Saturday, October 30, 2021

Fighting with Bubble Wrap; Catching Coquis

 [Note: This is another blog based on my weekly emails to my family on the mainland.]

10/30/21

Aloha Everybody –

I hope your fall is going ok.  Our weather had definitely changed from the last time I talked about it, which was when I was complaining about all the rain we were getting during the summer. Now we need some.  Maybe this was another aspect of the Sherman Travel Curse (see last week) but since we left for our trip it has been very dry, though it has stayed fairly cool. Some parts of the island are nearing drought conditions whereas a few months ago they were flooding.  Sigh.....

It was a very quiet week here.  We’re more or less over our jet lag, though it still seems hard to get much done each day.  My big project this week beside the usual maintenance stuff was to remove our old pool cover and install a new one.  This is the cover we use at night to keep our pool water warm.  It

looks like a huge piece of blue bubble wrap – the little bubbles trap air and act as an insulator.  These things last about 3 years and then the plastic starts to deteriorate from the sun and pool chemicals. We try to rationalize the environmental impact of the covers by buying very few plastic drink bottles, and by noting that people who use covers require less energy to heat their pools. Don't look too close at these arguments.

 It has been much cheaper over the years to buy replacements on the internet and install them ourselves.  This year, however, no company would ship to Hawai’i, so I had to find one locally.  They come in standard sizes which requires buying one that is actually too large and then trimming it to fit.  Sounds easy, right?  The problem is it is large, heavy, and difficult to maneuver.  Plus it comes folded up and needs several days to flatten out the wrinkles before any cuts are accurate.  I’ve found it usually takes around 3-4 trimmings along the sides to get it to where it will roll up fairly easily.  I’m on the third trim – this involves being on my hands and knees leaning over the edge of the pool.  What could possibly go wrong?


Our Covid situation is better but stubbornly continues with daily infections still higher than before the Delta variant came on the scene. The good news is that we now have a few ICU beds available and only one is being occupied by a Covid patient.  I learned this week that my gardener got Covid just after we left for our trip — yet another blow from the Sherman Travel Curse. (Let's see, we're up to earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, drought, disease---quite a trip!). Although he is now working again he can only manage a few hours a day.  Turns out he wasn’t vaccinated, but his wife, who works with him, was.  She didn’t get sick, nor did any of the others on his crew, all vaccinated.  He admits he should have gotten the vaccine, he said he just never found the time. He now regrets it, as I’m sure his wife reminds him, you know just from time to time....

I caught 4 coquis this week, all in our front garden.  When we returned last week I heard one and thought it was only one that moved in while we were gone.  Wrong.  Even with four on ice there is still another one that is taunting me, so at least 5 were setting up territories.  I think they are all very young and haven’t yet been able to attract females, but I can’t be sure.  It takes about 8-9 months for males to become sexually mature, and that’s when they start singing in earnest.  My captured frogs this week were very timid singers, usually only making a few calls at a time. I doubt any females were impressed. The fact that they were nearly all in the same small area and the same age makes me think there were from the same clutch of eggs deposited about 8 months ago.  The depressing aspect of that being true is that I could be battling a bunch more -- coquis generally lay clutches of 20-30 eggs.

Yesterday I saw my eye doctor.  It was six weeks since my last injection., which was right before we left .  The Eylea did its job, and there was no sign of new fluid buildup.  Bottom line, no shot. I'll go back in 4 weeks.  I won't have the drug discount for my next injection, but I'll get it anyway.


Karen played golf on Tuesday and did pretty well.  Her golf buddy will be returning to the mainland in November for routine medical checkups and to visit friends & family, so it looks like I’ll be taking to the links again in her place.  My goal this time will be to actually make it through all 18 holes.  Oh, and not spin the cart or drive it into one of the lakes.

That’s about it for this week.  Off for our usual Saturday morning itinerary.  Take care. Stay healthy and warm.
         

 

5 comments:

Coleen Hanna said...

Thanks for the shots of the pool cover and the explanations. I found it very interesting. When you got to the part about being on your hands and knees, I said “ouch!” My knees cannot handle anything like that anymore. Sounds like you and Karen are doing well.

cecilia said...

Be careful with that trimming while leaning into the pool! I was trimming overgrown invasive multiflora rose bushes on a trail and face planted into the creek about 6 feet below. Luckily my sister was with me and found my glasses, and we helped each other back up the embankment. Miraculously I didn’t impale myself on the clippers, and no permanent injuries.

Richard Sherman said...

Ouch to both of you. I'm grateful that so far my knees and hips are holding up pretty well. I did, however have to use a pad for my knees while trimming the bubble wrap.

Face planting into a creak! For me one of the most disconcerting aspects of something like that is how sudden and unexpected the event is, no matter how careful or attentive you might have been. Definitely an illustration of the "illusion of control" we are susceptible to....

Dennis L. Nord, Ph.D. said...

I put two "golf" cups in our pool last spring. That way I can go out with my putter in the pool to amuse myself. Never was much of a golfer and this isn't going to turn me into one. You probably recall we filled the pool with many tons of gravel capped with a few inches of decomposed granite. No more of those bubble covers for this pool, tho we had quite a few when we still had water.

We watched the most recent fire from a distance and felt most fortunate it didn't tip our way very far. In addition the wind blew the smoke all out into the ocean, I suppose it could have gone all the way to your house!

Richard Sherman said...

Good luck with those fires!

Despite the obvious hypocrisy and environmental head-in-the-sandism, we love our pool and use it almost daily year round. It would be tough to give it up. Actually, it uses very little water once filled, and the amount of chemicals we use (chlorine, mostly) is relatively minimal. And now that we have PV it isn't a big user of non-renewable energy, either. Those plastic covers, however...........