busy.  

So I decided to just deliver it.  I just walked out of the house this morning to rid of the package and walked down the street.  Damn, I should have driven.  It was further away than I realized.  

But I got there eventually.  Rang the doorbell.  Waited while a husky barked at me.  No response.  Banged on the door.  Waited.  Banged on the door again.  Eventually a woman came to the door and said yes her name was right.  Walked home.  My half mile start for the day.  LOL!

I'm a regular damned Boy Scout.


Premium Vector | Cartoon little boy scout

OK, that was 50 years ago, but I still am...  😀

Sunday, July 28, 2024

Temperature And Rain

The hot weather and drought has finally broken here.  The last few days, the temperature has dropped and I have gotten almost 2" of rain.  The lawn, tomatoes, and flowers sure appreciate it!  Even the native wildflowers were struggling...

One good thing about the rain was that it fell in spurts over 3 days, so it all had a chance to soak in.  It can be depressing to get 2" of rain all at once and watching the storm drains carrying most of it away!

The temperature wasn't as bad as some places.  Ten days ago, it was this, though, and that was at 11:30 am.  It probably got worse in the afternoon.


 Temperature is a funny thing though.  I read a science article in the newspaper that said even accounting for the "heat index", a lower temperature in one region can be harsher than a higher temperature in another.  

I don't recall all the details, but it involved accumulated soil temperature, sunlight reflectivity, etc.  They gave specific examples, but basically sometimes 100 is worse than 105.  Old joke "It was so hot, I saw a starving coyote chasing a terrified rabbit.  And they were both walking!"

And as far as "plain old temperature" goes, I was in Ft Worth TX on Govt business once, and walking to lunch with a few local employees.  We passed a bank temperature/time display and I laughed, saying they should get their display fixed.  It said 110 and I was comfortable enough.  One of the local guys glanced at it and said it looked right.  Huh???

It was the low humidity (about 10-20% he said).  Wow, I am used to 60-80% humidity in July.  That sure makes a difference.

Three decades ago here, we would get several days each Summer over 100 and a lot of high 90s.  The lawn would get so hot and dry that the soil would crack open.  The grass was routinely brown July and August.  It hasn't been that bad for many years.  

It may be that my lawn soil and grass is much better than when I first moved here (to an undeveloped property).  The builder probably seeded it with really cheap grass and used cheap "fill dirt" to raise and level the lawn (and then drove heavy equipment all over it building the house).

One good organic lawn practice is to leave your grass clippings on the lawn.  Grass is the perfect fertilizer for grass.  By definition, grass clippings have exactly what grass needs.  And, no, it doesn't cause "thatch".  Thatch is a layer of dead and living surface grass roots, and from runners from grasses that spread outwards (bluegrass, bermuda, and bent).  I have been overseeing with fescue for 3 decades.

I don't want to get too far "into the weeds" here and bore you to death.  But causes of thatch include over-fertilization, frequent shallow watering (it brings roots to the surface), and poor and/or compacted soil.   

And let some clover grow in your lawn.  First, the bees will love you for it!  But maybe more importantly, clover roots grow deeper than grass roots.  They bring nutrients back up from deeper soil.  Those nutrients are stored in the clover leaves.  Then,  those nutrients are returned to the surface of the lawn, where the grass roots can get at them when you mow the lawn.    

Over the years, the cycle of nutrient replenishment and left-in-place organic matter improves even bad soil.  I can tell.  I planted a shrub and a tree sapling in the front yard last Fall.  When I looked at the holes, I could see that the top 3" were darker and richer than the soil below.  It used to be clay from the surface down...

Meanwhile, I am enjoying the cooler and rainier days this past week.  Usually, this week or two are the hottest and driest part of the year.  But the forecasts show a decent chance of rain most days for the next 2 weeks.  I sure hope they are accurate! 

Sunday, July 21, 2024

Dinner

Dinner...

Pretty much my favorite.  Cubed pork, broccoli, water chestnuts, bamboo shoots, asparagus, scallions, straw mushrooms...


And the placemats [edited to specify "plastic"].  I started collecting them to use them on the top of the TV tray.  I eat dinner watching TV.  I have these apples, a dinosaur one, a sunflower one, a wine one, and two that look like a piece of blue marble.

And now I use a marble-patterned one (of two) for preparing the cat food bowls 6 times a day.  Easier to clean than the countertop.  

Saturday, July 20, 2024

Moon Landing Day

55 years ago today...

Man On Moon Apollo - Pics about space

Picture of first man on the moon - labelkurt

Neil Armstrong dead: Famed astronaut and first man on the moon dies ...

My paternal grampa told me he felt so lucky with his life.  He said he experienced the first airplane flight (by news, not personally of course) and lived long enough to see humans land on the moon and return safely.  He was very impressed by that.

And that was from someone who experienced WWI, The Great Depression, and WWII...  I was only 19, so I did not properly understand the event at the time.  In my life at the time, scientific advancement was routine and success was assumed.  

Medicine was much advanced.  I suffered appendicitis at 18.  At my grampa's age, I probably would have died.  And I was vaccinated agains several serious diseases.  In college, I was using a computer data center to write code (on punch cards) in Fortran and COBOL.  I could drive the family car, which was relatively solid and safe (station wagons were the SUVs of the time).  Food was refrigerated, safe, and abundant.  We had TV and A/C.

At my age then, grampa had none of those things.  And I suppose grampa was impressed by those things too when I was 19.  But the moon landing seemed to impress him very greatly.  In spite of the negative events of his (somewhat difficult) life, he remained a fairly cheerful and positive person.  He saw the advancements more than the failings of the world.

He was an organic gardener.  "Garden" doesn't quite describe it.  It wasn't a residential garden like we are familiar with today, but neither was it a farm.  It was about 1/2 acre, which he attended to happily when he wasn't building stuff in his large workshop.  I followed in his organic gardening habits and wood-working because of him (though on a much smaller scale.

And I don't want to leave gramma out.  She cooked wonderfully (Pennsylvania Deutch style).  When we visited, I would sit on the porch with her de-stringing beans and de-silking corn, helping in the kitchen too.  When I'm not strir-frying, I'm cooking basically like she did but with a a bit less frying.  "Like", not remotely as well (I still can't make a decent dumpling)...

But I mention her because she was fascinated by "outer space".  When we landed on the moon, she told me that if we could go "out there", then some other intelligent species could come "down here".  And she trusted the advancement of intelligent species.  She said that if a spaceship landed here, she would volunteer to go aboard.

So for both of them (and for general reasons), I wanted to honor this day...

Friday, July 19, 2024

Catching Up With Yard Pics

I hope I didn't post these before.  They were on my list of pictures that were not inked through.  But if they aren't new, enjoy them agin, LOL! 

Daylilies...




Maltese Cross perennials...  

Yucca in bloom...

Heirloom tomatoes.  They are indeterminant, so they need tall cages.  Putting cages on containers is awkward.

Pole beans and corn.  I was probably too late this year.  But maybe I'll get something by the end of the season.

This is a 5' kidney bean-shaped pond.  The sweet flag loves it.  There are a few lillies in there too.  I think the 3 goldfish died.  But it is hard to tell.  I think I meed to pull the plant pot up, drain the pond and  see if there are any fish left at the bottom.  I will have 3 trashcans of aged water to refill it if there are any.  Otherwise, I will just buy a few cheap ones next May and start over.

The Stella D' Oro lilies bloomed briefly, but it has been very dry for a month and they have not re-bloomed since.  They are hardy and will come back next year if not in a month.

And it has been hot here.  Not as bad as me places, but harsh for here.


101F.  Haven't seen that for a decade!  And that was in the morning.  I think it got hotter but I didn't think to take a picture a 2 PM.  I watered the tomatoes, corn, pole beans and 4 young trees.  It was like standing in an oven.  

I am reminded of an old joke:  "A starving coyote was chasing a terrified rabbit.  And they were both walking..."

Wednesday, July 17, 2024

Trading Freezers

I traded freezers last evening.  I been meaning to for weeks, but finally got around to it.  Well, I should say I traded the contents of my refrigerator freezers.  I don't have an individual freezer.  But I have refrigerators in the kitchen (with a bottom freezer) and the basement with top freezer.  

I find the kitchen one convenient because it has the crisper drawers in the middle and I am in there more often than anywhere else.  I spend a lot more time with getting at fresh fruits and veggies than frozen stuff.

The old previous basement fridge (and I mean "old") was more of a root cellar and storage for bulk items.  Bags of potatoes, onions, fruits etc.  And certainly horribly inefficient, energy-wise.  I replaced it months ago with another top freezer model, because I buy meat in moderate bulk on sale and I bought shoebox-size plastic containers to store the various kinds in.

But the kitchen freezer was the bottom type.  Stuff like frozen veggies, bread products (which freeze well), and leftovers stayed in containers on the (unmovable) top shelf.  Larger containers were in the bottom slide-out tray.  It became unmanageable.  Stuff on the top freezer shelf were impossible to sort through a small container at a time down on my hands and knees.  And the stacks just kept falling over, which destroyed any organizing I tried to maintain.

The slide-out shelf was not very helpful.  It was "necessary" to slide it out to get at anything, but basically, it was just a loose pile of variously-sized containers.  Even though I labeled them, it didn't help much trying to find anything

So I thought about that for a few weeks.  And I think I found the solution.  Reverse the contents of the freezers.  First, I emptied out everything from the slide-out kitchen tray.  Separated them into meat and veggies in a large plastic bin and put all my freezer gel packs on top to keep them frozen.  Then dumped all the small containers on top and closed the lid.

Then took my 6 shoebox-size meat containers to the empty Kitchen freezer.  They fill it up.  And since I have labels in front and on the top, they are easy to find and don't mix into each other.  The unmovable top shelf holds easy-to-manage stuff like breads, bags of frozen veggies, and smaller containers for various sausages/baked bacon. 

All those leftovers (and I do choose them sometimes just to use them up) are in the basement top freezer.  They are more stable there because I can see them better.  Most labels are on the top of the containers, but future ones will be on the front for easier identification 

A benefit of the freezer content exchange is that I used up some stuff I didn't remember I had.  I poached 4 chicken thighs in previously-saved frozen broth.  That had to start them out well.  I have a container of beef broth left over from a spicy chuck roast recipe, to make more beef stew tomorrow from a chunk of other slow-cooked chuck roast from last month I also found.  

So the transfer has worked out well.  I can see the contents of the small leftovers in the top freezer refrigerator more easily now without have to shuffle them all around on hands and knees.  And the bulk meat containers are easy to take out of the kitchen tray easily.

I say "bulk meat containers", but they are all cut up into in 3-4 oz portions and stored in zip lock bags.  All I have to do is lift a lid of the meat container I want and thaw it out.

This looking like a "winning" change.

Monday, July 8, 2024

Yard Flowers

 Some flowers do better than others.  And some have their own season to grow.  I try to plant flowers that can deal with the local climate.  But sometimes even they need a little help.

I've had these Stoke's Asters for maybe 25 years.  They are pretty durable and (apparently) insect-free.  But there used to be a dozen and now I see only 8. I enjoy seeing them every year.



The daylilies are durable too.  But I don't see as many colors as I used to.  There is weed competition and I need to do something about that.  Using a hedge-trimmer at ground level between the lilies should help.


But I really need to dig them up this Fall and move them to the front yard where The Mews don't go. Daylilies can be harmful to cats.

The yard Pansies are thoroughly done for the year!  Well, they are Fall-to-Summer annuals.

The ones in deck pots get some shade and better watering, so they are still blooming.

These are from a few weeks ago, but they still look pretty much the same.




I tried to pick out some of the weeds, but the roots are very entangled, so I think I will just leave them alone.


Sunday, July 7, 2024

Some Intrusion Pics

Here is where the "I think it was a fox" burrowed under the fence.  

This one shows the light from outside the fence.  Those fence boards were 4" below ground, so it suggests the amount of digging.


This one shows the scattered dirt inside the fence.  That is a lot of scattering!

The spot is now filled with cat pee and poops and no sign of anything digging there since.  Whatever it is, I just want it to leave my yard alone.


A Day Late

But I wanted to remember a sad day. I remember some parts.  I was only 13.  I saw a lot on TV afterwards.  But my most specific image is the...