Thursday Sleepy Open Comments

I’m sure my sleep debt is almost as large as the nation’s fiscal debt, though I have found myself sleeping not only better lately, but falling asleep a little earlier than usual.  I’ve also found myself catnapping around six in the evening – after dinner and my daily running around.

***

Can You Catch Up on Lost Sleep?

Let’s do some sleep math. You lost two hours of sleep every night last week because of a big project due on Friday. On Saturday and Sunday, you slept in, getting four extra hours. Come Monday morning, you were feeling so bright-eyed, you only had one cup of coffee, instead of your usual two. But don’t be duped by your apparent vim and vigor: You’re still carrying around a heavy load of sleepiness, or what experts call “sleep debt”—in this case something like six hours, almost a full nights’ sleep.

Sleep debt is the difference between the amount of sleep you should be getting and the amount you actually get. It’s a deficit that grows every time we skim some extra minutes off our nightly slumber…. Studies show that such short-term sleep deprivation leads to a foggy brain, worsened vision, impaired driving, and trouble remembering. Long-term effects include obesity, insulin resistance, and heart disease. And most Americans suffer from chronic deprivation. …

The good news is that, like all debt, with some work, sleep debt can be repaid—though it won’t happen in one extended snooze marathon. Tacking on an extra hour or two of sleep a night is the way to catch up…

Go to bed when you are tired, and allow your body to wake you in the morning (no alarm clock allowed). You may find yourself catatonic in the beginning of the recovery cycle: Expect to bank upward of ten hours shut-eye per night. As the days pass, however, the amount of time sleeping will gradually decrease.

For recovery sleep, both the hours slept and the intensity of the sleep are important. Some of your most refreshing sleep occurs during deep sleep. Although such sleep’s true effects are still being studied, it is generally considered a restorative period for the brain….

Interestingly: ” A 2003 study in the journal Sleep found that the more tired we get, the less tired we feel.”

So earn back that lost sleep—and follow the dictates of your innate sleep needs. You’ll feel better. “When you put away sleep debt, you become superhuman,” says Stanford’s Dement, talking about the improved mental and physical capabilities that come with being well rested. Finally, a scientific reason to sleep in on Saturday.


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70 responses to “Thursday Sleepy Open Comments”

  1. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    60 degrees here with low humidity but sadly it will be short lived but we’ll enjoy it while we can. So it’s Thursday let’s get moving.

    Mornin’ Gang

  2. Bonecrusher Avatar
    Bonecrusher

    I’m on the phone with Social Security. I thought it would be a good idea to start collecting now 65yrs and 6 months vs 66yrs and 10 months. The difference in the benefit would take 14 years or so to catch up. Now they are telling me that since I am employed with a group heath plan, every dollar gross income per month over $1940 deducts $0.50 from the monthly benefit?!? What kind of crap is that? Round numbers, I make a little more but for study: $4800/month -1940 = $2860 divided by 2 = $1430 penalty. My benefit was supposed to be around $2250, but deducting $1430 = $820 total benefit. It will stay this way until 66yrs and 10 months then only go up to the $2250 amount instead of the higher rate. Only demonazis could come up with a scheme to penalize someone for working. I’m glad I made the call and found out before I made an expensive mistake.

    1. Shannon Avatar
      Shannon

      Yep. If you wait until full retirement age, then there is no earned income limit.

      1. Bonecrusher Avatar
        Bonecrusher

        Perhaps the gloriously huge bill before congress will correct this ridiculous situation.

        1. Texpat Avatar
          Texpat

          In your dreams, bubba, in your dreams…

    2. Texpat Avatar
      Texpat

      It started with Ronald Reagan and Tip O’Neill in 1983.  Bill Clinton made it worse during his eight years.  The clever trick is the gutless Congress lets the already hated IRS come up with their annual formulas to steal from Americans.  Both parties are to blame for this.

      Oh, don’t complain to us, we didn’t do that, those creeps at the IRS did it.

      In 1993, the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, signed by President Bill Clinton, introduced a second tier of taxation, increasing the taxable portion of benefits to 85% for higher-income recipients. This affected individuals with a combined income over $34,000 and married couples filing jointly with income over $44,000.

      I was 41 years old in 1993 and nobody thought $34,000 was very much money.

      1. Bonecrusher Avatar
        Bonecrusher

        If SS benefits were taxed simply as ordinary income, it would not be so egregious. For someone who earns $75K/year, the penalty is so great that they would not receive any benefit whatsoever: the monthly SS benefit would be zero.

        1. Texpat Avatar
          Texpat

          It costs a single individual $80,000 a year to buy a small condo and own an average vehicle in northern New Jersey, Los Angeles or San Francisco.  Forget NYC, it’s much higher.

  3. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Expect to bank upward of ten hours shut-eye per night.

    That’s just not going to happen.

  4. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    I can probably count on one hand the nights I ever slept over 7 or 8 hours, at the most.  I was usually a 5 or 6 hour sleeper.  After over 7 decades, it’s a roll of dice about trying to string together more than 3 or 4 hours of sleep at a time.

  5. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    When you make it socially rewarding to murder insurance executives in cold blood on the streets, it’s nothing to start killing innocent young Jews on the sidewalks of America.

    I’ve lost what little reserve of human consideration I had for members of the Mohammedan Death Cult.

    1. wagonburner Avatar
      wagonburner

      Much as I despise the Mohammedan Death Cult, I’m not convinced they were involved in the murders of the UHC guy or the Israeli embassy staffers.

      It’s at least as likely that the roots lie in the lefty fever swamps.

  6. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    It was 63° in this house this morning.  Perfect for me in my nice long terrycloth bathrobe as I made coffee.  Then Her Highness shows up shivering like it’s a blizzard outside and turns the heat on to 72.  It is May 22 and we have the heat on.  They told me the globe was warming.

  7. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    During a revealing segment on Mark Halperin’s show “2WAY Tonight,” Senior Trump DOJ official Ed Martin dropped a political bombshell. Martin named names in the growing scandal surrounding President Joe Biden’s — or someone’s — use of the autopen, the mechanical device used to sign official documents. According to Martin, the issue isn’t the use of the autopen itself, but who was really in charge of it while Biden’s cognitive state was in steep decline.

    and…

    Then came the real revelation. Martin said a whistleblower recently came forward — “a senior Democrat from the Biden 2020 campaign at the highest levels” — who identified the individuals allegedly controlling access to the president and profiting from it. “The gatekeepers were [Ron] Klain, Anita Dunn, and Bob Bauer,” Martin stated. “Those three were really dominant characters in the White House.”

    https://pjmedia.com/matt-margolis/2025/05/22/ed-martin-names-top-three-suspects-in-biden-autopen-scandal-n4940047#google_vignette

  8. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    About SSI and taxes. I mentioned back in March that I had to pay the IRS about $20K this year! Me N the wife living on Social Security and not having a huge income but we both get pretty fair amount of SS and if I take ANY funds out of my IRA they tax the WDT! I’ll add that when I heard that Chelsea Clinton was getting a few million Bucks from the tax payers through the Democrat Slush Fund that Elon Musk discovered it really, really pissed me off!  ~SPITS~

  9. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    Interesting restaurant business.  They just raised $250,000 on Shark Tank.  Probably coming to Houston soon.

    Deviled Egg Co., founded in 2017 by former bar and lounge manager Raechel Van Buskirk, began as a side hustle in Omaha, Nebraska. Van Buskirk, the company’s CEO, experimented with a variety of off-beat deviled egg flavors, and catered them from her home before teaming up with business partner Alexi Wellman — originally the company’s first investor, Van Buskirk says — to launch a food trailer in 2020.

    Today, the business is a full-fledged restaurant — with two sit-down locations and one grab-and-go storefront, all near the Dallas metropolitan area — featuring deviled egg flavors like crab rangoon, cheeseburger and chicken quesadilla. Deviled Egg Co. also ships a 36-egg kit, called the “Shark Tank Special,” to further-flung customers.

     

    1. Super Dave Avatar
      Super Dave

      They need to add my Candied Jalapeno Relish Deviled Eggs to the list.   😉

    2. Shannon Avatar
      Shannon

      I actually watched that episode.

  10. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    I didn’t know Mark Cuban was in the online prescription drug business – Cost Plus Drugs.

    I checked my four most expensive drugs and can save substantially.

    1. Texpat Avatar
      Texpat

      Don’t you have a Medicare Part D prescription plan ?  My plan has been really great and I can’t tell you how many tens of thousands it has saved me.

      1. Shannon Avatar
        Shannon

        I’ve been with several companies. I rarely satisfy the deductible before the end of the year.

  11. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    Lawprof Josh Blackman has had it up to here with Chief Justice Roberts and he isn’t alone.  Childers mentioned this in his newsletter yesterday.

    And, I think, lower court judges are starting to fight back as well. Judge Ho made this same point in his concurrence yesterday, which subtly responded* to Chief Justice Roberts:

    It is not the role of the judiciary to check the excesses of the other branches, any more than it’s our role to check the excesses of any other American citizen. Judges do not roam the countryside looking for opportunities to chastise government officials for their mistakes.

    Yet Roberts does exactly that. Every action has an equal and opposite reaction.

    There is a storm brewing on the horizon, and I don’t think the Chief quite sees it. As I will explain in a forthcoming essay, Roberts’s two decades on the bench have rendered him utterly unqualified to deal with what lies ahead. The arc from NFIB to AARP does not bode well for the future. Here is a preview…

    *I disagree this qualifies as subtle.  I think it’s a little more that.

     

  12. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    Judge Ho at the Fifth Circuit in another scolding of the Supremes:

    But starting the clock at 12:34 a.m. not only ignores the court’s express instructions respecting the Government’s right to respond. It also ignores the fact that the Court is starting the clock at—12:34 a.m. We seem to have forgotten that this is a district court—not a Denny’s. This is the first time I’ve ever heard anyone suggest that district judges have a duty to check their dockets at all hours of the night, just in case a party decides to file a motion. If this is going to become the norm, then we should say so: District judges are hereby expected to be available 24 hours a day—and the Judicial Conference of the United States and the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts should secure from Congress the resources and staffing necessary to ensure 24-hour operations in every district court across the country. If this is not to become the norm, then we should admit that this is special treatment being afforded to certain favored litigants like members of Tren de Aragua—and we should stop pretending that Lady Justice is blindfolded.

  13. Tedtam Avatar

    Ironically, I didn’t sleep well last night, and it took quite a while before I could even open my eyes despite being half asleep since 4:00 a.m.   I finally dragged my ample butt out of bed and got my coffee into me.   I managed to whip out four “quickie” rosaries this morning, wash dishes, and toss some laundry into the machine – and here I am.

    It’s a good thing my jury duty was cancelled… 😀

    Off to my happy place….

  14. Tedtam Avatar

    Today’s C&C roundup:

    Good morning, C&C, it’s Thursday! Today’s roundup includes a trifecta of fascinating developments: Trump ‘ambushes’ the South African delegation in another made-for-TV Oval Office interview; Universal’s new park opens in Florida looking like a Disney-killer and highlights more pandemic ripples; and artificial intelligence made the biggest and quietest media splash yesterday announcing a secret mystery tech that raises essential questions about what it even means to be human. Hang on for a wild theme park ride.

  15. Tedtam Avatar

    First off, the somewhat amusing and totally Trumpian meeting between the leader of South Africa and Trump.  The SA leader called for the meeting and wanted to reassure Trump that no, there’s no genocide in my country, much less against the less pigmented population.  Don’t believe your lying eyes!

    In outrage, the Times claimed President Trump staged the meeting —a meeting he didn’t ask for — for political optics. But, arguably, Chuck started it, and not particularly helpfully. South Africa ironically fielded an all-black delegation to rebut claims of anti-white racism. Bad optics. True, Chuck hauled along two token white golfers, but the large political team accompanying President Ramaphosa was so monochromatic and so non-diverse it would have set an HR manager’s hair on fire.

    Of course, the media was all verklempt over what Trump did next:

    The two leaders chatted genially at first. But problems started when Ramaphosa, prompted by a reporter’s question, strained to deny the allegations of a “white genocide.” President Trump saw him coming 1,000 miles away. He turned to an aide and said, “play the video.” The Oval Office lights dramatically dimmed, and viewers (and the South African delegation) endured a painful five minutes of video clips showing one black South African leader calling for the death of white farmers after another.

    The Times, predictably, missed the point of the videos, focusing only on the last twenty seconds or so, which showed fields of crosses erected for Afrikaners slain by racial violence.

    The SA president sullenly said that the situation needed to be looked into.  Dude, you don’t have to “look into it”.  Just look out of your dang window.

    But Trump put it out so publicly that the left can’t deny it anymore.

    1. Texpat Avatar
      Texpat

      Trump has baited Democrats into defending:

      illegal aliens

      human smuggling drug cartels

      Islamic Death Cult illegals calling for the murder of Jews

      MS-13 violent illegal aliens with face tattoos who hack people to death with machetes

      Tren de Aragua terrorist illegal alien gang members into murder and sex trafficking

      And now he has the NYT and Chuck Schumer defending black racists advocating white genocide

  16. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    One more on the misguided failures of Chief Justice Roberts.  VP Vance is striking a preemptive blow to what is expected to be a defensive and arrogant end of term speech by Roberts.  (Bold emphasis in the original)

    Vice President J.D. Vance sat down for an interview with Ross Douthat. They cover much ground, but I wanted to flag this exchange concerning Chief Justice Roberts:

    Let me just make one final philosophical point here. I worry that unless the Supreme Court steps in here, or unless the District Courts exercise a little bit more discretion, we are running into a real conflict between two important principles in the United States.

    Principle 1 of course is that courts interpret the law. Principle 2 is that the American people decide how they’re governed. That’s the fundamental small-d democratic principle that’s at the heart of the American project. I think that you are seeing, and I know this is inflammatory, but I think you are seeing an effort by the courts to quite literally overturn the will of the American people. To be clear, it’s not most courts. But I saw an interview with Chief Justice Roberts recently where he said the role of the court is to check the excesses of the executive. I thought that was a profoundly wrong sentiment. That’s one-half of his job. The other half of his job is to check the excesses of his own branch. You cannot have a country where the American people keep on electing immigration enforcement and the courts tell the American people they’re not allowed to have what they voted for. That’s where we are right now.

    We’re going to keep working it through the immigration court process, through the Supreme Court as much as possible.

    Vance is exactly right.

     

  17. Tedtam Avatar

    Universal Studios vs. Disney:  I can’t wait to see how this turns out!

    This month saw the official public opening of Epic Universe, Universal Studios’ new, high-tech, 750-acre theme park in Orlando, Florida. It features next-level animatronics, an “immersive world” beating any current equivalent, and zero wokeness. No overweight, bearded princes dressed as princesses. No gender-ambiguous bathrooms. No rainbow parades.

    No sign whatsoever of The Message. It’s a message-free park. Just fun.

    Belly of the beast warfare, it seems.

    I think that when it comes to Disney, it’s support of wokeness (and the dismal results of the woke remakes of beloved classics), the wissing off of a lot of its base, and the middle finger flinging at the Florida government, you could say that Disney is the “find out” phase of FAFO.

  18. Tedtam Avatar

    Mr. C. covers the latest AI news – specifically a big merger that’s in the news – but I’ll let you go read it, since I am woefully inadequate to review it here.

  19. Tedtam Avatar

    From the AI story at C&C:

    They are clearly describing a “frictionless,” no-screens, always-on, ubiquitous AI companion — constantly listening, always learning, always helpingIt’s not that I’m happy to see you— it’s HAL 9000 in my pants pocket.

    Again, it smacks of “With Folded Hands”.

  20. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    When everyone everywhere gets in a tizzy over some subject, I just back off and watch.  I’ve watched too many of these spectacles in 73 years.

    Artificial Intelligence is the new tizzy.  My father bought me one of the very first transistor radios in Houston when I was 4 years old.  People were amazed and fascinated with it.

    I’ve seen a lot of crazy stuff and even crazier people.

  21. Bonecrusher Avatar
    Bonecrusher

    This new AI thingie will be the end of any privacy we thought we still retained. If a critical mass of people are carrying around the thing that is watching and listening to everything around, then no one has privacy – everything is recorded and subject to retrieval by the gubmint.
    Bonecrushers truth: If the government has access to the information – legal or not – that information will eventually be used against the citizenry for the empowerment of the government.

  22. Bonecrusher Avatar
    Bonecrusher

    I am eating a sandwich from Neilsen’s Deli and it is quite tasty. Double meat, double cheese on pumpernickel, half pastrami and half roast beef. Very satisfying indeed.

    1. Shannon Avatar
      Shannon

      I’m jealous. And hungry. 🙂

  23. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    I’m all for doing everything within reason to protect wildlife.  This looks fine for deer, elk and antelope, but how are you going to keep calves or lambs from crawling under it ?

    A recent study spearheaded by researchers from the University of Wyoming suggests that impassable fences might have greatly increased the death toll among antelope during the winter of 2022-2023.

    Chant said his family’s ranch switched from sheep to cattle a long time ago, but the woven-wire fence his grandfather had installed remained.

    And radio-collar tracking data for antelope compiled by researchers indicated the ranch had become a chokepoint for wildlife.

    “It (the fence) has always been an issue. I’ve seen it my whole life, and I heard generational stories of it being an issue,” Chant said.

    But the problem is, fencing is expensive. Replacing miles upon miles of it is beyond the budget of many ranching families.

    24 miles of ranch fencing is a lot of cash.

     

  24. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    I’m a regular skeptic about most tech developments because there is usually so much silly hype around it.  You have to wait until everyone stops talking about it to find what the pros and cons are going to be.

    AI will, like every other landmark achievement in technology, have fantastic contributions and reveal evil opportunities for the wicked.

    This story got my attention a few months ago.  A physician and medical researcher described how he and three or four colleagues together focused exclusively on trying to find the answer to an important question about a medical treatment.

    It took them three weeks.

    Later, the lead doctor was given an AI program.  He loaded the exact data he and colleagues started their quest with into the AI program and asked it to solve the problem.

    It took AI to reach the same conclusion in 3 hours it took 4 researchers 3 weeks.  The AI program also suggested some things about the procedure the researchers had not realized.

    I was impressed to say the least.  It’s definitely going to change the world.

  25. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    Brother Printer/Scanner/Fax MFC-J5620DW

    So far, I have not found a clear answer.  Although, when I go to the Brother website and ask for a solution to why my Mac Sequoia 15.5 OS will allow me to print, but refuses to allow me to accept a scan document, the list of download solutions offered doesn’t include anything above a Mac 10.5 OS.  They say if my model is not on the list they have no plans to offer a fix.  This unit is only 5 or 6 years old.

    1. bsue54 Avatar

      Squawk said “go ahead and give it a try – download it and your Mac will tell you whether or not it can be installed… If it does, give it a try and if it doesn’t you can always drag it out of there”

      1. Texpat Avatar
        Texpat

        I go to Brother and they send me to the App Store to download an app.  I open it and then the App Store says I have to go back to the Brother website and hit a button I cannot find.  When I ask Brother troubleshooting, they send me to a page for downloads that does not have my model # included.  It is the stupidest circular and typical tech support I always see.  It’s just infuriating.  There is no reason for this s**t.

         

  26. Dr phil Good-E=1984 Avatar
    Dr phil Good-E=1984

    Just another daily Dr phil Good PSA for the long weekend.

    the joined@thehip-sans-a-belt slack wearing republicant’s really really really don’t wanna win.

     

  27. Dr phil Good-E=1984 Avatar
    Dr phil Good-E=1984

    “We’re going to keep working it through the immigration court process, through the Supreme Court as much as possible.”

    then you’ll lose.

    What do you get when you cross a blasey ford drunk, a nutgorsach, a phony island hotdog and a woman who doesn’t know what a woman is all dressed in penguin suits?

    A gang-of-roos.

  28. Tedtam Avatar

    Hubby and I just got through reviewing some videos of house plan ideas.  The architect that put out those youtube videos put some very insomnia-reducing music as a background, which made it difficult for Hubby and I to keep focused.

    We did get some ideas, though, and talked through some compromise ideas.

    He did say he liked my idea of running our radiant hydronic heat through a series of hot water heaters instead of one big boiler, like we have here at the Dome.  I think what changed his mind was my comment “If you go before I do, I don’t know that those country plumbers will be able work on boilers like you can.”  Hubby was the “boiler pro” at one of his previous jobs.  I don’t know if a country plumber has much experience with fixing boilers; water heaters, I’m pretty sure they can replace.  It does mean there will be a difference in designing the system, but Hubby can manage that just fine.

    Also, I insisted that the water heaters – domestic and heating – be outside of the house envelope.  On the back porch, whatever, just placed so that if one goes, the flood is outside of the house; also, the plumber or handyman should have enough space to easily swap them out when the time comes.  Hubby’s thinking tucking them into a corner of the garage (or just outside of the garage), on a sloped slightly away-from-the-house pad, with an entry door from inside the garage so outsiders will have a harder time tampering with them.  I agreed that was a good idea.

    At first, he was insisting on a well, but I want to use a rainwater harvesting system.  I have a cousin in the Hill Country who has one and loves it.  Maintenance is almost nil, just replacing a filter and UV light once a year.  Maybe maintaining the pump.  I’ve texted her to see if we can visit so Hubby can look at it for himself.  I like the idea of not contributing to subsidence problems by sucking water out of the ground, and the water quality should be pretty good.  Hill Country Cousin told me she couldn’t keep a well working, the water was so bad; it also tasted horrible.  The well water we had growing up had visible grains of sand in it.  I used to say it was so hard you could hammer nails with it.  Rainwater won’t be like that.

  29. Tedtam Avatar

    One idea that we decided on was how to design the master suite: Hubby likes to get up at 4:00 or 5:00 in the morning to shower, and if my sleep is interrupted that early, I pay for it all day.  Right now, he goes upstairs to our huge double shower, so he doesn’t bother me. Usually.  Sometimes his walking around above my head is enough to wake me up, but not often.  He doesn’t want to bother me, so to mitigate the sound and light problem, I think we’re going to put the closet space between the sleeping area and the bathroom, with a separate entrance to the master bath from elsewhere so he doesn’t have to walk through the bedroom.

    I love that he’s being so solicitous about my comfort.

    1. Texpat Avatar
      Texpat

      Good idea.  You don’t have to worry about overhead noise now that you’re on one level though.

  30. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    It’s going to be fun trying to shower or bathe without rainwater during a drought.  Not having a good well drilled and installed by a good company is, well. uh, insane to me.

    Also, consider depending where you buy, it is likely you’ll be in a rural water system like the ones Shannon maintains, no matter how far out you go.

    Your rainwater collected through gutters and open collections places outside is not going to be potable.  You will have to run it through filters and purifiers. It’s pure falling through the sky, but it’s not once it hits your gutters, it’s not.

    My aunt and uncle had a huge rainwater collection system installed at their place outside Kerrville, but they would never have relied on it for indoor use.

  31. Tedtam Avatar

    Hubby and I have talked about potential drought shortages.  We figured we’d have to truck in water in that case.  Cousin has a huge tank.  The original fill on that thing was trucked in water.  That is something that we’d have to figure out – size and backup systems.

    And yes, I mentioned filters and UV lights above.  It’s all part of the potable system.  We may have a well on site, using one or the other as a backup.   We’ve had wells go out, too, on our river property.  No system is foolproof.  Even city water can have its problems.

    1. Texpat Avatar
      Texpat

      Trucking in water ?  WTF ?  Are y’all crazy ? Why would anyone do that when East Texas has plenty of subterranean water ?

  32. Tedtam Avatar

    One thing Hubby and I both agree on: fire sprinklers.  We can’t believe houses don’t have them.  Especially out where the fire departments are spread thin, having sprinklers to contain any fire and minimize damage (and maximize safety) is worth the extra money to install.

    We both shake heads when we hear about apartment fires and people dying or losing their stuff.  But then, some tenants can’t be trusted not to screw around with the safety equipment.

    And no, one sprinkler head going off does NOT set off sprinklers everywhere else.

  33. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    A fantastic Senior prank had all of Austin County celebrating.

    [caption id="attachment_30700" align="alignnone" width="208"] Screenshot[/caption]

  34. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    A fantastic Sealy High school Senior prank had all of Austin County celebrating.

    [caption id="attachment_30700" align="alignnone" width="208"] Screenshot[/caption]

  35. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    One more try on the image:

    [caption id="attachment_30700" align="alignnone" width="208"] Screenshot[/caption]

  36. Tedtam Avatar

    Oh, and we’re going to have floor drains in all of the wet areas.  I love my floor drains.  Mopping the floor is so much easier, and any water leaks won’t flood the house.

    MIL had two water events: one was a group of kids who broke into her house, stole her jewelry, and did the “wet bandit” thing from “Home Alone”.  Her kitchen cabinets were a mess, for a long time.

    The second time was when a toilet supply line broke just after she left to visit her sister in Atlanta, TX.  Hubby noticed water coming from between the bricks and her concrete foundation two days later, went in, and found water from her master bath, down the hall (flooding two other bedrooms along the way, and across half of her living room before running out into the backyard via her patio door.  She had just replaced most of that flooring, too.  Hubby, our employee, and I spent three days trying to squeegee and dry the water out of her carpet and her laminate wood floors before they were totally destroyed.  I think she ended up replacing the flooring.  The water had two days to do its work.

    When Hubby and I went on vacation last week, we turned off the main water supply before we left.  We tell all of our tenants to do the same.

    PS:  We’ve had a few toilet supply lines and a washing machine line cause water problems in our rental properties.  I advise turning off the water if you are leaving your house.

  37. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Everybody in the County knows that HEB has owned the property for years. According to unconfirmed gossip, WallyWorld has threatened the Sealy fathers with shutting down their gigantic distribution warehouse nearby if they let H‑E‑B in.

    The Senior prank made Channel 2 TV news.

    1. Tedtam Avatar

      I heard that major food chain was doing all it could to keep HEB out of the Dallas area, but HEB managed to sidestep them finally.  Lovely Daughter is very happy.

  38. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    This is Texas. You can’t live on rainwater alone.

  39. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Tyler, Texas wettest month is June. Average rainfall in June is 4.8 inches. (1991-2020 data from NOAA).

  40. Tedtam Avatar

    Okay, I’ll share your info with Hubby.

  41. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    In my orbit, is a four year old with a severe head injury at Texas Children’s.

    Yesterday, the child darted in front of a thrown baseball from an 18-year-old.

    Everyone involved could use your prayers. Thank you.

    1. Tedtam Avatar

      Kneemail up, sir.

      I remember barely missing being beaned by a hardball coming with great speed off a bat swung by an adult when I was only about 8 years old.  I heard screams from my family and turned my head just in time to hear a whizzing sound and the ball graze the out edge of my ear.  There were horrified faces everywhere but I just turned around, picked up the ball, and threw it back.  Looking back, I realize how close I came to a major brain injury myself.

    2. Texpat Avatar
      Texpat

      Good God Almighty, please help that child.  Amen.

    3. bsue54 Avatar

      Prayers up and will continue, for all involved ♥

    4. squawkbox Avatar
      squawkbox

      Prayers up

  42. Tedtam Avatar

    I found a post from a rain harvesting company.  I think we’ll just have to talk to them to see if it’s feasible in our area.

    I wouldn’t think my cousin’s house would be in a wetter area than Tyler, and she has plenty of water.  I suspect water capture/roof surface is the variable.

    1. Texpat Avatar
      Texpat

      Forget all the stories about bad wells and water in the Hays County and  Wimberley.  It has absolutely nothing to do with where you are wanting to move hundreds of miles to the east.  The aquifers, the substrates and geology are entirely different.  Besides Wimberley is overrun with crazy old hippy leftists and loony ecofanatics.

  43. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    Tedtam, I don’t have a problem with using rainwater collection, but please don’t live with  the delusion that you and Steve can actually survive off of that.  Use that rainwater reserve to water your yard, wash your vehicles and wash down your porches and decks.  Forget any fantasy of being off the Water Grid.

    1. Super Dave Avatar
      Super Dave

      Yes exactly. A deep well with a water softener is the way to go. East Texas has plenty of good ground water.

  44. Tedtam Avatar

    I just got off the phone with my cousin in Wimberley.  We talked a lot about her solar (still not sold on it, but she’s had reputable companies handling hers) and her rainwater harvesting system.

    She is still waxing ecstatic over her rain system.  She has plenty of water and recently had upgrades to her system to make it work better.  Moving a circulating pump inside the tank so it won’t get overheated in the Texas sun, for example.  Her neighbors are installing their own rainwater systems now.  Their wells produce crappy, smelly water that eats their equipment, and even those wells are running dry.  They had to drill 900 feet for her well because she’s at the top of a hill.  Her neighbor’s well is only 600 feet, but it’s a wasted 600 feet. In the event that there’s not enough water, there are companies that will supply it and refill the tank.  That, or the local fire department may do it, for a  fee.

    It’s not a done deal, but it’s certainly an option we’re looking into.  We are going to visit her and look over her system(s) to see if it’s something we want to do.

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