Category: Barbara

Wednesday, 5 August 2015

08:47 – This is kind of odd. Ordinarily, kit sales outside the US make up maybe 8% to 10% of overall sales. This month to date they’re over 50%. Stranger still, none of them have been to Canada, which is ordinarily about 90% of our sales outside the US. Oh, well. We’ll take ’em where we can get ’em.

Barbara is starting to wear down. She’s working her butt off at her day job, and then coming home and working on kit stuff on the weekends. That and house-hunting stuff not to mention routine household stuff like cooking and cleaning leaves her little time to relax. She told me last night that she was taking Saturday for herself and didn’t want to do any kit stuff, but she’d do kit stuff all day Sunday. I told her to take Sunday off as well and go hit some golf balls or something.

Barbara and I talked it over, and I just emailed our realtor and told him to put in an offer on a house. We’ll see what happens.


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Tuesday, 28 July 2015

08:26 – Barbara’s Y membership expires the end of this month. She didn’t want to rejoin for a year, so she stopped over at Planet Fitness on Saturday and signed up for a month-to-month membership. She’s headed over there after work for her first workout. She says they have more and better machines than the Y, and that she’d have made the change even if we weren’t planning to move.

Work on science kits continues. We’re down to half a dozen chemistry kits, so I’ll get to work today on building three dozen more. What makes me nervous about this time of year is that we might have two or three dozen of a particular kit in stock ready to ship and then get a bulk order that wipes out our stock of that kit. We could increase inventory levels, but I don’t like to have too many sitting in stock because I want to be shipping fresh kits.


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Tuesday, 2 June 2015

08:51 – The morning paper says that Blue Cross/Blue Shield has requested a rate increase of up to 26.7% for North Carolina. The fundamental problem, which no one ever talks about, is that insurers are being forced to cover people who shouldn’t qualify for any coverage at all, let alone subsidized coverage. Let’s hope that by some miracle SCOTUS actually rules according to the law rather than from political expediency and puts a stake through the heart of Obamacare. People are entitled to the best medical care they can afford without subsidies, and no more. If they can afford nothing, nothing is what they should get. And they most certainly should not have access to emergency room care.

Barbara is displeased with Colin because he’s being pretty blatant about being my dog. Last night, he refused to go out with her on his final walk of the day while I was in the kitchen cleaning up the evening’s dishes. So I took him and he went for his normal walk. I think the issue is that there’s been thunder around pretty constantly, and he can hear it even when we can’t. He’s terrified of thunder, and when he’s frightened he comes to me for protection. I told Barbara not to let it hurt her feelings. He goes to me for protection for the same reason he runs when I sneeze but ignores Barbara sneezing. He considers me the big, ferocious alpha male. It’s just a dog thing, but Barbara thinks he doesn’t trust her. Actually, he doesn’t fully trust anyone. He’s been timid ever since we first met him at 6 weeks old.

My parents brought home our first Border Collie in 1958, when I was 5 years old. We’ve had them ever since, often two or three at a time, and Colin is the first one who’s been “my” dog. The earlier ones were all my mom’s dogs, and Duncan and Malcolm were Barbara’s dogs. Oh, Colin likes Barbara well enough. He cuddles up next to her on the sofa and curls up next to her when she goes back to bed in the evening. The only thing that makes him “my” dog is that he comes to me for protection when he’s frightened. And Border Collies all have very strange personalities anyway.

More kit stuff today. My shipment of 96-well plates arrived yesterday, so I can finally finish building a bunch of kits.


12:16 – I’ve not been having much luck with UPS and FedEx lately. First, UPS bashed up a box of 1,500 bottles so badly that 413 of them were lost. They just ran a strip of packing tape over a small part of the main seam and delivered the box anyway. My bottle supplier has shipped replacements. Then I put in an order with walmart.com for 17 assorted 28-ounce cans of Bush’s Best Baked Beans, a bag of Krustez pancake mix, and a test bottle of Bertolli’s Mushroom Alfredo Sauce. The first time Walmart shipped that, FedEx damaged the box so badly that they didn’t bother to deliver it here, which is saying something. They just sent the remnants back to Walmart, which reshipped the order. That arrived today, with the 17 cans of Bush’s Best Baked Beans (12 of them with minor dents) and the bag of Krusteaz pancake mix. No bottle of Mushroom Alfredo sauce. So I just emailed Walmart to let them know. Presumably they’ll fix the problem, but the real problem is their shipping department. This shipment came in a large box with all of the items floating around loose. They’d put in some crumpled craft paper, but only about 2 sheets of newspaper worth. It needed 10 or 20 times that much to keep the canned goods secure. What they really should do is use packing popcorn or foam fill, but I guess they think all the hassles with returns cost them less than the few cents it’d cost to use the popcorn.


12:51 – Oops. The bottle of Bertolli’s Mushroom Alfredo Sauce was indeed in the box. It was wrapped very thoroughly with craft paper. Even at that, I’m surprised the glass jar survived the trip surrounded with heavy cans that were bouncing around. I found the jar as I was tearing down the box to put in recycling cart. I sent walmart an email to apologize for the false alarm and tell them they didn’t need to ship a replacement jar.

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Thursday, 28 May 2015

09:18 – Work on science kits continues, as does work on the prepping book, AKA The Book That Wouldn’t Die. I’m still jumping around in the book, writing a section here and a paragraph there as I think of things to add.

One of the reasons I look forward to Barbara retiring is that she’ll be able to do much of the work on science kits that I have to do now. I’ll still do things like designing new kits, making up reagents, and so on, but she’ll be able to do the repetitive things that take up my time now. Things like filling chemical bottles, building subassemblies, assembling finished kits, keeping inventory and cutting purchase orders, shipping kits, and all of the other stuff that eats my time. She’s good at this kind of stuff, and I’m not. Freeing up my time will allow me to do more of the stuff that requires my knowledge and abilities. Not that I plan to work Barbara to death by any means. She can do part-time what takes me nearly full time, and she’ll have the other half of her time free to do personal stuff. Including travel, although I’m very nervous when she’s far from home.


10:29 – The US Postal Service and Swiss Post have really outdone themselves. On Saturday the 23rd at 4:12 p.m., the USPS picked up a kit here that was destined for Switzerland. I just got an email update telling me that the kit has arrived at the local post office in Switzerland. I believe that’s the fastest any of our international shipments has arrived, including kits shipped to Canada.

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Thursday, 7 May 2015

08:51 – Barbara took today and tomorrow off work. She’s headed out on a day trip to North Wilkesboro with Bonnie Richardson. They probably won’t be back in time for dinner, so Colin and I will share roast beast sandwiches.

More kit stuff today.



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Wednesday, 18 February 2015

10:16 – Barbara is still driving the 4X4 to work. She called this morning to let me know she’d arrived safely and said that the main roads were in good shape but there’s still ice on some of the neighborhood streets. When I took Colin out this morning, all four feet skidded out from under him and he went down. I suspect there’ll still be quite a few fender benders today.

We finished series two of Mr. Selfridge on Amazon Prime streaming the other night and we’re now about halfway through series five of Justified. Next up is series two of Vikings. I like having both Netflix and Amazon streaming. When we start to run short of stuff on Netflix we watch Amazon and vice versa. At about $15/month combined for both of them it’s a no-brainer to have both.

Someone posted a link to Another Perspective : The Case Against IMMINENT Economic Collapse, which gets it mostly right. The only exception is the author’s comment on the eurozone, which in fact is imploding right now. But the euro is not the dollar. The federal government can create as many dollars as it needs, instantly and at any time. That means the dollar can’t suffer a sudden collapse. What it will suffer is a gradual loss in value because of ongoing high inflation, which is essentially a tax on anyone holding dollars or dollar-denominated debt. That’s why I expect a slow but inevitable slide into dystopia rather than a sudden economic collapse. That’s also why I’d prefer to hold most of our assets in things like property and physical goods rather than in dollars or, worse, in electronic values in a bank database.


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Tuesday, 17 February 2015

08:13 – We got about what was forecast. An inch or two of snow, with sleet and freezing rain on top of it. Barbara just left for work. The neighborhood streets are a mess, but she should be able to make it out in 4WD. The main roads are plowed and salted. The high today is to hover right around freezing, which’ll melt some of the ice just enough to make things really slippery.

I’m writing and working on kits today.


14:56 – I see that the Danes have finally named the dead gunman who murdered two people and wounded several others in two attacks in Copenhagen at a free speech event and a synagogue. I was surprised to learn that this piece of filth’s name was Omar Abdel Hamid El-Hussein, which sounds muslim to me. Even our own president, Barrack Hussein Obama–which also sounds muslim to me–tells us that these repeated attacks are random and have nothing to do with islam. It’s obviously just coincidence that the victims are those who have criticized or ridiculed islam and even more coincidental that these terrorists’ bullets seem to hit a lot of Jews.

I also see that Benjamin Netanyahu, the Prime Minister of Israel, is encouraging European Jews to relocate to Israel, where they’ll be safe(r). Netanyahu is being roundly criticized by European leaders for his remarks. Apparently, those leaders have forgotten that European Jews have already been the victims of one Holocaust within living memory and want them to stay put for round two. I think any European Jew, including UK Jews, who can possibly emigrate would be crazy not to do so. If not to Israel, then to Canada or the US.

Back before 9/11, I remember talking with and exchanging emails with my late friend, Bo Leuf, who was living at the time in Malmö, Sweden. According to Bo, even 15 years ago the muslims were turning Sweden into a hellhole. Cops were afraid to patrol areas of the cities that were infested by muslims. Swedish men were being attacked and Swedish women raped by these scum, and nothing was ever done about it. It wasn’t even reported by the press. Here it is 15 years later and this plague has spread and worsened dramatically. The western democracies treat muslims as being above the law. In many cases, literally. Rather than being prosecuted for their crimes in national and local secular courts, these criminals are often turned over to shariah “courts”, which of course don’t punish them at all.

I just wonder how long it will be before the lid blows off. People in western democracies know that their “leaders” are lying to them. They know that islam is the problem. They know that a high percentage of muslims are criminal scum, and that most muslims who are not active terrorists are would-be terrorists, or at least sympathizers. Of course there are secular “muslims” who don’t actually believe in islam, but they’re a tiny minority. And when the lid finally does blow off, those secular “muslims” will be tarred with the same brush. Perhaps literally.

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Monday, 16 February 2015

08:16 – Barbara is off to work. Colin is inconsolable. He watched out the front door as she drove away. The weather forecasts agree that we’re supposed to get snow starting mid-afternoon. Estimates range from 2″ to 5″ (12.5 cm), possibly changing to sleet late this evening. Local schools are closing two hours early.

She’s driving the Trooper. During winter weather, I’m much more comfortable with her driving a 4X4, and one that outmasses the average car on the road by a factor of about two. I know from experience what happens when a vehicle of 2X mass collides with a vehicle of 1X mass. It’s not pretty for the smaller vehicle. The Trooper also carries a comprehensive emergency kit, comprising one large duffel and two medium ones.


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Sunday, 15 February 2015

08:11 – It was a bit breezy here last night. I’m guessing the winds were gusting close to 60 MPH (100 KPH). One of our our large rolling bins blew over and rolled across the driveway at the back of the house. We have lots of fallen branches in the yard. Power failed only briefly here mid-evening, but as of 11 last night there were about 6,000 homes in Winston-Salem without power. Right now, it’s 14F (-10C) with a stiff breeze.

Forecasts are now calling for a couple inches (5 cm) of snow starting tomorrow afternoon and into tomorrow night, with the dreaded “wintry mix” on Tuesday. Barbara returns to work tomorrow. She’ll drive the Trooper, the back end of which carries an extensive emergency kit, including lots of warm clothing and blankets. It’s difficult to imagine a situation in which she’d be stranded on the way to or from work, but then the thousands of people who ended up stranded for days on Atlanta freeways last winter probably thought the same thing.


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Saturday, 14 February 2015

08:38 – Another blast of cold weather has arrived in Winston-Salem. Our high today is to be around 50F (10C), but then for the next several days highs are to be around freezing. Lows are to be mid-teens to low-20’s F (-10 to -5C), falling to the single digits F (~ -14C) later in the week.

I’m doing laundry this morning, as well as repacking our vehicle emergency kits. Barbara is to return to work Monday, and the forecast for Monday and Tuesday includes frozen precipitation. We live in the lee of the mountains, so as usual no one will know for sure what type or how much until it actually arrives. We could get nothing at all, or we could get a winter storm severe enough to shut things down. Barbara will drive the Trooper, but even so I don’t want her risking a fall walking from the parking deck to her office and back if it’s icy.


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