Saturday, December 31, 2011
Monday, December 26, 2011
Rufus
He's a cat of few words, he'll give you one meow and you'd best figure it out from there. He and I have a routine when he's outside he comes to the door wanting me to come out as well. When I'm sitting in the garage he comes up and sits in his chair next to mine.
He's a cat that thinks he's a dog. I will walk out into the yard while he watches me but if I stop and sit on the ground he'll come running to attack me. He and I are buds!
Here's Rufus, enjoy...
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Merry Christmas
Enjoy...
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Kroger. Are they really looking out for you?
To give you some background, my wife is having oral surgery is a few weeks and due to some infection in her gums our dentist prescribed penicillin for her, as he has done in the past. Now in the past we have gone to Walgreen pharmacy and paid $10.00 for a prescription however because Walgreen and my wife's insurance provider couldn't come to some kind of terms, we can no longer get them filled at Walgreen. So we went to the local Kroger store.
After turning the prescription over to Kroger my wife came home and at the appointed time she went back to the store to pick up her penicillin at which time they told her that her doctor had switched her prescription and it would now cost her $30.00. There was no mention of why it was changed so my wife, believing the doctor knows best, brought them home. After taking them for a day or two she noticed they were upsetting her stomach so we called her doctor to see if she could get them changed back. It was then that we were told that the pharmacy had called to request the change claiming my wife had told them she was allergic to penicillin.My wife told them no such thing.
Now there are so many things that disturb me about this first and foremost was why would they call her doctor and not us to confirm if she was in fact allergic? This was the first time she ever turned a prescription like this, in to them. Walgreen had it before and she took those pills with no problem. Why would she turn in a prescription for something she was allergic to and why would she tell them she was allergic to them? It doesn't add up.
They didn't mention anything about an allergy when my wife questioned the change. As far as she knew it was something the doctor decided, instead it was the pharmacy. Then there's the price thing. This whole thing cost us $20.00 more than what we had budgeted now I'm wondering how many other times this has happened and knowing how business works, I can't help but wonder how many others they've done this too after all it's about profit now not doing whats right for the consumer.
As I've said I've dealt with these people on a business level I know how they think. When you take the human element out of it, when you make it about money then you have things like this and you can't help but wonder. Is it about our health or is it about their profit?
Now, last but not least we have my wife, who was taking medication for a problem. They switched her to something that upset her system. My wife has been suffering from pancreatitis for years. That in itself upsets her system on a regular basis. She doesn't need someone doing it on purpose. This is medication it's not like they put the wrong seat covers on your new car this is something for your health and if this was just a mistake? Well that opens up a whole other bank of concerns.
This is an on going saga and updates will follow. Stay Tuned.
Monday, December 12, 2011
Attention WalMart shoppers
Yes she bought a cute little candle holder which could have ruined our Christmas. She lit the candle and dozed off on the couch. Shortly there after she smelled something and when she woke the candle holder was ablaze. Had this been sitting close to something flammable my lawyers would be knocking on WalMarts door right now. As it is I'm going to be seeking legal advice.
This is a warning to anyone who has purchased these candle holders do not light them and leave the room. In fact I wouldn't light them at all.
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
"Powerful polluters ... see it as a useful strategy to try to convince the public that the scientists are liars and that they're greedy and they're making stuff up. All in the service of their overarching strategy of creating enough doubt to persuade people that there shouldn't be any sense of urgency about addressing this crisis."
Live video by Ustream
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/14/24-hours-of-reality_n_962225.html
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Some Gardening advice
Provide support for flowers that need it before they start to fall over. Try twiggy prunings or pea stakes for sweet peas and ramblers. Put Grow-thru rings in place for bushier plants such as peonies, balloon flower, and globe thistle.
Spread a little lime or wood ashes around delphiniums and peonies.
Divide late-summer or autumn-flowering perennials. If necessary, go after phlox and artemisia with a sharp spade or even an ax. If delphiniums need to be divided, remove and replant the new little plants growing around the outside of the clump. Discard the hard old heart.
Trim climbing roses and attach securely to fences or trellises.
Scatter crushed eggshells in a thick ring around roses to deter slugs.
Sow annual poppies and baby's breath in borders for midsummer bloom by scattering them between the other plants, covering with fine soil, and tamping down gently.
Prune s**kers from fruit trees now before they become established.
Melons often benefit from supplemental warming, such as that provided by growing under plastic. Wait until the transplanted seedlings are established, as they cannot take up moisture very well at first and can easily get dehydrated.
Plant aboveground crops in the light of the moon.
Thin beets and lettuce and use the tiny thinnings to fill in spaces in the row or to start additional plantings elsewhere.
For a crop in two years, plant year-old asparagus roots about eight inches deep in trenches lined with rich compost. Fan out the roots and space two feet apart. Cover gently with good soil.
When potato plants come through the soil, hill them up by pulling several inches of soil around their stems with a hoe to encourage deep roots and keep young potatoes from exposure to light.
Mulch between rows and keep the garden weeded to give emerging seedlings a fair chance.
Get that herb garden started by putting in plants. If you include mint, plant it in a large plastic tub (the kind drywall joint compound or birdseed comes in) with its bottom removed. This will help keep it from invading the rest of the garden.
An established asparagus bed will be ready to harvest. Patrol daily and select spears of about the same size (which will require the same cooking time). If you had trouble locating those first spears, mark the bed with stakes so that you can find them next year.
Watch for signs of drought in plants transplanted from containers. Apply water (not much, but often) close to each plant's stem, where it will percolate down to the root ball. The larger the plant, the longer the recovery period, and the more diligently you need to water. Poke a pointed metal rod into the soil above the root ball. If the rod doesn't penetrate easily, the soil is too dry. If it moves around and feels squishy, the soil is too wet.
Moles generally come calling this month. They're searching for mates and also grubs in your lawn. To get rid of the grubs, apply milky spore disease (Bacillus popilliae or Bacillis lentimorbus), a dust you can buy at your local garden center. Or try a new product called Mole-Med, which has castor oil as its active ingredient. Moles don't like the taste of this any more than you do.
Prune late-flowering shrubs, evergreens, and hedges.
Don't be in a rush to plant tomato, eggplant, pepper, and other heat-loving seedlings if you live where late-May frosts are common. Old-timers will surely wait until after Memorial Day.
Don't cut the leaves off spent spring-flowering bulbs. Dying and yellowing foliage may look unsightly, but leave it in place (and don't tie it up) to help the bulbs ripen for next year's show.
If you have crocuses growing in your lawn, don't mow until their leaves have died down.
Don't force clematis to climb a lamppost or fan trellis. Instead, give it a chance to climb trees, scramble over shrubs, or romp over the ground.
Monday, March 28, 2011
Corporate Speak
It's corporate welfare. They are milking this country dry. Turning our labor force into a third world country and they call themselves patriotic.
I was watching 60 minutes the other night, which is what really inspired this blog post. They were doing a segment on corporations who are sending their profits overseas to avoid paying our taxes and supporting our country
One CEO who would talk to us was Chambers. Cisco is the giant high tech company headquartered in San Jose, Calif. He says our tax rate is insane. It's forcing companies into these maneuvers, especially when many other industrialized countries including Canada are busy lowering their tax rates in order to lure our companies and our jobs away.
"Every other government in the world has realized that the U.S. has it wrong. They're saying, 'I'm going to have lower taxes, period.' That's what you see all across Western Europe, that's what you see in Asia in the developed countries," Chambers said.
When asked if he's judged as a CEO on issues like taxes, Chambers said, "Absolutely."
He's been expanding Cisco overseas because of growing demand abroad, but also to lower the company's taxes: their average rate over the last three years was just 20 percent.
Economist Martin Sullivan says it's standard operating procedure for companies like Cisco. "U.S. multinationals are shifting their research facilities, shifting their manufacturing facilities, and shifting some regional headquarters into Switzerland and into Ireland. And those are massive numbers of jobs," he told Stahl.
Of course I can see why Corporate America would align itself with the Swiss. Study a little Swiss history and you see why they were able to do so well, primarily they were able to profit from World War II and take advantage of their good fortune after the war. Although the Swiss remained neutral they had no problem producing arms for Nazi Germany and because their country was spared the ravages of that war they were able to recover much faster than the rest of Europe. It wasn't until just recently that much of the plundered wealth acquired by the Third Reich from the extermination of the Jews, was repatriated from Swiss banks. The Swiss attitude of looking out for themselves and their own best interests fits right in with Corporate speak.
They claim it's because of the arcane outmoded tax system we have and I will have to agree with them. If we are letting corporations evade their tax liabilities then our tax code does need to be revised, so that we all pay our fair share.
But then it's the stock holders. Those faceless contributors who demand their profits. Well shame on them! If they are demanding their profits when all else are hurting then they are no better than the French Monarchy before their Revolution. Making a profit is fine, it's how much and what you do with it once you get it.
Our country is in crisis! We hear daily how our deficit is bankrupting us and the attitudes of the mega wealthy and corporate America are doing nothing to help. All they can do is sit on their Trillions and cry that they are being taken advantage of. The madness lies in those idiots who don't have a pot to piss in who defend them things like" why are you jealous of the rich?" "take responsibility for yourself and don't worry about the wealthy". People, that atitude plays right into their hands. They love it, not only are they driving us all to the poor house but the very people they are robbing are driving the bus.
Republicans like to point to President Kennedy's tax cuts as an example but what they don't tell you is that the tax rate then was 91% on income over $400,000. but then as now those high rates didn't generate the revenue because of tax loopholes. Today it's 35% and corporate America is making money hand over fist while not only not paying any taxes but in fact getting tax breaks and incentives. Most importantly without creating any jobs. You know what that means? That means they are "Too Big Too Fail!" and they don't need us any longer. They can make their profits without the American worker. Thats why they feel embolden to make the final push to do away with unions, because they can. People thats what Teddy Roosevelt warned against, thats why we have the Free Loader (Estate) tax.
Big money and corporate America tried to create a Fascist America shortly after FDR took office. They tried to hire General Smedly Butler to lead a 500,000 man army to protect their fortunes from the redistribution ideas of Roosevelt. You only have to research the good General to realize what they did and in so doing you have to come to the realization that thats what they are doing today. Had General Butler not turned them in they would have overthrown our country. The difference between then and now? The Internet!
Folks this was a smack in the face. This is extortion! This man said on prime time, on a national network, that they are taking their profits over seas because they don't want to pay their fair share and they are blaming us for it. This is the insanity of Corporate Speak because there are people who don't understand whats going on, that will side with them and condemn the very government that is there to protect them.
We all need to learn how to interpret corporate speak!
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Mothers a Tease
Just when my plants were about to give up the ghost Mother Nature gave us a taste of what is in store. We had a few days of really mild weather so I took the opportunity to take my plants out for some sun. They really needed it.
They loved it. You can see some of them shot out about 6 inches in two days. Just a couple things I've notice in growing my trees.
1.) When you replant your trees in the spring you should have a shoot at least 12-18 tall to make sure you get a tree. Your trees will have died back over the winter and once you get them back in their pots your going to need to cut that shoot back, so you'll need some plant to work with. If you start at the top and lightly squeeze the stalk, sliding your hand down the stalk as soon as it gets firm cut the stalk on an angle. If you see green in the middle then your in good shape, if not then keep going down till you do.
2.) If you have any babies, small starts coming up from the roots of the mother plant, you need to separate them from the mother and replant them by themselves. I have found that if you leave young saplings on the mother too long the mother will die. I always remove as much dirt as posible and with a kitchen carving knife I try to separate the root start as close to the mother as I can, being sure to include several nice roots on the start. Repot both of them and now you've doubled your yield.
3.) I feed mine quit often but then I keep mine in containers. If you plant yours in the ground it would depend on your soil as to how you fertilize. I have also found that in order to get any height from them you should prune the older leaves from time to time and of course you should clip and damaged leaves. Most of my trees could support 8-10 leaves.
Here's some pictures of past banana trees;
I love to use them as back ground and fill. Banana trees by themselves aren't very aesthetic but when they are combined with other plants or several banana plants they looks really nice.
I was just having some fun here. I'm thinking of getting one of these done as a film covering for an overhead florescent light fixture.
Bananas are fun. I hope you get a chance to grow some. They don't take a very big pot they don't mind their roots being cramped but they will grow bigger in a bigger pot. Water frequently and fertilize often depending on where you plant. Then at the end of the season just dig them up or do like I do and just put them in the garage pot and all..
Now I think I'm gonna have a banana split...
Monday, March 21, 2011
Why are we destroying the Earth?
First there were the dust bowls of the 30s;
We took what nature had provided and we tilled under the very grasses that made the land so fertile. With no thought to what the consequences were they saw a gold mine and used it till they used it up. The resulting dust storms blew parts of the Midwest as far east as New York City.
Then the discovery of oil led us to further rape the land...
Then of course there is King Coal;
The Oil spills;
Fracking;
Nuclear;
But like Lemmings headed for a cliff we are ready to pursue whatever it takes to meet our energy needs. Our only focus is keep our energy use at it's current (no pun intended) levels. We are consuming or permanently damaging everything our children will need to exist on this planet once we're gone. We need to stop and think. That would be a novel start.
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
The Elephant in the room
Medicare is a social insurance program administered by the United States government, providing health insurance coverage to people who are aged 65 and over, or who meet other special criteria. Medicare operates similar to a single-payer health care system.[1]
The program also funds residency training programs for the vast majority of physicians in the United States.
The Social Security Act of 1965 was signed into law on July 30, 1965, by President Lyndon B. Johnson as amendments to existing Social Security legislation. At the bill-signing ceremony, Johnson enrolled former President Harry S. Truman as the first Medicare beneficiary and presented him with the first Medicare card, and Truman's wife Bess, the second.[2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicare_(United_States)
The key Phrase in there is "Single Payer" Yes folks Medicare is "Socialized Medicine"! Make no mistake that is what bothers Republicans. The fact that Medicare is Socialized Medicine and is working very well. As well as funding will allow.
Health care in the United States is provided by many separate legal entities. Health care facilities are largely owned and operated by the private sector. Health insurance is primarily provided by the private sector, with the exception of programs such as Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, the Children's Health Insurance Program, and the Veterans Health Administration.
The U.S. Census Bureau reported that a record 50.7 million residents (which includes 9.9 million non-citizens) or 16.7% of the population were uninsured in 2009.[1][2] More money per person is spent on health care in the USA than in any other nation in the world,[3][4] and a greater percentage of total income in the nation is spent on health care in the USA than in any United Nations member state except for East Timor.[4] Although not all people are insured, the USA has the third highest public healthcare expenditure per capita, because of the high cost of medical care in the country.[clarification needed][5][6] A 2001 study in five states found that medical debt contributed to 46.2% of all personal bankruptcies and in 2007, 62.1% of filers for bankruptcies claimed high medical expenses.[7] Since then, health costs and the numbers of uninsured and underinsured have increased.[8]
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Toilets?
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Friday, March 4, 2011
2010 Patio and garden
I took some landscape timbers I had laying around to make a frame for the area I freed up by moving the fence. Laying two 8ft landscape timbers, lengthwise on top of one another I was able to make a frame measuring 6ft by 16ft by 8in, level with my drive way. I then bought bags of Peat Moss, composted cow manure and top soil. I started with a layer of peat moss, then a layer of cow manure with a layer of topsoil on top. I left some composted leaves and other compost-able material underneath, then as the year went on I would add discarded vegetables, watermelon rinds, corn cobs, anything the worms could turn into compost. I grew my peppers, heirloom tomatoes, egg plant and okra there.
The patio started out good but the heat took a toll on my riser plants. I had some Nasturtiums that developed some kind of fungus that shot out tentacles,the tentacles emanated from the base of the stalk then wrapped themselves around the limbs till they choked out the vegetation. It reminded me of the feelers that a cucumber plants puts out to latch on to other vegetation. It also attacked a thyme plant that I had but none of the others were bothered with it. I learned that in hot weather you want to be careful with over watering. I almost lost my red creeping thyme due to the roots sitting in water and the heat virtually cooks the roots. Even my "Purple Grass" was a disappointment. I love to blend in a planter or two of Purple Grass each year. The purple tassels make a nice contrast to the rest of the patio but this year they didn't produce any tassels.
My banana trees thrived very well in the heat in fact by the end of the season I had approx 20 trees in pots around the patio. I also cleaned off a smaller riser in a less sunny part of the patio the grow plants that didn't require as much sun light. With my tomatoes and other exotic plants though we still had a nice patio scene this year.
I'm such a terrible blogger
I don't know about you but I get into great debates with myself on a daily basis and I come up with so many ideas while driving down the road but wouldn't you know it, by the time I get back here I have forgotten what it was all about. Enter mp3 recorder.
I got an mp3 recorder to help me with learning my quartet music and I plan to carry it with me on a daily basis so that I can record my little pearls of wisdom and share them here. In that way all of you can just kick the crap out of them when I do an make me feel more insignificant than I already do.
BTW be sure to click on the ad-sense bar. You don't have to buy anything but if you do I get paid for it. I don't get a lot but every little bite helps. If you have a blog on here you should check into it as well. It really is money for nothing.