Exploring the Apartment

The Faucet

So I was pretty pissed to see my landlord removed the bathtub faucet from my shower when he fixed the leaky bathtub faucet. Not because I ever took baths, but that was how I filled my water containers for camping. As he ended up replacing the entire faucet and ripping out the wall while making the he also installed a cheap waterproof wall over the sheet rock, that doesn’t match the rest of the shower stall which is yellowed plastic. I guess it doesn’t really matter, as the rest of my low rent apartment is falling apart, and honestly I’d rather pay less in rent then have a fancy bathroom. I did figure out how to use my kitchen sink to fill the water container. I’m not sure if my landlord would be happy to find I’m taking 3 or 6 gallons of water each time I camp, but I figure it’s probably a net savings to him, because I’m not flushing toilets or taking a shower while I camp. My lease (which has long been on an auto-extender clause) bans outdoor watering and car washing, but is silent on filling water jugs for camping.

I know a lot of my colleagues have much nicer apartments then I do. But I like my location and like how it’s cheap. I can get free Internet by walking down to the library or the park, I have public transit to take to work, and plenty of places to walk to get some exercise. While things are wearing out in my apartment due to age and somewhat my neglect after living there for ten years, renters don’t normally fix up their buildings themselves, and landlords only fix what is critical when a tenant resides there. No need to nice appearances when you not renting to a new person. I’m fine where I live, and in recent years have gotten the mold under control by using excessive amounts of concentrated bleach.

Dripping shower faucet turned out to be a bigger project than landlord expected

Some people dream of owning a house with marble kitchen tops, a big screen television, and hardwood floors. I’d rather own a house where I can burn my own trash, heat with wood I harvested, and power things with wind, sun, or micro-hydro. I also don’t mind firing up a gas powered generator – I’d rather burn gasoline that I bought for actual electricity used then send a check to an invisible entity plus a bunch of connection fees, that are bulk of my bill. Raise animals for meat, hunt and shoot on my own land. Sending your garbage to landfills and expensive trash fees suck. I hate sending my check every month to some distant utility, where they burn large quantities of natural gas, coal, and nuclear material to keep the lights on. I do pay a surcharge for so-called green energy like wind and small-scale hydro, but ultimately I recognize it all comes from the same big industrial pool known as the grid. I do support greening the grid and fixing urban problems like increasing recycling – but in the mean time, I’m all for making my own life more sustainable and less reliant on the urban systems.

My apartment is just a cheap place to stay when I’m making money in the city. I rarely spend time there except to sleep at night. I keep investing and saving money that will ultimately be used for buying land, and an inexpensive cabin or micro-home, somewhere that is low tax and regulation. I really prefer to spend my weekends in the wilderness, camping by a fire, listening to the birds and the wind. I like the colorful lights and music, and just enjoying those long summer nights – or the cold winter nights which seem to be eight months out of the year. I look at camping as my temporary home, a place where I can practice for my future to be.

Earth

One of my new camp flags is this pretty Earth Flag. The screen print of the Blue Marble isn't perfect, but it still is a nice flag that was quite affordable.

Taken on Sunday April 16, 2017 at Exploring the Apartment.

Finally Got a New Battery for My Laptop

It was $15 with free shipping. I ordered it on Friday and came Monday. If it only was that simple.

My laptop battery started going out about a three months ago, with shorter and shorter lifespan each time I used the battery. Then about a month ago, the laptop suddenly started to die after about 40 minutes of being unplugged unexpectedly, and a week later, the laptop battery wouldn’t work at all. I had to have the laptop plugged in all times, and it would shutdown unexpectedly when it was unplugged.

After getting paid, I ordered a new laptop battery. I ordered an extended life one, it was $20 plus $10 shipping. I was excited to get it, when I discovered it didn’t fit in my laptop. I knew the battery had a slightly different digit sequence then the current one I had, but it seemed to indicate on Amazon it would fit. I wanted an extended life battery, as I figured a cheap battery would have a short life, and this would compensate for it.mPhyULOj5CxysD_Cj2fVx5g (1)

Turns out the $20 battery didn’t fit my laptop at all. I have a return code, but I got to decide if I am going to send it back. Probably going to cost like $6-7 to send back the battery, and if I get the full $20 back from the seller (which that’s a matter of their honesty), I will will only be $10 ahead. I could see them rejecting it or reducing the return price, as I ripped the outer package, in my rush to get it open.

If I don’t return it, I could take it to any retailer that sells rechargable batteries, as they are required to take back old ones and dispose of them through a recycler. Its good to keep the lithium and other toxic materials out of environment. Got to make up for big truck I drive plus all those styrofoam plates I use at camp. I guess I could shoot the battery or see what happens when I burn it in the woods. I heard they explode in the fire! But then I’d still have the unburnable stuff to clean up, and dispose of at a landfill. Not a great idea.

Then there is free-cycle or maybe Ebay. Those might be good ways to get rid of a perfectly good battery that won’t fit my laptop.

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At any rate, the $15 battery seems to work well enough. It says I have a battery life of 3 hours and 10 minutes, fully charged. That works well enough for me. If it only lasts a year or so, that still beats paying $120 for a battery that might last 18 months. If it continues to work well enough, I probably will buy 2-3 more of these batteries, and keep the extras in storage. That way if I am out in the woods or somewhere I needed extended power, I can just swap out a discharged one for a fully charged one.

I finally got a working battery that holds a charge for a while in my laptop, after accidentially ordering the wrong battery for my laptop.