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Hey there, long time no post

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  • rustyfingersR rustyfingers

    Sorry you've been having trouble with your knee. I had a bad fall a few years ago, broke my kneecap, bonked my head creating an eye injury, broke my arm, and couldn't get around for a few months. Completely recovered now, but made me feel vulnerable and old in a way I hadn't experienced before.

    Sad to lose a piano, but exciting to be on the hunt for a replacement. I mean, that's how a lot of us came to know each other, wasn't it?

    wtgW Offline
    wtgW Offline
    wtg
    wrote on last edited by wtg
    #21

    @rustyfingers said in Hey there, long time no post:

    Completely recovered now, but made me feel vulnerable and old in a way I hadn't experienced before.

    Tell me about it. I tripped on the front porch and banged up my knee in a big way several years ago. I narrowly missed doing a face plant into the granite door sill. I had to go up and down the stairs on my butt because I couldn't bend the knee or put any weight on it.

    It was the second time I took a fall on that porch; I fell flat on my chest and had the wind knocked out of me. Bruised my ribs.

    Both falls were the result of shoes that didn't fit quite right and that had caused me to trip, but not fall, on previous occasions. Lesson learned. Ditch shoes that make you trip. Birkenstocks and Crocs aren't in my wardrobe anymore.

    @rustyfingers said in Hey there, long time no post:

    Sorry youv'e been having trouble with your knee.

    @Big_Al 's knee replacement saga.

    https://well-temperedforum.groupee.net/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/9130004433/m/3053902797/p/1

    When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier

    rustyfingersR 1 Reply Last reply
    • Big_AlB Big_Al

      Hello, RF. It's good to catch up with you and your family.

      I've had my portion of tribulation with the knee replacement failure I've recounted here. Nonetheless, my wife and I are still in our home and keeping on with various activities.

      Your saga of instruments prompts me to relate mine. My Yamaha Clavinova began losing notes. A technician determined that the keyboard sensors were failing. No replacement parts were available and no used parts became available on eBay or wherever else the tech looked.

      I'm now looking at a replacement. The leading contender is the Yamaha NU1XA hybrid piano. It has the action of a Yamaha upright piano but with sensors that activate the electronic portions of the instrument. I've been very impressed with the feel of the keyboard and the sound is also very impressive.

      I'm probably going to proceed with my purchase this month.

      Please keep us apprised of events in your household.

      Big Al

      ShiroKuroS Online
      ShiroKuroS Online
      ShiroKuro
      wrote on last edited by
      #22

      @Big_Al said in Hey there, long time no post:

      Yamaha NU1XA hybrid piano

      Oh that's exciting!! Keep us posted! 🙂

      1 Reply Last reply
      • wtgW wtg

        @rustyfingers said in Hey there, long time no post:

        Completely recovered now, but made me feel vulnerable and old in a way I hadn't experienced before.

        Tell me about it. I tripped on the front porch and banged up my knee in a big way several years ago. I narrowly missed doing a face plant into the granite door sill. I had to go up and down the stairs on my butt because I couldn't bend the knee or put any weight on it.

        It was the second time I took a fall on that porch; I fell flat on my chest and had the wind knocked out of me. Bruised my ribs.

        Both falls were the result of shoes that didn't fit quite right and that had caused me to trip, but not fall, on previous occasions. Lesson learned. Ditch shoes that make you trip. Birkenstocks and Crocs aren't in my wardrobe anymore.

        @rustyfingers said in Hey there, long time no post:

        Sorry youv'e been having trouble with your knee.

        @Big_Al 's knee replacement saga.

        https://well-temperedforum.groupee.net/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/9130004433/m/3053902797/p/1

        rustyfingersR Offline
        rustyfingersR Offline
        rustyfingers
        wrote on last edited by
        #23

        @wtg my new mantra is "don't fall". (My old saying was "life is too short to wear uncomfortable shoes".). The fall I took was on New Years Day. I was hanging a picture and missed the last step of the stepstool on the dismount and fell backwards hitting my head on the first step of our central staircase.

        This past August I fell again hanging pictures. I was standing on my bed and walked into a running ceiling fan, which knocked me down onto the bed. Ended up with a laceration on my head, but no other damage.

        I'm not allowed to hang pictures anymore.

        Thanks for the link to @Big_Al 's knee saga. BA, what a nightmare, and did you really say they used leeches? I thought that went out in pioneer days. So glad you were able to stay with your daughter during your long rehabilitation.

        In my rehab my physical therapist and I spent a lot of time figuring out how to get me into my house, which has 8 stairs. We ended up using a shower chair to manage the stairs. Something like this:

        Link to video. (She makes it look a lot easier than it was). Once in, I lived in the living room on the first floor for a few months.

        We also spent a long time practicing getting into a car. To this day I say to myself "don't hold the door" every time I get into or out of a car.

        Big_AlB 1 Reply Last reply
        • M Offline
          M Offline
          Mary Anna
          wrote on last edited by Mary Anna
          #24

          @rustyfingers, I don't think Amanda has met either of your kids, but I'll ask when they visit this weekend. Maybe at BeeLady's party, but I'm not sure they were there. I've met them, but I think it was another time.

          I've thought of you as academic funding has been thrown into chaos. I've got a proposal for a monograph out at an academic publisher at the moment, and I'm working on a proposal for an edited collection with a colleague who has a publisher in mind. Both of them are British publishers. (And one of them owns the other one, but the contraction in the number of both academic and commercial publishing houses is a whole nother conversation.) Both projects probably belong with British publishers anyway, since there's a lot more interest in our research focus, Agatha Christie's work, in the UK than there is here, but American academia is a scary place right now.

          Yes, let's find a time to get together!

          ShiroKuroS 2 Replies Last reply
          • M Mary Anna

            @rustyfingers, I don't think Amanda has met either of your kids, but I'll ask when they visit this weekend. Maybe at BeeLady's party, but I'm not sure they were there. I've met them, but I think it was another time.

            I've thought of you as academic funding has been thrown into chaos. I've got a proposal for a monograph out at an academic publisher at the moment, and I'm working on a proposal for an edited collection with a colleague who has a publisher in mind. Both of them are British publishers. (And one of them owns the other one, but the contraction in the number of both academic and commercial publishing houses is a whole nother conversation.) Both projects probably belong with British publishers anyway, since there's a lot more interest in our research focus, Agatha Christie's work, in the UK than there is here, but American academia is a scary place right now.

            Yes, let's find a time to get together!

            ShiroKuroS Online
            ShiroKuroS Online
            ShiroKuro
            wrote on last edited by
            #25

            @Mary-Anna said in Hey there, long time no post:

            American academia is a scary place right now.

            It certainly is.

            😞

            1 Reply Last reply
            • M Mary Anna

              @rustyfingers, I don't think Amanda has met either of your kids, but I'll ask when they visit this weekend. Maybe at BeeLady's party, but I'm not sure they were there. I've met them, but I think it was another time.

              I've thought of you as academic funding has been thrown into chaos. I've got a proposal for a monograph out at an academic publisher at the moment, and I'm working on a proposal for an edited collection with a colleague who has a publisher in mind. Both of them are British publishers. (And one of them owns the other one, but the contraction in the number of both academic and commercial publishing houses is a whole nother conversation.) Both projects probably belong with British publishers anyway, since there's a lot more interest in our research focus, Agatha Christie's work, in the UK than there is here, but American academia is a scary place right now.

              Yes, let's find a time to get together!

              ShiroKuroS Online
              ShiroKuroS Online
              ShiroKuro
              wrote on last edited by
              #26

              @Mary-Anna btw my publisher is a UK-based publisher as well. And I recently found out that my book (published in hardback and ebook versions in 2023) will be released in paperback in Sept. (yay!)

              I feel lucky that I ended up with that publisher rather than a US-based one.

              M 1 Reply Last reply
              • ShiroKuroS ShiroKuro

                @Mary-Anna btw my publisher is a UK-based publisher as well. And I recently found out that my book (published in hardback and ebook versions in 2023) will be released in paperback in Sept. (yay!)

                I feel lucky that I ended up with that publisher rather than a US-based one.

                M Offline
                M Offline
                Mary Anna
                wrote on last edited by
                #27

                @ShiroKuro Congratulations on the paperback!!! That's exciting!

                ShiroKuroS 1 Reply Last reply
                ♥
                • M Mary Anna

                  @ShiroKuro Congratulations on the paperback!!! That's exciting!

                  ShiroKuroS Online
                  ShiroKuroS Online
                  ShiroKuro
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #28

                  @Mary-Anna thank you!! I'm super excited about it!

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  • wtgW Offline
                    wtgW Offline
                    wtg
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #29

                    Just gotta say...it's so good to have you back, @rustyfingers !

                    When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier

                    rustyfingersR 1 Reply Last reply
                    • S Offline
                      S Offline
                      Steve Miller
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #30

                      Great to see you!
                      👍

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      • wtgW wtg

                        Just gotta say...it's so good to have you back, @rustyfingers !

                        rustyfingersR Offline
                        rustyfingersR Offline
                        rustyfingers
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #31

                        @wtg thanks! It's great to be back. Have missed you all.

                        Hi @Steve-Miller!

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        👍
                        • rustyfingersR rustyfingers

                          @wtg my new mantra is "don't fall". (My old saying was "life is too short to wear uncomfortable shoes".). The fall I took was on New Years Day. I was hanging a picture and missed the last step of the stepstool on the dismount and fell backwards hitting my head on the first step of our central staircase.

                          This past August I fell again hanging pictures. I was standing on my bed and walked into a running ceiling fan, which knocked me down onto the bed. Ended up with a laceration on my head, but no other damage.

                          I'm not allowed to hang pictures anymore.

                          Thanks for the link to @Big_Al 's knee saga. BA, what a nightmare, and did you really say they used leeches? I thought that went out in pioneer days. So glad you were able to stay with your daughter during your long rehabilitation.

                          In my rehab my physical therapist and I spent a lot of time figuring out how to get me into my house, which has 8 stairs. We ended up using a shower chair to manage the stairs. Something like this:

                          Link to video. (She makes it look a lot easier than it was). Once in, I lived in the living room on the first floor for a few months.

                          We also spent a long time practicing getting into a car. To this day I say to myself "don't hold the door" every time I get into or out of a car.

                          Big_AlB Offline
                          Big_AlB Offline
                          Big_Al
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #32

                          @rustyfingers said in Hey there, long time no post:
                          BA, what a nightmare, and did you really say they used leeches?

                          Yes, they really did use leeches. As the plastic surgeon explained to me, the leeches feeding on the blood promoted vascularization of the muscle that was inverted and transplanted into the wound left where all the dead tissue and knee cap had been removed. Without the growth of new blood vessels, the muscle could probably not have survived. The leeches came from a leech farm that one of the local hospitals maintains for this purpose.
                          They would be applied a couple at a time and were about the diameter of a pencil and less than an inch long, They proceeded to ingest blood and became about as big around as my finger and about twice as long as they started. When they had finished feeding, they would release their grip and try to crawl away. At that point, the nurse would collect them and drop them into a jar of alcohol, which ended their lives.
                          There was great interest in seeing this procedure in the hospital. I counted as many as twelve people in my room watching once.

                          Big Al

                          Money seems to buy the most happiness when you give it away.

                          Why does everything have to be so complicated, all in the name of convenience. -ShiroKuro

                          A lifetime of experience will change a person. If it doesn't, then you're already dead inside. -MarkJ

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          😨
                          • rustyfingersR rustyfingers

                            I leave the food gardening to thecomputerdude.

                            Also I've developed an interest in birds.

                            Happy belated anniversary everyone.

                            wtgW Offline
                            wtgW Offline
                            wtg
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #33

                            @rustyfingers said in Hey there, long time no post:

                            Also I've developed an interest in birds.

                            I saw a hummingbird today! It made a brief stop at a columbine flower in my front yard.

                            When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            • rustyfingersR Offline
                              rustyfingersR Offline
                              rustyfingers
                              wrote on last edited by rustyfingers
                              #34

                              How cool! My columbine is doing pretty well this year after several meh years, but I've never seen any hummingbirds near it. Maybe when the weather warms up a little...

                              IMG_3710.jpeg
                              IMG_3712.jpeg

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              • S Offline
                                S Offline
                                Steve Miller
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #35

                                Pretty!

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                • M Offline
                                  M Offline
                                  Mary Anna
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #36

                                  Pretty! I've never grown columbine, but I got some at a garden sale that was basically stuff people dug up out of their yard and donated to their church.

                                  What variety and color of columbine did I buy? I don't know, because it was just a pot that said, "Columbine." ! I hope it's as pretty as yours.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  • rustyfingersR Offline
                                    rustyfingersR Offline
                                    rustyfingers
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #37

                                    Mine is a native here...red Columbine . I've been trying not to buy cultivars. https://gobotany.nativeplanttrust.org/species/aquilegia/canadensis/

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    • Big_AlB Offline
                                      Big_AlB Offline
                                      Big_Al
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #38

                                      The columbines have been proliferating around our house. They're seeding themselves in new places and have really thrived this year. There are no spectacular colors, though. They all range from near-white to shades of purple.

                                      Big Al

                                      Money seems to buy the most happiness when you give it away.

                                      Why does everything have to be so complicated, all in the name of convenience. -ShiroKuro

                                      A lifetime of experience will change a person. If it doesn't, then you're already dead inside. -MarkJ

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      👍
                                      • M Offline
                                        M Offline
                                        Mary Anna
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #39

                                        The ones I've seen in people's yards around here look like red Columbine, so I may have gotten a native plant. I have my eye on some other plants native to New York, since they fit into my current gardening scheme which is, "Hey! I'm in a new-to-me growing zone. Let's plant some things I've never been able to grow before!"

                                        This house has a very small yard, but it seems that it has been inhabited for 140 years by people who weren't very interested in flowers. Most yards in this part of town have a lightly tended Victorian-cottage-garden-packed-with-flowers look that I just love. Ours had some untended foundation plantings, three huge trees, a couple of patches of hostas and a hydrangea bush. The church plant sale was held by people thinning out those gardens full of things that are easy to propagate and hard to kill, and I kinda love the continuity of that.

                                        So I got some lilies-of-the-valley, even though I know they're thugs in the garden, so I planted them in a bed bounded with a wide sidewalk. (Most of this stuff is going there, actually.) I also got some hellebores, because I have a lot of shade, some foxgloves, and some iris. A friend gave me some daylilies, rose of sharon, and Montauk daisies, too. Quirt is correct when he says I need to take a break from planting before I put in more than I can take care of, but as I read that list I think I should go get some native plants to balance out the exotics. Gardening is an illness. 😄

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        • rustyfingersR Offline
                                          rustyfingersR Offline
                                          rustyfingers
                                          wrote on last edited by rustyfingers
                                          #40

                                          Isn't it fun?

                                          I just nuked our inherited three rose of Sharon shrubs last year as they are invasive here. Pretty in bloom, but I finally brought myself to cut them down. True to form, this year I have thousands of seedlings trying to reclaim the space.

                                          Similarly, I've been fighting a losing battle with the lilies of the valley in the back yard. So far, they are winning. Again, so pretty in bloom, but invasive here. (I fondly remember the "white coral bells round from my childhood.)

                                          I intentionally planted hostas. They are thriving, but I'm thinking of replacing them with Solomon's seal, which is native here and grows equally well in shade. Snapped this picture on a walk by an empty lot.

                                          I've also had really good luck with our native wild ginger, which is going gangbusters under a mature but invasive Norway maple cultivar under which little else will grow.
                                          IMG_3760-compressed.jpeg

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