August 29, 2020 Night

Good evening! Cloudy and damp around 70 degrees on Delmar. ☁️ There is a west breeze at 13 mph. πŸƒ. The dew point is 67 degrees. The skies will clear around 9 pm.

Not a super nice day so I stayed home 🏑 and read and worked on a variety of little projects. I wanted to go for an evening walk 🚢🏻 but the threat of rain was much too high. Tomorrow I’ll get out hiking. Put together some new maps πŸ—ΊοΈand stuff for the blog, was reading another book πŸ“™ about homesteading. 🐐 Cheeses and dairy science is fascinating stuff πŸ§€ – minor changes in processing milk πŸ₯› can create vastly different effects products or more likely ruin it entirely.

I finally baked up that cookie mix πŸͺthat expired in April. Good peanut πŸ₯œ butter cookies that I bought last fall for my West Virginia trip but never eat. πŸ˜‹ I figured I better eat it before the mice get in an chew holes in the packaging.🐁It’s been a bad year for mice in the woods – something people were talking about yesterday on Facebook and I noticed we’re bad both in the Finger Lakes and Piseco Powley Road.

Tonight will have a slight chance of showers before 11pm. Partly cloudy 🌧, with a low of 58 degrees at 5am. Typical for tonight. Maximum dew point of 67 at 9pm. West wind 10 to 13 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%. In 2019, we had mostly clear skies in the evening, which became partly cloudy by the early hours of the morning. It got down to 57 degrees. The record low of 38 occurred back in 1982.

Tonight will have a Waxing Gibbous πŸŒ” Moon with 90% illuminated. At 9 PM, the moon was in the south-southeast (156Β°) at an altitude of 21Β° from the horizon, some 239,388 miles away from where you are looking up from the earth. πŸš€ At the state speed limit of 55 mph, you’ll make it there by February 27th. Buckle up for safety! πŸ’Ί The darkest hour is at 12:57 am, followed by dawn at 5:49 am, and sun starting to rise at 6:19 am in the east-northeast (77Β°) and last for 2 minutes and 59 seconds. Sunrise is one minute and 4 seconds later than yesterday. πŸŒ„ The golden hour ends at 6:56 am with sun in the east (83Β°). Tonight will have 10 hours and 44 minutes of darkness, an increase of 2 minutes and 44 seconds over last night.

Tomorrow will be mostly sunny 🌞, with a high of 72 degrees at 3pm. Six degrees below normal, which is similar to a typical day around September 16th. Maximum dew point of 58 at 7am. Northwest wind 13 to 15 mph. A year ago, we had partly cloudy skies in the morning with some clearing in the afternoon. The high last year was 82 degrees. The record high of 98 was set in 1953. The great Heat Wave of 1953.

Should be a nice autumn like day. πŸ‚ Nice change from the humidity and stormy weather today. I am thinking of doing some hiking and fishing 🎣 at Partridge Run tomorrow. Should be a great day to spend outdoors but maybe a bit chilly by the time I go out to my parents house for Sunday dinner. 🍲 But then again, Tuesday is September. Summer has quickly bit the dust.

I get so tired of hearing so many police 🚨 sirens lately. The past few months they really have been abusing them it seems. For a while they were relatively quiet, tapping the sirens only briefly at the traffic light 🚦 to warn motorists but lately it’s been non-stop and it’s annoying. That and the super throaty motorcycles and trucks 🏍. Maybe I’m noticing it more this year as I’m home all of the time I’m not in the woods enjoying the quiet. 🀫

I am planning my next trip after Labor Day Weekend. πŸ‚ I’ll have to get out my blaze orange and gun cleaned up at that point. I’m thinking the Spectulator Area most likely especially if I’m planning several weekdays because the library is a pleasant place to work for Zoom Meetings. After October 1st I might camp and work from a combination of Stoney Pond State Forest and Charles Baker. β›Ί I can probably get Wi-Fi at the Cazenovia and Hamilton libraries out there for Zoom. Remote work has its benefits. πŸ’»No permit is needed for Stoney Pond State Forest after October 1st and it’s unlikely I’ll see anyone there except maybe a grizzled old hunter. 🎫 Fishing in Nelson Swamp is a lot of fun too.

I really enjoy reading and looking at pictures of folks off grid properties on the Facebook. 🏑 I just really like the simple and the small with lots of land in remote country. Some folks are really fancy or big builders but that certainly aint me. Some are into art work and making things pretty but I’m fine with chipboard for walls. The less you have, the less to spend money on, the less to break or have to throw away regularly. πŸ› οΈ

I’ve considered doing a trip in October to the Finger Lakes πŸ’» and remote working from there but I have concerns about the length of day and having enough sunlight then to keep things charged and the long trip back to Albany after hours should something break that I can’t continue to work from there likedead fuse, inverter or other problems with the solar system which I couldn’t fix in the field. ⬛ It would be fun though to enjoy the leaves, 🍁 hunt before 9 AM πŸΏοΈπŸ°πŸ¦ƒand then work the rest of the day from camp but maybe exhausting to boot. At the National Forest you can camp for two weeks in one site, no permits required.

I also don’t want to put on too many miles or break shit in my truck πŸ”§before the state inspection in November. Since addressing the tire wear issue on the truck in June things have been a lot better at slowing the wear and I’m not concerned about this year’s inspection but I also don’t want to have any kind of costly repairs this autumn if possible. πŸ”©

In four weeks on September 26 the sun will be setting in the west (269Β°) at 6:45 pm,πŸŒ„ which is 49 minutes and 15 seconds earlier then tonight. In 2019 on that day, we had partly cloudy, rain showers and temperatures between 69 and 53 degrees. Typically, you have temperatures between 68 and 47 degrees. The record high of 90 degrees was set back in 2017.

Looking ahead, Northern Zone Regular Season 🦌 is in 7 weeks, Halloween πŸ›₯️ and the Blue Moon πŸŒ• is in 9 weeks, Small Business Saturday πŸ›οΈ is in 13 weeks, Repeal of Prohibition Day 🍺 is in 14 weeks, Boxing Day πŸ₯Š is in 17 weeks, Cold Moon πŸŒ• is in 4 months, Static Electric Shock Day 🧼 is in 19 weeks, National Cheese Lovers Day πŸ§€ is in 21 weeks, 38th Birthday πŸŽ‰ is in 5 months, Save the Pine Bush Turns 43 πŸ¦‹ is in 23 weeks, 5:30 PM Sunset πŸŒ† is in 25 weeks, Snow Moon πŸŒ• is in 26 weeks and Snow Moon πŸŒ• is in 26 weeks.

Schoharie Valley

From Lead to Ethanol | White Papers | EESI

Fact Sheet – A Brief History of Octane in Gasoline: From Lead to Ethanol | White Papers | EESI

A cornerstone of U.S. environmental policy has been the reduction of harmful tailpipe emissions from cars and trucks. Thanks to EPA regulations of mobile sources, air pollutants have been reduced by millions of tons in the urban environment. Several EPA fuel regulations have concerned octane. Octane is a gasoline additive that is needed for the proper functioning of modern engines. Octane sources have taken many forms throughout the years, both renewable and petroleum-based. They include lead, methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE), benzene, toluene, ethyl-benzene and xylene (BTEX), and ethanol (a biofuel). As adverse health and environmental consequences have been discovered for lead and petroleum-based octane providers, they have been removed from the fuel supply or decreased. 

This actually is a better article about the history of octane boosters in gasoline. β›½ 

Ethanol and Octane For Beginners

Ethanol and Octane For Beginners

In terms of its octane rating, ethanol has a rating of 113. As mentioned above, fuels with a higher octane rating reduce engine knocking and perform better. Also, almost all gasoline in the US contains 10 percent ethanol. When you mix 10 percent 113 octane ethanol with 85 octane gasoline it increases the octane two points to the normal 87 octane most consumers use. So the higher the ethanol content, the higher the octane. The octane rating for E15 (15% ethanol) is 88 octane and E85 (85% ethanol) is 108 octane.

 

It’s a gas

I remember when Hurricane Katrina hit and gas prices were like $2.15 a gallon and I was like, damn that’s expensive. A decade and half later, that’s what gas still costs. Gasoline is such an odd commodity.

β›½ πŸ’°πŸŒ€