I try to get between 225-250 but don't use a remote thermometer and have a WSM, so just take the digital reading every 1/2 hour by poking through the vent. Almost ran out of charcoal after 5 hours so wrapped it and finished it in the oven (225) for the last couple of hours, great ring and ok bark.Thanks for this. What temp were you looking for and how did it turn out?
My kid was hoping to go back for a week or two just to get closure. Horrible for the high school seniors who won't have that clean break before going to college.The school announcement is completely expected but also insane that they waited this long. Totally unfair to keep people particularly the naive and hopeful students in limbo this long.
Naive as in the 6-10 year old children who wake up everyday hoping its safe to see their teacher and their friends.Only the naive didn’t know this was going to be the way
TeleMed was up and coming and gotten much bigger, much quicker during COVID.
Think about a stay at home mom, 2 kids, one of them 4, one just over a year old. The 4 yr old has a fever and runny nose.
Scenario A - She packs up the entire family, shleps across town, parks, takes out a stroller, maybe it's bad weather? Goes into a germy waiting room, waits 15 minutes, gets in the examination room, waits another 15 mintues. Dr comes in and spends 5 minutes looking him over. Fluids, aspirin, rest. Sends them home.
Scenario B - She schedules a TeleMed appt for 10:15. Connects at 10:15. Dr examines and asks questions and gives the same diagnosis and recommendation.
Guarantee the Vitamin D levels are at least as high in Tijuana as it is here in SD; where deaths in TJ despite way lower population have already healthily eclipsed that of SDI thought this article was interesting
“The most vulnerable group of the population for COVID–19 is also the one that has the most deficit in Vitamin D,”
It's from the NY Post not the NE Journal of Medicine, but it is an easy enough thing to do.
Guarantee the Vitamin D levels are at least as high in Tijuana as it is here in SD; where deaths in TJ despite way lower population have already healthily eclipsed that of SD
Who cares? This is about reducing things down to Vitamin D, and generally, heat and sunlight as an alleged killer of the virus. It’s way worse in TJ despite at least equal access to sun, heat, and vitamin D.I’d say the populations of San Diego and Tijuana are only comparable in terms of their relative geographic coordinates to one another.
Certainly not in the same way most first world European countries are comparable to one another.
Who cares? This is about reducing things down to Vitamin D, and generally, heat and sunlight as an alleged killer of the virus. It’s way worse in TJ despite at least equal access to sun, heat, and vitamin D.
You’re supporting my point that this comes down to SES more than anything
Vitamin D isn’t preventing anything. Hence the reference to Tijuana, where it’s in abundance.The point being it may very well be helpful in preventing deaths in the areas studied for public health initiatives to include provision and/or advertisement of vitamin D supplements to populations seen as deficient, and that it may be useful in areas which are comparable to those European nations socioeconomically.
Naive as in the 6-10 year old children who wake up everyday hoping its safe to see their teacher and their friends.
[/QUOTE the parents should be guiding their kids thru this pandemic not governor Lamont He’s never given false hope to opening schools so the parents shou on don’t have either
Made me wonder about failing Seniors (including the knuckleheads), do they graduate automatically?So CT public schools are now officially distance learning until the end of the school year. My kid is bumbed about that and bored out of her mind.
Made me wonder about failing Seniors (including the knuckleheads), do they graduate automatically.
Also for those HS Senior baseballers who were hoping to land a schollie with excellent seasons. Hell are Universities even processing scholarship applications, and student loans efficiently nowadays?
I mean forget about graduations, the proms and all a lot of careers and dreams are upside down. Even if college was not a desire, the workforce situation is too competitive for them to even land a low paying job, due to the unemployment of so many experienced applicants.
I really feel for these kids, and am concerned about how they are coping with all this uncertainty. Who knows they may turn out to be the best graduating class in our Country's history (if it can be measured).
Hate sounding doom and gloom, but this Country (particularly the decision makers) need to really get going and roll out plans and solutions. This Country is definitely in a transition with an uncertain future.
Wait 4-5 days till after all the Mother’s Day visits percolate.Fewest new cases nationally since 3/28 today.
Or 3 weeks until symptoms and test resultsWait 4-5 days till after all the Mother’s Day visits percolate.
Bumping a very old thread to see what changes people are still seeing nearly a year later? Did the year go as you expected? What changes are permanent?
In my case, we are still not back in the office. I took a company wide survey today with lots of questions about what we want to do. My response, hybrid work from home and office, but the unique sub-question was: how often do you want to go in? I thought initially 2 days a week, but on reflection said 2 days a month. I find I miss a lot of things, and the office is on the list, but low on the list. I'm more interested in meeting my work colleagues for a beer than actually working in the office.
The bump was triggered by this article in the WaPost. It will appear this weekend. The featured family are friends of ours and live 3 doors down. It is interesting premise, that as works shifts to home (as it was in the agrarian economy) we may see more 3 generation family structures again, especially with both parents working. The oldest can help with youngest, and kids can help aging parents. Work from home is going to provide lots of new flexibility for people to be where they want.
Families reunite in pandemic and rethink what home means - The Washington Post
My wife works for a market research company, so of course they also surveyed their employees in a similar manner. She put 1 day a week back in the office for herself personally, 0 people out of the 50 respondents put 5 days a week back.Bumping a very old thread to see what changes people are still seeing nearly a year later? Did the year go as you expected? What changes are permanent?
In my case, we are still not back in the office. I took a company wide survey today with lots of questions about what we want to do. My response, hybrid work from home and office, but the unique sub-question was: how often do you want to go in? I thought initially 2 days a week, but on reflection said 2 days a month. I find I miss a lot of things, and the office is on the list, but low on the list. I'm more interested in meeting my work colleagues for a beer than actually working in the office.
The bump was triggered by this article in the WaPost. It will appear this weekend. The featured family are friends of ours and live 3 doors down. It is interesting premise, that as works shifts to home (as it was in the agrarian economy) we may see more 3 generation family structures again, especially with both parents working. The oldest can help with youngest, and kids can help aging parents. Work from home is going to provide lots of new flexibility for people to be where they want.
Families reunite in pandemic and rethink what home means - The Washington Post