A Fine Day

Yesterday I cleared a path from the dog run to the field and loaded about a barrelful of branches on the truck. We did an easy transfer station run. Looks like a rainy one today.

A neighbor’s mail had been delivered to us by mistake, so we walked over to re-deliver it.

Ron’s back was feeling okay, so we extended the walk and stopped to chat with a neighbor who is a stone cutter. He gave us a tour of his work area, including two winches and a giant trailer he’d built over an eight-year period.

Received Em’s birth certificate – great service from the Lowell City Clerk’s Office!

Our Hearts to a Dog to Tear; Fence; Blood

The fence was finished in a day on Wednesday. It looks like it’s always been there: a good sign that it’s in the right place.

I donated blood yesterday and got a Falmouth Road Race gift pack: nice!

We are getting ready to do a transfer station run. Ron’s back is better, but still not 100%.

We’ve filled out three or four applications to shelters, I’ve lost track. I lucked out with Paula. Nowadays, it’s not so easy to find a dog that is looking for a home. I’m not sure why the big demand.

Fence Solution; Ron’s New Implant

We’re having the new dog run installed at the back of the property. We’ll be able to see the dog and it’ll be cooler in the summer.

Ron has peace with this.

Impeachment day, thus nailing Trump as the worst US President, at least in our lifetimes if not the nation’s.

Ron got his tooth implant today and is very happy with it!

Nervous, Nellie

The dog fence will be installed this week. The timing was a surprise, and I’m nervous about it.

Ron has been no help, still feels lousy, still doing nothing about it.

I drove Em to her new PCP appointment today. Had a discount coupon for Cape Cod Creamery, which was nice.

Wish the Trump slapping were over. I’m getting nervous that the corporatocracy will let him get away with his malfeasance.

Chopped “Liver”, Another Standout

Made hash browns and scrambled eggs for Ron, who was still hurting and grumpy.

Joined the group on the Falmouth Green around 12:15.

Deposited checks from MRS and Harvard Pilgrim. Did a small shop at Shaw’s.

Made one of the veg chopped “liver” recipes, and it turned out very well. I guess we don’t have to wait for Roche to stock it at the next Jewish holiday!

Sent James an Apple gift card. Used the Mass Save debit card.

Did laundry and changed the sheets. Watched a film on Netflix while exercising. We watched a couple of Wild Card games.

Ron’s Bad Back, Truck, Furnace

The new plumbing company sent a good tech to take care of our long-neglected furnace, and the fine workers at Cormier’s fixed my truck yesterday.

I stood out with Move to Remove this morning and did several errands on the way home: picked up a book at the Falmouth Library, did a shop at Job Lot for lentils, cookies and parchment paper, returned an unneeded part to Amazon from UPS, got Em’s request for their birth certificate notarized and mailed.

Ron’s back has been bothering him since Wednesday (I think). He’d run out of pain med, but S&S pharmacy was finally able to get through to his doctor for a refill. He is very unhappy and in a lot of pain even with meds.

Yesterday we did a transfer station run. I made a salad and corn chowder from a mix and baked spaghetti squash and potatoes. This morning, oatmeal and sautéed mushrooms.

We may yet have a chance to meet Teddy the dog. He’s been transferred to a shelter in Brewster. This morning, I gave the fence company the go-ahead for the installation.

“Everyone is blaming Trump for Georgia,” the Republican strategist said. “When Trump took office, we had the White House and both branches of Congress. Now we have nothing. He inherited a Lamborghini and treated it like a lawn mower.”

Systematic failures

The French police official detailed multiple lapses they believe were systematic.

  1. Large crowds of protestors needed to be managed far earlier in the process by police, who instead controlled a scene at the first demonstration Trump addressed then ignored the crowd as it streamed towards the Capitol.
  2. “It should have been surrounded, managed and directed immediately and that pressure never released.”
  3. Because the crowd was not managed and directed, the official said the protestors were able to congregate unimpeded around the Capitol itself, where the next major failure took place.
  4. “It is unthinkable there was not a strong police cordon on the outskirts of the complex. Fences and barricades are useless without strong police enforcement. This is when you start making arrests, targeting key people that appear violent, anyone who attacks an officer, anyone who breaches the barricade. You have to show that crossing the line will fail and end in arrest.”
  5. “I cannot believe the failure to establish a proper cordon was a mistake. These are very skilled police officials but they are Federal and that means they ultimately report to the president. This needs to be investigated.”
  6. “When the crowd reached the steps of the building the situation was over. The police are there to protect the building from terrorist attacks, and crime, not a battalion of infantry. That had to be managed from hundreds of meters away unless the police were willing to completely open fire and I can respect why they were not.”

‘Thank god it didn’t work because I can’t imagine how hard it would be to sanction the US financial system’

The third official, who works in counter-intelligence for a NATO member, agreed that the situation could only be seen as a coup attempt, no matter how poorly considered and likely to fail, and that its implications might be too huge to immediately fathom.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/some-among-america-s-military-allies-believe-trump-deliberately-attempted-a-coup-and-may-have-had-help-from-federal-law-enforcement-officials/ar-BB1cypbi?ocid=ob-fb-enus-1541512262291&fbclid=IwAR3yZ8xNRs6dCrc_lHcYm-PJ7vFkfHLv_FVmJDdnzXg1w2wXAD03TSPcRy4

Stew, Feeders

Made a heavy veg stew, which took the morning.

Uninstalled Panda and installed Kaspersky.

Made some minor SQL changes to MRS.

CL shut down a couple of assholes that were playing juvenile games. Ha ha ha.

Very hard to concentrate today with political goings on. Freaking fool Lyons refused to charter the CCRTC. The lunatics are running the asylum.

Running CCleaner.

Ron went shopping, again.

I found and filled the big seed feeder and put it out along with three small suet feeders.

Semi-Gourmet New Year’s Day

Ron got his pension benefits and did a huge shop at various places yesterday and plans to go out again today.

I heated up some frozen foods that looked good, veg “chicken” pie, gorgonzola appetizers, vegetables and pasta. Heated up chocolate for dipping with strawberries.

We took down and stored the holiday lights. This morning, I did the same with the tiny Christmas tree.

Tried making oatmeal overnight but the recipe called for way too much water. Will be better next time.

Water Filter; New Year’s Eve

Changed the water filter yesterday.

Visits from two companies to consult on a dog fence. Looks like it could work.

Ron went to Rockland. Had to make an appointment to access the coin counting machine in the lobby. He picked up random coins that had been rejected; he saved them even though they are not negotiable, at least not here.

I did a fairly expensive food shop.

Signed up for a second produce delivery service, Imperfect Foods.

We are pretty well “liquored up” for New Year’s. Ron brought home two bottles of white wine yesterday, and we have an unopened bottle of Macnish.

Otherwise, we’ve been pretty much sheltering in place since Christmas.