OP
Dan in Pasadena
Well-known member
^^^ Certainly better but still 31 miles from my house. Appreciate the info
Well, there's that.31 miles in the LA area might take 3 hours…
Exactly. There are no "rush hours" here anymore. ALL hours are rush hours.31 miles in the LA area might take 3 hours…
Only 3? You are so optimistic.31 miles in the LA area might take 3 hours…
31 miles in the LA area might take 3 hours…
Only 3? You are so optimistic.
Things must've got better. I remember spending about 5 hours in LA traffic one evening. I was told it was fairly normal.Well, when I was driving to work (pre-retirement, pre-Covid), an 11 mile ride home from downtown LA would easily be an hour.
Right now, Google puts it at 16 minutes!
People in Californica don't bike or walk, even to the building next door, they drive. I have watched an entire office go to lunch together. Each one got into his/her individual car, and drove 200 feet up the street to the restaurant, overcrowding the parking lot there. Priceless.With that kind of traffic, seems like a bicycle is a better option.
^^^ This is far from typical.People in Californica don't bike or walk, even to the building next door, they drive. I have watched an entire office go to lunch together. Each one got into his/her individual car, and drove 200 feet up the street to the restaurant, overcrowding the parking lot there. Priceless.
Guess what? 60's-70's-80's was when I was out that way. Haven't been there in 40 years. Nice to know things have changed.^^^ This is far from typical.
Maybe in "the old days" - 80's-ish - but today we're a little more conscious of walking. At least we were before I retired in 2017.
Agreed that unless you're a devoted bicyclist, we don't much ride bikes - though that is changing toward electric bikes. Which of course isn't exercising at all because most use them as electric minibikes not as assistance on the hard parts of an ordinary bike ride.
People in Californica don't bike or walk



Thank you PD for the kind words.Sorry to hear about your MIL. We went through that with both my inlaws last year.
Hospice workers are amazing- can't omagine doing that day after day.
Good luck with the skin doc, Dan.
Thanks for the words. She was a very very kind and sweet lady til the very end. Rest in Paradise, Señora.Awesome story, thanks for sharing her history.
It hardly counts as "surgery" but yeah, it went fine. Hardest part was anesthetic shots in the face & back. He lopped off the little things and said they don't look malignant but he'll send them to the lab and get back to me. Real attractive having a scab right on your face, ha ha!I hope the surgery goes well.


Could you have cut the end off the provided wrench and chucked that up instead?Man, Chinese nuts & bolts are ****. They give long machine screws with large diameter flatheads that hold the pieces together BUT they have a tiny place for the Allen wrench. Of course being GJ I can't use the pinché wrench provided so I put an Allen wrench socket thing on my Milwaukee drill driver and it immediately stripped out that little spot in the flathead - UGH. I had to use vice grips on the one I stripped and then had to wear out my thumbs turning the ****** wrench....which I promptly threw away!
I have those sockets that have about 3/4" of Allen wrench embedded in them. That's what I tried to use that stripped the hex hole in the cheapazz Chinese fastener. Had to downshift to the provided tiny wrench.Could you have cut the end off the provided wrench and chucked that up instead?
Yes, they were here when we moved in. The room is pretty small and truly is an office. The former owner was a self employed concrete contractor - which is why we have a bunch of stamped concrete front and back. It'll be a small but adequate guest room.Was the desk thing already there? If not, you put that up fast.
Thanks! Yes, I agree.Looks good, Dan.
A fresh start on that room will help you and your GF move forward.

Ha ha, really?WOW!! Thats more than we've had in PA this year.
