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Second Chance

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Posts posted by Second Chance

  1. 2 hours ago, JimK said:

    It sounds like she is taking desensitization shots.  These sorts of programs are specific to the individual, their allergies, and the plan to desensitize.  You are not likely to be able to just drop in on another allergist and have them administer the correct shot.  If you are going to a specific location and there is an allergist nearby, perhaps your wife's current allergist can consult and make arrangements with the new allergist to continue therapy.

    For a short trip it might be possible for an allergist to provide a dose or two for self administration, but I doubt it.  Desensitization means being injected with a substance the individual is allergic to.  The idea is to administer small amounts to deplete the patient's antibodies without causing a reaction or stimulating more antibody production.  It is all but black magic and something the allergist needs to assess constantly.

    I would agree with this. When I was doing the desensitization thing, I administered my own injections (I'm a retired Army nurse, so not a big deal). I she or her husband are willing to learn how - and it's OK with her allergist - this is an option for the road. The vials are just stored in the refrigerator and she'd need to have Epi-Pens with her.

    Rob

  2. 19 hours ago, aztex said:

    ... BTW Said important mail was resent and received by Escapees and forwarded to me..... Now lost in transit....5 days since a tracking update....

    How are you having your mail forwarded? If by USPS, they are completely unreliable these days. I'm currently tracking a Priority Mail flat that was sent from the Baltimore area to Las Cruces, NM, last week (not an Escapees mailing). USPS sent it the wrong direction in the first place and it has spent the past four days circling in and out of a distribution center in MA. I only use FedEx two-day for Escapees mail forwarding and have never had an issue doing it that way.

    Rob

  3. After a loop in Southern Utah with friends this spring/summer, we're considering heading north before going east. It looks like one way to avoid the really steep grades, tunnels, etc., in the central Rockies would be to take Colorado 3 from Rifle, CO, to Craig, CO, and continue north to then slant NE to the Black Hills and Mount Rushmore. What can anyone tell me I-70 in Utah and then Colorado 3 going north from Rifle? The Mountain Directly doesn't raise any red flags for that route and we rather like getting off the beaten path. (Rig in signature.)

    Thanks!

    Rob

  4. We are domiciled with Escapees in Texas and have purchased three vehicles while in other states (a truck and an RV in Georgia and a car in New Mexico). With the Georgia purchases, the dealers downloaded a form from the Texas DMV site attesting that the vehicles were out of state. We had to have them inspected the first time we were back in Texas. With the New Mexico purchase, the dealership was 25 minutes from the Texas border and the nearest Texas vehicle inspection station. We were required to take the car down to get it inspected before the dealer could complete the Texas registration and titling with Polk County. In all cases, the dealer(s) handled everything (except taking the car to get inspected, of course).

    Rob

  5. We don't use anything on the back end, but we do use Capital One Shopping on the front end (Laura has some Capital One accounts and I'm one them, too.) Their plug-in installs in your browser and checks the price of things you're looking at. If there's a better deal elsewhere, the app will tell you; if there's a coupon, the app will tell you. We haven't been using it long, but, so far, it seems to work well.

    Rob

  6. 2 hours ago, durangodon said:

    When you do the upgrade to Win 11, does it tell (warn) you about which programs will no longer work ahead of time?  Or, is it a big surprise after you do the upgrade?

    Seems like in the past, you could run a program in an earlier version mode (example: in Win 7 mode).  When I upgraded to Win 10, I had programs which just disappeared.

    There is a PC health check utility you can run on the PC  prior to upgrading. It will tell you which apps and hardware items will be problematic (if any). I have a fairly new PC, so no hardware problems. I'm running some very old apps (as in 10+ years old) and they are running fine. The upgrade went very smoothly of both my wife's and my Lenovo notebooks which were running Windows 10.

    Rob

  7. 43 minutes ago, LindaH said:

    Second Chance, thanks for the information.  I'll file it away for the future.  Fortunately, I finally got it working again!

    I searched online for "How do I get my wireless adapter back" and came up with several fixes, some of which I'd already tried, and/or didn't work.  However, the one that DID work was going to Network adapters on the Device Manager, right clicking on the network adapter's name, selecting Update driver, and then restarting the computer.  

    Big sigh of relief!

    Yep - that's a good/frequent fix, too. Strangely enough, right after I posted that I hadn't had that issue for a while it did it again! I just now got the computer on-line, but it took a complete network reset in the Settings menus.😐

    Rob

  8. I was having this issue quite often for a while. What I had to do was clear the DNS stack on the computer:

    From the search bar, run "cmd" (run as administrator)
    Type or copy in this command: netsh winsock reset (and hit "Enter")

    It just takes a second or two. You may have to reboot the PC. I'm now running Windows 11 and, after the last update, it has quit doing this.

    Rob

  9. 1 hour ago, lg61820 said:

    As a parent of grown children, I feel I must reply to aryhrudy.  Having been burnt multiple times by my fiscally irresponsible children I would say that I would NEVER, under any circumstances, take out a loan and trust that my children would pay me back.  If the child was financially capable and had proven themselves trustworthy then they could get their own loan, and not depend on their parents who have been fiscally responsible.  

     

     

     

    I agree with this wholeheartedly!

    Rob

  10. 18 hours ago, jamtracy said:

    That's awesome Bob. We are Tri care prime.  I believe when we go to Montana for a workkamping gig in May we might have to transition to tri care select.

    Anyway glad to know they will ship to a temporary address.

    James

    I think you can only switch between plans during Open Season (which it is now - until 13 December). You might want to look into switching now.

    Rob

  11. 6 hours ago, jamtracy said:

    I use Apria and have never had an issue. I do not know how they are with shipping to different addresses.

    Based on your post, I had a nice, long chat with Apria Healthcare this morning. I told them that we were mobile and that my wife has TRICARE Select now, but will transition to MEDICARE and TRICARE For Life next May. We discussed shipping to different locations with billing/domicile in one place. Their response was... no problem! We would just have to order supplies by phone (rather than on-line) so the temporary shipping address could be put on each individual shipment. I'm considering moving over to Apria in January when we move our primary care over to a new internist in New Mexico. Thanks!

    Rob

  12. 1 hour ago, Kirk W said:

    Same here. We have used a portable one since 2003 and not only has it never been stolen, I have yet to hear of anyone who has had one stolen. 

    We've had a couple of instances reported on one of the other forums I belong to.

    Rob

  13. 3 hours ago, Ray,IN said:

    This is the water pressure regulator W/gauge I have used for several years without any problems: https://www.amazon.com/AccuMeter-Lead-Free-Pressure-Regulator-Adjustable/dp/B07TB9C36N/ref=sr_1_7?dchild=1&keywords=Water+Pressure+Regulator+with+Gauge&qid=1634569517&sr=8-7

    It will NOT freeze when stored, or mine has not in the past 5 years; of course leaving it full of water in freezing temperatures will crack the brass casting.

    Our MH has a built-in EMS and voltage protection. It has prevented a faulty voltage problem from damaging our MH many times during the past 8 years of ownership. I consider it a must-have device.

     

    2gypsies: https://www.handi-steps.com/index.php?main_page=index&cPath=1

    I've replaced one of those regulators twice in the last six years. One was probably a diaphragm failure, the other the gauge failed. The company sent me a new gauge and then the regulator stopped working altogether about nine months later. The third one is still in use and working OK. It's mounted inside a heated utility bay on our fiver so we don't have to worry about freezing.

     

    For the OP: they are SO much more than surge protectors - they are electrical management systems (EMS). One of their most important duties is to protect your motor-driven appliances (think ACs, residential refrigerators, etc.) and sensitive electronics from low-voltage situations - a common occurrence in many campgrounds. Permanently installed "hard-wired" EMSs are convenient and greatly reduce the risk of theft.

    Rob

    Rob

  14. While nice for a teardrop, I'm with Kirk on this. As full-timers, I can't imagine living full-time in that kind of space. When the weather is nice, all the world is your porch; when it's blistering hot, freezing cold, pouring down rain, etc., that little trailer is going to get incredibly claustrophobic. Other considerations are storage space (you have to carry everything you need with you) and the wet bath. A wet bath means that the entire bathroom is your shower... nothing on the counter that can't get wet and you have to dry it down each time to prevent mold and mildew.

    Rob

  15. 1 minute ago, gypsydan said:

    And I notice that some have the notification they are a YES, and others are a NO. Is this a secret society to identify members?   OR, could this mean those with a YES are better than those with a NO, or vice-versa? OR . . . . . ?

    The "Yes" and "No" are appearing just below our Escapees member numbers. This is where the lifetime membership information used to display... perhaps they just forgot to label it.

    Rob

  16. I'm also with Dutch. I've used the TireMinder A1A for about six years now monitoring 10 tires. I called Minder Research yesterday and had a conversation about upgrading just the monitor to get more bells and whistles. TheA1AS would run me $300+ ($349 I think he said... but I quit listening at that point). I scroll through and check everything before each departure but, while on the road, I never look at the monitor unless an alarm goes off. Too much stuff to pay attention to while driving. I'm "newly happy" with my original A1A monitor.

    Rob

  17. 47 minutes ago, rocci and carol said:

    Hello,

    We are transitioning to full time motorhome living.  I'm about 20% computer etc savy.  Does anyone know if we can use the Jetpack as our only internet connection for 2 t.v.s & computer?  We have a jetpack and when we are traveling we have used it for our phones & computer but it seems we will be relying on the jetpack for everything in the motorhome.  Any input would be helpful.

    Thanks

    It depends on which data plan you get. Streaming TV and movies takes a lot of data (about 2GB/hour for HD). Doing all the other internet stuff doesn't use nearly as much. The device will work fine. We have a Verizon JePack 8800L with an unlimited data plan. It has been our only internet connection for the TV, two laptops, a wireless printer, two Kindles, two iPads, two Echo devices, and the phones when they're on WiFi.

    Rob

  18. 17 hours ago, TXiceman said:

    Mi esposa used to teach Spanish and said that she had heard this and decided it was a myth.

    Ken

    Tu esposa tiene razón. My wife is natively bilingual (born in Argentina, raised in Costa Rica, lived in Spain for 10 years as an adult and another 7 back in CR). She has masters degrees in education and Spanish and also studied at the University of Madrid. OK - credentials out of the way. She says that the Spanish King Ferdinand theory is widespread but it's urban legend. A more academic explanation is this:

    Castilian Spanish of the Middle Ages had originally two distinct sounds for what we now think of as the "lisp": the cedilla, and the z as in "dezir". The cedilla made a "ts" sound and the "z" a "dz" sound. Both in time were simplified into the "lisp", or what Spaniards call the "ceceo."

    Interestingly, with her gift and ear for languages, she picked up the "lisp" while living in Spain. When she moved back to CR, her friends there told her to drop it (in no uncertain terms). To many Spanish speakers in the new world, the "lisp" reeks of colonialism. 

    Rob

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