Fifteen bucks at Walmart for a new one. I mean I could probably have driven all over on Saturday and found one at a Tag Sale or maybe found one at a thrift shop. But fifteen dollars isnβt much money in this days. But my opposition to a lava lamp isnβt monetary.
Iβve never owned a lava lamp, because frankly theyβre kind of dumb and wasteful. If I bring the lamp into my office it will be on for 40 hours a week β figure 8 hour work days for 5 days a week. If it has a 25 watt bulb, which works out to be about 1 kWh per week or 52 kWh a year. While I donβt pay for electricity in my office, and save energy by not using the overhead lamps in favor of desk lamps with energy-efficient LED bulbs, it still seems like an unnecessary waste.
Plus itβs just more stuff. It encourages the production of more lava lamps at that distant factory in China or India. More clutter in the office, something later that Iβll have to give away and somebody eventually will have to dispose. Something that will have a bulb burns out, maybe as frequently as twice a year if I plan to leave it on all day at work and it lasts 1,000 hours per bulb. Another hassle to repair, more parts to feed it, more worry and clutter on my mind. I am sure most people would just toss it in garbage when bulb burns out, not spend time fiddling around on the internet finding the proper bulb to repair it, and then disassembling and replacing the bulb.
Itβs also money that I would end up spending. I get $15 isnβt end of world, but again itβs stealing from my future. Itβs money I canβt put towards that off-grid homestead or fuel to spend traveling up to wilderness to have fires and ride my mountain bike and smoke grass. Itβs money that some day could be put towards land, solar panels, a tractor, or hogs. But I get itβs not that much money, and indeed most days the value of my investments and net worth swing much greater then that. But stupid things like this add up over time, a dollar here, a dollar there adds up to real money. After all, thatβs the goal of saving and investing.
On the other hand, I would enjoy that lava lamp, it could sit on the table in front of my desk. When there are down moments in the office, when I need a little serenity on a stressful day, I could watch the bubbles of wax and chemicals float up and down. It would make my drab office a little more interestesting, much like the artwork on the walls or the hourglass toys on my desk. It would make a very corporate-looking office just a bit more fun. And its not like Iβm moving out of this office tomorrow β there is a very good chance Iβll still be here in 13 or 15 more years through my retirement. And that could mean many hours, built over years and decades looking into the lava lamp. A lot of enjoyment for $15. Chances are it would last the whole time, as long as I got a steady supply of bulbs for to feed the fixture.
Iβve been thinking about lava lamps for a while ever since my Mom gifted my niece a lava lamp a few Christmas ago. And I donβt have get one right away. I might think about it a bit more, before rushing out to get a lava lamp.
I donβt like wasting money on mindless consumerismbut at the same time, there are certain things I like to consume that do give a lot of pleasure and enjoyment to my life.
Rockwood State Forest has a series of tent sites, with a grouping of them just beyond the parking area at the end of Cementery Road Extension in the hamlet of Rockwood off NY 29. The Cemetery Road Extension Campsites are grouped together, and are at the top of an old woods road that in a 1/4 mile takes you down to a rope and popular jumping off place into Rockwood Lake.
After hiking back to Eagle Pond -- which actually I was confused on in the map and only got the swamp below Eagle Pond, I bushwhacked onto the ridge above the swamp and looked at the mountains to the north of the pond.