Climate in the 21st Century

Will Humankind see the 22nd Century?

  • Not a fucking chance

    Votes: 41 28.3%
  • Maybe. if we get our act together

    Votes: 35 24.1%
  • Yes, we will survive

    Votes: 69 47.6%

  • Total voters
    145

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
Well if your in Texas, get ready summer is already here.....just to give ya a taste....today's weather is 98F with a dew point of 75.....that mean heat index is 109. For Memorial weekend base temps will be 100s for the first time this season, and with that dew point, it will feel 115F or higher.

So my advice, is to get your things done in the morning like groceries and running around, then when you get home, baton down the hatches and stay inside, if you need to go outside for any reason make sure you bring water and a hat, you could also make a cool rag put it around your neck. Then about dusk pop your head out see how it feels, once the sun sets, you can water your gardens and such. Also watch your animals if you have any, bring them in if you can, or at least make sure they are covered and away from the sunlight if you can't. My suggestion is to bring them in....

It's gonna be a long summer down here, just please be prepared......
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
I’m changing my brand of kitchen bag.

I use waxed paper to wrap my sandwiches like my mom used to wrap ours for thousands of lunches over the years. Keeps them fresh as ziplocks for a couple days, longer if refrigerated. Do my best to buy products like jams, peanut butter etc in glass jars and have sent emails to many companies that make products I like but put them in plastic. I'm sorry to inform you that due to recent revelations about the dangers of plastics food containers I will be buying X product instead of yours which I like better other than the plastic containers. Vote with your wallet.

I do not click on .amp links either for much the same reason. Hazardous to your internet security.

:peace:
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
I’m changing my brand of kitchen bag.

We use the reusable bags. I wash them when I wash the dishes. You are talking less than a minute per bag. We've had them a couple three years now and they are still going strong.

I will still use a single use bag once in a while, but not very often. This brand is easy to find and pretty good. Some of the cheaper ones the zipper grooves will get crossed up.

 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
We use the reusable bags. I wash them when I wash the dishes. You are talking less than a minute per bag. We've had them a couple three years now and they are still going strong.

I will still use a single use bag once in a while, but not very often. This brand is easy to find and pretty good. Some of the cheaper ones the zipper grooves will get crossed up.

I get between six and ten uses out of a “disposable” zip bag. Dish soap is cheaper than a new bag.
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
We use the reusable bags. I wash them when I wash the dishes. You are talking less than a minute per bag. We've had them a couple three years now and they are still going strong.

I will still use a single use bag once in a while, but not very often. This brand is easy to find and pretty good. Some of the cheaper ones the zipper grooves will get crossed up.

I've seen those too but ALL plastics release microparticles that can enter into our bloodstreams and lodge in our organs including the brain. Science is only beginning to research the long term consequences of this but I have a feeling that what they find is not going to be good news.

NO plastics are microwave safe regardless of what it says on the packaging. I haven't used a microwave to heat food in at least 30 years. I can wait 20 min while the toaster oven warms something I want to eat or I toss it in a pan and heat it on the stove.

I remember at least a couple decades ago they came out with glass containers for various foods, condiments etc that had a thin plastic coating so if it were dropped and the glass broke it was contained by the plastic skin and didn't scatter glass shards all over the place.

Another way to reduce plastic and other waste is to increase the deposit paid when you buy them. Here in Alberta aluminum beer, pop cans etc up to 1L are only 5¢ each. Every spring after the snow melts I pick up at least a couple dozen, mostly beer cans of the crappier brands as low class people tend to toss junk out their windows or into the back of their pickups knowing full well that it will disappear by the time they get to their destinations. If they put a 25¢ deposit on them so a dozen empty beer, pop cans etc were worth $3 instead of only 60¢ I bet I'd see a lot less in the ditch along the 200 yards or so in front of my place. Same with paper coffee cups that have plastic lids. Plenty of those end up in ditches along the thousands of miles of highways just here in Alberta.

:peace:
 

Sativied

Well-Known Member
Don't you hate it when a broken smartphone screen or other part requires you to buy a new one or pay more than the phone is worth...

After recent approval by EU parliament (elected) this idea from the EU commission (uhm...) was just approved by the EU Council (heads of individual nations), meaning all EU members get 2 years to implement it in national law.


The Right to Repair

A recent Eurobarometer showed that 77% of Europeans feel a personal responsibility to act to limit climate change. Discarded products are often viable goods that can be repaired but are often tossed prematurely, resulting in 35 million tons of waste, 30 million tons of resources and 261 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions in the EU every year. Furthermore, the loss for consumers of opting for replacement instead of repair is estimated at almost 12 billion per year. Additionally, the initiative is estimated to bring EUR 4.8 billion in growth and investment in the EU.


From another random article on the topic, basically the key parts of the law:

Obligation to repair
The new rules ensure that manufacturers provide timely and cost-effective repair services and inform consumers about their rights to repair. Goods repaired under the warranty will benefit from an additional one-year extension of the legal guarantee, further incentivizing consumers to choose repair instead of replacement.

After the legal guarantee has expired, the manufacturer is still required to repair common household products, which are technically repairable under EU law, such as washing machines, vacuum cleaners, and even smartphones. The list of product categories can be extended over time. Consumers may also borrow a device whilst theirs is being repaired or, if it cannot be fixed, opt for a refurbished unit as an alternative.


Another welcome and useful contribution from the EU, part of the Green Deal from Timmermans, now leader of left-wing opposition in NL.

It's annoying Google can't show their own Maps as first result anymore when I (and others in EU) search for a location though.
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
I've seen those too but ALL plastics release microparticles that can enter into our bloodstreams and lodge in our organs including the brain. Science is only beginning to research the long term consequences of this but I have a feeling that what they find is not going to be good news.

NO plastics are microwave safe regardless of what it says on the packaging. I haven't used a microwave to heat food in at least 30 years. I can wait 20 min while the toaster oven warms something I want to eat or I toss it in a pan and heat it on the stove. . . . . .

:peace:
I cook in freezer bags only when hiking. Just pour in the boiling water and wait seven minutes (assuming noodles and not Knorr sides). I do use the nuker a lot, but I use a bowl with stretch wrap or a wet paper towel over it.

We also heat food in the air fryer. It doesn't change the texture of the meat like the nuker does.
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
Effing heat.....this is nutz...98 today with a dew point of 76%....put heat index temps at 110F today, even though i stayed primarily inside temps outside were nutz, didn't pop my head out till after 7pm....
We have been in the 90's for a few days, but just missed it today. Plus we had 37% humidity. That's cause for a party around here. But the drawback is rain is always four or five days away.
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
I cook in freezer bags only when hiking. Just pour in the boiling water and wait seven minutes (assuming noodles and not Knorr sides). I do use the nuker a lot, but I use a bowl with stretch wrap or a wet paper towel over it.

We also heat food in the air fryer. It doesn't change the texture of the meat like the nuker does.
I remember my mom getting a microwave not long after they first came out. She starting using it for meals but nobody liked how things tasted and especially the texture or 'mouth feel'. Buns turn into rubber in those things. After a bit she would only use it to heat water or maybe some leftovers.

I read years ago bout how they break down compounds in your food especially amino acids which are the building blocks your body used to make proteins to keep your muscles strong.

In the old folks homes and hospitals here everything is mass produced at a big factory kitchen then flash frozen and shipped to the various facilities then nuked and served up. These are sick people who need decent nutrition but are fed slop. I was in the hospital for about 10 days for a ruptured appendix a few years back and I wouldn't eat most of what they served up. Margarine on white bread toast, juice cups that were no better than kool-ade loaded with food colourings, artificial flavours and high fructose corn syrup ffs. Luckily I couldn't eat much due to the intravenous antibiotics giving me the shits so bad I had to wear a diaper and could barely get back to bed without having to run back to the shitter. No sleep for a week until I had a psychotic episode and freaked out on the staff.

Stretch wrap in the nuker is a no-no. Lots of those plasticizers in that stuff to make stretchy. That new car smell these days is a lot different than back in the day and is all plasticizers you get to inhale. Buy used. :)

I got the wife one of those little ovens with the swing open doors for Xmas a few years ago and she loves it. Real heat and half the power needed as the oven in the stove. I don't mind waiting to heat up a snack in it.

As soon as we make a pot of coffee in the BUNN it goes into my Tim Horton SS thermos so we can shut off the warmer plate that uses 84W to keep the pot hot. That last cup of coffee in the pot 5 hours later always tastes like shit but from the thermos tastes fresh. I might give it 30 sec in the nuker before I add milk and sugar but have a cup warmer on my desk that uses 13W and a lid for the cup and it can make the coffee almost too hot to drink. Great for evaping off the last of the ISO from a small oil batch too. :)

Almost everything we eat is made from scratch at home. When we have to go to the city every 3 or 4 months we order chinese at a friends and pig out on lemon chicken, prawn veggie mix and the usual. Never a fast food joint. There's 3 eateries in the small town near us and we never eat there as they are all crap. At one they gave me a pre-made then nuked burger that was still frozen in the middle of the pattie. The chinese food place pours a little sweet and sour over dried out fatty pork chunks that are like eating rocks and the hotel food is to die for, literally.

At least the place in another town 20 min away makes a great donair, a really decent burger with real fries and a fair pizza so that's something and if we have to go there for something else we occasionally grab some stuff to take home. No deliveries of any kind here so not tempted to order in. No mail or UPS etc either but a friend in a town nearby lets me have stuff sent to her place if they won't ship to a PO box. Our PO box is in the post office and not one of those community ones down the road or something.

:peace:
 
Top