Blog

  • SURVEY Survey survey

    Today has been stressful. Not in the sense of I had to do anything super stressful, but just in the sense of we had the mortgage valuation survey, the actual survey-survey (*house inspection) and the prospective purchasers popped around for another visit. This meant our house had to be back up to show-standard, which wasn’t that far off where we were…

    …but did mean that both Kathryn and I were super stressful; and despite the fact that we’re both fairly certain there’s nothing hideously wrong with the house, I always imagine the surveyor coming in and going “Oh DEAR. You’ve got dry-rot and wet-rot and this whole wall is about an inch from exploding, and how long have you had that infestation of kangaroos? You’ll need to get that dealt with”.

    Or something like that.

    Actually, though, the surveyor said that he couldn’t really find anything much of concern. The front wall, adjoining the neighbours house, is apparently very slightly damper than would be ideal, but it’s not affected the paint and despite the fact we’ve had that area almost completely blocked off with records most of the time here, they’ve shown no signs of damp, and nor has it got even the faintest sign of mould. So it’s pretty marginal. He commented on very little else… so I think our house should get the clean bill of health it deserves.

    I believe the mortgage valuation should be okay.

    And it turned out the sellers wanted to ask about what furniture they could buy with the sale, and were wanting to check about various modifications they’d like to make (downstairs toilet, for example) and wanted to ask the surveyor about how much of a problem that’d be…

    What I also found out is that for [reasons], the buyer’s solicitors don’t seem to have passed them any of the information we’ve sent. I don’t quite know why that is. I’m going to ring my solicitors and chase them.

    So, all in all, it wasn’t actually stressful at the time, but it woke me at 2am, which seems to be the new go-to time for insomnia for me…

  • shadesofmauve:

    bioticbooty:

    inquisitorkells:

    sheetghcst:

    powell’s city of books (portland, or)

    @bioticbooty works here and I am so jealous

    It’s literally heaven

    YOU WORK THERE? *drools*

    I don’t understand how anyone can work there. I mean, if I worked there I’d never have money for food, or a place to live…

    …unless…can you live there too?

  • Hands-free wheelchair controlled by leaning

    Hands-free wheelchair controlled by leaning

    I’ve some issues with the language used in the video, but it looks conceptually neat to me. Having never been in a wheelchair myself, I’ve no idea if it’s a good idea – but I’m sure many folks have experience and could provide sensible input :)

  • I know this has been doing the rounds on the webs, but for anyone who’s missed it’s fantastic & gorgeous. Clicky.

  • Why vegans should use honey instead of agave nectar

    clittyslickers:

    itslittl3red:

    Okay, so I might get a lot of hate for this, I might not. I don’t particularly care either way, as long as word gets out about this, because it’s extremely important to me.

    As I’m sure most people know by now, bees are disappearing at alarming rates. Simply put, our entire species could not survive without them. This is due to a syndrome called Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD).

    Many vegans opt to use agave nectar instead of honey, because agave nectar is plant based. But harvesting of agave nectar is threatening the existence of two other endangered species: Mexican long-nosed bats (who live strictly off of nectars – primarily agave nectar) and the Jaguarundi (a solitary feline who basically looks like a love child between a jungle cat and a ferret.) Approximately 113,126 acres of these animals’ habitat were destroyed from 1991 to 2000, and more has been destroyed since.

    On the other hand, beekeepers are essential to increasing bee populations. They monitor the bees’ health and help protect them from dangerous parasites and pesticides that are suspected to cause CCD. In addition, well-kept bees never need to use the amount of honey they produce; Honey is made by the bees to consume only when there is not enough food for them outside the hive. In the care of a good beekeeper, this will only happen during the winter months, and the keeper will leave enough honey for the bees to thrive until it’s spring again.

    It’s best to buy local, organic honey if at all possible. Local beekeepers will not use dangerous factory-farming methods, and it helps maintain your local bee population! If you want to help bees in a more active way than buying local honey, you can plant a bee garden or even become a small-scale beekeeper! (I don’t have a link for this, it’s best to check out local resources. Maybe even ask the person selling honey at your farmer’s market!)

    this is so interesting!! anyone have more information on this?

  • 5 Black Churches in the Ferguson Area Have Burned Since Last Week, Media Shrugs

    5 Black Churches in the Ferguson Area Have Burned Since Last Week, Media Shrugs

    iwriteaboutfeminism:

    On October 8th, the first fire was set at the Bethel Non-Denominational Church. Between October 10th and October 14th, three more churches were burned — New Northside Missionary Baptist Church, St. Augustine Catholic Church, and the New Testament Church of Christ. In the early hours of Saturday morning, another fire was set at the New Life Missionary Baptist Church. All 5 churches are within three miles of each other.

  • senshisushi:

    bidonica:

    Today’s installment of  why“but it has always been like this!” is a bullshit argument: @nitratediva? lays down the law about the role of women in early Hollywood

    Y’all are forgetting Mae West, who is my hero. I guess she’s a little later, but she wrote and starred in her own films, with some of the sassiest lines OF ALL TIME. I forever regret not making a quote of hers my yearbook quote.

  • Stephen Harper to step down as Conservative leader, party says

    Stephen Harper to step down as Conservative leader, party says

    seananmcguire:

    markdoesstuff:

    allthecanadianpolitics:

    The Canadian Press has learned that Stephen Harper is poised to step down as Conservative party leader, but will stay on as an MP for Calgary Heritage.

    Party president John Walsh is expected to say that Harper has asked him to reach out to the new parliamentary caucus and request that they choose an interim leader.

    Walsh will also ask the party’s governing body to start the process of appointing a leadership organizing committee to set the groundrules for an impending race.

    A policy convention had been scheduled for this May in Vancouver, and that will need to be postponed.

    Harper’s departure will signal the beginning of a tumultuous time in the party — he has been the only leader of the organization formed in 2003 between the Progressive Conservative and Canadian Alliance parties.

    More Coming

    so did y’all vote him into a pit of snakes? i hope he steps down into a pit of snakes.

    Why would you do that to the snakes?  SNAKES ARE OUR SLITHERY FRIENDS.

  • Anonymous:

    Are you good as far as having drugs to make having the flu not suck so bad?

    shadesofmauve:

    justice-turtle:

    brin-bellway:

    sinesalvatorem:

    What type of drugs? Where can I get them? Will they cost more than $25? I’ve never bought flu medication back home. We use ~traditional herbs~ and suffering it out, because that’s the cheapest thing for it.

    (will use chemical names because over-the-counter medicine brand names are ever-changing, often overly broad, and generally confusing)

    (I spent long enough composing this that I’ve quite possibly been ninja’d, but hopefully this helps anyway.)

    Relevant contents of my family’s basic medicine stock, available at any ordinary pharmacy (Pharmasave, Shoppers Drug Mart, stuff like that, also most grocery stores):

    Pseudoephedrine: de-clogs stuffy noses. I don’t think it does anything for runny noses, or at least it didn’t seem to during my recent cold. While not particularly psychoactive itself (apparently it can be a stimulant, but not at the doses you’d be taking), is an ingredient in making meth, so you will likely be required to show ID and be forbidden from buying quantities that look suspiciously industrial. IME, wears off after 3 – 4 hours, but can only be taken every 6 (although you’re officially allowed to take another dose after only 4 as long as you don’t do it too often; see box for details). Plan your off times accordingly.

    (Phenylephrine: …actually, let me just quote Wikipedia here. “Phenylephrine is marketed as an alternative for the decongestant pseudoephedrine, though clinical studies show phenylephrine to be no more effective than placebo.“ You might be tempted by it because it’s less restricted than pseudoephedrine, but don’t bother. If you have trouble obtaining pseudoephedrine, just go without.)

    Dextromethorphan: reduces cough frequency, though not always to nothing. Taken twice a day, and also cannot be relied upon to actually last the whole time.

    Guaifenesin: if you are having the kind of cough where you can feel there’s phlegm clogging your lungs but the cough’s not clearing it out, turns your coughing into the kind of cough that does clear it out. Kind of gross while the “productive” cough is going on, but you can breathe better afterward.

    Dimenhydrinate: anti-nauseant, in case you need that sort of thing at the moment. Is also a sedative, so don’t take it if you want to be awake. Has a similar name to anti-allergy (and also sedative) diphenhydramine because it’s a similar chemical: you might be able to use them interchangeably in a pinch, but probably better to keep separate stocks of them if possible. Definitely don’t take them both at once, though. (Mind you, it’s general good policy to never take any sedative with another sedative, or any stimulant (including pseudoephedrine) with another stimulant.)

    (With flus you probably don’t need an anti-diarrheal, but for future reference that’s loperamide. Half a pill renders you unable to poop for 24 – 36 hours. I recommend against taking a whole pill.)

    The four main OTC pain relievers are ibuprofen, aspirin, acetaminophen, and naproxen. I generally use ibuprofen, but I’m not sure the difference is that important if you don’t have any medical issues forbidding one or another. (Oh, although, ibuprofen is nearly tasteless, so if you have trouble swallowing the pill, you can just chew it and it won’t be horrible.)

    I don’t normally bother with topical anesthetic for sore throats (you open your mouth, aim the spray bottle at the back of your throat and press the button) because I find the feeling of numbness it replaces the pain with to be just as bad, but Mom uses phenol spray.

    Note: all of these are sold in quantities too big for one cold suffered by one person. Rather than buying your own supply and having it expire before you can use it all, you may want to consider buying partial containers off of classmates. Possibly. Don’t blame me if something goes wrong with this plan.

    Not relevant to the flu, but throwing in that the four OTC painkillers have vastly different effects on period cramps (ibuprofen is the most effective, acetaminophen the least). Also, if you have trouble swallowing a pill, I know both ibuprofen and acetaminophen come in chewable or flavored-liquid “children’s” forms. I’ve used the liquid form of ibuprofen when period cramps were upsetting my stomach too badly for a solid pill.

    Also, all of these things come in various bundled products, so you can be careful reading active ingredient listings and buy two things rather than six (tho single-drug pills are pretty awesome if you’re building up a drug cabinet and want to be prepared). If you do that make sure you don’t accidentally double anything up – if the combined drug has acetaminophen (paracetamol for brits), don’t take another acetaminophen, etc.

    If you DO accidentally double up, don’t panic. Manufacturers are conservative with their estimates; what is written on the box is a very safe dose. Accidentally double dosing yourself once isn’t going to kill you. Just be more careful next time, and be extra careful if you took something that has either a stimulant (jitters) or sedative (sleepiness).

    Ibuprofen is better than acetaminophen for muscle aches (cramps, flu aches). I find naproxen to be the runner up for those of us who can’t take or don’t get an effect from ibuprofen.

    Oh, and there’s an anti-Guaifenesin post going around tumblr, btw. It’s bullshit, ignore it.

    With acetaminophen, do be very careful. It’s an ace for reducing your temperature, and really good if taken in small divided doses as a pain killer; however it’s very toxic to your liver in overdose.

    So *really* check that you’re not double dosing. We see a lot of accidental ODs on acetaminophen in the ER, and I’m not quite sure of the US treatment, but in the UK the treatment, if you catch it early, is a 21 hour infusion and a couple of blood tests. If you don’t catch it in time, you’re looking at fun stays in ITU and potentially needing a liver transplant. (Aren’t I just the sunshine bunny).

    The problem with acetaminophen OD is that you won’t necessarily feel unwell until it’s done significant, irreversible damage to your liver. 

    Not that I want to scare you, I love the stuff, think it’s fab. It is really safe in normal doses. But just be wary that when you’re sick or pain you’re not just going *YAY PILLS!*, which is clearly a temptation for some.

    Also, weird side point the second. In the US you have a bit more leeway for safety, as the US Max dose appears to be 3g / day (in divided doses), in the UK it’s 4g / day*, and people usually take the max dose on the packet. I do not know the reason for this difference.

    * There is a weight component to this calculation, but it’s not on ordinary OTC packs of tablets; as long as you’re normal adult human weight, these figures apply.