Buying forest land, implementing solar

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swbluto said:
I solved some previously intractable problems and got my workers back to work. That probably had a lot to do with it.

Workers. You have workers now. This would happen to illegals, would they? (Ah, the pursuit of poetic justice.) So you must be needing a lot of line drawings to have workers now.

Is that you doing your mockingbird calls in the video?
 
Dauntless said:
swbluto said:
I solved some previously intractable problems and got my workers back to work. That probably had a lot to do with it.

Workers. You have workers now. This would happen to illegals, would they? (Ah, the pursuit of poetic justice.) So you must be needing a lot of line drawings to have workers now.

Is that you doing your mockingbird calls in the video?

Lol, not a live "worker", but a metaphorical worker. Sometimes my workers have issues and they need my help to restore them back into good health and get back to work.

Anyway, found, same thing happened today as last time!

Woke up, didn't get my cocoa, when to harbor freight (To return the farm jack and pick up an electric swatter. Also, bought a level.), then went to Tractor supply to pick up fencing equipment to make the perimeter for the trash bags so animals don't rip holes in them and spill it everywhere, and /bam/ same thing like last time.

Last time I was feeling really lifeless walking around.

This time, I was getting intermittent pain in my left neck near the jaw (Possible carotid pain), and then /bam/ a feeling like my chest was squeezing, for about 7 seconds, not a hard-to-miss sensation, but I wasn't feeling lifeless this time.

What is about this Tractor Supply that produces these events? Unless the timing of the relevant variables is remarkably similar (Like, time I got there).

The only notable possible risk factor I could identify was the busy interstate about 150 feet away, higher levels of emissions.

I noticed the watermelon I got later was tasting really good, so maybe I was low in bloodsugar? But, jeez, I wouldn't think I was that low from eating all those bananas and peanut butter earlier. Anyway, this kind of event is discomforting.

Well, maybe I didn't compensate my salt intake for the work load yesterday. The salt is tasting really good right now. The last time, I didn't have a lot of salt the days earlier, this time, I've been feverishly working on the driveway while salt intake have been "normal". So, maybe salt once again.

Anyway, good to see my gaze can cause women to run their arms up and down their body, lol.

It's interesting to see that there's no mention of this nonverbal behavior on google, but it seems pretty intuitive to me. And, you can see it in music videos like...

https://youtu.be/HcXNPI-IPPM?t=328

Anyhow, yes, need to get the current box down and set up the perimeter fence, and sometime soon enough, get the trash into the new trashbags and put it inside the perimeter fence. I could probably get that done later today... [Seems like light enough work; I try to put a day between my "heavy work" days, since it seems like heavy work causes my body to strain the next day or several.]

OK, the posts have been installed, now I just need to attach the fence to it. Anyway, a fence post driver is really desirable; while the sledgehammer method works, it was awkward enough trying to sledge something 7 feet off the ground, let alone the 10 foot poles I was planning on getting for the main front fence, lol. Anyway, 7 feet -> 5.5 feet off the ground once installed. So 10 feet probably is 8 feet off the ground once installed. (I didn't get a post driver because they ran out and I figured the sledge was good enough.)

I obviously need a plan for standing high enough off the ground to pound in the 10 foot poles. Not quite sure, yet, maybe I'll create a particularly sturdy 2 foot platform for standing on (I think a ladder would be a bad idea with all the movement involved with driving a post driver. And, they're a bit expensive.)

The corner posts, methinks, needs to be something other than a tpost. Maybe. Well, it definitely needs to be cemented or similarly, these t-posts are flexible in this ground. I think the corner posts along with a tightened fence are mainly to give the fence some rigidity, since the t-posts themselves are fairly flexible in the ground (Not something I would trust to keep out intruders on their own.).

This temporary fence obviously can't be tightened or the tposts would bend over and the fence possibly fail.

And, the 4 foot tall 2"x4" fence is no longer on sale; now it's 56.99 vs. 49.99 when it was on sale. Well, I'll need to watch the adverts, maybe I'll look on craigslist.

Update: And, the triangular perimeter fence has been setup. I think I will fill the trashbags tomorrow night since I only want to give the animals one night of opportunity to attack. (I need to store it overnight because the trash collection is in the morning, and collecting all the trash back into new trashbags will definitely take some time.)

And, boy, there are midget bloodsuckers here, I would guess they are mosquitos but they are /tiny/ for mosquitos. They attack my hands when I'm garbed up with my skeeter armor.

And, this fence could be used to hold a dog, so I now have what I need to contain a dog. So getting a dog is a possibility.

Out of breath climbing stairs... either a sign of hypoglycemia or heart blockage. I suppose hypoglycemia was possible today, just a little confusing. And, there's those surface chills. I thought I would often get that when not having enough sleep, but seems like it can occur with stress and also heart blockage. That was obviously a stressful thought, but it's unusual that it would produce symptoms except for the possibility of not having had enough sleep. That's what this morning felt like, despite getting enough sleep, it felt like I didn't get enough sleep. And, it definitely felt like that yesterday night... I know surface chills can also occur with hypoglycemia.

Anyway, I just investigated the back for a place to put the mosquito netting for the shower, and did not see a suitable set of trees. I think I will try to reassess it tomorrow. If I do find something that works, I could be taking my first shower in a while. While checking out the back, I found the fourth survey stake (Didn't think I had one), so now I fully know the corners of my property. Well, that'll be convenient, especially when it comes time to installing the fence. I just need to cut a line through the forest so I could see this fourth corner. Or maybe I'll get a wire and stretch it down the way.
 
Gee, 66% humidity and 73F. Definitely feels "warm and humid" outside. 30% humidity definitely feels more welcoming to hardwork. And this is supposed to be one of the drier days for the next week! Oh man, don't tell me that it's normally like this during the summer. "Hot and humid" like the locals have been warning me. :shock:

I wouldn't normally have anything against the humidity other than it dissuades against working hard, I get these rashes, and I seem to be having black mold growing in my RV that I suspect has given rise to much sneezing in recent days. If I were living in a mold free air conditioned house with the rare need for hardwork outside, like most modern American folk, I probably wouldn't have a problem with it, lol. I see why there has been no longterm indian settlements in these parts, working outside during the warmer, more humid half of the year is just unbearable, which I'm guessing typifies the traditional Indian lifestyle.

Anyway, I got started on the last bit of the driveway, and now I need to break up the large rocks. This last step is particularly hard work; the 'rocks' are large and difficult to break apart. Maybe I'll push that off towards the end of the day and get the broken down clay distributed and pounded in tomorrow.

Anyway, thinking I might have underestimated the necessary startup carb loading yesterday morning (Don't /really/ know, but those watermelon spears were exceptionally good initially), I decided to do it different today. Start off with a bit of honey and two bananas, no peanut butter, right on top and then soon after top off with two bananas + peanut butter for longer term energy. I also had about 1000mg of sodium via my pickles (I need to start picking those up), and definitely a noticeable improvement in feeling as compared to yesterday morning. I still get that fleeting carotid pain(?) every now and then, so I suspect possible complications that the hypoglyemia tends to elucidate, but it's a mere suspicion. At least some of fleeting neck pain could be of cervogenic origin, especially since it seems like I have something going on at C8. I just don't necessarily know which ones.

And, I think I were buying some property in a neighborhood... I would make sure it wasn't a high density neighborhood, and it if it was, I'd definitely make sure there'd be some kind of regulatory body governing the area. I think I'm finding out that some of these people in this "Freedom zone" like playing their party music during the warmer months, and apparently the bass can travel at least 1/3rd a mile away. I could definitely hear it last night at 1:30 a.m.; thinking maybe I need to call these people in? Not sure if it would be any good...

I think that's one of the things that HOAs are good for, keeping that kind of sleep disrupting behavior minimized. At least I would hope.

I would think large area parcels (5 acre lots) would have a similar affect, due to the low density. Unless you got "lucky" and your neighbor regularly hosted loud parties, lol.

I have heard high powered firearms coming from this party in the past... thinking maybe they 'projecting their power'.... as in, "you can't stop us, we've got firepower!"... I would hope cops could do something about it, because vigilante justice would probably get vigilante in trouble and the perp gets off scot free. And, it's a shame to think nothing legitimate could be done to something like that. I'm all for "freedom to enjoy your property", but ones soundwaves doesn't stay on ones property, they tend to trespass on others property and interfere with the enjoyment of others property. I've purposely arranged my generator to minimize noise that can be heard by the neighbors, and I'm just pretty lucky there's one direction where there's no neighbors for at least some while.

----------------

Okay, no Q-doba around Houston,TX. Apparently there was 3 of them, but all are permanently closed, lol. The nearest one appears to be in Austin,TX?

My guess with them closing here was because of all the low-price taco vendors in Houston. No shortage of mexican taco people here; there's 3 of them in my tiny town, lol. (The authentic mexicon tacos taste pretty good and definitely healthier than American fastfood. You can healthy subsist off this food, but not so much American fast food, lol. The vegetables are definitely fresh and plentiful in the mexican tacos.)

Beef tacos are $1 each here, and the chicken tacos are $1.50 and $1.65 from the two other vendors. I don't like the $1.50 tacos because the chicken tastes like leftovers. The fajita tastes pretty good, I think it's essentially steak?

Houston qdoba comment, 5 years ago
If you like burritos you have to check this place out. Been my favorite for years, finally glad they are back in Houston.

Lol, they were nonexistent before? Well, they are now, once again, lol.

I personally like their pico de gallo and sour cream. The mexicans don't offer sour cream, I guess it's isn't traditional mexican fare?

And... The driveway material has now been entirely spread out. Just need to let it dry for a day or two, and then pound it in, then do some final adjustment, than start driving my van over it (Once it's completely dry), and I have a usable driveway during the dry times, lol. During the more rainy times, I won't be able to use the driveway to move vehicles across it. I would have to get gravel, which I have no problem against, I just have no viable way to pick it up. I don't know how you guys are finding people who lets you load it in trashcans... the ones I found don't allow that. They require a trailer or dumptruck or similar.

Anyway, the "hard work" with the driveway is done, now it's just a matter of time until complete.

Anyway, earlier today when waking from my afternoon nap, I was feeling really lifeless so I started walking which kind of helped... then I figured, "If feet impact improves circulation, what happens if I pound my feet?", so i did just that, and the lifelessness went away fast, woohoo! I figure that the lethargy during the midday from being unpleasant to work outside might cause my circulation to impair itself, producing that lifeless tiredness. But, it might've been a carb shortage; seems like hard work increases my glucose metabolism for the next 8-12 hours, so I think working out hard in the morning time is pretty much ideal, the end of the day is when one should be winding down. It doesn't seem ideal to go to bed with glucose-starved muscles; in healthy people, I'm sure it's harmless...

I don't really know how necessary carbs are. It sure didn't seem like that muscle man's diet of spinach, mushrooms and meat made him particularly lifeless (Granted, I don't know if he gets carbs somewhere else or some other time.); it just seems like working hard makes that honey taste so good, leading me to think they're important, lol.

And, while picking up the trash today, I lifted the stack of wood so I could unpin one of the trashbags and...

I saw a bunch of ants tending to these white blobs (Some kind of larva) on the hardwood door. That defied my understanding on how ants work.

And, a gigantic mouse hopped up from my door onto the stack of wood. I'm thinking he was probably a rat, based on how large he was, but he didn't look particularly ugly. He looked "cute" just like any mouse, lol. That's the first time I've seen a mouse/rat in this area. And, I saw another snake earlier today, a bit thinner than the first snake I saw a couple days ago. Boy, the wildlife I'm finding here seems to be booming by the day.
 
It's the next morning, now 6:40 a.m., and I was about to munch on a banana, and I heard a crow. With the stronger fleeting left carotid/jaw pain this morning, and the fact I haven't heard/seen a crow in many months since moving here, I was a bit paranoid it was predicting the finale. But, I later realized it was probably attracted to my neighbor's property 75 feet from me because it has been cleared out; apparently crows like open spaces, which would explain why I haven't really seen/heard that often here in the middle of the forest. So, in all likelihood, this creature didn't go out of his way to be a sign of the prophecy, lol.

And, now I'm just waiting for the driveway material to dry out and then it's ready to tamp in. Then the driveway needs to dry out some more, and then it's ready to drive on. In the meantime, I should be focusing on clearing out the back.

And, FREE mulberries from the roadside mulberry tree down the block! The really dark ones are definitely sweet and not sour and wow, they taste freaking amazing. It looks like the tree is 'everbearing' while it's in season, and looks like it's currently ripening at a rate of 10 berries a day. I ran out of bananas so now I'm looking at finding other fruits, and that mulberry tree fit the ticket for now, lol.

Man, now I just need to find out all the berry trees/bushes/etc. and try to overlap them to get year-round production. I think I might be giving up on the idea of year-long tropical production because of the lack of solar during the winter. (Sun angle at 50 degrees from the vertical, so a little weak, I'd say an average of 45 degrees during the winter. And, sun coverage is only 40% during the winter.) BUT... I would still be capable of growing tropical fruits since I could protect the leaves from frost, even though fruit production would be insubstantial during the winter. Winter time would likely be a good time for cool-weather vegetable production, especially the shade vegetables.

https://www.thespruce.com/growing-vegetables-without-full-sun-2540014

Salad Greens, such as leaf lettuce, arugula, endive, and cress.
Broccoli
Cauliflower
Peas
Beets
Brussels Sprouts
Radishes
Swiss Chard
Leafy Greens, such as collards, mustard greens, spinach, and kale
Beans

Peas looks good. (A pleasant, sweet starchy carb packed with green vegetable goodness. I currently eat peas.)

https://www.fast-growing-trees.com/Black-Beauty-Mulberry-Tree.htm
You'll be picking these one-inch sweet fruits from June to August

Well, these are producing abundantly in early may here, so I'm guessing their "Houston season" is from May to September.

I need to find the local berry farms, because I did see seasonality information on one of them.

While checking out Blessington, I noticed...

https://blessingtonfarms.com/hydroponics/

There are no soil borne diseases and plants have fewer pests. More food can be produced in less space. We are currently growing 72,000 U-Pick strawberry plants on one and a half acres instead of using 15 acres. We use only about 5% of the water used in traditional strawberry farming.

That sounds appealing, especially with my "limited land, limited water" scenario. Apparently this works for strawberries, I'm not sure if it works other berries? Would think it'd work for mulberry trees.

Okay, so the current list of "long harvest season" trees .

Blueberry (May-September) [Perpetua brand has two crops a year]
Strawberry(April-September)
Black Mulberry(May-September)

Blackberries have a particular harvest time as do the other ones I saw.

I guess there are no "year long" producers. Oh, well, that seems about right... the leaves here didn't come about until late march, so I wouldn't expect fruit until sometime after.

It does seem like these berry trees like the Ditches, so I can tell they like moist soil. Makes sense as they need water for sugar production.

I think I'm going to get a greenhouse going just to see if I can get year-round fruit production from the more promising fruit plants. And, I already have a greenhouse, so don't really need to do anything special, lol.

And, I just found out... I can bend the mulberry tree over and pick whatever berry I want from the branches, lol. No need to "shake the tree" for me, lol.

And, what's with these itchy white bumps on both my elbows all of a sudden?

I'd believe mosquitos if it weren't for the fact it's both elbows at the same time and I have no other mosquito bites.

What is dermatitis herpetiformis (DH)?

Dermatitis herpetiformis (DH) is an intensely itchy skin disease. It causes clusters of small blisters and bumps. It typically affects people in their 30s to 50s, but it can happen at any age. This lifelong condition affects more men than women.

When's the last time I intentionally ingested gluten? Like, 2 weeks ago.

The only source of gluten contamination would have to be corn tortilla tacos. Perhaps the corn tortillas are prepared on a floured surface, I don't know. I do know they cook up the tortillas somehow, so it's plausible there's gluten contamination somewhere along the way.

And there's this kind of nice smelling tree with finger-like clusters of yellow buds hanging off the branches (Flowers?), and it's pretty popular with the bees. You swear you're walking past a bee hive when walking past this tree, lol. I need to figure out what tree this is... Such variety here. There's apparently a wild persimmons tree in the area and it seems like all the fruit trees here are growing on the banks of the ditch. Kind of making me think I should create my own ditching (or amplify the existing mini-ditches in the forest floor.)... It seems during the warmer summer months, the water table is a bit lower, so the ditching seems to make fruit trees more practical in this area that can have droughts. And most fruit production happens during the warmer sunnier months.

And, I officially have no idea what kind of tree it is. It's fairly distinctive compared to the other trees here, though, making me think it's been classified.

FOUND IT!

It's a chinese tallow tree.

tallowtree-0.jpg


Apparently it's a non-native invasive species and I kind of wonder how it found it's way into the middle of this forest, since I doubt there's too many people nearby that have purposely planted these trees. This tree must release millions of seeds and they just follow the wind and the .1% will grow a tree wherever they happen to land.

Anyway, I noticed I was getting tired earlier, and tested by bloodsugar by tasting honey, and it tasted pretty good so I figured I was likely getting low. Fueled up, about an hour later, getting tired again. I was a little befuddled as I was sure my blood sugar levels were fine, and tasting the honey confirmed this (Didn't taste like "Eat some more!"), and so I figured that likely sitting had caused impaired circulation and thus tiredness. I walked about 800 steps (1/4 mile), and I'm really feeling awake now. Well, I'm thinking I need pretty regular breaks, like every 30 minutes and just walk two laps or do something (Like breaking rocks), and so I'm using software now to get that going.

And, I think I'm going to start adding salt to foods instead of buying presalted foods. It seems that when I add salt to foods, I can add as much as I want as I go along, which pretty much ensures I'll get as much as my body needs. Presalted foods lacks that flexibility. Plus, for some reason, freshly added salt tastes better than foods soaked in it. I'm guessing that's because there's a more direct absorption/flavor-impact with freshly applied crystals. The whole "Keeping eating it until it no longer tastes good" seems like a pretty reliable method. It seems that salt is pretty important down here, with the kind of weather that makes you lightly sweat just sitting there.

I'm suspecting that low sodium was truly underlying my tiredness, not solely because of "sitting too much".
 
Oh, I just realized what I could use a mill for. I could make molds! That's actually pretty darn cool. With my lead melting pot, I could cast low-temp alloys and create parts, which sounds like it'd be pretty awesome. (I'm pretty sure as long as the metal casing doesn't melt, it won't "stick" to the part? I.e., I could cast melted aluminum in a stainless steel mold.)

I remember a time when I was selling chocolate bars, and they weren't moving too quickly, so they were sitting there and I was hungry so... I just ate them, lol. Yeah, I paid for them eventually, but that was kind of a deal at the time. The girl who stole her uniform reminded me of this. I understand her reasoning for stealing, it was likely her only way to keep her highschool cheerleading uniform, probably one of the most important things in her highschool life. I got to keep my navy uniforms, and I made sure I did. Not that I really care about them now, 2 years later, but maybe I will in the future. Who knows.

Looking back on Nuke school... I can't really say I reminiscence fondly of the overall experience. The parts that seem possibly cherishable, have even their own uncherishable aspects. Now, DTP... well, that was memorable but it was intrinsically temporary. I'm guessing it was more memorable because of the more relaxed culture and the friendships within. Had the "free time" to cruise the town with friends, and my friends there needed me to give them a ride, unlike back in Nuke School. No one really needed me nor my car, and my friends there didn't really seem to care about 'exploring the town', interested solely in their MMORPGs. They just weren't that adventurous.
 
I always thought forging was cool. Seems that forging + milling machine molds = awesome. And, injectable wax + steel molds + (greensand or plaster) forging/casting = awesome.

Anyway, went for a walk around the block, trying to find other fruit trees. Did not find a single one along the 2/3 mile of road I walked. it seems that this particular corner I'm near is where the fruit trees are, probably because it's at the "bottom" of a series of slight hills, so the soil on the side of the ditch here is probably a little more moist here than other ditches elsewhere, favorable for native fruit production.

While on my walk, apparently I came across a nearby dog who I did not see, but I could hear growling, so I lightly jogged in the direction away from the area he was likely guarding. Luckily, he did not follow and engage me in a sword fight.

Now I'm just kind of wondering what kind of soil modifications might be optimal for growing fruit trees and bushes. Should I dig ditches and then partially fill the soil back in with the loamy sand and whatever topsoil and musroom compost? (Otherwise, i'd be growing the trees in clay, not the best medium for roots.)

It does seem like watermelons benefit from this design, at least in Dallas. That is, creating depressions in the ground and watering. (According to one Dallas gardnerer. The common advice of creating mounds to shed water didn't work for the dry area of Dallas according to him, unlike depressions, which worked like gangbusters.)

And, the destitute guy with a bicycle who warned me of thieves just went by. Thinking maybe I should be concerned, as it appears he's purposefully riding past my property now that he's aware of it. (He's never ridden past before.) Well, getting a fence up once I get the RV on the property is a high priority. And, I think I'll need to weld on fencing onto these tall gates to create a formidable gate. The gate seems to be a common weak-point in the local area. I'm not so concerned with vehicle entry as I'm concerned with personnel entry; this bicycle guy doesn't have a vehicle and there seems to be a fairly high theft risk in his case.

Man, now doing a midday grocery visit would be risky with this guy here. There's a risk of breaking in my RV. The risk at night is a bit lower because no one willingly travels down these creepy forest woods at night, I've found. No street lights = dark as sin. It's just that the dark hours are getting a bit late. and other businesses I want to visit will be closed, so it'd be a risk. Maybe think I should increase internal security measures; locking my equipment to the RV.

Update: OK, he travelled away and he was in the tiny town while I was about. No worries. Anyway, I've gone the entire day without feeling tired at all! Wow, amazing. It's either because 1) I made sure my sodium intake was sufficient using the "Add salt as desired" method 2) Using workrave software, I was never sitting more than 30 continuous minutes at a time.

I don't really know which one, but I highly believe that both are better practices than what I had been hitherto been practicing. I don't necessarily think I can reverse the inadvertent damages I might have caused through those neglicenses over long periods of time, but it appears I can keep the tired/lifeless and, hopefully, associated cardiac symptoms at bay.

Anyway, had the watermelon... wasn't really craving it. But, boy, I was really craving those bananas! Had 5 straight in a row. Makes me think I was running short on something they provided... potassium... b1,b2,b6... I don't know, but they were tasting quite good compared to the sugary watermelon.

I felt tempted to exercise my Spanish in Burger King, but they didn't really offer what I would've accepted. Hardly anyone offers corn-based options, besides mexicans. There's chinese, but they aren't that close to me.

Anyway, earlier today there was a fuzzy black caterpillar bumbling across the road. I took my machete and cut it in half because I was feeling aggressive (Likely because I ran out of bananas), and the ants started swarming around it. Curious, anyway, I went back to work and came back later and wondered what came of this caterpillar, nowhere to be seen. What the hell happened to it? So, I started following the road expecting to find it somewhere, and sure enough, I saw like 10 ants carrying off small chunks of the caterpillar, carrying the chunks as a team. Woah, it looks like 1) The ants actually cut this caterpillar up into small chunks and 2) Carried the small chunks using 10-12 or so ants as a team, carrying it all the way back to the colony. That's pretty amazing, these ants are some pretty sophisticated creatures, showing human-like levels of cooperation.

I personally saw two separate teams carrying two separate chunks; the other chunks must've been carried off already by other teams, or by these particular teams earlier.

I didn't know ants were carnivores. They're like humans, hunting mammoths in packs.

And, boy, I can tell I'm a bit stronger than the average man. This guy was acting like he was majorly straining carrying that welded wire roll, it was like a carrying a light sapling for me (Easy). I can tell working the land with my hands is making me pretty strong. It's interesting I could do 10 chinups (Haven't tried recently) when I've never did chinups before and never really lifted weights out here, other than trees and clay.

(I got the welded wire for the first stage of fence. The second stage, the gardens, don't really need to be that secure, so I'm going as cheap as I can there; I probably should keep the rabbits out. And these rabbits like the nighttime and they appparently can dig under fences... so they might be a challenge... I might need some screening for the vegetable patches.)

Anyway... as to notable medical happenings today... After I got done running about 1/4 a mile, my chest felt... I don't know how to describe it.. fuzzy and full. Maybe that's not the right description, it just didn't feel normal (And by normal, I really mean, didn't feel anything.) but it wasn't painful. It was just a bit unusual, since I've never felt that before. Even after running. It waned after 5-10 seconds as I walked along.

Anyway, I was subsisting off of canned carbs this morning so that might have had something to do with it. Peas seem to be more satisfying than corn, and salt tastes much better on peas too boot, so I'm focusing on building my canned pea reserves over the corn. Plus, they have higher levels of important minerals found in high quantities in spinach, like magnesium, folate and the such.

And, I'm jacking up my carb intake, thinking it might be insufficient. I'm thinking maybe low-carb->anxiety and/or hypoglycemia->cardiac. So, while I would normally get 3 bunches of bananas for 3 days, I got 5 bunches. Bananas are cheap carbs, and they have all the important minerals, besides green-leaf specific ones (Like Vit K). And they taste quite good and are fairly satisfying, especially with peanut butter. I don't really like how I can't find slightly green bananas at the store, though. These bananas get spotty by the end of 3 days. Makes it hard getting that constant "perfect unspotted yellow" state throughout the week (Spotted ones can taste good in the right context, but they tend to not be as satisfying for long periods of time, likely due to the lower-starch/higher-sugar/higher-GI state.)
 
Sometime(About 30-60 minutes) after eating the watermelon and a small bowl of panda express brown rice, the pain in my right upper jaw became really noticeable, and tracing it, I could tell it originated back to the pocket in the gum line near the back right upper molar and the gumline there was feeling slightly irritated and itchy, tale tale sign of bacterial invasion. Well, this is war. I suspect this dude is causing/aggravating my heart, as it was feeling uptight when that upper jaw pain was pinging.

In other news, I found that never allowing myself to sit for more than 30 minutes at a time was /super effective/. Come 11 p.m., I was out like a rock, lol, as if I had been working out all day when in reality, I wasn't. I was actually on my butt for most of it (Granted, I probably did collectively walk 4-5 miles or so, but there has been other days where that's been true, too, and I never felt like being out like a rock so early.). Yep, so I'm thinking this a good habit to have.

I was actually somewhat concerned feeling so instantly and ineluctably sleepy, since the upper jaw pain was happening earlier. And, to be clear, that has never happened on the days where I had biked 10 miles, or just really pounded in the clay and my glucose demands skyrocketed (High energy expenditure), so it's clear that this uncontestable sleepiness isn't related to energy expenditure in the day but rather to a lack of sitting continuously for some period of time (I arbitrarily capped it at 30 minutes, since it seems the tired and waking-up-feeling-like-death spells come after 45-60 mnutes or so.)

I didn't work hard yesterday at all, unless you consider walking 1/3 a mile 'hard work' (To be clear, I was never sweating from walking, lol.). My glucose demands didn't really seem substantially above normal like shoveling a good amount of clay will do.

And, today, I'm switching focus to the backyard.

And, yesterday, I got a container to dispense the 55 gallon drum water from. The 55 gallon drum is kind of cool, but it's not really convenient to access (Especially since I have to climb through back to open it up ever since the rear electricity seemed to disappear.). With this, I can access it pretty easily for things like.... filling shower bags and washing my hands, lol.

(Now I think I understand why that guy who moved to florida in a van got excited when he installed a sink. In his case, however, I don't think he bought land down there (It's a wee bit too expensive, especially for him if he couldn't afford an RV, which I'm assuming.) so I don't entirely know his living arrangements.

And, where the fruit trees seem to grow abundantly (On the side of the road ditch at the bottom of a series of slight hills), it does seem like the land is declining downwards and going towards a creek, which my neighbor has mentioned (I can't see it, so I just have to believe him). So, I suspect that fruit trees tend to grow abundantly near rivers/creeks/etc.; and, in the wild, fruits would be sourced near these bodies of water. Except for the really rainy areas of the world, I'm sure they get enough rain and the soil is persistently hydrated enough where fruit trees can grow anywhere.

He tells me that local panthers like visiting the creek. With the abundance of wildlife I've seen here, I don't think I can doubt panthers. Google is telling me there are more jaragundis than black panthers in this area, so it might be a jaragundi.

Jaragundi images: https://www.google.com/search?q=jaragundi&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi00avJ2efTAhUl3IMKHVFuCzk4ChD8BQgIKAM&biw=1440&bih=808

Update: Wow, just got the second sleep in and slept like a rock then too! Amazing. Did I just find the cure to insomnia? Don't sit for more than 30 minutes at a time.

I suspect this helps keeps the body's internals active throughout the day, which then commands the body to rest to replenish everything, thus the "sleeping life a rock" effect. I guess if the body's internal shut down due to too much sitting, they aren't properly depleted by nightfall, so a slowness/difficulty/inability to fall asleep can ensue.

Actually, let's be a bit more comprehensive with the possible causes of yesterday's 'sleeping like a rock' affect. What was unique about yesterday compared to most of recent history?

-Ensured sufficient salt intake via adding it to canned vegetables as I went along.
-Ate some brown rice with some shrimp from Panda Express.
-Sat for 30 minutes maximum at any one time.
-Strong pinging pain in my upper right jaw an hour after consuming the watermelon and rice (Actually felt some spontaneous fleeting stuffiness sensation in the right side of my head about 15 minutes after eating the watermelon, then I ate rice about 10 minutes later. The strong pinging pain came on about 45 minutes after that.).

Any of those could be responsible for the sleeping like a rock affect. My money is on the lack of sitting hypothesis, but the salt and brown rice intake are contenders.

Anyway, I need to get into the practice of chewing on some garlic. I'll need to find my garlic, I'm sure I have some somewhere.

https://www.organicconsumers.org/old_articles/organic/bananas022403.php

"The chimpanzees are able to tell the difference between the organic and the regular fruit," Melchiorsen reported: "If we give them organic and traditional bananas, they systematically choose the organic bananas, which they eat with the skin on."

"But they peel the traditional bananas before eating them," he added.

Copenhagen Zoo, which hopes to be awarded a "green label" as an environmental zoo, began last year
feeding its animals at least 10 percent organic products.

Eating the banana with the skin on is the way it's meant to be, you say? Well, I guess that makes sense since I assume the skin has most of the antibiotic compounds, just like every other fruit. It just seems so abnormal, lol.

I guess in cultures where you eat everything you can get ahold of, because food isn't necessarily that abundant, this would make good sense. Let nothing go to waste. And, I get the sense fruits in the wild aren't particularly common.

Man, I need some flexible mosquito gloves. My leather gloves work well, but you lose some fine motor control. I wonder if there are less loose ones out there?

Looks like thinsulate gloves are a winner according to a guy at https://backpackinglight.com/forums/topic/46752/ . Now it's questionable if I'll find them around here... SInce they're usually designed for winter wear and Houston isn't exactly known for cold weather.

And, holy crap, $10 tacos in West Houston. I get my chicken tacos for $1.65, and I could get them as low as $1 if I ate beef tacos. They aren't comparable to Taco bell tacos because taco bell tacos aren't really that's filling. They don't serve beans and rice and plenty of hearty vegetables with their tacos; they use nutritionally void iceberg lettuce filler for theirs. And they certainly don't use pico de gallo and offer salsa verde, that's for darn sure.

Update: And, I just ate an organic banana peel. Wow, kind of surprised me - didn't taste bitter at all. I guess the bitterness I typically associated with banana peels is from the pesticides on traditional banana peels. I see that monkeys can tell the difference, lol. It doesn't really taste like anything, but it has that "meatiness" about it, that's kind of filling. I'm thinking that banana peels are supposed to be consumed with the flesh, since I would assume that they would be filling that way, whereas straightup bananas without the peel aren't usually filling on their lonesome (But with peanut butter, they usually are.).

So, debating whether I should get into consuming the peel as a habit. When I'm brave enough, I think I might try eating an entire banana, with the skin unpeeled. But, not right now, lol.

And those "blue h20 55 gallon plastic drums" I picked up that had a little vinegar left over? That's not all it had, it also had a little raw chicken meat as well. I found this out while I trying my hardest to suck the vinegar through my siphon hose, eventually a piece of raw chicken breast came out of the hose, lol. That's why it was so hard to suck! lol.

Now I can hear the jokes coming now, "I bet you suck so hard, you can suck a chicken breast through a garden hose", lol.

And, that water is definitely not good to use for a shower. I need to empty it and get all the remaining chicken breasts out; I'm assuming there's more. It seems doubtful my siphon magically located all the chicken breasts and it picked up two.

And, it turns out my effective networth is substantially above average for my age. I guess that makes a bit of sense, I'm a saver and business investor at heart (More of a business investor right now). I minimize frivolous spending. So it'd make sense i would have a higher networth than most my age. The average person in this particular area came to own these properties at the age of 45-55 years old; I bought it at 29. So, even though I suspect I might be doing poorly, I'm actually doing spectacularly well for my age.

And, I'm finding that 3-4 p.m. is about my favorite time of the day. I guess it's because the sun is at a some 30 degree angle, which effectively increases the amount of solar rays hitting me, compared to when its nearly 0 degrees (0 degrees relative to the direction I'm facing, east/west.) overhead during midafternoon. It's interesting what I'm finding out going for a walk every 30 minutes. I guess by extension, that'd also be true of 10-11 a.m., but it was cloudy and raining this morning, lol.

Update: Wow, lots of fuzzy black orange-striped caterpillars on the road at 5:50 p.m. today. I wonder why?

Update: Wow, second day when I went the entire day without getting tired and falling asleep and then waking up like death. Could be the salt or the maximum sitting limits, I don't know what, but it's working. I suspect the maximum sitting limits play a strong role, because I have long noticed that trend. Sitting too long = poor circulation and sluggish.
 
Okay, so I need to come up with my pug wanted listing. I don't think it's going to be very effective, but I think it's worth a shot. [Pugs have been in short supply recently]

Looking for a pug, $600, with first set of shots.

I"m looking for a pug puppy and I'm willing to dish out $600 for first dibs of the litter or $500 otherwise, and they must have had their first set of shots and been in your possession for at least 2 weeks after the first set of shots. You can get them cheap at the local Tractor Supply store on Saturdays. At least that was true of the one in Conroe, TX; it might depend on the local Tractor Supply store, you could call and find out if they have "Vet shot saturdays". I grew up with a pug in my childhood, and I'm looking one for my home, so please let me know if you know anyone or if you happen to have one for sale. I will need to see pictures of the pug's parents.

While I don't condone stealing, if you happen to find a pug puppy in a neighbor's yard and it goes 'missing' one day, don't tell and I won't ask. I report all self-admitting thieves to the police at once. Stealing's bad people, don't do it.
 
-Okay, so yesterday, slept from 11-4, and then 5:30-8.

Tonight, I've slept from 11-2:10 and now from 2:40-4:00. The first awakening was distinct because there was a somewhat noticeable chest pressure sensation along with it, but I don't know the source. I'm only mentioning this because the sleep pattern tonight is a little unusual.

So I think I can cross out walking every 30 minutes as a possible cause of sleeping like a rock. Although, I was quite sleepy compared to most other nights. Maybe my leg muscles are being built up? Walking a mile every 1.5 hours.

I guess the other defining difference of that particular day is that I felt fairly full with having ate the quarter watermelon, 4 bananas and brown rice from panda express and those carbs clearly carrscied over into the next morning (Didn't feel like I was craving the honey or bananas come morning). So, perhaps I was well carbed up for sleep that particular day and notso mfferthuch yesterday night? I don't really have a solid feel on how many carbs I consume with the bananas, but I can't say I was feeling particularly hungry yesterday, suggesting I was eating "enough".

Update: Okay, went back to sleep from 6-8:18 (apparently took a walk to get sleeping again), and I woke with the distinct feeling as I I were stretching out the solidiification of my neck joints, with all the nausea that goes with it. (At least I'm assuming that's what's causing the nausea.)

I don't know if my neck was implicit in last night's happenings or what, but it's plausible. I could see a neck issue waking me up, causing cortisol to surge, and then subsequently inducing an Angina like issue. It might be the angina like issue that wakes me up more so than the neck pain itself... even though the neck pain is what triggered it...

It's hypothetical. I know I welcomed that "sleeping like a rock" day with open arms, and I think I can possibly figure out its secrets.

I'm gonna stop slicing those black/orange caterpillars just because I wanted to see the ants cut them up and carry them off, lol. I think god may be warning me to stop with the needless homicides, lol.

Looks like HF has a 25% off coupon this Mother's day weekend and it appears that they offer this particular coupon 2-3 times a year (The only other known time is New Year's day.).

So, the $699 mill would be $524, and it'd probably be $560 after shipping costs. When they weren't using coupons like this, the 'sale price' for the mill was $529.

With the 20% coupon, which apparently happens often enough (Every month), it'd be $559 or around $596 after shipping.

I thought it was cute someone complained of the plastic gears. I'm thinking "Just mill up some metal ones", lol.

And to get the bare minimum tooling and equipment to use the mill would be $220, including shipping, at http://www.littlemachineshop.com . (mini mill starter kit[clamps,parallels,edge/hole finders,etc.] + end mill holder + end mill set + vice)

So a milling machine would be a $780 purchase with bare minimum tooling.

The rotary table with indexing looked pretty interesting. Looks like that's how you'd make precision gears. But, if you CNC'd the sucker, I wouldn't think you'd need the rotary table.
 
nicobie said:
My son in law bought that mill/lathe. It's a POS. Not capable of even doing crude work.

Really? The harbor freight reviews make it sound like the bee's knees. Does it have "too much" play for high precision work? What about... if you don't need .001" tolerances... can it do .05" tolerances?

And, I'd want a pug because it was the defining breed of my childhood. I don't want just any dog. And, I really don't want a large dog for the higher feeding costs.

I thought about English bulldogs, but I saw the YT vids of them, and they seem like they're a bit sluggard and topheavy and kind of retarded.

That's one of things that my pug had: She could read my intentions and acted accordingly. She could tell pretty accurately when to distrust me and when not to, lol. (That was only that particular one; the other one I had in the past distrusted me all over, and the other one was just a bit too obsequieous and not very playful. She was also deaf. To get another dog like that, all I really have to do is find the dog who's constantly playing with others and domineering.)

[Btw, I figured out she could tell when to distrust me based on the tone of my voice, lol. I'm guessing she could tell when it had a "mischievous" tone, lol.)

I don't think a retarded bulldog could do that.

OH... nevermind, you're talking about the mill/lathe combo they used to offer. Harbor freight doesn't offer that anymore, and the identical one on Amazon indeed has pretty low reviews.

I'm specifically looking at the minimill, it's not a lathe.

AND... I just found out that...

20 bananas separated from each other but laying in a big pile matured faster than bunch of 4 bananas still attached.

The 20 bananas have brown spots all over them while the 4 bananas in a bunch that's been separated 3 feet from the other bananas are still yellow with no brown spots or very few brown spots on one banana.

I think this experiment proves that it's not "detaching from the stemholder" that slows down the bananas maturation, it's physically separating them from each other with distance!

It seems the ethylene has an effective range of 1 foot or something (Maybe 3" or 6"), so the closer the bananas are to each other, the faster they ripen.

And, this makes a lot of sense. The more bananas in a small area means there's going to be higher levels of ethylene in that small area (Due to each banana producing a certain amount of ethylene, which adds up), thus they'll mature faster.

Apparently there's brown recluses here that will leave a hole in your leg when they bite. I think I've killed a few of them.

So, I think I figured out how to keep them from climbing. Put the feet of the bed in water; for preventing them from dropping down from the ceiling right onto the bed, I think they could be denied the area by leaving metal stripping on the ceiling around the bed, and then energizing it by using a fence energizer. Any spider that tries to walk across it should get get zapped and fall off.

That might get annoying at night, though, assuming there's an audible arcing sound when the zap occurs. Probably should find something with an adjustable voltage or some such; maybe electric fences don't usually make a sound when zapping, that'd be ideal.

Anyway, this transient sharp heart pain that I've googled, google seems to suggest pericardial inflammation (Pericarditis of the heart) which apparently can be caused by a bacterial or viral infection. Well, bacteria is a pretty sound suggestion, with the suspected irritated upper right molar + heart association.

For me, I'd suggest keeping blood sugar low through low GI consumption(Might be what brown rice did for me that one night), minimize gum irritation, stay physically active, get adequate sun, maintain a good mood, and eat garlic and green leafy veggies.

Update: I noticed that the largest vice offered for the mini mills was 3", and I'm thinking that's just a little too tiny for creating molds. I'm sure there's a lot of molds I could create at that size, but If I were plunking down some $1000-$2000 for the kind of equipment that could do it, I'd prefer not to waste my money on something that could only create molds for 1/2 the things I want to make, and instead buy right the first time with something with an 8" table or larger. So, that means I should have at least $2000 to buy the mill + CNC equipment + mill equipment so that's clearly not going to be a priority right now. I already have a CNC router that can work on aluminum with low enough feed rates, I would assume, and I could probably create suitable molds for casting low-temp alloys and also machine machining wax. I should probably maximize my use of existing equipment before graduating to full sized mills.

On that note, the current priorities:

Fence
Dog
Shed

The priority of the shed is debatable. If I can create a secure enough fencing, then an enclosed structure should be good enough for housing equipment. But, I would want something that's at least somewhat adequate at keeping bugs out, and might as well be somewhat secure if it's housing expensive equipment.

AND... the driveway is packed in! Just need to let it dry for 2 more days or so, and then drive over it with my van to make it vehicle worthy kind of packed in. Then I can back my RV onto the property, work on the fence and gate and get the area fenced in. Get the tarp covers to cover the RV and storm shelter area to protect against rain and sun. The shade is so much more enjoyable in the midafternoon summer sun, yes, and I've been feeling somewhat unbrave just stretching the tarp across the street and attaching to the trees. If I a cop comes through, and they seem to come through often enough, it's plausible he might have something to say about that. I think shading the RV should bring down afternoon operating temps substantially.

And, I'm becoming a little more used to current income levels in terms of minimizing needless expenses (Like buying $10-$100 niceties, like toolboxes). Historically, the second half of the month produces twice as much income as the first half, so I have that to look forward to. [Maybe I should continue this habit so I can eventually buy that CNC machine?]

And, now I'm /really/ working on the back, now that the front driveway is a waiting game and it doesn't need any more high levels of effort. And, looking at what's been done to the area, it looks like I moved a /SHlT/ ton of clay to create the driveway, lol. I guess 12 cubic yards is a good amount (it didn't look like nearly as much when it was in a nice compact little pile, lol.)

No one elses driveway here looks nearly this hefty, lol. (I don't plan on driving the van on the driveway, especially when it's wet. I plan on my parking my van on the side of the road where the RV currently is. It might be nice to do 3-point turns on the front half of the driveway, but I'd need to get some stone, I would think. And, apparently I have no easy way to haul the amount of stone I would need for that and I'm not allocating funds for a trailer right now, lol. I really don't have an easy way to get the trailer on my property... unless I plop it on the front half of the driveway, in front of the fence, and leave it there... that actually sounds like an idea, lol.)

Anyway, it concerns me a little that I remember seeing my ECG wave being "perfectly normal" like one time and almost never since. It seems like it /should/ be perfectly normal like 100% of the time, right? Am I wrong?

I mean, I do see the right waves at roughly the right heights and lengths, but they aren't consistent and perfect looking like I'd expect of a perfectly healthy person, lol.

And, I'm rethinking my position on Target. I supported the Target ban, but now I'm thinking through the immediate impacts of their trans policy: There's a chance there will be a woman in the mens' bathroom. Well, then... lol

Following guidelines at http://www.medicaldaily.com/try-sit-stand-formula-every-30-minutes-avoid-health-consequences-sitting-all-day-355250 , I am now sitting for 20 minutes max when I'm /not/ really working on the computer. However, I will make 30 minutes exceptions for long continuous computer tasks.

Update at 9:30: 71 degrees at night and it's busy around town, wow. I'm guessing the night temperature must be perfect, it seemed to be the deciding factor in how busy the sidewalks were back in Spokane (House was on a popular pedestrian route). The mexican grocery had a whole gang of young mexicans invade, whom entered after I did and joined "The line" blob after I did, and she took his order. Hoho, well, I guess I know what that means; mexican bros before gringos. Yeah, so I ditched that place fast and did the second leg, get some gasoline. I've been feeling strong feelings towards reducing my visits there because it's currently a $100/month outflow, but I often reason that eating at home doesn't make much difference, because it'd cost me $1.50 in food anyways, so cutting it out completely would only really save me $50/month. So, essentially it becomes a question of "Do I want to give my money to the corporate grocery store and have peas for supper or would I rather give it to the local grocery store and have some delicious authentic tacos?", so it's not a hard choice. Plus, I get to practice my Spanish and converse with someone on a daily basis, so I figure it's pretty wise all factors considered.

Once I get my dog, maybe I can just converse with her. I tried that in the past, though... it's just not the same thing. The dog just keeps looking left and right with that face of "Why are you holding me? Let me go.", lol. So, it really takes a very strong imagination to believe the dog is listening to you, lol.

And, I just removed the bags of crap from the road, and I used my shovel, lol. It's been sitting there for 3 days and I was just /so/ shocked at how non-civic-minded the people here are. No wonder why the longterm residents here have some crappy looking abodes; it's because they don't care how their house, property nor the neighborhood looks. (My neighbor is the exception; keeps his lawn mowed and keeps up good appearances. I'm also cleaning up my property as I've just recently acquired a trash can and fencing necessary to protect my plastic bags from the creatures of the night. Once I get my main fence set up, I should be able to take that fence down and use for it other purposes.

To be honest, though, I'm probably among the few who carries tools like shovels in my vehicle, lol. It's mostly done that way because it's not really convenient to put them in the RV. They are far easier to access in the van, and I need to access them often enough.

As to many people's claims that Trump's a liar, well...

-I think much of the time he honestly believes what he says (Thus making him mistaken, not lying. Lying requires intent to deceive.).
-He has the tendency to talk in exaggerations, as part of his tendency to talk in the superlative. I wouldn't necessarily call that lying, as he usually does have the intent behind it in the same direction, but "the results" are often beyond his control. Much depends on congress as to how much money is earmarked for the Wall.

I actually think in terms of intent, he's actually a bit more honest than most career politicians. If there's something he doesn't want people to know, he doesn't lie; he let's them know he doesn't want to talk about it, lol.
 
Oh cool, I have a pet rabbit now! She seems to be living under my pile of cutdown trees and she lets me get within 4 feet of her. Wow, she trusts me!

But, she still won't let me pet it. Oh well.
 
swbluto said:
(Due to each banana producing a certain amount of ethylene, which adds up)

Yeah, from multiple bananas you call it polyethylene. You go from low density polyethylene and a number 4 in recycling to high density polyethylene and a 2.

Can't get a combo mill/lathe on the Harbor Freight site, but the common complaints on those are

1) Low power. Aluminum cuts okay, anything harder just creates a struggle. This is exasperated by the drivetrain to share the motor with both functions.

2) Lack of RPM selection. You might get a few choices by shifting the belt on the pulleys. You don't get much range and you definitely don't get the lower RPM's that make life easier.

3) Failures in the complicated drive train.

4) Instabilities that make the precision work difficult or even impossible.
 
Anyway, for the shed, I think I could design it so that it had a protruding entryway that led to the door. With this design, and sufficient sealing, an electric band could be implemented that would help keep ants/spiders out.

Thinking about making the length of the extended covered entry variable, what if we made it of length 0? It might be possible to implement the electric banding around the doorway frame, if it were designed appropriately. And, I would think you would want it on the front of the building on the doorframe instead of inside the doorway frame directly, so that any zapped bugs would fall directly in front of the shed and not potentially inside the shed.

Anyway, I could tell this design approach would benefit from my own custom design. The wooden designs I saw at Home Depot looked like they have poor sealability against bugs. (For example, the roof laying at an angle to the box creating many gaps along its edge. If it were laying flat, it'd be much easier to seal against bugs, and a pitched roof could still be placed ontop separately.)

I might be able to suitably modify the existing designs at the hardware stores. It might be easier that way.

But, if I were to do my own custom design, I might be able to put in a larger footprint that worked with the trees so that none of the significant shade-providing trees would come down.

The benefit of a larger design is essentially more area to deploy equipment. An 8x8 would work, but my 5 foot wide bed would only leave 3 feet beside it, which would be rather restrictive for deploying a desk or table. So, I'm thinking 8x12 might be more ideal. And, I could use the space as my garage, essentially.

And, I strongly suspect an 8x12 custom design would be far cheaper than the kits.

To calculate cost, let's figure out the basic cost for the basic box.

8x8 box

Twelve 2x4 8ft. lumber
Two 8x4 panels per side * 6 sides = Twelve 8x4 Panels

8 ft lumber = $5
8x4 plywood panel = $21

Cost = 12*5+12*21 = 60 + 252 = $312 *1.08(tax) = $337

So an 8x12 box, with things cut down to size, would be $337*1.5 = $505.

Add in a hundred for the foundation (Bunch of 12ft 2x4 wedded with 8 ft 2x4), looks like roughly $600.

For the top, I'd use a tarp or similar. I would pitch it using some of the nearby trees and some rope and collect rainwater.

Now, the extras.

Door frame and door.

Maybe $100.

Now we're upto 700.

WIndow? Another 50.

So $750 with a door and window. Probably would want 3 windows, so $850.

And, having just saw a two large spiders inside my RV (And it's clear they were roaming around because I left the RV and it was dark inside. Telling me, these guys are crawling around when I'm asleep.), I'm fast tracking this. Forget the backyard clearing, that shed is getting built immediately. I can start off with 8x8 and then expand to 8x12 by bolting on an extra section; I just need to make a temporary siding. Possibly hammer the side in with removable nails, round head nails for the pneumatic nailgun.

I need to take a good look at...

1) How the frame is typically assembled (How are the beams arranged in connecting to each other? Any special techniques for joining difficult to join frame boards?)
2) How the door is typically implemented
3) How the window is implemented

Before I start off on my own design.

Anyway, on another subject, I wonder if dietary fat helps bacteria invade the body?

I remember that one guys comment, that fat and carbs caused his heart to beat really fast and his bloodpressure to skyrocket after a meal, and I understood the why behind carbs but not so much fat. So, I was somewhat perplexed.

But, I was recently reading about "dose dumping" where you can overdose on drugs by eating them with a fatty meal (Because the meal promotes absorption)... and I know that fat helps with absorption of nutrients/minerals/vitamins in foods...

And I wondered if they also help promote the absoprtion of bacteria?

I don't really know exactly how fat promotes absoprtion of nutrients/minerals/vitamins/drugs, so I don't know if it would also do it for bacteria, but that one guys experience with the high BP/high HR, makes me suspect that.

However, I'm also aware that their are fats that have antibiotic properties. So, even if the fat might promote absoprtion of bacteria, some fats will kill them long before they had the chance to get absorbed. For example, the lauric and calypristic(?) fatty acid in Virgin Coconut Oil. Virgin Olive Oil also has a little antiobiotic effect (Not nearly as potent as coconut). Omega 3 fatty acids. But, what about the fatty acids that don't have a strong antiobiotic affect... like possibly animal fat? [I don't know]

Might help explain the association between animal fat intake and ill health, but that's purely hypothetical. I don't even know if there is a connection between animal fat and ill health, just seems like I've heard that often enough.
 
Went to go kayaking but the park was closed (Monday is the only day they're closed, lol.) and it looks like they used a barbwire fence to secure the park. They also have a $2 admission fee.

I've never seen a "closed" park before. And I can't remember the last time I've seen a park with a fee. Maybe they're was something for use of the boatdocks or something, but the park itself didn't cost anything. And I've never seen a park enclosed off with barbed wire fencing. This is making me think... this isn't like a normal public park is it? I've never seen a park be a dick to people who want to use it, lol.

And they had posted "No boats". I'm not sure what they mean by that...the small sign didn't seem interested in the specifics. (I don't know if they're referring to motoboats or all water vessels, like kayaks. If they banned kayaks and the like, than that effectively excludes kayaks along the entire waterfront which doesn't seem legit. I would think the lake is a public resource and effectively banning an entire class of watervessels goes against the idea of a public resource. Making me think it's not really treated as a public resource, but something monopolized by the local wealthy.)

So this whole idea of "I"m so close to a lake, have lake access whenever I want"... maybe not so.

I'm getting the sense that "Lake Conroe" is treated like the wealthy's exclusive playground. The cops there being so aggressive makes me think they're working for the wealthy's interests, and not so much "the public".

There are kayak lakes a good 35 miles away. And there's a pond about 1 mile down the main road here... if you trust the residents...

So I went to the hardware to look at sheds.

Went to the store and got updated on shed design.

-Looks like nails are inserted diagonally on the sides of difficult to join pieces of wood. I'm assuming they're using a nailgun.
-Looks like boards are attaching vertically on the frame for implemented windows and door frames.
-Premium sheds have 1' stud spacing, while economy sheds had 2' spacing. Not exactly sure if these studs are structurally necessary... I assume they're there for implementing insulation if desired?
-Bare minimum exterior doorframes with the side attachments are $149.
-All the exterior doors seemed to be made of fiberglass or steel and sounded fairly hollow - easy for sound transmission.
-The only solid doors seemed to be the "Solidcore" internal doors. Looks like I'd need to protect the doorway from the elements if I were to use an internal door, I suppose?

Couldn't see how the entire frame was connected together since it was covered with corkboard paneling.

Seems like I could use a plumb... but...I think my level should work for anything I'd need a plumb for?

Anyway, looks like there's a NF public boat ramp that's not much further away. It's a fee, and I don't know the amount. Might be interested in a pass.

What I've seen some people do is drive to the bridge, park on the side, and then deploy the craft there. That appears to be quite far north, though.

he lake is decent and the park is a decent size so its not crowded but we took our inflatable "boat" and could only use it without the paddles or otherwise it was considered a "vessel" and we would get fined.

Okay, that's a good sign kayaks are not allowed.

And I found another lake about the same distance away in the opposite direction. Seems to be a smallish lake. Looks promising for kayak access. Doesn't really have much in the way of "places to go and things to see" like the lakes I've been on but it will work. For Lake Conroe, it appears I would need a touring kayak to tour it using the "kayak authorized outlets". I don't really know if kayaks are specifically banned from the lake but the boat access areas seem to have that effect. It /is/ telling there's not a kayak or small personal craft in sight as you driveby so I'm suspecting that might be the case. Regardless, I'll call the private docks to see what the story is.

If they were "against the local laws", I wonder how the police would apprehend a wayward vessel? (If they were, you'd expect that info online somewhere...)

Looking online, says everything is allowed as long as it's not restricted by "The General Manager". And the rules say such restrictions would be clearly marked by signs and markers and haven't seen those yet so it appears it's allowed but there appears to be no public access.

Looks like Krogers is starting to look for job applicants - they put the giant NOW HIRING sign out. Sign they may be opening up soon enough (Maybe a month or two from now is my guess)

Just about everyone is hiring around here, so it's really a matter of where you want to work in this area.

I'm thinking about applying because 1) Get me off my butt 2) The money doesn't hurt, but I don't really care about the money - it's quite paltry compared to my business 3) A group of people/peers I get to see every so often - this can be invaluable because without them, there's often little motivation to do/acquire things to impress your peers 4) I would get to group up my grocery visits and I have a strong feeling I would be grocery shopping here. [It's also close enough; I mean, I could apply to corporate in the woodlands but it's quite the commute. I would only seriously entertain that notion if I was taking on a full-time position, otherwise, the commute would be a waste of time/money.]

Anyway, I like with the way my property is currently set up, I could easily hold two vehicles should I desire. Might be nice getting a highigh MPG car for those long trips here.
 
I think I'm having an idea.

I know that the clay driveway will become unusable when it rains and puddles start to form. But, it's entirely usable when it's not wet.

The common prescription is to order tons of rock, say, $500 of rock to cover 20-30 feet of driveway.

What if I instead purchased $500 worth of tarp and structuring to keep the driveway dry?

Not only would I not have to bother with getting the equipment to haul the rock in, I would also have a covered driveway to protect me from the rain. This clay is actually quite nice to walk on, with its somewhat giving texture, compared to the rockhard road and I take walks every 20 minutes.

If I were able to keep the driveway dry, I could... drive on it. Not that I would want to do so regularly, but it'd be nice possibly storing a vehicle on the driveway and also being capable of getting the RV out on a moment's notice regardless if it rained 2 days ago. (Like, say, a large brush fire that was threatening the neighborhood just 3 years ago.)

So, I'm thinking covering the clay driveway is a very real practical possibility.

And, I'm thinking about putting a trolling motor on the kayak and powering it with my small generator. It should be able to get me into the waterfront in an hour's time from the public boatramp so I paddle at leisure while technically not breaking laws. (But, knowing the police in this area... there's a real risk of harrassment if they think something's "out of place".); I would just have to deal with another 50 pounds of weight, I think? I think I could handle it.

I was thinking it'd be kind of cool to put a roof on the kayak and put solar panels up (To keep me protected from the sun, especially important midday). But, I would think I could benefit from some stabilizing beams with it being a little topheavy, so that would be a project.

And the rear electricity went out (Verified with the rear cig lighter), checked the fuses, all the fuses look fine. Fudge me, I have no idea what's wrong with it.

Chewed through wires? Corroded connectors somewhere? Burned up wire, maybe?

With how inaccessible the wiring is for testing, I'm leaning towards establishing new wiring, tapping an existing 12V source somewhere or hooking in a 14.4V lipo battery to power the rear.

Rear electric is important because it appears without it, I can't open my rear door and I can't load/unload large objects from the side (Say, my 55 gallon drum that filled with water in there at the moment.).

Anyway, I find it funny that people imply that guns are comparable to knives or pens or whatever that could possibly be used lethally. What I find funny about those comparisons is that guns don't really have a purpose beyond killing things, while the same could not be said of knives and pens. So, if anything, I would think that guns are more susceptible to being banned by virtue of their lack of useful non-lethal uses. I'm not really for banning guns, but... I wouldn't be against banning gun behaviors, especially unnecessary annoying ones. So, I'm not so much for gun control, but gun behavior control.

Anyway, I got two lizard tails today. Got a tail on each of the two "first strikes", didn't miss, cool. I wonder if it's possible to get something other than a tail with these creatures? Because I wasn't really aiming for a tail, but I seem to keep getting them.

Anyway, the local rabbit really seems to like the stack of fallen trees I have; seems to think it's a nice safe hiding spot from predators. I had the flashlight pointed at yesterday night and was about to touch it, and my hand was super close (I think the light was blinding it), but I decided against it because I didn't want to get bit, lol.

Anyway, saw two love bugs in the middle of copulation so I tried separated them with my machete. Well, they got separated and one of them flew off; the other one didn't make it? Huh, I wonder what happened to him? Did I chop off his dick or something? I'm thinking maybe, but I'm guessing they are so tiny, I can't really see.

Anyway I'm thinking about frame design. Apparently "double stud construction" is the best, and it essentially is "creating a frame within a frame, with a small gap between them.".

That looked pretty interesting, but it looked costly as you're doubling up frame materials. So I wonder if I could get a more cost effective design with the same idea?

The gap reduces the transmission of sound, as sound would ordinarily travel directly to the interior walls through the frame.

I'm thinking if I were to do that design, a double door design would also likely be appropriate. And windows... forget about windows, lol. Double windows! Luckily the paneling/drywall cost wouldn't change much, which appears to be the most expensive cost.

One guy said he didn't like windows on sheds because they're easy to break into, but I'm thinking just add some security bars. I'm thinking I'd add some security bars when I was planning to be away for more than a couple of hours.

--------------

Okay, went to the grocery store and also went to home depot to pick up some rock to firm up my driveway. One of the holes where I removed a tree stump, the clay is especially wet there, so it's especially not-solid which is why the driveway was failing there. So, I got some larger rock from home depot to hopefully separate the wetter bottom clay from the top clay and to help firm it up a little.

While there, I noticed that 2x4s came in 8ft, 10ft, 12ft and 16ft sizes. The 16 ft size didn't seem particularly straight in the 2x4 form, so I wouldn't really recommend that, lol, but yes... so I'm thinking about increasing the dimensions to 10ftx12ft with expandability upto 10ftx16ft.

With the double frame design, I'm thinking about 10 ft x 12 ft externally, than 9ft x 11ft internally.

And, I lost the key to my lock on the RV. I think caribbeaners are bad business for a key keeper, they seem to constantly lose them, lol. Maybe the screw type of carbineears are a better type. So, I took the angle grinder to the lock and had it off within 30 seconds. If I were to ever become a professional thief, I would think a battery powered angle grinder would be a good tool to have, lol. Anyway, I'm under no illusion that my RV is secure. I'm just hoping no ones comes out with the big guns to break in while I'm away, and I'm not usually away that often, nor that long.

A shrouded lock definitely seems like it'd be more secure against angle grinder attacks, but it would benefit from a small attack window. Some of the shrouded locks I've seen have a fairly wide attack window.
 
swbluto said:
And the rear electricity went out (Verified with the rear cig lighter), checked the fuses, all the fuses look fine. Fudge me, I have no idea what's wrong with it.

Chewed through wires? Corroded connectors somewhere? Burned up wire, maybe?

With how inaccessible the wiring is for testing, I'm leaning towards establishing new wiring, tapping an existing 12V source somewhere or hooking in a 14.4V lipo battery to power the rear.

Rear electric is important because it appears without it, I can't open my rear door and I can't load/unload large objects from the side (Say, my 55 gallon drum that filled with water in there at the moment.).
Service manual should have drawings showing which wire goes where. Also shows every connector, shape, wire color, and where it is on the vehicle. It's fun to follow wires using a service manual. Can also test wires by poking insulation with a pin. Do you have a service manual? If no? Buy one now! Paper or CD can be found on eBay or go here:
ALLDATAdiy.com Leading Source of Factory Automotive Repair Information
For me alldatadiy manuals are sometimes easier to navigate then CDs on a computer.

Shops suscribe to:
ALLDATA - OEM Repair Information for Professionals
Anyone have a username and password for alldata.com? View every manual for every car.

Might also get lucky and find a torrent same as sharing music and movies.

Most cars have a door latch and key that works with no electricity. Important to get out of vehicle if electricity fails.
checked the fuses, all the fuses look fine.
Try testing with a test light or voltmeter. Its hard to see electricity by looking at it.
 
Good insight on the wiring. The difficulty is that all my crap is in there so it's hard to access the wires and it's hard to take the heavy things out from the back now that the rear door won't work.

Anyway, doing a renewed cost estimate on the 12x10 double stud design with 2' stud spacing.

12 ft = $10
10 ft = $8
8 ft 2x4 = $5
8 ft 4x4 = $10

Each frame would use the same sizes since the internal frame would have a foot cut off each side. So I essentially have to double the frame cost.

External frame =
4 - 12ft
4 - 10ft
4 - 8 ft 4x4 (corner post)

5 studs on the 12 ft side, 4 studs on the 10 ft side ->

18 - 8 ft 2x4

Frame cost =

4*10+4*8+4*10+18*5 = $202
Then for the internal frame = $202

Total frame cost $404.

So, 11x 8x4 for the sides, 4x for the roof, another 4x for the floor;

External frame wood panels = 19 * $20 = $380
Internal drywall = 18 * $10 = $180

So total materials estimate for a double stud 11x9 = $964.

Then the $200 in door materials = $1164.

Okay, well, I'm voting to make this a two stage project.

The first stage is a single stud 10x8.

The double stud, if deemed necessary based on the performance of the single stud design, can be constructed around that as 12x12 or 12x16 and the internal can be lengthened upto 10x11 or 10x15.

If I were wise, I might consider making it possible to integrate this into a roman courtyard building design in the longterm. With ten foot wide hallways, this seems possible.

I'm just not entirely certain if I'd be using this kind of paneling for a roman courtyard building. The internal drywall (White walls) seems appropriate... Now plywood external paneling.... hmmm.... I don't really know.

And, I don't really know if a roman courtyard building would be built ontop of wooden boards. I wouldn't think so, lol.

This is some BS. The internet is like "Mushrooms can't be digested without cooking them" apparently because Dr. Weilz said so (Really? Does the world really believe the opinion of just one person and completely disregard all research evidence?), anyway, I was finding myself skeptical because these portabellos taste rather good raw and normally indigestible things wouldn't taste good raw. So I googled other animals that eat raw mushrooms and found...

A wide range of animals are known to eat wild mushrooms – some examples include badgers, deer, mice, pigs, rabbits and squirrels.

So just about every animal with an ounce of vegetarianism eats mushrooms raw. Call me skeptical, I don't really believe the "Eating uncooked mushrooms has no benefits".

I would believe, however, that it benefits from a high vitamin C diet.-Vegetarian animals get a pretty high dose of Vitamin C through their fruits and veggies, and mushrooms do taste notably better with vitamin C foods (i.e., salads).

It seems to me if something makes something taste better, it's at least partially because it helps in its absorption. For example, fats with fruits, or vitamin c produce, including spinach and carrots, with peanuts.

Anyway, finding that my skills are going up, I'm able to maintain greater uptimes, and now I'm so productive I have free days available. So, I'm starting to make use of my small generator for running the personal electric items. This is important because the 1000w honda generator will burn .6 gallons in 8 hours, while the 2000w honda genny burns 1 gallon in 8 hours, so $1.20 for gas vs $2.20.

This is also part of the reason I'm thinking of finding a side job, now that I have more freetime. And a grocery store is appealing because it's close and I could pick up things there without feeling like I'm wasting gas. (For example, I would love to eat watermelon just about everyday but going to the grocery every day for just watermelon feels like a waste of gas.) And I might even get employee discounts? Lol.

My neighbor said he paid $75 for electricity last month. Wow, if I were to run soley off my generator for the month, my electricity would cost me like $40. But, he's probably running a fridge and he might be running AC. I don't think he's running AC, though, because I always see the screen door wide open during hot weather.

Some peak afternoons here have been a little miserable. Like, no matter where you are, in the forest in the shade, or in the well fanned RV, there's a small bead of sweat on the skin. It's unavoidable, lol, so you must endure it. I think that might be part of the reason why this area had no permanent settlements, because the summertime sweat was unavoidable (It's probably a bit worse towards the ocean/Houston proper.). Walking outside in the shade makes it a little better.

I think this might be why salt production was/is important to the people of India, and why the 'making salt' protest was so central to Gandhi. Sweating their balls off -> Needs salt.

Update: Thank god it's been a cloudy day so far. I'm not sweating my balls off, thank god, lol. A nice comfortable atmosphere to work productively in; a sweaty hot atmosphere has a way of sapping your energy to work.

And, while walking, I came across a black berry on the ground coming from a small plant. I thought it might have been a nascent mulberry tree, but nope, that was definitely a blackberry! That was delicious, didn't taste bitter at all. I'm starting to think all this bitterness in grocery store produce is strictly from pesticides. Unripe fruit appears to taste mostly sour, not bitter.

So, this area appears to be good for growing berries. I think that will be in the seasonal section (The front half of the lawn, since it gets shade from the tall trees during the winter. I'm thinking about removing all the pine trees to maximize winter time solar for the cool season crops; the leafy trees lose their leaves, so they're not blocking the sun, but the pine trees keep their needles.).

I think I I figured out why this bunny seems to like my area. It's because I throw the remains of the carrots (The top) into the nearby woods, lol, so he's munching on my carrots. At least that's what I'm assuming.

Left hand seems to be going numb compared to right, so nerve impingement is not unlikely.
 
marty said:
swbluto said:
and also went to home depot to pick up some rock to firm up my driveway.
Rock comes in a dump truck not a plastic bag.

To get very much, sure, but they DO have small amounts at the hardware store. Someone could see that in any part of the country.

swbluto said:
. . . . I'm not so much for gun control, but gun behavior control.

What if I instead purchased $500 worth of tarp and structuring to keep the driveway dry?

Every few months? It wouldn't last. And just because the rain doesn't fall directly on it doesn't mean there isn't runoff, seepage, etc.

And it's funny how the same people who don't want to allow free speech, protest over someone holding an opinion other than their own, etc., don't want to think about behavior when it comes to guns. But notice how recently a college professor wasn't going to allow this prolife group to express their opinion on HIS campus and orders one of his classes to go disrupt their demonstration. How does he react if it's proguns over there? If he gets his students to cause trouble and they're NOT shot it's like a feather in the cap of the gun group, eh?
 
12 ft 2x4 = $10
10 ft 2x4 = $8
8 ft 2x4 = $5
8 ft 4x4 = $10

4x8 3/4" = $21

Okay, so creating a 8x10 single stud frame on a 10x12' base.

External frame =

4x 10 ft (horzontal)
4x 8 ft (vertical)
4x 8 ft (depth)

Than for 8ft 2x4 studs...

On the 10 ft length = 4 studs
On the 8 ft length = 3 studs

Total studs = 14 studs.

External paneling
On the 10 ft sides, 5 total
on the 8 ft sides, 4 total
on the floor, 3 total
on the ceiling, 3 total (We could split 5 among the floor and ceiling.)

14 4x8 plywood

Internal drywall

8 ft side = 4 total
10 ft side = 5 total
ceiling = 2 total

11 4x8 drywall

Total frame cost =

(Main frame members) 4*$8 + 8*$5 + 4*$10 +
(studs) 14*$5 +
(external plywood) + 14*$20
(Internal drywall)+11*$10

=
$112 +
$70 +
$280
$110
=
$572

+$80 for door ('ll just rearrange two studs for the door frame)

Now for the base pallet.

6x 10 ft and 5x 12 ft -> 6*$8+5*$10 = $98

Total project estimates not including screws/nails/tools/etc., 572+80+98 = $750

With tax, 750*1.08 = $810

I'm uncertain how I'd add drywall to the ceiling. Screwing in 4x8 drywall panels seems like it'd be dangerous. (I wouldn't trust the heavy sheet from not suddenly falling straight down.)

Putting the drywall outside of the frame, ontop, seems possible but that seems to make it especially vulnerable to the rain and I don't know of an easy/conventional/reliable solution to address that vulnerability.

I would want to put high mass on the ceiling as that'd be one of the primary entrances for sound into the structure.

And for a driveway cover, maybe corrugated steel would be a better option. The thing about the driveway not getting water on it is that it shouldn't become sticky as hell... but, with the runoff touching its sides, the lower layers will likely saturate and the driveway would be more strongly affected by heavy objects. Not by me walking, but by a vehicle traveling over it. A vehicle wheel would likely sink in if the bottom layers softened.

Update: I'm thinking very hard about getting dessicants, lol. Because, man, when it's really humid here (Like it's been 75-80% humidity tonight), the sweat starts forming just sitting there and a fan is like the only way to keep the sweat off (Likely because it helps dry it off faster). When I get that house built, moisture control will likely be an issue when I close up the building. Heat would might also be an issue, but I figure that the volume capacity of the structure won't make temperature a problem, like it did with my 4'x4'x8' soundproof box. (8x10x8 feet is a bit larger, right? Well about 4 times larger... hopefully it shouldn't be a problem.)

Now I'm just wondering if the dessicants suck up the moisture, how do I dry the dessicants so I can reuse them? lol.

In this area, it seems that with clouds, comes humidity. I think that's why the morning time tends to be humid, because it tends to be more cloudy. But, it's been cloudy all today, so it's been humid all today and I'm especially feeling it now, lol.

With the drywall, I'll have to think about how to install the drywall so it can be easily removed for inspection. Want to make sure spiders/ants/etc aren't getting in through holes in the sealant with the paneling, especially if they start cropping up out of nowhere. The ceiling design seems like it'd be especially important to design carefully, given how it's not really easy just removing drywall off the ceiling for inspection, lol.

----------------------

After last night, I think I'm voting for some air conditioning, lol. (84F at 90% humidity is just not sleep worthy)

Thinking a metal drum filled with water, with water circulating to a water cooling device, being powered by the sun. Then the room is lightly fanned. I would want to be careful with fanning, because that does add energy/heat to the system.

It sounds like a good way to ensure a nice steady temperature that shouldn't require active refrigeration during the night. (Important, because I'm not going to be running the genny at night nor is there sun.)

I'm not really sure what kind of power of a water chiller I'd be looking at.

I would imagine it depends on the heat losses of the room.

Not really sure what kind of heat losses I'd be dealing with.

90F ambient
66F water

Seems like typical 5000 BTU ACs use about 500w (https://www.kompulsa.com/much-power-air-conditioners-consume/#power_consumption_of_5000_btu_air_conditioners), so I might need 2/3 HP. Since there'd be times when the water wasn't getting chilled, and the room would be cooler than the outside temperature nearly always, I might actually need more than 2/3HP, maybe 1HP. Those are expensive, about $1000.

https://www.amazon.com/Active-Aqua-Chiller-10-HP/dp/B008HV7VKG?th=1

Maybe I should just get a traditional air conditioner (In the $100-$200 range) and have a water drum in the room if I needed more temp stability during the night.

I wouldn't need the air conditioner during the day, but it seems like it'd be highly desireable with the summer nights here. (The climate charts were telling me 76F nights during peak summer, but it was actually 80F last night, so it was 84F in the RV. At 90% humidity, so tough to sleep in.)

And, the putting a hole in the wall for an airconditioner does seem it'd potentially cripple the soundproofing efforts.

I wonder if these airconditioners have an exhaust port so I can duct the heat outside through a less sensitive route (Like the floor)?

And, I'm not really sure what these rabbits eat. They seem to be eating my banana sticker labels just fine but completely ignoring the carrots. Maybe they haven't found them yet, I don't know...

And, 2 nights ago I saw an opossum in the middle of the road. Oh man, this confirms I'm in the South! lol.

Vultures feasting off a ran over raccoon, so, yep... those guys exist. I've never seen them before in the forest, but they're probably there. I'm thinking maybe these be the guys tearing holes in my trashbags; it seems like my 40 inch tall rabbit fence isn't really keeping these guys out... holes all over...

And, the pug search is coming up a little dry. What advertisements I see in the area, don't really seem to be pure bred pugs. They claim they are, but they have quite a snout... lol

Other listings suggest this "ugly snout" comes from a Boston Terrier ancestor, at least in a few cases. Possibly a beagle in a few cases.

I think I figured out why europeans wear clothes whereas south American tribes go around naked...

Naked is the only way to go in Hot and Humid weather, lol. Clothes are just uncomfortably wet from all the sweat.

I think that's part of the reason why there's a gay nudist campground within four miles of here...

And, I think I can deduct the pug as a guard dog expense. People seem to think they're intimidating, and one did viciously bite me when I was a wee one, so I think it's a valid deduction.

So, this project is a go and I'm greenlighting it. I'm going to construct a simple shed without the drywall, and then add drywall if deemed necessary later. While in simple shed mode, I need to "get everything figured out" in regards to whether I really want to construct a window (I probably do, lol.), how, air conditioning, making sure it's sealed up and bug proof before adding the drywall, etc.

If it turns out that I don't need the drywall for my purposes, then I won't add it.

So, next trip is going to be about gathering materials to construct the pallet and getting tools (Like a nailgun from Harbor Freight).

It's now 1:54 p.m. and kind of sunny outside. Oh yes, this is much more comforable than 80% humidity. I think I really just need to get some dessicants and bake them during the day (Maybe using a solar cooker?), and just a small fan to keep circulation going in the room. I think 80F is probably just fine at night, if it's dry enough.

Update: now 4 p.m.; this afternoon, while slapping around, the peak included a pounding sensation in my chest (Like, it was flopping around) along with this very quick transient numbness shooting down my left pinky and ring finger. The pounding sensation lasted for about 4 seconds, while the transient numbness lasted for 1-2 seconds (towards the end of the pounding).

Well that was unusual. I figured higher levels of adrenaline than normal due to poor sleep or some such.

Then I was walking around just now, for like 6 seconds, got this heavy sensation in my chest along with this sensation shooting up through my left carotid and it felt like the two were connected via a solid path of sensation. Perhaps it was cervical nerve phenomena, but yeah... I've heard similar chest sensations can be heart related and I don't think the afternoon event could be explained away via cervical phenomenon, so I'm somewhat suspicious something's been happening today. But I try not to stress about it, figure it's usually something benign I don't fully understand.

Oh man, with the recent night of high temp and high humidity, my skin is starting to break out in those staph aureus rashes. The last time I had these was when I didn't have active fan cooling in the RV and it was getting hot and humid in here, but then I got fan cooling, and the rash largely went away.

Yep, so I'm thinking dehumidifcation is definitely going to be a thing.

I wonder if my heart has been getting attacked by the bacteria in these rashes? Might explain the flareup.

Anyway, yes, I'm definitely enjoying the lower humidity now. Wow, what a difference it makes.

It appears there's long lasting chemical humidifiers that don't require an energy source (But, it appears they benefit from one, like a fan to push the air through the salts.). Apparently rock salt or calcium chloride is a good absorber of moisture, but I'm thinking I'd need good luck finding rock salt/deicing salts in Houston, lol.

And, I just remembered... with a 10' interior, and 8' length, extendable upto 15' or so, I actually need to contruct a 12' by 12' pallet for the option of creating a second frame around the first frame (The "double stud" frame technique). So, yes, I need... 14x 12ft beams (7 in each direction; 2 ft requires 2 beams, so therefore 12 ft requires (12/2+1=) 7 beams.).

And, I just verified I had the required floorspace available (I.e., no need to remove some giant ass trees, lol).

Man, it looks like I'll get to say I'm a homeowner, and my home consists of one bedroom, no kitchen, no bath, lol. [But, if I can achieve a bug-proof structure, than I might start to use it as a kitchen. And wouldn't that be awesome? Get the use my stove, oven and a panoply of kitchen gadgets without reserve. I might just deploy solar panels and get a fridge and run it off the solar, and use ice to help regulate the temperatures during the cloudy days. Heck, my batteries could easily supply the needs of a refrigerator, especially if there was a solar charging input.]

I think I figured out how spiders can create webs between trees with the branches at least 3 feet apart. They jump from a higher branch, landing on the lower branch to the right, climb back up, drop straight down on a branch to the left, then they have the three points they need to create the full web. Yeah, so basically they jump.

Which means I need to take that into account with my design. They shouldn't just be able to "jump across" the electric barrier.

And the strips need to be close enough for the tiny baby ants, at least somewhere along the entrance.

If I can achieve a bug proof structure, I won't need to resort to somewhat absurd measures like putting the feet of the bed in a container of water. It's effective, but ... I'd rather not, lol.

What's with these girls that have the look of "Just give me your dick.". Maybe it's my imagination, lol.

And, I reasoned that pesticide exposure to peanuts wasn't bad because they were grown underground and incased in a protective shell but I looked at the research just to check, and it looks like I was wrong. Plenty of pesticides in non-organic peanuts. Okay, I'm banning that immediately.

And, boy, I love this super simple but not immediately obvious how to use can opener. My 'traditional can opener' from Walmart has stripped the gears, so it doesn't turn, whereas this simple one has a single gear so it's not likely to strip and once you know how to use it, it's fairly easy to use and pretty effective.

Anyway, the simple one was $1.36 or some such, and it looks like it's made almost entirely of thick sheet metal (The different parts having been cutting/bent/sheared/etc.). The three major parts are pretty much cut and shaped sheet metal, with the addition of a gear, a rivet(?) and a thin plastic spacer. Super simple.

Anyway, I was reading this one article about a women blaming "childish men" for having babies later in life. I thought that was a bit absurd, because if that were true, it should've always been true, right? There's always been 'man-babies'.

Then I saw another suggesting that more women in their 30s were having babies compared to those in their 20s.

Uh oh, why is this... a downward shift in the economy. Older folks get priority over the younger folk, and the "family sustaining incomes" have shifted down a bit since the great recession.

So, that girl blaming childish men, uh, yeah... I think it's more likely the economy. I originally said it was HER fault, and she was the irresponsible one, but... I recognize there are factors beyond our control and the economy has been a big one.

The fact that incomes have gone down, and rents have gone up, and mortgages have become more inaccessible due to increased restrictions and lower incomes, all points to lower family formation.

Anyway, it's a little interesting I'm thinking about building a house. Generally speaking, people here don't seem to live in "houses"; it's almost all trailers. The wealthier ones, however, do seem to have houses.

----------------

Update: 10a.m. of may 19, 2017

Apparently didn't sleep well with a fan blowing air into my face one foot away. Eyes were burning, especially when air was blowing in them. Woke at 6, and fell back asleep at 8 a.m., heard gunshots at 8:50 a.m. which woke me up and the eye burning sensation is largely gone, but it seems to have been replaced with other physical symptoms. (Like, heaviness in the head upon climbing up stairs.); clearly 50 minutes wasn't enough. I'd reckon the sought amount was more like 3 hours.

Anyway, I think I'm going to start climate control in the RV starting immediately so I can at least sleep well at night. So, I'm going to get that as well as the pallet material today, lord willing. The climate was a little better last night, but still sweating and uncomfortable.

Anyway, list.

-14x 12 ft. 2x4s.
-light pajama pants
-Dessicants (Homedepot has some for RVs)
-AC (Maybe. If I do, I should get one that would also work well with the house and not cripple the sound proofing efforts.)
-28 degree framing nailer from HF [Might want to consider getting one of the extended warranties on this product considering how much I'll be using it and the reviews on HF. I figure it's still cheaper than the HD nailguns and still guarantees a year or two of service, which is where 90% of my currently planned use should take place. I'm sure I might have new plans in the future and I will have to see where I am at that time, lol.]
-30 degree paper collated round head nails from HD, 1000x.

Update: now 6:30 p.m.; Just went to harbor freight to get the nail gun, got the extended warranty (Rarely do I get the extended warranty but I foresee A LOT of future use out of this, lol.), picked up the wood from home depot along with some nails, picked up the 5k btu AC from walmart and I plan on installing it ASAP.

Tomorrow morning starts sapling clearing and pallet construction, and every free day from here on out will consist of either picking up materials or building the bedroom.

Anyway, while at home depot, this presumably homeless caucasian man was asking if I knew where to find a job (I wouldn't think he should have a problem finding one here BUT... the kind of unkempt appearance that homelessness/showerlessness/washingmachineless lifestyle gives you I feel kind of gets you stuck there, especially if you don't have to funds to acquire cleaning supplies/equipment/etc.), I said I didn't know the area that well, and he then he asked if there was anything I could spare, and I said SURE, you want some bananas? He accepted and acted like he scored the jackpot getting a free bunch of bananas. It's kind of weird thinking that a bunch of bananas would be more meaningful than $5, but I guess food is more easily immediately relatable to than money is, especially if you have a history of hunger which I'm guessing this guy might have.

Anyway, I've gotten a little more charitable than in the past. Probably mostly because I got the (future) necessities largely taken of (or so I think) whereas that didn't seem like it was true in the past. Being jobless in a desperate town kind of has a way of instilling that fear.

As far installing the AC without crippling the sound proofing efforts, I figured I would put a box around the AC that minimized sound while also not reducing airflow. I would have likely needed to do that anyway with the hoses, and the hose version only made it $150 more expensive, lol.

Anyway... I need to get to doing that...

And... I think I just figured out... that the fan is the only thing keeping from sweating because it dries it off too quickly to become sweat. With the fan off, outside or inside, I'm sweating. I wouldn't normally think that 80 degrees would make you sweat?

So I'm thinking it's the humidity that makes you sweat.

And, I got the AC, and I was looking to install it and... yep, don't really have the kind of window they're suggesting I should have, lol. So, I figured out a window on the side I'm going to remove, then I'm going to install a wooden board to secure the AC inplace, than I'm going to have to seal off the gaps somehow. I'm thinking I'm going to tape it up with some kind of solid material. Maybe some clear plastic 'fabric' from Wallie world. Still need to pick up the light pajama pants, so maybe I'll be making that trip tomorrow.

Anyway, this "perma-sweat" climate just started like a couple days ago, apparently, and I get the strange feeling it's not going away. I'm thinking it's going to get worse, lol.

During the day, the fan is a more energy effective way to stay sweat free (I think?), but come night, I think I'm going to have to use the AC. Or I'll use a dehumidifier if it proves effective.

And, this is supposed to be the busy period, but it seems like it's slowed down a bit. I'm thinking this might be the beginning of the next recession; I won't really have a good guess until next monday, and the monday after that would be the confirmation.

If this were true, I wonder if the Trump factor might be at hand here?

It's interesting, this concept of impeachment. WIth the comments that Trump has made, I get the strange feeling he wouldn't mind getting impeached. But, I would think if he really wanted to quit, it'd be easier to resign, but perhaps he doesn't want to "lose face", so he's trying to get others to impeach him. Purely hypothetical, I don't really know Trump's intents in this manner.

And, my driveway should be pretty much done, assuming the rock treatment is working. So, I could get the placement of the RV on the driveway tomorrow. Then install the AC. Place the shade cover over the RV to minimize sun heating, and away I go. I might not get to the pallet construction tomorrow since that sounds like a full load. And, it's pretty important, "getting the heat" taken of. Seems the heat is depriving me of sleep.

Don't really know why the RV seems hotter than the outside, even after fan cooling it alot and keeping the screen windows wide open. I wouldn't think it'd be retaining that much energy after the sun goes down, but it seems like I could be sleeping outside no problem, but sleep inside the RV = feels hot and sweat, lol.

The only problem with outside, right now, is that the air mattress isn't really that comfortable and I'd need a larger tent for the fullsize bed I have.


Update: next morning on may 20
Oh that figures, if I only I had waited 1 and a half months, I could've had a 10ft kayak from Tractor Supply for $180 with paddle included. But, it's probably the heavy oars, definitely don't see cupping in the paddle design, and with tax it would've been $195, so I paid $5 more for a higher quality kayak and a much higher quality oars. And, I haven't gotten to use it, yet.

Anyway, turns out that it rained today and it's threatening all day today, so putting the RV on the driveway isn't a today item. I'll still will want to install the AC and might get started on the pallet construction.

And, I don't really like this "4 hours of sleep", now it's 7 a.m., event. It makes me think I'm going to fall get sleepy sometime after 9 a.m. and sleeping in the RV is still not comfortable enough at that time, lol. And, plus, the gunfire seems to randomly happen during the day, more often in the morning it seems.

Granted, it's possible these sleep disturbances aren't related to the unusually warm summer nightime weather, and they're a sign of something else entirely. Maybe I'm getting excited about the happenings? Maybe I'm dying and I don't know it.

While dumping the wood at the worksite, it made a loud noise, which then made me think of the neighbors hearing it. And, upon that thought apparently, my chest tightened and it seemed like my breath was threatening to escape me (Lasted for about 2 seconds). Apparently they scare me. If I reflect on the realities, within a second or two, I'm not really scared (At least not anymore), but that subconscious feeling that imposes itself in the first second apparently is.

Once I'm in a less vulnerable living situation, I should feel a little more secure. On my property and fenced in seems like a step in the right direction. An AR-15 would be an upgrade.

Once I get my person on the property, fencing happens immediately. Whether that be the RV on the property or the house, doesn't really matter. (It'll probably be the RV, lol. I'm suspecting the construction will likely take 2 weeks in full.)

Okay, got some 100% cotton flanel pajamas. Apparently polyester is bad for sweat and the shirt I usually wear attest to that (Polyester mix). Coincidentally, it was marked down to $3 by walmart. It looked like they were phasing out the item which seemed like it would've been bad for me; it was the only non-polyester pajamas there.

And, I'm thinking I need loose exercise pants/shirts. It's not like I'm really "exercising" but merely doing any kind of movement with any amount of force outside seems to cause sweat to drench. I need the 'loose' for the mosquitos, seems like they don't attack loose clothing.

And, I just figured I should cover the entire pallet with wooden board. Well, more like, I mean, let's start from a corner and cover out the pallet with plywood from there until enough area for the first planned building. So I should get enough for 12'x12', if I want to get proper 8ft. distance from drywall to drywall, otherwise, with 8'x12' coverage, I'd be nailing the walls into board, reducing the width by 4" on both sides, reducing the stud to stud width to 7' 4". Further, I'd have to reduce the beam width on to accomodate this shrinkage to fit onto the boards. So, yes, I need 12'x12' initial plywood floor coverage. So, that means, I need...

1:8x4
2:8x8
4:12x12 with missing 4x4
4.5: full 12x12

I have four full 4x8's, so it looks like I need to get another one and split it into 4x4.

I'm thinking about 10 ft. width vs 11ft width, with initial length being 8 feet, planning on upto 15 ft. The 11 ft width would require me to reduce 12 ft 2x4s with 4x of them; Seems easy enough. If I went with 11 ft., on two of the walls, I'd have to reduce the 4x8 to 3x8. Doesn't sound too expensive.

I only wanted 10 ft to fit my 10 ft kayak in there, but an extra foot might be appreciated, especially initially.

And, I figured out the pallet design. Looks like I'll need two more 12 ft. 2x4s to secure the bottom beams which I'm planning on arranging vertically to give the pallet some rigidness and height off the ground.

Anyway, need to move the 4x8s to the worksite and I should be doing that shortly. Came inside the fanned RV just to get the sweat off, lol.

Anyway, the corner post should be rigid. I was initially planning on just nailing it into the pallet, but that seems like a bad idea to rely on that for strength, lol. I guess the strength comes in when the four sides are nailed into the corner posts, turning it into a rigid box that shouldn't just fall sideways and collapse, lol. I guess I'll nail the corner posts into the pallet, and have 2x4s along the top of the corner posts joining them together and that should give it the structure it needs to nail the walls in. I'm guessing that contractors rely on multiple people to hold everything into place, so they don't need top boards securing the corner posts into place for attaching the walls.

I'm thinking I'll need a 8' 10" step ladder from wally world. Would be good for construction and might help with installing the fence. Their step ladders seem pretty affordable compared to what I've seen at Home Depot. Seems like home depot has the cheapest consumables and commodity items, but equipment tends to be expensive. It does seem to be higher quality than wallie/HF equipment, so maybe it's a good thing for the heavier users.

Okay, as of 2p.m., all the pallet lumber has been delivered to the site.

Now I just need a 4x8 cut into two 4x4 and two more 12 ft. 2x4 beams to secure the sides of the bottom vertically oriented 2x4s of the pallet. Might just do that tomorrow when I go to pick up a speed square and a free gift from harbor freight. It doesn't really seem like you can have too much tarp here, lol.

And might as well load up on the next load.

What do I have left...

four 8ft 4x4 corner posts

An 8 ft long wall needs...

8 ft. top and bottom
Five 8 ft studs

Seven 8ft 2x4s in total

A 10 ft long wall needs...

10 ft ft top and bottom
six 8 ft studs

Now for nailing the top and bottom to the studs..

I can reduce the studs to 7 ft 8", and place the 2x4 outside studs on the left and right of the top and bottom beams, effectively giving me 8ft 4" floor width and 8 ft. ceiling height. This is more work, requiring the reduction of the studs by four inches.

Or I can leave teh studs at 8 ft, and place the outer 2x4 studs between the top and bottom beams, effectively giving me an 8 ft. floor width, and an 8ft 4" ceiling height. This is the easiest option. This also seems like you wouldn't need to get 8 ft 4" long pieces of 2x4s for the ceiling beams. (I assume you need beams for the ceiling to hold the ceiling panels up.)

I thought it was funny someone was saying their ceiling height was exactly 100 inches (8ft 4") and she had absolutely no idea how it got such a ridiculous number, lol. Well, I have a good clue now. (I had this hunch at the beginning, noticing that 4" was a multiple of the 2" in a 2x4.)

Still haven't made a definitive case for a plumb. But a speed square looks rather handy for getting boards down to a needed length which I have a feeling I will have a need for.

It's kind of funny, it seems like it's been 2 months since the last time "tornado weather" rolled on through. I wonder if that kind of weather only happens in March here... (I wouldn't normally think so)

Anyway, tonight, I'm going to blast the fan at full to get the temperature equalized with the outside, than I'm going to lock it up and using this tiny 6" clip fan I got to push the air into the dehydrater bucket, hoping it should rapidly dehumidify the air. I'm hoping it will make a measurable difference in sleeping comfort.

Anyway, said it was going to rain today, so I'm not doing construction. Got some untreated pallets that I need to protect, and I should get another large tarp to cover the entire project as it gets going.

Update: 5:25 p.m. didn't rain today. Will do the AC install tomorrow and get the pallet built tomorrow among other things, apparently won't rain.

And, I thought through the pallet design and realized I didn't need the top layer as the boards will provide that functionality. So, now I have 5 extra 12 ft. 2x4s. I'm voting to reduce 4' of them to 11' and make the room 11'x8'. And, this is where I could use a speedsquare.

Anyway, looking back, this is actually relatively spacious compared to previous arrangements, especially the military dorms back in Charleston, SC. And, it's especially spacious compared to the houses this guy is making for the homeless in LA. He calls them $1400 houses, but they're 6 foot tall, 4'x8' and I'm just like yeah, I don't really believe the materials are actually $1400. Maybe he's including labor...

One thing I don't really have in the RV is space. All my business equipment is taking up all the available space and even the floorspace.

Just walking outside at 8:20 p.m., it's now getting dark and I saw the resident rabbit hop out from the middle of the road as I walked by and he went to the side to go munch on the grass. Apparently they eat green stuff. It's curious, he lets me get like 2 feet away from him (But no closer), I think he must've been born not too long ago and hasn't quite learned to fear humans. This is kind of cool, having a rabbit that hasn't learned to fear people and lets me get close to him. I'm thinking the rabbits start to become active around twilight, though I've seen this particular rabbit at all hours of the day.

So my under forearms have been itchy and have red spots all over it and it seemed to be spreading.

I thought it was because of sweating and bacteria (staph aureus), and so I'm washing hands pretty regularly.

But... wikipedia thinks differently...

Brachioradial pruritus (BRP) is a localized pruritus of the dorsolateral aspect of the arm. BRP is an enigmatic condition with a controversial cause; some authors consider BRP to be a photodermatosis, whereas other authors attribute BRP to compression of cervical nerve roots.

BRP may be attributed to a neuropathy, such as chronic cervical radiculopathy. The possibility of an underlying neuropathy should be considered in the evaluation and treatment of all patients with BRP.

The main cause of BRP is not known, but there is evidence to suggest that BRP may arise in the nervous system. Cervical spine disease may be an important contributing factor.

Patients with BRP may have underlying cervical spine pathology. Whether this association is causal or coincidental remains to be determined.

There is controversy regarding the cause of brachioradial pruritus: is it caused by a nerve compression in the cervical spine or is it caused by a prolonged exposure to sunlight?

In many patients, itching of the arms or shoulders is seasonal. Some patients reported neck pain.

OK, so, it's seasonal in many cases and this...

The condition is becoming increasingly common, presenting in patients who are usually fair skinned and middle aged and indulge in golf, tennis, outdoor table tennis, sailing, or other leisure outdoor activities in sunny climates.[1]:64[2]:402

Okay, I would highly suspect the sunlight factor over cervical diseases. Especially since I've /never/ seen this before until this summer in Houston, telling me it's definitely caused by "the climate" somehow. And, sun->sweat is probably the link to sweat.

If I were to guess... I'd think that white people weren't designed for outdoor exposure at the 30 degree parallel (The list of outdoor activities makes me think of Florida... which is even lower...), and they were really meant for the 45 degree parallel. It's just surprised me that "parallel incompatibility" would cause an itchy inflamed skin disorder?

It's be telling if it was mostly the east coast and not the west coast... would likely indicate humidity being a factor.

Google tells me florida is affected just like Calfornia, so humidity it likely not a factor. Mainly sunlight. 30 degrees + white people = skin disorder. Fudge... lol.

There goes my "living in the tropics" dreams, lol. I guess the tropics isn't meant for white people, lol.

I don't think these people have ruled out the involvement of sweat... "sunny climates" can also probably be considered "sweaty climates", lol.

And coconut oil... maybe I'll try that for my forearms...

Seems like some cases are genuine staph infections, which I'm suspecting.

And, yes, it seems you can immediately taste the difference between organic peanut butter and regular peanut butter. The regular peanut butter had hints of bitterness/metallic or something, and the organic peanut butter literally tastes like peanut-flavored butter.

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update 4:40 a.m., May 21

Fell asleep at 11:30 p.m. (A little earlier than usual, falling asleep earlier than usual seems linked to cardio events)

Woke up two hours later with this kind of severe chest pain (It went away when I woke up/got up), breathing in quickly produced anxiety, EKG trace which I took 20 seconds later showed fast heartrate (100 bpm), but intact EKG trace although a few beats looked weird. My guess is a PVC or some such. There was a spontaneous strong pain in my left hand (middle left wrist, bottom of palm) that felt particularly serious; like, not just a pain that felt strong, but a strong pain that also came with a feeling like something was really wrong.

Initial suspicion was cardiac, but later guess was neuromuscular with all the loadbearing backandneck bending I did try to get the van unlocked yesterday and transporting the plywood into place. Might've loosened joints, leading to nerve impingement.

But, I went to sleep at 2 a.m. and woke up at 4:20 a.m., and noticed that was quite a palpitation there and my eyes seem to be unusually sleepy(They aren't anymore as of 4:45 a.m.), and I got so easily lightheaded while in bed. So, the cardiac guess seems to be a good one.

Anyway, this was possibly caused by not eating enough. I eat and the food tastes good, but for some reason, my body feels like it doesn't really want it. But, perhaps that was a sign of another underlying problem that was triggered by the workload earlier today. Maybe. It doesn't seem like carrying plywood is particularly arduous for the average Joe. I saw a woman carrying one on youtube earlier tonight. But, it did seem to impact my appetite.

left hand seems number than right, so maybe a nerve impingement.

Update: Woke up at 7:45 a.m. after falling asleep sometime after 5.

Even though I haven't been able to capture one of those unusual spontaneous traces... I think I can recall the shape of it.

waveform.jpg

With my current knowledge...

completely negative R wave, extremely high T wave

or tiny R WAVE, extremely negative S Wave, Tall T wave.

If it's the latter, it's indicative of MI, STEMI or similar etiologies. It's just rather odd it'd be "spontaneous" and surrounded by a bunch of healthy traces.

I can't say I have much clinical experience, so my insight is limited here, but I can think of.

Coronary artery vasospasm

But, my impression of that disorder is that it stays closed for at least a couple minutes.

The other possibility is that arterial diameter fluctuates over time (Due to cortisol, due to insufficient sleep, food, emotional/physical stress,etc.), which due to some existing CAD and/or maybe the diameter is just too small to begin with, induces a spontaneous blockage causing a fleeting MI due to temporary LAD occlusion.

Is it serious? Kind of looks like it. Maybe not immediately... Maybe not in the next year or two... But, looks like it could be serious much sooner than I might otherwise wish.

It was feeling pretty serious this morning, though I wasn't immediately convinced it was.

http://hqmeded-ecg.blogspot.com/2014/12/transient-st-elevation-rules-out-for-mi.html

This place is calling it Transient STEMI or Unstable Angina. But, even in this particular patients case, the trace lasted for longer than one consecutive beat (My guess would be at least 10.).

Anyway, if this is true, Unstable Angina, this is not one of the better diseases to have.

Update: 2:43 p.m., after looking into PVCs and PACs, It appears that could be either though I get the feeling it's closer to a PVC than a PAC (I'm just recalling from memory, so I can't be sure what it really looked like.).

So, there's a chance it wasn't serious cardiac phenomenon.

I remember in the distant past that if I had really did some impact exercises, like running or bicycling, or lifting heavy objects, I'd often get back pain while laying down. I'm thinking that must be what it was, because I was carrying the 4x8s a good 100 feet or so, and the back pain was referred to the connected ribs, making it seem like chest pain. That'd explain why it wasn't felt after getting up. It's kind of odd that it suddenly surfaced last night, when I've never experienced in the last 200 days or so, but carrying the 4x8s that amount of distance was a bit beyond normal effort levels, so it's plausible it broke some kind of threshold.

So, doesn't look as bad now as it seemed then.

Still, getting the soft chest ache with some simultaneous anxiety after thinking of a scenario where a 'hostile thought' was being communicated, has me a little on gaurd. Especially since it seems like the phenomena is a bit stronger/frequent than normal during simulcra erotica.

It seemed like I was missing something this morning, despite getting what seemed to be enough sleep. I didn't seek out a close-as-possible parking spot like I usually do, instead parking pretty darn far away, and that wasn't intentional.

And, it looks like the new neighbors are here. They appear to be a young mexican family playing their mariachi music somewhat loudly in the back of their truck.

After "moving in", will they be playing this music loudly during the day? The night?

If so, I may want to move the designated build site a little further from their property. There is a noticeable difference in volume at the edge furthest from them.

I want to make sure I know the build site before assembling the pallet because once it's assembled, it doesn't appear it's moving too far, lol.

Found another site though it appears more sun hits the forest floor there (There's more plants there.). I'm planning on covering it with tarp anyhow, just of note.

Anyway, this guy talking about being a freak about his heart with his "Tiniest bit of fluttering during orgasm", I'm like lol. If he's experienced what I've experienced, I would assume he'd be more than just freaking out, lol.

Anyway, it appears there's a resident here who probably used to live here but it looks like they moved somewhere else by now (They're a bit older). It's interesting because it looks like they did what I'm planning on doing, building a small house.

Anyway, I'm planning on buying materials as I need them. Having extra unused materials hanging around is an unnecessary theft risk and I don't just happen to have a temporary construction fence, lol. So, that's why I decided to forgo getting frame materials, as I still have to build the pallet.

And, I'm definitely going to keep the double frame technique open as a possibility. Neighbors don't seem to be quiet people right now. Someone already yelled at them to "knock it off!" and they didn't do anything about it. Likely por que ellos no hablan inglis. (Because they don't speak english) O ellos son pollas.

I think I'm erring on moving the build site further from them. The new location should be good, because it should give me a good view of the entire backyard (Good for keeping pests out of my garden; target practice from my window.)

It'd be nice if I could ask them "Are you always going to be this loud?" but my Spanish isn't that advanced.

Because the original site is a pretty sweet location, and I'd hate to move if they're going to be quiet people once moved in. It seems they are burning debris at the moment, and I could understand how much more boring it'd be without their favorite music.

I saw that Home Depot sold 12'x3' pallets for $10. Looked interesting, but it didn't look strong enough for the heavier things (Like houses). Adding a few more beams would likely make it strong enough.

I should have a better chance to make the current design extendable into a roman courtyard style building with the new build location. The other location is somewhat of a stretch. For the roman courtyard, one side of the building should be 10-13 feet from the property line, as the total structure would be 50 feet wide.

(I actually wonder if I'd really need a 30x30 garden... Maybe a 20x20 would be fine...)

I don't think drywall would be very roman in style, but I don't really think I /need/ strict adherence to the old design materials. Just the architectural idea of putting a garden courtyard in the middle of the complex. I would like the exterior to be more "authentic"; I don't really think plywood is very convincing, but I could be wrong with the right cover materials, which I assume you could put over the plywood.

And, I just determined I need to chop down the large trees from the backyard before building up the frame. I probably should do it before building up the pallet. Wouldn't want any 100 foot trees falling on the structure /right/ away, lol. So, yes, I need to be clearing out the backyard. And, I've never chopped down an exceedingly large tree like the ones back there... so I don't really know if my techniques will work on this large of a tree. I assume they would, and I would definitely be using a chainsaw for this, because my axe isn't large enough to do it quickly enough. Anyway, I guess I need to focus on clearing out the backyard now and downing the trees before building the house, lol.

So efforts are getting shifted to clearing out the back, which is what I was doing, lol.

If I didn't know any better, I'd suspect that the natural aphrodisaics have a way of boosting seed production.

Update: 9:20 p.m.; something feels weird, I just don't know what exactly. Seems like carbs are upping my anxiety level, which isn't normally how it's supposed to be... so maybe I'm over-carbing. I don't know. Seems like walking helps cool it down. Suspecting high sugar levels might be boosting anxiety, somehow. Taking the axe to the trees in the back might've upped my cortisol levels. Seems like how I take physical work affects the cortisol levels. If I'm just normal and relaxed, great, if I'm putting some oomph into it because my neighbors are pissing me off, there goes the cortisol. I guess it's equivalent to yelling in anger.

And, the palpitations have been picking up. And, that one as I walked past my fan felt /sore/. I see the usual "I get them all the time and they are meaningless" jazz, but, this is like the first time it's happened, and it happened the day after this morning, which is also the first time that happened, lol. So, I'm thinking like... uh... this isn't 'normal', lol.
 
So the Dallas alpha chimp died at 20 while his father died at 49? And he died of Heart Failure.

Chimps normally have a life expecancy of 50.

He died from heart failure. This seems comparable of a human dying at 30 from HF.

This is puzzling. Was his diet any different from the other chimps? Physical activity?

The only clue I could gander was that he wasn't sexually interested in the females. Does nature really kill you off if you don't frock within 10 years of attaining adulthood? I'm thinking that might be the case; dying of an unfulfilled heart.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6499967

Fruitflies

In all cases lengthening of female lifespan and shortening of male lifespan were observed as an effect of virginity.

https://rbej.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1477-7827-12-84

Mice

Virgin females displayed higher life expectancy than virgin males. The relative risk of dying for a virgin male at a particular age was 2.116

Wow, 212% higher chance of dying at any given age for the virgin male mouse.

So this chimp died so young because he was a virgin...

Update: I actually read the mouse paper...

And got the full sentence and not Google's misleading snippet, lol.

The relative risk of dying for a virgin male at a particular age was 2.116 [99% confidence interval: 1.317, 3.398] times that of a virgin female. No significant differences on expectation of survival times between virgin and mated females, and between virgin and mated males were found.

So virginity has no affect on female nor male mouse survival times. Male mice are simply more likely to die than female mice.

Okay, so I guess I can't jump to conclusions with this chimp. So, how did this chimp die at age 20 from heart failure again?
 
So, you are complaining about hot/humid/and strong sun, so, you are cutting down the "very large" trees that would provide plenty of shade and keep your property cooler. I would be nurturing the smaller trees and clearing out the brushy type stuff.

We planted 12" high tree stock here, 12 years ago, and now, they provide enough shade to keep the temperature "feel" factor, probably 15 degrees or more cooler than the sunny areas and there is nearly always a breeze, just from the convection of heated air rising and moving the cooler air around under that shade from the trees.

We have 70+ foot tall trees on our place now and around my workshop and it is usually cooler than in our house by that same air temp difference.

Are you planting concrete pillars and putting aluminum termite prevention caps on them, before placing that tender delicious wood pallet on top? You didn't state, or, I missed that part, about the pallet wood being pressure treated. That won't necessarily prevent termite damage.

Figure out a way to put an opening on top of that RV and vent that hot humid air out the highest place and allow the cooler air to come in at the lowest place in that RV. Even place a small fan in that top opening to pull that humid air out. We don't have AC in our house, just a couple of ceiling fans running in reverse.
 
Harold in CR said:
So, you are complaining about hot/humid/and strong sun, so, you are cutting down the "very large" trees that would provide plenty of shade and keep your property cooler. I would be nurturing the smaller trees and clearing out the brushy type stuff.

We planted 12" high tree stock here, 12 years ago, and now, they provide enough shade to keep the temperature "feel" factor, probably 15 degrees or more cooler than the sunny areas and there is nearly always a breeze, just from the convection of heated air rising and moving the cooler air around under that shade from the trees.

Just the trees in the backyard for the garden. The front trees are being kept to provide shade and some privacy. Also, apparently makes for a good environment for chickens; the forest is a chicken's natural environment (Their ancestors originated from the forests of India). Makes a lot of sense with hawks being their predators and the fact that forests are not lacking in bugs, the natural diet of a chicken.

Are you planting concrete pillars and putting aluminum termite prevention caps on them, before placing that tender delicious wood pallet on top? You didn't state, or, I missed that part, about the pallet wood being pressure treated. That won't necessarily prevent termite damage.

Thanks for mentioning this, I started realizing I could use some concrete pillars, lol [All the shed/tiny-house YT videos feature it]. The wood is pressure treated. So there's aluminum termite prevention caps you say? Interesting, will look into it. If it prevents termites, maybe it prevents other crawlers.

Figure out a way to put an opening on top of that RV and vent that hot humid air out the highest place and allow the cooler air to come in at the lowest place in that RV. Even place a small fan in that top opening to pull that humid air out. We don't have AC in our house, just a couple of ceiling fans running in reverse.

The RV does have a top vent, but the tarp is currently sitting on the RV limiting airflow, lol. I plan on lifting it up off the RV and attaching to the trees, so that should increase top vent airflow while also providing more protection from the sun and better limiting the rain noise.

Right now it's downpouring, which is soaking my driveway and cutting channels in the clay, so it looks like it might be some time before I can drive on the driveway and position the RV.

-----------------------

Okay, I'm currently addicted to this song.

[youtube]n4KrOOm8Nj8[/youtube]

A tale of searching forever, finally finding it and losing it, missing it and forever loyal.

Kind of like what Hitler expected of his troops and German Shepards. Forever loyal.

What Trump was looking for from Comey, but he only gave half-assurances on his loyalty to him. (On that note, I'm surprised the FBI isn't independent of the White House. It does, however, appear that the DOJ is independent of the White House, which is pretty cool. I'm guessing the DOJ is "The primary judicial system" of America, counterbalance to the president and representatives.)

Currently riding on either no sleep or 2 hours of light sleep. Got woken by the rain at 4 a.m. and have been awake since. Sudden transient blurriness occurred this morning, after reading about "TIA symptoms" thanks to google, and feeling this recurrent right lobe pain and some kind of pain in the gumline on my top right molar (It's been there since last night, doesn't seem like I could find the offending food bit if there is one.), I'm thinking bacteria is having some kind of party on the right side of my head. The lack of sleep might be suprressing immunity, effectively helping to make the party louder.

Update: I'm listening to they lyrics, and I just suddenly had pause.

"I will be waiting, until the sky falls down, let the rain clouds come, baby."

I first thought she was implying she would wait forever if she had to as the sky doesn't fall, but then she requests the rain clouds to come and rain. Either she's implying that the rain clouds represent the tears she's going to shed in missing him, or the rain clouds are "the sky" and she wants them to end the wait soon.

Well, I don't think she's trying to contradict the message that she's trying to convey, so probably the former (or something), but the latter had me question it for a second, lol.

Anyway, after getting up last night, it almost seemed like I couldn't inhale. I don't really understand what that was about, because true shortness of breath makes it self like unmistakable in my experience, so I'm not really sure what that was. I did burp and breathed fine after about a few seconds later, so I'm guessing it was intestinal gas. Anyway, just seemed a little curious. The last time I woke up from a nap that late at night (The night before lastnight), I woke up with some significant chest pains (But not after I woke up) and some questionable phenomena in the 30 minutes after.

Anyway, man, I was getting so energetic to start clearing out the backyard but... nope... I think we're getting like 5 inches of rain.

And, the 6 inch culvert pipe is exposing its weaknesses right now. All the washed off clay is now blocking somewhere between 60-90% of the pipe, lol. No one told me my clay was going to clog up the pipe!

It's actually a relatively straightforward task to remedy this. Just dig up the driveway where the new culvert will go, and put it in. It is a bit of effort, though.

Update: Now 5:40 p.m., may 22.

Thought through courtyard building a bit more, I realized I could probably make the east wing private rooms (bathrooms,bedrooms) and the west wing public rooms (living room, kitchen) and the north and south wing could be open to walk as decided. All rooms would, of course, have windows exposing the garden at the center (Including shutters for those wishing privacy). So, essentially, little to building space would go wasted while everyone would have a beautiful view of the gardens no matter where they were.

I could also have rooms branching off the wing (Say, branching off the north wing), should that be desired.

Whatever I use to attach the drywall, it should be easily removed for expansion/modification. I don't know what kind of screws/nails/etc. enable this, but I'm thinking there's something.

One of my fears is that after building such a structure, I would've only put some $45,000 culatively into building materials, but the county would probably value it at some $500,000 or some such, so my taxes would be sky high. Maybe I should pursue expansion on a larger property where I could claim agricultural exemption, like the other rich guys here. It would also make more sense from a networth/resale value POV to choose a better neighborhood, so being able to transport parts of the building might be desirable. I've seen semis transporting uprooted double wide trailers down the highway. Then again, perhaps I'll just buy a new property to start the project on. I would think 5 acre properties in this region would probably go for... $20,000. The ones closer to Houston would be more like $30,000, I think? It just depends on how close.

Anyway, I've heard people claim that the Texas lifestyle sucks.

Well... from my firsthand experience... if you can afford it, west coast city life is definitely nicer, for sure, lol. But, there are plenty of nice areas are around here, it's just that... I don't know... it seems way more car centric here than the west coast cities. I know it's car centric everywhere, but you can at least get away with not having a car in most west coast cities... to some extent... here, definitely not the case. There's going to be at least one or two stores that are going to be way out of your way by non-car methods in like 99% in the city of Houston.

(Granted, if you happened to be the 1% that lived really close to the woodlands mall... you could get the vast majority of needs fulfilled there, or at least it seems like. I think the post office is still 3 miles away from there, though?)

and I just realized I can tell how successful my right top molar antibacterial efforts are by pushing on my right cheekbone, which is right in front of the right molar. If it feels sore, there's an active infestation. Think I'm going to start regularly chewing on garlic. If I had this insight earlier, I might have succesfully implemented the theory earlier before "The vascular symptoms" arose.

If I were to minimize distance traveled to the various stores, I think I would either live close to Conroe or close to the Woodlands.

Of course.... my knowledge of the area is /kind/ of limited to North Houston, so there might be other good locations in Houston.

Oh what the heck... a pug listing got flagged for removal.

Jeez, I hate the plebians of craigslist. I wish they treated craigslist like it was a free market, and sellers could name any price they wanted, at least it would be available if you're willing to pay the price. Right now, there's no other pug listings.

I think I should be putting up my wanted ad... might be the only way pug sellers can find buyers...

And, I thought about how to implement water pressure.

Use the trees to make a mini watertower.

Put a platform up for the IBC tank (Or daisy chain barrels), put them up there, then fill them with water with an appropriate water pump. I'm not really sure what kind of heights are necessary for "usable pressure"... like... for toilets, washing machines and the such.

Oh well, apparently there's a vendor that sells parvo pugs. It could have been his/her listing...
 
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