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What are your jeans doing today?


ninetynine

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We all have our weird tradeoffs.

I had a sinus injury when I was young, so I’m not sure I can taste/smell as well as the average person, but the romance over gas is something I truly cannot comprehend. Induction is faster, more precise, cleaner (air and surface). My brother who is an intrepid cook who does understand the difference in more subtle ways changed about two years ago, motivated at least in part by having a young child with asthma - and wonders why he was hesitant. For our part, we’re just slowly trying to electrify our home over time as we can afford, and this was just one step in that. 

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I much prefer electric stoves but it's entirely because they're so easy to keep clean, just wipe down the flat surface and you're done. Cleaning my gas stove is annoying and time consuming that I don't even care if it cooks better or not.

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I think my (somewhat strong) preference for gas is rooted in some of my favorite pots & pans not having fully flat bottoms. A small saucier will operate very differently if it’s only heated from the bottom; a wok won’t operate at all. That said, I’m sure that when we inevitably do make the switch to induction, it’ll just take a year or two to forget I ever had any complaints

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43 minutes ago, Hopethisoneisnttaken said:

^ as you mentioned briefly in your last sentence, induction stoves that match the quality (of cooking) of gas stoves are much more expensive than their gas counter parts. At least that’s how it is here. I’m not sure it’s romance, I think it’s a much more practical. 

Yea I totally understand not switching due to cost. I’m speaking more about all the waxing poetic about it that I’ve seen here in the US - advertising and lobbying really and then people buying into it. There has been a lot of money spent trying to make people think gas is the best, and to actively invest in it - and it’s been done largely by utilities who just want to sell gas - the fossil fuel industry. 
 

@julian-wolf You're right though. We had to ditch our wok (which was also our only pan that lacked the magnetic properties needed). I do miss that a bit, but only when I’m reminded of it! There is a bit of an adjustment. 

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Being in an off-grid situation we're on propane. Like KOTH Hank's barbeque except it's a 500 gallon tank. Used to be affordable. Now it costs a f'in fortune. 
I've been curious about induction cookers. I suspect they're a big current draw which is problematic for us.

 

 

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5 minutes ago, CSL said:

Being in an off-grid situation we're on propane. Like KOTH Hank's barbeque except it's a 500 gallon tank. Used to be affordable. Now it costs a f'in fortune. 
I've been curious about induction cookers. I suspect they're a big current draw which is problematic for us.

 

 

I can’t speak to the particulars, but whatever the additional draw is I can say we haven’t really noticed it on our electric bill. That might not be helpful as I’m not sure what sort of rationing you’d have to do. There was already a 220 line next to the gas line that was installed before we bought our house, that was lucky.

We did notice our bill change a little when switched to EV and a plug in hybrid (our mileage is generally fairly low, most miles total are electric) - maybe 12-13k a year for spread across two cars.

Edited by ATWM
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^^^For us the problem is not the increased usage, rather that our system can't handle big current draws without turning on the generator. 

During the day, sun on the panels will handle most things, but from twilight on it's a different story...

Edited by CSL
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These days, pretty sure you can get induction (or electric) cookers with pretty big built-in batteries that are made to handle an hour or two of heavy draw per day without added stress to the system—could be worth looking into

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^^^Good to know. I'll look into that.

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Trying hard to get back into climbing after close to two years mostly off 

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feat. Union Special Daisy Mae, Columbiaknit rugby, M41059, Bootleggers chalk bag, Acopa Chameleons

Edited by julian-wolf
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^ Wishing you luck!! I got back into climbing a couple of months ago also and almost immediately reactivated both my old hand injuries on some overhang routes. Trying to practice through it when I can but I’m still back down to only 1-2 times a week lol. Hope you are having fun climbing again!!

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I've been climbing less but feeling stronger lately

I tore a pulley in my ring finger earlier this year and the rest I took during the healing process really helped me 

Occasionally taking longer breaks is good - all of that bad muscle memory can potentially get wiped out

and remembering you're ultimately there to enjoy yourself helps, too

 

My gym has also left me feeling humbled lately, and it's most certainly lit a fire

 

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Thanks @chicote. At this point 1–2 times a week is just about my goal, but man, having a regular 9–5 with a commute on either end makes it feel a lot harder than when I was working @ the university right down the street. Shame about the injuries. When I first stopped, it was on the tail of bad tendinitis in one of my wrists, and I’m really hoping to keep that behind me. Wishing you luck w/ working past your hand issues! Those can suck big time.

@scooby That’s a good angle. It’s true that getting fully rested & loosened out feels like it can take months sometimes. A lot of my best climbing (or bicycling, or whatever) sessions have been right on the tail ends of longer sedentary spells. You’re right, too, that feeling humbled can be a good motivator in itself (I’m right there with you, these days)

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@julian-wolf generally in the same boat as you. 
 

after having a baby last year and starting a 9-5 after some time in academia I barely squeeze 2 sessions a week if I’m lucky. It’s mostly the one session on Saturday morning where everyone’s still asleep for me. I’ve sort off switched to climbing mostly on moonboard since I can’t really have projects in the “regular” gym sections, since they change fully within a month. And I can only do 4 sessions a month. 
 

Been mostly trying to maintain the same level rather than improving. 
 

but hi, at least I don’t have to buy new climbing shoes every 10 months now 😅

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Wait till you hit your 50s JW, recovery takes an age.. i've only just recovered from an achilles injury from June 2024 :D

I'd had time away from tennis while i'd been working on the bathroom project.. then i played one of the neighbours on the local clay courts.. i'd never played on clay before and wans't used to the loose powdery surface.. maybe Chucks wern't the best choice of footwear either?

At the end of the match i limped home, elevated / iced but by the time i went to bed, i had to go upstairs, backwards on my arse... i couldn't play tennis for 6weeks although cycling was fine. @MJF9 is sick of hearing about it :)

First match thereafter, post-physio.. i strapped my ankle up tight af but tore the calf in my left leg (typical tennis-leg injury) i heard an audible POP! ..  I was trying to put less pressure on my injured achilles.. to add insult to injury, i had an allergic reaction to the lycra in the strapping so my lower leg was covered in what looked like burn blisters.. for 6mths after just carrying bags of shopping from the car would hurt my heel.. i couldn't even put my feet up on the footstool.

14mths later i'm now pain free again.. 10am this morning, waiting for the offspring.

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Do you think Taylor Fritz has to bring a brush to sweep the court.. :D

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We're all getting up there I guess ha.

I used to be a decent enough casual runner, I would try to clock a sub 5 mile as my sort of annual check in. But now I am always training around some sort of injury and I've had to add 30 seconds on to that baseline and be happy with it.

Sore achilles for the past 6-7 years (gets better then I overdo it), elbow tendinitis for the better part of four years (trips to PT, gets better, then I overdo it), IT band pain (when my achilles isn't hurting). Sprained ankle every once in awhile too. I wish I could climb but I'm at a strength/conditioning gym 3-5 days a week and just can't add anything on top of that - but I know enough to know that I need that to keep some baseline functioning. Total recovery has seemed to be sort of a pie in the sky notion since I turned 35 (which is some years ago now), lol. But when something is hurting at least there is always something else to do that avoids it!

I was just telling my wife though that I need to recalibrate my routines for my current age. Less high intensity and more yoga and walking I think is in the cards. It's just hard for me to "slow down" so to speak, moreso recently than in some years, which is all the more reason that I need to. 

Edited by ATWM
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