On a sadder note, I'm reporting the first Covid-19 death in the extended family. My ex-wife's niece, who was in a nursing home after a horrific car crash decades ago, passed away this morning. Nursing homes seem to be very hard hit.
My mom, 75, is working at rite aid. They are the only store in the area that hasn’t adjusted their hours. Open 8am-10pm. They haven’t put up the glass either. She said people are so rude. Yelling at her because they don’t have anything... No paper towels, toilet paper, hand sanitizer, Lysol. And it’s “all her fault”. She had a rough day yesterday. Was almost in tears.
My daughter works at CVS in Texas. Although their hours are adjusted, she said people are ridiculous and rude!
My wife works for an assisted living community and is very familiar with the incident that you are referring to outside of Baltimore. Just got a notification that another nursing home has had an outbreak. Seven residents and one staff member so far. Going to get much worse before it gets better. Maryland officials say we are still two weeks away from the "surge."
Prepare for combat style triage if things get too of hand.
The Johns Hopkins dashboard relies heavily on public-sector reporting. The State of Maryland's own official tally for Howard County is currently at 3:I read in the Washington Post yesterday that there had been ten deaths at the facility in Howard County, but the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus map still says there have been only three deaths in all of Howard. I had been treating the JHU map as very reliable, but when they're not even up on what's happening 25 miles away, I have to wonder. Or wonder about the Post.
If the tender is USS Frank Cable (AS-40) I am a plank owner. Part of the crew that commissioned the ship in 1979.
I certainly hope not also. I am thinking the six foot rule would prove insufficient for firearm distancing.We're still healthy.
My wife still won't let me go shopping with her
Up here in NorthEastern Vermont, there's (officially) 8 cases in our county and none in the even more rural county to the North.
Our town has 2, large well stocked supermarkets; toilet paper excepted (I don't get the rush on toilet paper) and prices have stayed reasonable ...eggs have gone up...and are the 2nd scarcest item. She shopped yesterday; seemingly fine, the drug store had shields, the supermarket didn't.
St J is a good place to be away from it all; quiet streets to take a walk, a railroad trail for more extensive walks and the entire white Mountain system, starting 20 miles away or so.
I worry about the townsfolk...There isn't much decent employment in this town in the best of days, most people living hand to mouth,
Back in the early 1900's the town was booming, Fairbanks made industrial locks for the world; lovely Vics on every street, for the elite, a main street with set back quasi mansions...All still there but in the poorer blocks somewhat going to seed...
The median household income is 47 thousand, lower than the rest of the state and the country (63), I don't know how these people will survive a sharp recession; there just aren't any resources to fall back on...but gun sales are way up...a bit frightening. Is anarchy a real possibility...I certainly hope not.
We vacation in the Islands most years. We occasionally take a detour through St J and we usually stop to visit the Athenaeum and their surprisingly extensive art collection.We're still healthy.
My wife still won't let me go shopping with her
Up here in NorthEastern Vermont, there's (officially) 8 cases in our county and none in the even more rural county to the North.
Our town has 2, large well stocked supermarkets; toilet paper excepted (I don't get the rush on toilet paper) and prices have stayed reasonable ...eggs have gone up...and are the 2nd scarcest item. She shopped yesterday; seemingly fine, the drug store had shields, the supermarket didn't.
St J is a good place to be away from it all; quiet streets to take a walk, a railroad trail for more extensive walks and the entire white Mountain system, starting 20 miles away or so.
I worry about the townsfolk...There isn't much decent employment in this town in the best of days, most people living hand to mouth,
Back in the early 1900's the town was booming, Fairbanks made industrial locks for the world; lovely Vics on every street, for the elite, a main street with set back quasi mansions...All still there but in the poorer blocks somewhat going to seed...
The median household income is 47 thousand, lower than the rest of the state and the country (63), I don't know how these people will survive a sharp recession; there just aren't any resources to fall back on...but gun sales are way up...a bit frightening. Is anarchy a real possibility...I certainly hope not.
My husband’s uncle has a place in the Islands and we go at least a couple of times a year. Can’t help but wonder if the locals are guarding the causeway to keep the out of state people away. Sadly, Maple Fest is cancelled this year so that is one less trip for us.We vacation in the Islands most years. We occasionally take a detour through St J and we usually stop to visit the Athenaeum and their surprisingly extensive art collection.
My husband’s uncle has a place in the Islands and we go at least a couple of times a year. Can’t help but wonder if the locals are guarding the causeway to keep the out of state people away. Sadly, Maple Fest is cancelled this year so that is one less trip for us.
Damn sorry Mil. I hope everyone within your immediate family are still well and hunkered down.On a sadder note, I'm reporting the first Covid-19 death in the extended family. My ex-wife's niece, who was in a nursing home after a horrific car crash decades ago, passed away this morning. Nursing homes seem to be very hard hit.
I'm seeing just the opposite at the supermarket. People are being polite and mostly practicing safe distance. I have yet to see anyone being rude to a cashier. Are you in NYC or NJ?
I shopped today, the store was crowded and probably 90% of the shoppers were wearing masks and most were wearing gloves. Cashiers are behind plexiglass and the aisles are marked one way and there is spacing tape on the floor for register lines.
Thanks. Grandpa is hunkered down in Alexandria; the California family is working and taking college classes from home in Irvine; and the Texas family is working from home and teaching the little ones (Mom has an M.Ed. from Stanford) in Houston, having left Queens last summer. We are all present and accounted for.Damn sorry Mil. I hope everyone within your immediate family are still well and hunkered down.
I went out for a walk in Old Town Alexandria today, and the sunny, 77-degree weather brought out about double or perhaps triple the number of people I've been seeing on my 5-mile walks.I'm in the Maryland suburbs of DC. That's the only rude person I've seen, but she was really awful.
As you experienced, the vast majority of the people are very considerate, 6 foot distances are marked near the registers, etc. Outside of fresh food, though, the stores are still very poorly stocked.
On my noontime run today, there were probably ten times as many people out walking/running/riding than a week ago. I think people around here are still taking the threat very seriously, but being antsy is now winning out over being spooked.
I've been doing these 2 hour walks every day and you would all be amazed at how many people are still walking Brooklyn's streets. What has really picked up is the number of people riding bicycles around the borough.I went out for a walk in Old Town Alexandria today, and the sunny, 77-degree weather brought out about double or perhaps triple the number of people I've been seeing on my 5-mile walks.
Are you able to maintain distance from folks in a place as crowded as Brooklyn?I've been doing these 2 hour walks every day and you would all be amazed at how many people are still walking Brooklyn's streets. What has really picked up is the number of people riding bicycles around the borough.