Hit my local Meijer (Portage) this morning. Not very busy at all. Not much for TP, but they did have some, although it was scented. Didnt need any anyway. No chlorox wipes or the like anywhere. Cambells soups were pretty wiped clean still. Most everything else was stocked well, including bread, milk, eggs and all varieties of meats. The hamburger meat was all in the vacuum sealed tubes, so no fresh ground burger. Plenty of all fruits and veggies.
Few people wearing masks and gloves. Maybe 4 or 5 was all I seen.
Staff is disinfecting the carts as they come in and were wiping checkout lanes down (self serve) after every customer.
Only reason I'll have to go to store now will be for an Easter ham in a couple weeks
It wasn't me! I don't own a Hi Point, don't own any camo, and I haven't received these yet (cross posted from the "What have you done this week to prep" thread.
"I just ordered 2 of these. I don't know why, but these are strange times. Or it could be the Jagermeister. (Probably)
https://www.robertrtg.com/store/pc/R...ARY-8p7234.htm
"
Easter Ham?
Eater is the time for getting your snares set up for some grilled Easter Bunny.
No need to shop for that.
Split peas without toilet paper.....maybe only half-blessed.
Humidity, yet another reason to stay in... I went to clean the gutters and trim a tree branch and made the mistake of not checking the temp in the garage before opening it... everything in the garage is now soaked in condensate. I had to drag our old 1980's dehumidifier out of the basement to try and dry off my tools and everthing else (the main one is plumbed to the sump). Fortunately it's working.
I'm moving to Mississippi this summer. Good things I never would have thought about.My garage will drip with humidity this time of year and actual rain will start dripping off of anything metal for hours or days. A shop dehumidifier is a must, IMO. My Dad's shop is even worse since it's a steel building. The interior walls will actually start to "cry" if it's bad enough.
Just returned from the Miejer on west 38th.
It was in fair shape but limits on hamburger and other high traffic items.
I'm moving to Mississippi this summer. Good things I never would have thought about.
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This time of year the lows are semi-similar (on normal spring days, not so much early March) but the highs exceed by 10° or so. And 100% humidity.I don't know if it's a problem down south or not. My gut feeling is that down south you'd probably get a better ROI with just a regular A/C since it's more likely to be muggy and hot down there and without as much night-time cooling like we get up here. So, you'd probably just want to run an A/C if it's that muggy down south.
That's just a hunch though.
This time of year the lows are semi-similar (on normal spring days, not so much early March) but the highs exceed by 10° or so. And 100% humidity.
I don't have much of a shop (don't want to start building up until the move, an old boss of a lathe would be nice), but I'll be watching for these things when I do.
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I am lucky in that just the floor gets cold soaked in mine. Tools and lathe must get enough heat, dry as a bone.
My garage will drip with humidity this time of year and actual rain will start dripping off of anything metal for hours or days. A shop dehumidifier is a must, IMO. My Dad's shop is even worse since it's a steel building. The interior walls will actually start to "cry" if it's bad enough.
The old thing worked. So well that I am keeping it there. It filled 1/2 the bucket before it shut off at 3/4 setting.