Category: science kits

Monday, 23 March 2015

08:10 – We finished watching Saving Grace last night. I was kind of expecting her to end up with set of big, honking archangel wings like Earl. Her dog, Gus, would also have looked nice with a set of those wings, Alas, that was not to be. We started watching the Canadian series Orphan Black, which stars Tatiana Maslawny, who formerly played Kit Bailey on several episodes of Heartland.

Speaking of Heartland, I just grabbed S08E17, which ran last night. The final episode of series eight runs next Sunday. Amy and Ty will start series nine as a married couple, and I suspect that a little Ty or Amy won’t be far behind. My guess is that Amber Marshall forced their hand. She loves all small mammals and she’ll have been married two years this summer, so it wouldn’t surprise me if she’s expecting a small mammal of her own.

After reading my page yesterday, Barbara commented that she didn’t want to give up on the idea of relocating somewhere to our northwest just because there were chicken farms. I told her that I wasn’t giving up on the idea, but I want to find a place far from any large chicken farms. Over the coming months, we’ll be taking a few day trips to check out various areas. In the interim, I’m reasonably comfortable where we are.

Barbara watched some of the basketball tournament yesterday. I commented that I didn’t understand why anyone would watch that. It’s basically a bunch of underclass thugs, complete with gang colors and tats. I told Barbara that these guys are not ones she’d want to meet in a dark alley, or a well-lit one come to that.


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Saturday, 21 March 2015

08:32 – Barbara likes the new mattress. She says she slept very well last night. So did I, but then I almost always sleep very well. When she was at the store choosing the mattress, the guy asked her about my preferences. She told him that it didn’t matter because I was happy sleeping even on the floor. Which is true. I’m a mattress agnostic. I’ve spent more than a few nights in my life sleeping comfortably in the woods after just scooping out hip and shoulder troughs and piling pine needles to sleep on.

Page A4 of the paper this morning had an interesting full-page article/graphic. I’d known that near the end of the War of Northern Aggression General Stoneman and his cavalry had spent a couple of weeks pillaging and burning western North Carolina, but this page lays it out graphically and day-by-day. Stoneman’s raid was purely gratuitous because the war was very nearly over and also because western North Carolina had tended pro-Union throughout the war. Stoneman’s forces faced some opposition, mostly by teenage boys and wounded Confederate soldiers, but they were welcomed with cheering upon their arrival most places around here. (The fabled Tarheels were mostly from central and coastal North Carolina, where there were many plantations and tens of thousands of slaves. Slaves were relatively uncommon in the western parts of the state, which was mostly smallhold farms. The few slaves held by these family farmers were often treated as members of the family.)

More kit stuff today.


10:49 – The prevailing opinion seems to be that brown sugar isn’t suitable for long-term storage. Everyone including the LDS church says so. I’m not sure why that should be true, but then I’ve never tried storing brown sugar so I’ll assume that these sources may know something I don’t.

Not that it’s a real problem. Granulated or powdered white sugar can be stored essentially forever. The LDS church says 30 years, but the truth is probably closer to 300 years if not 3,000 years. The same is true of molasses, which is basically what’s left over when natural brown sugar is refined into white sugar. It’s easy enough to make up your own brown sugar on the fly by mixing one tablespoon of molasses, give or take, with a cup of white sugar and stirring until they’re completely mixed. So I’m not storing any brown sugar. Instead, I’ll store a couple bottles of Grade A unsulfured molasses.

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Friday, 20 March 2015

08:41 – Barbara took the day off. She ordered a new mattress and wanted to get the bedroom cleaned out and be here when the mattress was delivered.

We’ll both be doing science kit stuff over the next three days. I’m trying to get subassembly inventories for all the kits built up before the summer rush. Today will be a first for me. I’ve never ordered 10,000 of something at a time before, but today I’m putting together a purchase order for bottles and caps. I’ve been ordering 15/415 caps for 15 mL bottles in boxes of 1,440 at a time, but I’d figured I might as well order a full case of 10,000. They’re 20% cheaper that way, and we’ll certainly go through 10,000 of them in the not-too-distant future. I’ll keep ordering the bottles in cases of 1,100 to 1,650, depending on size, because that’s the largest UOM they offer and because our storage space is limited.

Amazon is behaving strangely. Yesterday, I ordered an ebook from them, which as usual I chose to download for transfer by USB. That worked fine, but I noticed that I didn’t get the usual email receipt for the order. So I checked on the Amazon.com site, where the order was showing as “Pending”. It stayed that way for several hours, even though I had successfully downloaded the ebook. Then, this morning, I got email from Amazon saying that my subscribe-and-save order for five 2-pound boxes of Alpo Snaps dog treats had been canceled. When I checked the item it showed availability of 2 to 5 weeks. This is the second time in a row that’s happened, so I canceled my standing order and just ordered the dog treats from WalMart.


09:06 – A victory. Barbara was going to have the old mattress hauled off, but I convinced her we should keep it downstairs. It’s about 15 years old. I think it’s perfectly fine, but Barbara says it’s gotten uncomfortable for her. I pointed out that when we relocate we may do so gradually and it’d be good to have a mattress in each place while we’re doing so. She said she’d actually thought about that, so it wasn’t that hard to convince her to hold onto it.

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Tuesday, 17 March 2015

09:48 – I’m doing science kit stuff today, building boxes and subassemblies for later assembly into full kits. I’m also down to my last case of 100 goggles, so I need to reorder several more cases. This afternoon, I’ll get started on the taxes, which means I’ll be in a bad mood until I get them finished and sent off. I’m sure our taxes will go up this year, as usual. At least we can afford to pay them. A lot of people can’t.

Now that the weather is getting better, I want to have the taxes out of the way so that we can take some weekend day trips up to our northwest to check out potential areas for relocation. We probably won’t be making the move for a year or two, but I want a better idea of what’s out there. So we’ll be making trips up to the Dobson and Sparta and West Jefferson areas.



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Sunday, 15 March 2015

10:12 – We’re doing the usual Sunday stuff. This afternoon, Barbara will continue watching season 5 of Glee while she labels bottles. I’ll be filling bottles.

The mailman brought me six flats of boxes yesterday, four of the regional rate A boxes and two of the regional rate B boxes. I mentioned to him that it was annoying that USPS would allow me to order only four flats of 25-boxes of any given size at a time, which means that I need to place multiple orders to keep the boxes in stock, particularly during the summer/autumn rush season. He said that USPS implemented the limit because people would accidentally over-order. He said one of his customers wanted 100 flat-rate boxes and had ordered quantity 100 without realizing that she was ordering 100 flats of 25 boxes each rather than 100 boxes. So he ended up delivering 2,500 boxes, to her horror. He carried the extra 96 flats of boxes back to the post office, which was a several year supply for them.



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Monday, 9 March 2015

10:41 – I need to spend this week mostly doing science kit stuff. We’re in reasonably good shape on chemistry kits, but I just shipped the last forensic kit this morning and we’re down to half a dozen biology kits. I’ll be making up and bottling chemicals, building subassemblies, and building kits most of this week.

I’ve been putting a lot of effort into the prepping book and I need a break from it. Thinking and writing constantly about disasters gets depressing, particularly the types of disasters that are essentially impossible to prepare for. As I’ve said many times, unlike some of my readers I don’t really expect an apocalyptic end of all things. What I expect is a gradual slide into dystopia, with increasing poverty, social unrest, and government intrusion into our lives. That’s why I want to get away from the city, and that’s why I’m storing foods, guns, and other supplies and developing more useful skills. But in a true catastrophe like a long-term grid-down situation or a nightmare pandemic, there’s no real way for anyone to be prepared. The simple fact is that we have too many people who are entirely dependent on a complex, interlocking network. If something catastrophic enough to break even part of that network occurs, there will be a mass die-off in the US and there won’t be anything anyone can do to stop it. The most that Barbara and I can do is relocate to thinly-populated farming country, stock up, and hope that when the crunch comes we’re prepared to ride out the worst of it with our family and friends.




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Monday, 23 February 2015

09:48 – Work continues on science kits and the prepping book.

With the amount of text I’m generating for the prepping book, I decided I really have no choice but to break it into two volumes. The first will cover the first day through the end of one year and the second beyond one year. I hope to have the first volume complete by late spring.


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Saturday, 21 February 2015

09:19 – As usual for February, I’m starting to feel like the Maytag Repairman. For the first third of the month, we were shipping science kits at a decent rate, but the middle third was a complete washout. This final week will probably be slow as well.

At least that gives me time to work on other stuff that needs to be done, including the prepping book.


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Thursday, 19 February 2015

08:02 – It didn’t get as cold here last night as it was supposed to. The forecast was for 2F (-17C), but the actual low was about 10F (-12C). The forecast low tonight is 0F (-18C). We’ll see. Saturday we’re supposed to have more snow and ice arriving.

Colin got his own back yesterday afternoon. In the morning, all four paws went out from under him and he went down. Yesterday, with the ice just starting to melt, we were on the street in front of Kim’s house when I slipped and went down in the gutter. After checking to make sure I wasn’t hurt, Colin mocked me for going down despite being in six-paw drive. It took me a moment to realize that he was talking about my own two feet and my four-footed cane. Kim and her mom came running out their front door to make sure I wasn’t hurt. I told them I was fine. The only damage was that my jeans got a little damp. The worst part was lying there in the gutter trying to get up with my feet sliding out from under me.

I’m still making up chemicals and filling bottles for science kits. When I eventually get through this batch, we’ll have most of what we need for 30 more forensics kits, 90 more biology kits, and 120 more chemistry kits. Then it’ll be rinse and repeat to get ready for the rush in July through September.


11:52 – Wow. I was just washing out the reservoir from one of our automatic bottle fillers when I noticed that the cold tap water seemed a lot colder than usual. So I filled the reservoir and stuck a lab thermometer in. The temperature was 4C (39F). No wonder my hands were starting to get numb. Falling into a pond at that temperature can kill you just from thermal shock. Even if it doesn’t, you’ll be in bad trouble in 30 seconds and probably dead in a few minutes.

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Tuesday, 10 February 2015

08:06 – Barbara is doing well. Assuming the doctor approves, she’ll probably return to work next week.

I built a new batch of chemistry kits yesterday, lacking only the wire gauzes. I have a few of those on hand, which should be enough to carry us until the new shipment arrives. If not, I’ll just ship the kits without and send the wire gauzes separately when they arrive. Today I’m going to get started on a new batch of biology kits, which we’re running low on.


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