|
||||||
|
DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** |
|
|||||
|
Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: Stilly River Sage Date: 09 May 26 - 11:29 AM I was mulling that same thing about letters as I wrote the last post, it must have broadcast through the ether. I'm looking at old letters in the computer now thinking "is anyone going to want to see this?" not "will it make a difference in the world?" Also the daughter of a librarian hoarder of information and my own decades of work in the library had me thinking "that could be interesting later." Now I ask "to whom?" I have fewer filing cabinets (two down from four). And their most important job is to hold up the plank of furniture-grade plywood that serves as the desktop for the old computer and the digital equipment if I ever get around to digitizing my Dad's many cassette tapes. (Those WILL go to a university archive, so it is what I should be doing now.) We (Mudcatters) donated a couple of computers to Art Thieme over the years and he put them to good use, digitizing all of his song recordings. Bob Nelson (Deckman) also. I need to take a page from that book and do the same and then clear out all of these shelves of stuff that I never even notice any more but that take up a lot of wall space behind me in the office. |
|
Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: Stilly River Sage Date: 09 May 26 - 03:26 PM I'm pacing myself today on the yard work because it's hot out there, but I've made progress on the first long raised bed. Next trip out will extend the length. I'm combining a couple of them and cutting a new path between the two that will result (where there were three). I'm in for an iced tea cool-down break, then back to the driveway. I hope this evening to run the tiller and get the bedding plants all put in place. A trip to pick up free mulch will be required soon but I have a few bags from last fall to use first. The really rotten old planks from the edges are broken and slipped into the trash bin alongside the juniper branches. Other old siding pieces (not rotten but less robust than what is going in now) will be cut to length and lay down on that new path I'm digging through the bed area. In the cleanup of duplicate files in the old HP I find that it still has a working version of the old Google Picasa photo organizing tool. I had no idea it would work but clicked on the icon and there it went, cataloging all of the thousands of photos. I'll have to see if I can make some use of it now. |
|
Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: MaJoC the Filk Date: 09 May 26 - 05:00 PM A bit of mental decluttering: I subscribe to The Observatory and Astronomy and Geophysics from the Royal Astronomical Society, and realised recently that I'm a few issues short of both. Today, I finally e-mailed RAS to ask whether my subscription has date-expired, or if the postie's eaten them. So that particular Round Tuit has landed, or is at least in flight. |
|
Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: Stilly River Sage Date: 09 May 26 - 09:45 PM I could go out and plant tonight but I'm tired and the mosquitoes will be out (though lightning bugs are also out and they're a delight). I've tilled one now-elongated bed and am ready to till the next (it needs more planks on the far end, but 2/3 of it is looking good). The routine today was to wheelbarrow various tools in and out of the garage and work for about an hour until I felt uncomfortably hot, then rolled it all back and drank iced tea in the house for an hour. This was strenuous enough and engaging enough that it was a great departure from screen time and the politics that ooze through. Time for a shower and a good night's sleep. |
|
Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: Charmion Date: 10 May 26 - 08:39 AM Up early — 0538 hr — after a broken night of coughing. I still can’t talk, let alone sing. This is driving me nuts. |
|
Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: pattyClink Date: 10 May 26 - 12:01 PM Got out early to start tackling the yard while it's not crazy hot. Sinuses are very angry right now, but hopefully they will settle down. Job one is removing the tumbleweeds. They are green, soft, and pliable now, but will turn into large, hard, thorny monsters if I let them go. I think I whined here previously about how each one had to be disassembled with loppers into many thorny pieces for bagging. Not going there again! Job two is removing miscellaneous weeds in what I laughingly call 'the garden areas'. Never knew it would be so hard to keep two small plots with cacti, dry dirt, and rocks from being overridden. Well, at least my late mom would be happy to see me out 'puttering in the garden' today, as she used to enjoy doing. |
|
Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: Stilly River Sage Date: 10 May 26 - 06:02 PM patty, we were on the same wavelength today. I struggled with a computer task for a while but knew it was killing my garden time so said 'fuck it' and went outside. I finished shaping the beds and putting sturdy board edges (most from the former patio cover.) Good move to get the tumbleweed out of the way while it's soft, and if you have tender weeds to kill now would be the time to try the strong vinegar. I had some old cans of sardines and mackerel (from a buy nothing group) for a bowl of fish slurry that went a dollop per plant as I put in the bedding plants I picked up last week. Then the bags of mulch from last fall that were still in the garage (burlap would rot if I left them outside). So there's more room in the garage, the gardens look good, and I'm hoping the forecast rain comes soon or I'll have to water (the hose is in place). There's room left for planting okra and cucumbers. I've wanted to upgrade these beds for a while and had other things to finish before I got to it this year (this is the latest I've put in the garden since I can remember). Today I was able to work without breaks because it's in the mid-60s. Yesterday was up to 90. Since the tiller and mattock were used for this my feet stayed safe in the steel toed books, but after several hours they are tired. The boots are pretty much broken in, but as heavy as they are it takes some conditioning to get used to them. A soak in a tub of hot water this evening will feel great. |
| Translate Thread |