Daily Archives: November 4, 2022
My Bubba Stik . . .
Since my cervical spine fusion about a year ago, I have occasionally used a walking stick. (Note, It’s not a Cane. It’s Walking Stick!). Not to walk, really, but pretty much just to stand still.
My inertial balance (middle ear) is still a little wonky so if I stand still for any length of time I tend to wobble and it bothers my back. So I use the walking stick to stabilize myself.
In the past I’ve used one of these adjustable walking sticks that we bought for our European trip back in 2019.
But I found that the ‘adjustable’ part doesn’t age well, and tends to become a ‘collapsible’ feature as the joints wear. This came to a head last Saturday, when using it for the first time in a good while at the Wings Over Houston Airshow.
When I was stepping down from a curb, the stick suddenly became about six inches shorter, and almost dumped me on my rear.
So the next day I ordered a Bubba Stik like this.
It’s 39” of Texas Red Oak hardwood, made in Texas by Texans. The brass knob at the top is actually one of two at the top part of a horse collar, and is called a hame.
The hames are where the traces or reins are attached to guide the horse.
It has several indented rings around the bottom end to make it easy to cut down to a comfortable size
Pretty sure this one is not going to collapse on me.
Plus it’s heavy enough that it probably would come in real handy in a bar fight.
Recently I found that the rain sensor for my La Crosse Weather Station had stopped working.
It had been working fine, but then we went through about 3 weeks with no real rain. And when we finally got a down pour, nothing showed up on my display.
The past readings were still there, just nothing new. Figuring the batteries had died, I changed them out and rescanned for the sensor. Still nothing.
So after trying a few more things, I contacted the La Crosse company and told them about my problem. And then today I got an email back from them telling me to give them the sensor serial number and my name and address and they’d send me a new sensor. But that they were on backorder and weren’t expected in until the end of December.
I suspect that the reason for all this is because they’ve been having problems with this units, since they don’t list them for sale on their website, and they’re listed as Currently Unavailable on Amazon.
The PowerBall is up to $1.6 Billion, a new lottery record. The previous record set back in 2016, with $1.583 Billion split by two winners.
As the amount goes, the odds of there being multiple winners goes up. This is because as the winning amount increases, more and more people start buying tickets
Thought for the Day:
From Scott Adams of Dilbert fame:
November 4, 2011
A Ray of Sunshine . . .
Looks like yesterday’s hard rain has gone away and we should have pretty good weather until we leave here on Monday. We’ll see.
About 1 pm I went down to the park office to pick up a package from Amazon that had come in yesterday afternoon. That should be it for mail while we’re here.
Getting back to the rig I went through the activation setup for Jan’s new LG Revere cellphone. That only took a few minutes, but a good bit longer to get the contacts transferred over. It’s still not set up quite like I want it, so I’ll have to play with it some more tomorrow.
Later, I called the Wal-Mart in Vandalia, IL so they’ll have our prescriptions ready when we get there on Monday. Since we plan on Wally-Docking there for one night while we visited Jan’s sister, it’ll be really convenient.
Our daughter Brandi called a little after 5 to catch us up on Landon’s Halloween adventures Monday night. They walked him around to some houses in the neighborhood, and, at first, he was a little reluctant to go up to the door. But quickly got the hang of it.
Brandi said that at one house Landon walked up to the door holding open his bag, and that when the lady put the candy bowl down to talk to him, he reached into the bowl, picked out one piece of candy, and put it in his bag. Smart kid!
Several readers had asked for Jan’s Broccoli-Cheese Casserole recipe. Since it uses so many prepared ingredients, it’s easy to throw together on the spur of the moment.
And even better. it’s really, really good. When she takes it to get-togethers’, I’ve learned to get my fill there, because there’s usually none to bring home.
For bigger groups, like tomorrow’s Thanksgiving dinner, she makes a triple batch of it.
BROCCOLI – CHEESE CASSEROLE
1 16 oz. pkg. Frozen cut-up broccoli
1 cup cooked Minute Rice
1 cup Cheese Whiz
½ cup finely chopped onion
1 can mushroom soup
¼ cup ButterCombine all ingredients and bake at 350 for 45 min.
I’ve also posted one of her other delicious favorites, Squash Casserole. She usually makes this with fresh squash, but sometimes during the holidays, it can be hard to find. It’s still great with frozen squash.
SQUASH CASSEROLE
2 cups cooked squash – fresh or frozen
1 T sugar
½ onion, finely chopped
1 egg
½ cup mayo
½ cup sharp, shredded cheese
salt & pepperDrain cooked squash and mash. Beat in egg, mayo and cheese, onion, and salt and pepper.
Pour into greased casserole dish. Bake at 350 for 40 min. If center appears soupy, let it cook awhile longer.
Old Home In Athens, AL
November 4, 2012
My Home’s in Alabama . . .
Although we had a line of heavy thunderstorms come though last night and bring much cooler temps, this morning started out bright and sunny. Since we had nothing scheduled until later in the afternoon, we used the morning for some delicious vanilla crème coffee and to catch up on some of the programs we had recorded on our DVR
After Jan fixed us cheese toast for lunch I spent some time taking a look at the starting problem I had last Thursday morning leaving Heflin, AL. The American Coach tech I had talked to had mentioned a couple of fuses in the Battery Control Center box that might have blown and caused the problem, but I checked the two 5 amp fuses that were listed as being part of the start circuit, but both checked out OK. I then reseated all the connectors on the board, replaced the dummy plug, and tried the engine. But no luck.
Since it was Sunday I couldn’t talk to the American tech, so I’ll have to follow up while we’re at Gulf Shores next week.
About 1:30 we headed down to the local Wal-Mart to pick up a few things before heading over to my Uncle Ed’s to say goodbye and thank them for their hospitality. Then it was over to my Uncle Theo’s and Aunt Virginia’s to visit for a while. It’s always good catching up with my family and we look forward to coming back next year. And even better, when we left, my Aunt Virginia gave us a couple of loaves of her delicious sourdough and banana nut bread. Hmmmm!
And since my Aunt Jan gave us some of her pear preserves and green tomato salsa, we’re all set.
Saying our goodbyes to Theo and Virginia, Jan and I headed over to Hwy 72 to have dinner at Bojangles’, a chicken and biscuit chain we’ve seen up and down the east coast, and we wanted to give them a try.
They turned out to be pretty good. Jan liked their Fried Chicken and Mashed Potatoes & Gravy, and I had a Steak Biscuit and a Country Ham Biscuit. Both good, and their biscuits are really good. In fact we got a couple of their egg, ham, and cheese biscuits to have for breakfast before we head out tomorrow morning.
Coming home, we drove through a nearby Texaco station to verify that we can fit in there to fill up with diesel tomorrow morning.
Finally this evening, Brandi sent over this photo of Landon in his new Mickey Mouse jammies.
Tomorrow we’ll head out about 8:30 for a 370 mile run down to Gulf Shores, AL for about 12 days before we head home to Houston.
Gate Guarding near North Zulch, TX
November 4, 2014
Called on Account of Rain . . .
A short blog today, called on the account of rain.
Lot’s and lot’s of rain.
After staying north of us all day, about 6:30, right after I’d gone to bed, the bottom felt out, right on my now-somewhat soggy Sweetie. Never really hard, but steady all evening. And it looks like more of the same all day tomorrow, at least until tomorrow evening.
Here’s what it looks like on the Rainy Days app on our Galaxy Tab 4.
That’s us, the little red dot in the center.
And as I had thought (feared?), there’s no slope or drainage here, so we’re now sitting in a big puddle. Along with all our electrical cords, heaters, fans, radios, etc.
Oh boy!
I’m going to check with the Company Man and see if we can get another load of pea gravel to put down here like we did at our other gate. At least that will get us out of the puddles.
On a bright note though, my new steel-toed boots from Wal-Mart seem to be very waterproof.
But on a dark note, still no Frack Food.
Oh, The Horror.
Gate Guarding near Carthage, TX
November 4, 2015
Six Days . . .
That’s how long they lasted this time.
The weather actually got a little better today, with the sun and some blue sky peaking through the clouds. Nice for a change.
But last night was another story. It was forecast for fog, but I think it got a little carried away. In fact between 2:30 and 3:30am, it was like a black curtain descended and I couldn’t more than about 10 feet in front of me. And even stranger, I could no longer see the 3 big light towers down at the site. It was just Black.
One of the tanker driver’s who came in about that time said he had trouble following the road. But after about 3:30 the really heavy stuff lifted and it was just normally foggy again.
But it does look like tomorrow night will start off several more days of rain, although it’s not supposed to be nearly as bad as last week, at least not around here.
With the cooler weather it has been nice not to have to run the AC. Sitting right behind us, it’s pretty loud, even on low fan. But it was heaven when it was 98°.
Readers will remember my frustration a few weeks ago trying to add some Thousand Trails parks in the northeast to our membership. We plan on attending the 56th Escapade up in Essex Junction, VT next July, and our present Alliance membership doesn’t have anything north of New Jersey.
When we were at the Verde Valley TT this past July I talked to a salesperson there about getting a Ready Camp Go card, and she said it would be perfect for that. It was $299 for a year, so I thought I’d wait until this fall to purchase it so we’d get the most use out of it.
But when I went to purchase one a few weeks ago, I found it was no longer available to Alliance members, or the general public for that matter, but you had to be an Elite or Elite Connections member to purchase one. And I could upgrade to an Elite membership for the measly sum of only $5000, well, $4995 anyway.
And then $299 for the RCG card. I’m sorry, but for $5300 I can stay at a lot of RV parks.
Next I was told that I could add a Zone pass to my membership. At $545 it was more expensive than the RCG card, but it would do the job. Then I found out that, like the RCG card, the Zone Pass was now only available to Elite or Elite Connection members.
I’m starting to detect a pattern here.
Then a couple of days ago I logged into the Thousand Trails website to pay my dues, and I found this.
It says, “Thousand Trails is currently offering exciting new opportunities for you to enhance your membership benefits, such as. . .”
Now lets parse this out.
“…exciting new opportunities…” It’s plural, more than one.
Well that fits, because I see two different things being offered, a Camping Pass and an Elite membership.
Now then, “…enhance your membership benefits…” and the Bold is theirs.
So we’ve got “enhance”, as in add to something.
So I read this as saying you can add one of these ‘exciting new opportunities’ to your present TT membership. And this is reinforced by the fact that this is only seen inside the TT website, where you have to already be a member to log in.
But then when I called the number listed with the ad today, happy to have finally gotten this taken care of, I was told, “Oh, no. You can’t add the Camping Pass to your Alliance membership.”
Me: “Then who can buy a Camping Pass?”
Her: “You can’t be a member and buy a Camping Pass.”
Me: “So you can’t get one if you’re an Elite member?”
Her: “You can’t be a member and buy a Camping Pass.”
I’m starting to detect a pattern here.
Me: “Then why is if offered inside the TT website, where you have to be a member to log in?”
Her: “I don’t know, but you can’t be a member and buy a Camping Pass.”
I resisted the impulse to chant it along with her.
So, at this point I’m dead in the water again. I don’t think they like me anymore. Of course maybe they never did.
Since I got the charger port on the laptop fixed, Jan had been using it at night to watch some of her favorite old shows we have on DVD. Right now she’s going through the entire series of Northern Exposure. I bought her the entire set for Christmas 2009, but I think this is the first time she’s had a chance to watch it the whole thing at once.
Northern Exposure – The Complete Series
In 2008 on our way to Alaska we stopped and visited Roselyn, WA where NE was filmed. And it’s all still there, The Brick, Ruth Anne’s store, Dr. Fleishman’s office, the Café, and the KBHR radio station.
Here’s a blog post I did about our visit.
Check it out. There’s even some Mister stuff there.
Six Days.
My second pair of expensive ($6.50 a pair) boot laces made from cheap cow parts from India (they worship them and then turn them in to shoelaces), lasted only six days this time, instead of the previous record of ten days. So until I can order these 550 Paracord Steel Tip Boot Laces from Amazon, I’m back to my cheap ($1) laces from Wal-Mart that last a couple of months.
Gate Guarding near Kenedy, TX
November 4, 2016
Last Minute Gate . . .
or Home Sweet Shack
Todd called this morning about 8:40 telling Jan he had a gate for me, and then texted me the directions. And by 9:30 I was logging in vehicles at the gate.
This is brand new gate, one that has 3 holes that eventually will be fracked, but needs to be prepped first with coil tubing.
When I got to the gate about 9:15, there was no gate there. Todd had just arrived and was rolling out the containment pad that goes under the generator trailer to catch any leaking diesel. So no generator trailer, no guard shack trailer, and more importantly, no potty trailer.
Since we already had people on the pad that hadn’t been logged in, and I didn’t have any log sheets anyway, I just started logging people in using tag numbers and times. About an hour later,John the maintenance guy showed up with the generator trailer. Of course with no shack yet, we had nothing to plug into it.
But finally about 11:30 Todd showed up with the shack, and he and John got it set up.
So by 12:30 I was logging in for real, with a lot of trucks circling through with load after load of big equipment and large drilling fluid tanks. The rest of the afternoon was steady, but not really heavy, so not too bad.
Even though we’re about 10 miles out in the country, I’ve still got good 3G on my Verizon aircard so that’s good, and the over-the-air TV signals are fine as well.
My relief, who was supposed to show up at 6:30pm, didn’t make it until about 6:40 because he took a wrong turn. Turns out he’s two spaces down from us in the park.
It’s kind of confusing about the shift times at different gates. So far we’ve been at 5 to 5 gates, 5:30 to 5:30 gates, 6 to 6 gates, and now a 6:30 to 6:30 gate. Not sure why it works out like that.
We don’t know yet where this gate is going to go. It could expand to have a greeter on the pad and one on the staging area, as well as my gate out front. Or, I guess it could all go away tomorrow. You never can tell.
Next up is to try to figure out the night time guard and I can switch. He would rather work days, and I would rather work nights. So I need to sit down and figure out how we can switch shifts. It may be our wives can help us out, but I’ll to write it down to be sure.
Now I’m going to bed. I have to be up at 5:30AM ! Yikes!
November 4, 2017
Fallin’ Back . . .
Heads up.
In case you haven’t heard, tonight’s the night the clocks fall back, so at 2am Sunday morning, it becomes 1am Sunday morning.
We both did little or nothing today. Jan read, napped, and watched TV, while I mostly did computer stuff . . . and napped, too.
I’m sure we’ve all seen the‘snarky’, or downright nasty comments that show up in the many Facebook RV groups. I’ve regularly seen friend Ed Hurlburt threaten to kick people off, or actually kick them out of his RV group because of what they said, even after repeated warnings.
But you would think that a cooking group would be immune, but no. Recently in the Instant Pot for Beginners group, one of the admins had to threaten several members with expulsion if they didn’t stop berating and arguing with other members.
So much for civility.
Elsewhere on the FB front, we still don’t have our ‘Like’ emoticons back. And according to Google we’re not the only ones to have the problem, some dating back four or five years. A number of different fixes haven been recommended, but none have worked so far.
I do know it’s not the browser since it does exactly thing in Internet Explorer as it does in Chrome. So I’ll keep looking.
On the Amazon front, a couple of weeks ago I ordered a 4TB external hard drive to keep on-site system image backups of the 3 PC computers at my clients.
At 4-1/4” x 3-1/4” x 3/4” it’s tiny, at least compared to my very first HD, a 10MB SCSI drive that was connected to my Commodore Amiga. It was the size of a shoebox and cost $995 in the early 90’s. In comparison, the 4TB drive cost only $110 and holds 400,000 times more data,
Modern Technology!
November 4, 2018
A Busy Week Ahead . . .
I spent most of the morning trying to straighten out our prescriptions at WalMart. First up, the first part of October both Walmart and Sam’s Club updated (changed) their discount drug lists.
Luckily the ones that WalMart dropped got picked up by Sam’s and vice versa. So it just means we’ll have to move some of our scripts back and forth. But the real problem came with the prescription renewals that our doctor faxed over this past Friday.
Yesterday afternoon we got a text from WalMart saying 8 prescriptions were ready, for a total of $1358.92.
That’s One Thousand Three Hundred Fifty Eight Dollars and Ninety Two cents.
YIKES!
Checking out both discount lists, my drugs should have totaled $46 and Jan’s about $84.
It was also a problem that the nurse sent all the scripts to WalMart, and not the ones that were supposed to go to Sam’s.
So where did the $1300+ come from?
Looks like I was going to have to talk to the WalMart Pharmacy directly for that.
Jan and I finally left the rig a little before 2pm with our first stop for lunch at Floyd’s Cajun Seafood. It’s been a couple of months and Jan was jonsin’ for their catfish fillets, and I could certainly go for a big bowl of their Shrimp Gumbo.
But we both started with a Side Salad, Jan’s with Ranch and mine with Blu Cheese.
It’s kind of funny, but I never really liked Blu Cheese Dressing until I got hooked on Wedge Salads. Now it’s my choice on regular salads as well.
Jan of course, went with the Catfish and the Grilled Veggies,
while I got the Shrimp Gumbo, also with the Grilled Veggies.
And when I say Shrimp Gumbo, I mean Shrimp.
And Floyd’s is the place that turned us on to the Grilled Veggies, and we’ve gotten them at several other places too. They’re jus the normal Steamed Veggies thrown on the grill for a few minutes with a little butter or oil.
Just ask. We’ve never had anyone tell us No. Give it a try.
Our next stop was WalMart and their Pharmacy. Turns out that for some reason the nurse had sent over a prescription for Vescepa. And a month’s supply of it is $858.
YIKES, again.
And we don’t know why it was sent over anyway. It’s for high triglycerides, and it’s never been prescribed to Jan before. So we dropped that.
Next up was Losartan, which should have been sent to Sam’s, not WalMart. At Sam’s it’s $12 for a 90 day supply. At WalMart it’s $345 for a 30 day supply. So that was out too.
So now all we had to do was to send the other ones over to Sam’s and it was all straightened out.
Heading home we drove by the house to see what was up with it. And rather that looking better, it actually looked a lot worse than when we left for Florida over a month ago.
The front yard was littered with trash and branches that fallen from the trees. Plus about 15 feet of the sidewalk was gone, seemingly dug up to replace the water meter box, which looked new.
Don’t know what the problem was, but it wasn’t there when we owned it.
Next week looks to be a busy one for us. Beside work, Tuesday afternoon we both have ophthalmologist’s appointments to take a look at our cataract situation.
Jan has had hers for a number of years, waiting for them to get big enough to be operable. Mine, only in my left eye, wasn’t there a few years ago, so I don’t know if it’s large enough to take out too.
Then on Thursday, we’ve got tickets to the Houston Ballet’s Nutcracker Market.
Put on for the last 37 years, it’s a fantastic event full of gifts, food, and sugar plums. All as a fund-raiser for the Houston Ballet.
It’s been a number of years since we’ve been and we’re really looking forward to it. And even better, Brandi will be meeting us there.
BTW if you really need Vescepa, with a discount coupon from GoodRx you can get it for only $242.00.
November 4, 2019
All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain . . .
Some of you will recognize the above as one of the last lines in replicant Roy Batty’s dying soliloquy in the finale of Ripley Scott’s movie, Blade Runner.
But something you may not know is that Hauer rewrote his lines the night before the scene was filmed.
Originally the scripted lines went like this:
I’ve seen things… seen things you little people wouldn’t believe.
Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion bright as magnesium…
I rode on the back decks of a blinker and watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate.
All those moments… they’ll be gone.
But Hauer’s rewrite went like
I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe.
Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion.
I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate.
All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
Time to die
Shorter and much more to the point.
But rather than try to describe it, you can watch Rutger Hauer and Harrison Ford (Rick Deckard) in one of my all-time favorite movie scenes.
The reason I’m really talking about this is that this 1982 film was set 37 years in the future. That’s right.
November 2019
So where are my flying cars? I want my flying cars!
Along with the many films Hauer did, he was also originally cast in the Peter Weller part as Robocop. But they decided he was just too broad shouldered to look right in the suit.
And in a fitting wrap up to all this, Rutger Hauer died this year just as did Roy Batty.
After 3 or 4 months of twice-daily use, the battery in my SwitchBot battery is finally on its last legs.
I can actually read the battery level from the SwitchBot so I know it’s time to change it out. It’s never failed to work yet, but I don’t want to take a chance on waking up to no coffee.
Turn out to be really easy to change, and I didn’t even have to detach it from the Mr.Coffee.
Just pop off the back, pull out the CR2 battery, plug in the new one, and now I had this.
So our coffee is safe for tomorrow.