Notes

I get myself to work by eight 🏒

“Well you know I think my fate’s belated
Because of all the hours I waited
For the day when I’d no longer cry.
I get myself to work by eight
But oh, was I born too late,
And do you think I’ll fail
At every single thing I try?”

The famous words that Joan Baez sung so beautifully at 2 AM in the morning over the muddy fields Sullivan County’s biggest dairy man, Max Yeger during the Woodstock Concert during mid-August 1969.

It’s my goal to be into the office by eight most mornings, πŸŒ…  because that’s when most of the operators are in there and I need legislative hours when I can get them banging out new IOI Codes and manipulating data in preparation for next year while I spend my evening running label jobs for the campaign committee. It’s work that needs to get done and certainly all my experience writing R code helps enormously as I can automate things and put “sanity checks” into the code πŸ›‘ so thinks halt if something is wrong. Without sanity checks πŸ€ͺ a lot of things would slip by as I’m not a detail oriented person. I’m a data person.

Finished reading The Rural Midwest Since World War IIΒ  by J.L. Anderson on Hoopla Library Books. πŸ“– I think some time I got that physical book out from the library but it never got read it. I’ve been fascinated by the mid-west for a long time, because it’s a place with cheaper land and prices, more in the rural-style of living I crave to live and would be a better place to build an off-grid home without all the regulation and taxes of New York. Better gun laws and fewer restrictions on fires and it’s probably easier to get land further away from the peering eyes.Β  πŸ‘β€πŸ—¨ Now just to get cannabis legal in those states. πŸͺ΄ Information is power, says the boy generating up more and more IOI Codes, the more you know, the better decisions you can make. πŸ’­ Also finished upΒ  skimming through John Soares’ Camp For Free: Dispersed Camping on Public Lands in America. πŸ“™ And earlier in the weekend, I finished up Kirsten Li-Nelson’s So You Want to Be a Modern Homesteader, about her homesteading life in Northern Maine.

I dun a lot of reading this weekend, πŸ“š which is why I didn’t ride as much but still got out a fair bit, especially Saturday evening on the ride out to ol Voorheeesville. 🚴 I still have my 10 August reads to fill on Hoopla, on my reading list for the end of the month into the first few weeks of September is a book on restoring old houses πŸ”¨ – – maybe the one I started last month but didn’t finish before the loan expired – – and another book on cannabis strains, as I still want to learn more about the best ways to maximize my pot smoking experience. 🚬 One option I’m considering is restoring an old house, that would be greener option then building new, but that requires a plan, good house inspection and contractors, and doing what I can pratically do myself. 🏘 I can probably haul garbage out of a gully and paint a wall but I doubt I’m able to do anything structural.

Weekend still looks good for a long weekend. πŸ• I got the bluetooth speaker I ordered last week on Saturday, so I will be able to listen to tunes and audiobooks both riding to work πŸ”Š and while up at camp. It’s nice to have the tunes both when floating in the East Canada Creek and in the hammock. Plan to get at least one or two new audio books to read over the long weekend. πŸ“š

Back out riding around the burbs studying the houses from the road 🏠

I mean the houses in the suburbs are what the banks, insurance companies and the politicians want you to buy. Complete with the large garbage cans out front, the mowed lawns and careful landscaping. Something to be proud of as outstanding citizen, consume and toss a lot and pay a lot in taxes.

Truth is that I’m not unfamiliar with this all, just like I’m not unfamiliar with rural living. πŸ” I sometimes find it hard to believe I’ve lived in my apartment for going on seventeen years, paying over hundred thirty thousand in rent πŸ’΅ – but you need a place to live and any home I would have owned would have cost far more and there is something a lot more flexible about being invested in the markets. πŸ“‰ I am still expecting a big market decline in the coming year, so some of that money will disappear for a while. What goes down will eventually go back up. Well diversified people who started investing in early 20s, were fine made whole by the mid-30s, even if 1929 and 1930 were bleak. People think when you own a house without a mortgage you live rent free except for the broken water heater and taxes. Plus all that cost to heat a big building and to commute from my preferred rural area. I really don’t want to be a suburban homeowner. 🐷 I just want my homestead but it has to be the right property. And mostly the ride tonight was about getting in a bit of physical exercise 🦡as I’ve been home reading most of the afternoon. But I figure it never hurts to observe communities – be it urban or rural when I ride by. 🚲 A bicycle is safer and slower and gives you more time to observe.

People tell me that those who live out in the country, often are quite poor, 🏍️ making much less money then I do and have pigs 🐽 and chickens πŸ” as much to feed their family πŸ‘ͺ as a much as a hobby. The four wheelers and trucks they have are used, fix it uppers they’ve wrenched together πŸ”§ and people burn debris as it’s a cheap way to get rid of it. Same thing with hunting and fishing 🎣. I guess it’s true but they seem much richer in my mind compared to folks in the city πŸ™. I really don’t understand those fancy suburban houses.

I was annoyed that after replacing the drip pans on the stove last December πŸ«– already one had burned through and the element was falling through already. To be fair I do a lot of frying on the burner and often high temperature boiling of rice and beans. 🍚 But it didn’t seem to last long despite being $8 bucks at Home Depot compared to the $5 one I replaced it with at Wally World today, 🧼 They now have soap locked behind glass at Wally World, seems silly as who is going to steal that. I’m sure they’ve had a lot of problems with the self checkout β˜‘ and that’s why they’ve moved back to more cashiers and only want people to do self checkout for fewer than 15 items. After all, if something doesn’t scan properly how much effort are you going to put into trying to rescan it if your not a clerk? I know I’ve gotten a few things accidentally for free at the Walmart self checkout only noticed when I got home and checked the receipt. πŸ“œ Also got some lemon πŸ‹ essential oil I plan to put on the candle πŸ•― warmer at work to make my office smell like lemons rather than pumpkin for a change. Autumn’s coming!

Decided to sign up for State Farm’s Drive Safe and Save Program 🚘 mostly because it’s a way to save a few bucks potentially on insurance without reducing coverage, it’s just a nosey πŸ‘ƒ phone app πŸ“± and a dongle that pairs to your phone to know your in your vehicle driving and not for example on a city bus 🚍 or riding your bike. 🚲 Truth is I’m always curious about more information and saving money. πŸ’΅ If it doesn’t work out, I can quit the program and delete the app off my phone. I figure every buck helps towards owning that homestead some day, which is why I tell myself I ride my bike 🚲 to work whenever possible but when you make six figures little shit like this doesn’t really matter much.

Still I’m interested in becoming a safer driver. Always fascinated about learning about bad habits and how to avoid them. Truth is I don’t want to get in another wreck – ten years ago Big Red πŸ›» was hit on the expressway and while I had no long term injuries it was immediately painful in ways hard to explain and I had brain 🧠 fog days thereafter and a loaner vehicle and at times no vehicle at all thereafter. And it wrecked what was going to be a nice trip up to Moose River Plains. πŸ–₯ Plus I’m a data person and I’m fascinated by the collection and use of data. I’m not worried much about privacy unlike some but I’m fascinated how all this data will actually be used. I’m guessing it’s in part self selection – safer drivers are more likely to sign up plus when you know your being watched you’ll drive safer. πŸ’₯ And then just the discouragement of interacting with your phone while driving. I’m sure the acceleratometer and vehicle speed and braking are taken into consideration but it’s probably far less than they want you to think it is. I’m sure on the internet people have reversed engineered such things.

It looks good for riding in tomorrow 🚲 but the evening commute might be wet but it’s not the end of the world πŸ—Ί. I won’t melt. I can’t ride in on Wednesday and Friday I’m planning on taking off to head to the Adirondacks for some time – maybe the last time fully off the cell phone πŸ“± network to spend studying the clouds from the tube. β­• And smoke a bit, have a campfire, πŸ”₯ read and relax πŸ“– one more time fully off the grid for the next 79 days between now and Election Day.