Category: personal

Friday, 10 June 2016

09:55 – Barbara is off to the gym and supermarket. Then it’ll be back to kit stuff.

Our driveway is gravel, and Barbara wants to have it paved. We’re going to get quotes. It’s a double-wide driveway and 125 feet long, so it won’t be cheap whether we decide on concrete or asphalt. I’m perfectly happy with gravel, but Barbara really, really wants it paved. So we’ll wait until the house in Winston sells and then get quotes.

Of course, fair is fair. If we have the driveway paved as Barbara wants, I should get to buy something I really, really want, which is another two or three person-years worth of bulk staple foods and some other prepping supplies. I’d also like to get some of our assets transferred into stuff that holds its value. Those dollars in our bank account lose value every month. I’d like to get some of those dollars shifted into stuff like .22LR ammunition, which holds its value over time and is nearly as liquid as dollars. Fifteen years ago, I could have bought .22LR for about two cents a round. Now, that ammo is more like seven cents a round. The value of a round remains the same as it was 15 years ago; it’s the dollar that has lost much of its value over the last 15 years. And the same is true of LTS food.


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Wednesday, 8 June 2016

09:54 – Barbara is down in Winston today, running errands and meeting a friend for lunch.

We planted our test garden yesterday with all open-pollinated seeds. We put in short rows of broccoli, carrots, green beans, onions, peas, and zucchini. We’ll also be putting out a bunch of herbs and peppers in pots in the next few days. This year, we’re not looking for production quantities. I just want to see how they do, what works and what doesn’t.

Soon after we finished out in the garden, I got a phone call from a Sparta number I didn’t recognize. The caller asked if this was Bob Thompson. I replied that this was a Bob Thompson, and he said he was also Bob Thompson. One of the purchase orders I’d issued last Thursday had shipped to his house. Neither of us understood how that had happened, but fortunately my phone number was on the address label.

Barbara and I drove over to his house to pick up the mis-delivered case of goggles. Just one case rather than the three I’d ordered. When I saw the shipping label, all became clear. It was a five line label, with my name on line 1, then the business name, then my name again, then the business name again, then “Sparta, NC 28675”. Obviously, FedEx had done its best to deliver a box with no street address. They must have searched for a Bob Thompson in the Sparta area and just delivered it there.

When we got home, I called the vendor, who was horrified at the error. The service rep said she had no idea how it had happened. I told her that all would have been okay if they’d just provided the 9-digit zipcode to FedEx. She said they did have the full zipcode in their database record, but the FedEx label-printing software only printed 5-digit zips. How odd. At any rate, she was able to track down the two missing boxes, and said they would be delivered here today.

She commented that it was fortunate that the person had called me. I told her I wasn’t surprised. Up here in Sparta, population less than 2,000, pretty much everyone is friendly and honest. I told her if this had happened when we lived down in Winston, I wouldn’t have been surprised if whoever received the box just kept them and sold them on eBay.


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Tuesday, 7 June 2016

10:34 – I’m surprised that with all the comments yesterday, no one pointed out that I’d dated that entry 2015. Fixed now.

Still more kit stuff on tap for today. Barbara has a busy week, including a trip down to Winston tomorrow, so we interleave all the kit stuff on a time-available basis. We’re never short of stuff to do.

One of the items on my to-do list is checking into the details of our well. I’ve been thinking about having a 24VDC or 48VDC submersible pump installed to replace the current well pump, assuming our well depth is within its capacity. That could be driven by an ordinary transformer during normal times, and directly by solar panels or solar-charged deep-cycle batteries in a long-term emergency. The ShurFlo 9300 model I looked at pulls only 4 amps max at 24VDC, has a maximum lift of 230 feet, and delivers just under two gallons per minute at max depth. In a pinch, it could be driven directly by one 18V 100W panel, although two panels with a charge controller would be better.

Solar well pumps are a mature technology. They’ve been used widely for years, particularly in the arid western states for unattended livestock watering systems. Their service life is rated at 5 to 10 years, and repair kits are available. I suspect we’ll end up installing one eventually, but for now I’m reasonably happy with the generator and rainwater harvesting for backup. We could run the well pump on generator to produce 100 gallons per day using only 4 or 5 gallons of gasoline per month. Rainfall is pretty reliable around here. In the last six months, we’ve gotten measurable rain probably every week. We’ve had between 3.2 and 4.0 inches of rain per month since we moved here in December of last year, typically a quarter inch to a full inch at a time, and even the summer months have regular rainfall. In a pinch, we could store several hundred gallons of captured rain, which would be enough to carry us through any dry spells.

Back to work on science kits.


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Monday, 6 June, 2016

10:12 – Happy birthday to me. I turn 3F today. Only one more year until I hit the Big Four-Oh. A year after that, I’ll be eligible for Medicare, assuming it’s still around two years from now.

Barbara got me the perfect gift for anyone with an interest in science: Derek Lowe’s The Chemistry Book: From Gunpowder to Graphene, 250 Milestones in the History of Chemistry. Recommended.

Big article in the paper this morning about the increasing violence in cities. After peaking in 1990, violence in cities had declined significantly over the next 20 years, but now it’s started to increase dramatically in many (but not all) cities. Apparently, no one in authority can figure out why this is happening, or maybe it’s just that they’re not allowed to say. Hint: it has to with the large increase in the population of underclass scum. That, and forbidding the police to deal with them.

Back in the Good Olde Days, cops divided people into three categories: cops, civilians, and scumbags. They treated civilians politely, and never, ever beat or shot them. They treated scumbags as they deserved to be treated, and beat or shot them as necessary. In olden days, mistreating civilians was the fastest way for a cop to commit career suicide, while treating scumbags harshly was just another day at the office. Nowadays, the situation is, if not quite the opposite, uncomfortably close to being so. Cops now shoot more middle-class civilians than they do underclass scumbags. Killing a middle-class person has become almost a protected activity for cops, while killing an underclass scumbag invariably results in severe blowback, often career-ending. This has to change.



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Sunday, 5 June 2016

09:49 – Since we moved up to the Sparta area, Barbara and I have remarked several times that Alleghany County must have as many cows as people. Last night, I looked it up. It turns out that Alleghany County has just over 11,000 total population, about 47 people per square mile, and more than 23,000 beef and dairy cattle, about 100 per square mile. Forsyth County, where we used to live, has a population density of about 900 people per square mile. According to the most recent USDA numbers, Forsyth County has 3,843 cattle, or just over 9 per square mile. So, Forsyth County has about one cow for every 100 people, while Allegheny County has about two cows per person. I much prefer the latter.

We have a pretty full day planned. Barbara is cleaning house right now. After that, we’ll build kits and get to work on more subassemblies for yet more kits.





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Saturday, 4 June 2016

09:41 – I didn’t remember until after dinner yesterday that it was the 49th anniversary of the day that Billie Joe McAllister jumped off the Tallahatchie Bridge.

We just started rewatching the HBO series Rome on Amazon streaming. It’s historically inaccurate, but what drives me really nuts is that the characters all pronounce Latin words very badly. Jool-ee-us See-zur instead of Yool-ee-us Kie-ssar. Siss-ur-oh instead of Kee-kur-oh, Kay-toe instead of Kah-toe, Tye-tus instead of Tee-tus, Loo-see-us instead of Luke-ee-us, and so on. Mrs. Shreffler, my junior high Latin teacher, would have rapped all their knuckles. They also don’t understand the most extraordinary characteristic of Caesar as a military commander: his ability to move huge numbers of men and heavy equipment large distances in incredibly short times. Historically, that’s been the notable characteristic of the best ground commanders, from Alexander to Caesar to Gustavus Adolphus to Nathan Bedford Forrest (get there first with the most…) to George S. Patton. Caesar redeployed in literally days what his opponents expected to take weeks, giving them a nasty shock by doing so. Patton did the same during the Ardennes Offensive.

Barbara is out doing yard work. She’s always wanted to get rid of the rotting pile of firewood down in the back corner of the yard. I’d told her months ago that that was fine, but I wanted to have a cord of new firewood before we did that. She thought the pickup load we got in last month fulfilled that, but I was speaking of a literal cord rather than the face cord we had brought in. That was roughly 40% of a full cord. I told Barbara yesterday to go ahead and have James haul off the old rotting stuff, but I wanted to make it a very high priority to build a couple more firewood racks and get another couple pickup loads of new firewood stacked in them.

We’re building chemistry kits this weekend. This batch will take us up to reasonably good stocking levels going into June; about three dozen finished chemistry kits, two dozen biology kits, and a dozen forensics kits. Once we get that done, it’ll be back to labeling and filling more bottles, building more subassemblies, and building more finished kits. By the beginning of August, we’ll have bunches of kits stacked up and ready to ship.

Also this weekend, weather allowing, we’re going to plant some test seeds in our garden as well as some herbs in pots on the deck.


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Friday, 3 June 2016

09:27 – We’re building more science kit subassemblies today, which we’ll be doing pretty much every day for the next two or three months. I issued purchase orders yesterday for a couple thousand dollars worth of components, which covers most of what we were short of.

We’ve devoted most of our time this week to getting science kit subassemblies built for the autumn rush, so there hasn’t been much time for prepping activities. I did order and receive from Amazon a gallon of molasses, which is used in cooking and baking to turn white granulated sugar into brown sugar, at a ratio of one tablespoon of molasses per cup of white sugar, and a couple cans of high-temperature flat black spray paint, which we’ll use in converting 2-liter soda bottles into gardening pots for herbs and other plants that do well in containers.

After 35 years of drinking coffee only occasionally, I’ve started drinking it regularly. One, or sometimes two, 10-ounce (~300 mL) mugs every morning. I’ve been playing around with different concentrations, and I’ve decided that 10 grams of ground coffee is enough for a 10-ounce mug. That means I get about 45 mugs per pound, or about 135 mugs per 3-pound can. At about $12 per three-pound can, Costco-branded Columbian coffee is about as good as any I’ve tried, and three of those cans is a one-year supply for one person, assuming one 10-ounce cup per day. Barbara and Frances don’t drink coffee. Al drinks much more than I do, but he also likes his coffee much weaker than I do, so six or seven cans should be plenty for the two of us. In the metal cans, the coffee has a long rated shelf life and I’m sure it’d still be fine for at least several years past the best-by date, so there’s no real down-side to keeping a good supply in our LTS pantry.


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Thursday, 2 June 2016

09:36 – I’m old enough to remember the time when newspapers did actual journalism rather than just reprinting government press releases. I thought about that this morning while I was scanning the morning paper. There was an article that reported unemployment in the Winston-Salem area was at 5%. Yeah, right. Time was when a newspaper would have pointed out that the government 5% number was entirely bogus. Not only does it not include those who are so discouraged that they’ve given up looking for work, but it counts any job as a job. The simple truth is that the country has lost millions upon millions of good middle-class jobs over the last couple of decades, and replaced them with crap service jobs. If a machinist making $60,000/year loses that job and goes back to work in a minimum-wage retail job, the government considers that a wash. One job lost and one job gained. We should try that on them, making all government jobs start at minimum wage, with a cap no higher than the average wage earned by people with jobs in private businesses.

More science kit stuff today. Barbara assembled a batch of small parts bags for chemistry kits yesterday, and is working on another batch as I write this. We also have chemical bottles to label and fill, and I have purchase orders to cut.

Walmart has some of their Ball canning jars on sale. Their website lists a two-pack of Ball wide-mouth quart jars with lids and rims for $18.95, or $0.79 each. I added three of those to my shopping cart, which was enough to get over $50 for free shipping. But when I tried to place the order, instead of going to the page that confirms shipping address it took me to a page that said I could pick them up at the Elkin Walmart Supercenter. I wasn’t about to make a 60 mile round trip, so I canceled the order.


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Wednesday, 1 June 2016

09:05 – I just closed out the books for May, which was up about 25% over May of last year. Year-to-date, we’re down about 11% in science kit revenues from last year, all attributable to a much slower January this year. I don’t worry too much about small percentage ups and downs, particularly during the slow first half of the year. They tend to level out over the course of a year, and it’s the July through October numbers that really matter.

More work today on science kits. Over the weekend, we got one of the Costco LED shop lights installed in the unfinished area downstairs. It draws only 42W, but puts out about as much light as 250W of incandescent bulbs. The lights come two to a pack, but I decided not to install the other one. I’ll keep it for use elsewhere. With the existing 400W of incandescent lights already in the unfinished area, one of the LED shop lights provides plenty of light over our work area.



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Tuesday, 31 May 2016

11:20 – We’re back to the usual stuff around here. Barbara cut my hair this morning. I was getting a little shaggy. She’s running some errands this morning while I do laundry. This afternoon we’ll work on kit stuff.

I’m debating how best to protect our garden against herbivorous predators. I was thinking last night about different types of fencing when I realized that a better solution overall might be landmines or perhaps sensor-activated claymores. In addition to protecting the vegetables, that would give us an ongoing source of deer and rabbit meat, albeit somewhat pre-shredded.

We’ve been rewatching Deadwood, which continues to set the standard for bad language. I read somewhere that over the entire three seasons Deadwood averaged just under one incidence of “fuck”, “cunt”, “cocksucker”, etc. every minute. I’m surprised it isn’t more than that. Once we finish Deadwood, we’ll at some point start re-watching Rome. That one has much less strong language but much better dresses.


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