Sunday, June 24, 2012

My 'puters return


My computer fan had been struggling and making noise and I knew I needed to replace it--it was too far gone for just a cleaning to be right. We had recently got Morg's back after some work (it had lost its ability to charge) and the guy did the work well for a reasonable price. I am a little uncomfortable getting into this little netbook because my eyes are just not working well and I had/have many other things on my plate to do so I decided to have this same guy do the fan. Ron had been dealing with him so I told him to call the guy and find out how long it will take to replace the fan. I should have been much more specific but it was more of a reminder as we had covered it once before. I have been babying it to keep it from getting too hot for about two months and didn't want to be without it for any length of time--I thought when I was told a couple of days to replace the fan that meant I would have it back in a couple of days. He did not have the fan in and *that* is what I wanted Ron to get the guy to do, order in the fan then have us drop off the 'puter.  I think maybe Ron gave the guy the idea my 'puter was the same as Morg's (he has fans for that model)  but I have an earlier model and it is not the same; he didn't have a fan for mine. But after the phone call, Ron said he was to take it in that evening and it would be a couple days. I asked if he had the fan already and Ron told me had had lots of fans. A couple hours after the 'puter was dropped off, Ron was still in town, the guy calls and tells me that he cleaned the fan up but the bearings were shot. Heck, I knew that without taking the thing apart--it can't run with hair and dust wrapped around it for long without tearing up the bearings and it ran long. He said he had to order in the fan and so it would take a few more days. That was what I was trying to avoid. He offered to let us take the 'puter back and he would call. But I had no way to get hold of Ron in town and it was Thursday so the next time anyone would be heading that way  would be Saturday and then when he got the fan it (on Monday or Tuesday) we would have to just run it right back to him, making a special trip to do so. I was a tad irked because this was the very thing I wanted to avoid, him having the 'puter during fan shipping time, but saw no point in that. Well, a week and a half later, the fan he ordered with a rush shipping never came; he ordered another and it hadn't come in yet. I told Ron get my 'puter. Aside from the internet, I use MS OneNote for a few things including my garden map--and I need that so I am not lost; at this time of year it is too easy to confuse melon with cucumber, some plants are new to me and I am not so familiar with the look of it, and until there is fruit there is no easy way to tell variety; row markers/garden tags always seem to fade. The garden maps, or should I say maps, have been wonderful. We have two fenced gardens plus three unfenced and they spread out a ways. Living in a holler we need to take advantage of full sun where we have it, even if it is only a small spot of it.  And then there *is* the internet part of it. Granted, I have not been overly active but I do have email (I still haven't caught up on)  ad some other things I don't like letting go for more than a couple /few days at a time. And, we use Google voice a lot to save money on long distance. Considering that we can't even call the police or fire dept. as a local call and sometimes a call needs made when the 'puter isn't on, I will not cancel our long distance service but since about the only local calls are pretty much our next door neighbors, the bills can add up. Morg has it  on her computer but it is an imposition to be hitting her up all the time to call up folks. I am glad my 'puter is home, I wish it had a new fan.
I wanted to write about the movie we saw today but I think I ought to let my machine cool a bit first.

Friday, June 8, 2012

A Funny Letter


I first saw this around eight years or so ago, I am thinking one of my sisters sent it to me. My husband just found it again and I have to share (and not lose it again).

Letter from a farm kid

AT SAN DIEGO MARINE CORPS RECRUIT DEPOT

Dear Ma and Pa:

I am well. Hope you are.

Tell Brother Walt and Brother Elmer the Marine Corps beats working for old man Minch by a mile. Tell them to join up quick before maybe all of the places are filled. I was restless at first because you got to stay in bed till nearly 6 a.m., but am getting so I like to sleep late.

Tell Walt and Elmer all you do before breakfast is smooth your cot and shine some things. No hogs to slop, feed to pitch, mash to mix, wood to split, fire to lay. Practically nothing. Men got to shave but it is not so bad, there's warm water.

Breakfast is strong on trimmings like fruit juice, cereal, eggs, bacon, and stuff, but kind of weak on chops, potatoes, ham, steak, fried eggplant, pie and other regular food. But tell Walt and Elmer you can always sit by two city boys that live on coffee. Their food plus yours holds you till noon, when you get fed again.

It's no wonder these city boys can't walk much. We go on "route" marches, which the Platoon Sergeant says are long walks to harden us. If he thinks so, it is not my place to tell him different. A "route march" is about as far as to our mailbox at home. Then the city guys get sore feet and we all ride back in trucks. The country is nice, but awful flat.

The Sergeant is like a schoolteacher. He nags some. The Capt. is like the school board. Majors and Colonels just ride around and frown. They don't bother you none.

This next will kill Walt and Elmer with laughing. I keep getting medals for shooting. I don't know why. The bulls-eye is near as big as a chipmunk head and don't move. And it ain't shooting at you, like the Higgett boys at home. All you got to do is lie there all comfortable and hit it. You don't even load your own cartridges. They come in little metal boxes.

Then we have what they call hand-to-hand combat training. You get to wrestle with them city boys. I have to be real careful though, they break real easy. It ain't like fighting with that ole bull at home.

I'm about the best they got in this except for that Tug Jordan from over in Silver Lake. He joined up the same time as me. But I'm only5'6" and 130 pounds and he's 6'8" and weighs near 300 pounds dry.

Be sure to tell Walt and Elmer to hurry and join before other fellers get onto this setup and come stampeding in.

Your loving daughter,
Gail Ann






Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Gee, More About the Weather (and the garden)



We have been short of rain, or any kind of precipitation this year, and I wrote about the 1/9 inch we got last week. Well the night before last we got a 1/2 inch and then last night we got another 1 1/2 inches of rain. AND we are expecting more tonight. Woo Hoo! It has been coming down so most of it is soaking in rather than running off so that is double the good news.
We, like much of the country, have been running on the warm side of normal but we get a couple days here that will be in the upper 60;s. Of course, we just got the pool set up and the kids got in it today for the first time and now we get a couple days too cool to swim. We often have the pool set up by the end of April but it didn’t get done that early this year. Brianna hasn’t been hassling us this year and I was focusing on the garden.
Speaking of the garden, those Rat's Tail radishes are producing like mad now. I have refrigerator pickled some and they are good that way too; which is good because they are prolific enough that we are not eating them all while fresh. They haven't minded the record breaking heat at all that I can tell. These are supposed to have been very popular a couple hundred years ago and are heirloom veggies that I highly recommend. I got seeds at www.rareseeds.com at a place I have been getting seeds from for years called Baker Creek; it is a  great place for open pollinated seeds ( NO GM FOODS!).
The other new things we are trying this year are purple tomatillos, a new cucumber called Dragon's Egg (we have been growing a Lemon Cuke), and a or the Burr Gherkin, a cucumber relative that people buy as little sweet pickles, and a tomato called Violet Jasper. We have a tomato that we love called Fox Cherry but we want to be sure we have the best for here and we can grow two kinds and still keep the seeds true. We can't get big tomatoes to ripen and the Fox Cherry is BIG for a cherry tomato, about the size of most whole peeled tomatoes in cans, and they ripen. The Violet Jasper is supposed to be about the same size so we are trying them.
It was too hot for peas this year.
Besides the radishes, we have had a couple of summer squash--which is new too come to think of it. It is called Table Dainty and is a striped oval thing. It is pretty good but I have yet to decide whether I like it better than the Lemon Squash that we usually do. We have had problems in the past couple/few years with those; the plants not producing well before they die off usually by squash bug infestation of that wilty thing caused by cucumber beetles. They used to do better before we lost them. I wish I could figure out what to do with the squash bug thing, we have been battling them for too long and the problem is not getting better. It is tempting to go for the non-organic methods but  I am still holding out...

Better to write for yourself and have no public, than to write for the public and have no self.
Cyril Connolly


Dark Shadows


My family and I went to see the movie "Dark Shadows" on Sunday. I have been meaning to write about it since but every time I get ready to write my husband starts talking to me and then I get to tired--I am trying to ignore him now (not really). I am not sure how I feel about the movie. If I had no knowledge of the original "Dark Shadows" soap opera I would probably have really liked it. Depp seemed to feel comfortable with the part and was entertaining. I am trying to think of how to describe it without giving away anything….I could start with the year of Barnabas being freed from his chained coffin. The soap started in 1966 and ended in 1971, Barnabas came into the series about six months in, so that would be 1967 that he makes his appearance. The movie takes place in 1972. This is insignificant, really, but I am curious as to why if they were going to change the time that they chose 1972-- just slightly more modern than the soap but not fully modern. And, in the soap the Collins were not as well-to-do as they had been in the past but they were still doing just fine compared to the average townsfolk. In the movie, the Collins were on hard times. And in the movie, Elizabeth, the current family matriarch, is aware right away that Barnabas is a vampire--that does not follow the soap either. Certain main characters were missing in the movie, or combined, two characters into one. Dr. Hoffman wasn't already there when Barnabas comes to stay in the soap like she is in the movie. And the introduction of the werewolf was, um, weird. In the soap that person was not a werewolf. Also, it seemed as though something pertinent to the werewolf situation had been cut out of an earlier part of the movie; I base this on a comment made when the werewolf shows up. But there was little point in having the werewolf in the movie at all. And there was no time travel in the movie. I remember watching "Dark Shadows" as a little kid, it was creepy, this movie was set up to be humorous.
The ending was set up for a sequel; I would watch it.
We have been watching the old soap on DVD, that is why I am sure about how things started in the show. I was way too you young when it started. And while I remember various scenes I do not recall story lines or how it ended.  So watching it this way is kind of fun. It is going a bit slower than I anticipated though; we have to find the money for the DVDs and the time for all of us to sit in front of the TV for a bit.
I mentioned I do not recall how the soap ended, I do remember not being able to watch it in those final months because I was foolish and I remember being chastised by my sister for causing us to not be able to watch it. There was this one scene that scared me and so I left the TV room and told my mom when she asked what was wrong that "Dark Shadows" had scared me. My mom didn't watch it with my sister and I and she knew little about it, I guess, and she didn't know that it usually didn't scare me like that. We couldn't watch it anymore. My sister was pissed. I shouldn't have told Mom about it. Can't go back and undo it though.
I did watch the revival series in the 90's. I do not remember much of it, it didn't last long. I do not recall it being bad though.

Writing is not necessarily something to be ashamed of, but do it in private and wash your hands afterwards.
Robert Heinlein

Monday, May 21, 2012

The Weather

So, I guess it is past time for my first post;I have been putting it off and it has not become easier to start--big surprise there. I decided if I am going to blog then I ought to blog and the weather wins out because it did.
We got an 1/8 inch of rain today.and unfortunately that is the only rain we have received since May began. April was rather dry too. I hope the rest of the growing season is not this way; it is hard to garden when it is this dry. Last year was a bit dry, mostly later, during summer, our spring was wetter than this year though. It got so hot and dry that most folks around here gave up on their gardens; we did pretty good in comparison even if it was a bad garden year in general. A couple/few years ago we had a very dry spring but a wet summer. I am hoping for a wet summer since we have no rain this spring.
We have a larger garden this year than anytime previous here (11 years). And we finally found a reliable radish for us. We have poor luck with them forming bulbs and our springs can be short enough that it gets too hot too fast for radishes or peas so we found something called a Rat's Tail radish that forms fat tasty seed pods instead of bulbs. It supposedly does not mind the heat so much also. We have had a taste of a few smaller ones and so far so great. The flavor is really good and we are already close to getting as much radish as all the  "bulb" type we have ever planted.
I suppose I ought to mention that the "we" is, as far as gardening is mostly my husband and I with a little help from one of our two daughters, the youngest, who is emerging into her teen years this year. Our other daughter doesn't help in the garden; she is autistic and it is just not something we have been able to get her into doing. We live in the Missouri Ozarks.