7:35 am - Tuesday - February 24th - TWW - 37° F, humidity 35%, cloud cover 27%, wind 12 mph out of the west by northwest.....partly cloudy today with a forecast high of 65° F. The view this morning.....
......and on this date in 2020 TLE and I were touring Galleta Meadows on the outskirts of Borrego Springs, CA.....
....where there are a 100+ metal sculptures dotting the landscape....these are just a couple of them.
I've had a project on my long range 'to do' list for about a year now, and have been procrastinating about fixing an issue with our patio awning, but recently, due to some high winds we had, it became worse, so TLE and I promised ourselves we would fix it Monday morning, on the warmest day we've had in weeks. What was the issue you ask? Well, a picture is worth, they say, a thousand words, so here is a picture of it fixed....
....the Sunbrella fabric had pulled loose from the aluminum slot beginning about 2" from the left side (see red circle) over time. We have fixed it once before, about 8 years ago, but it had begun to pull loose again a few years ago resulting in a 3-4" gap. After the recent windstorm the separation had expanded to about a 10" gap running to the right side of the circle where you could see daylight, and it appeared it would come completely undone in the very near future. The reason I kept procrastinating was it took us several hours to fix it last time. Once we had decided to fix it I began my usual process of trying to figure out how to fix it more efficiently this time, and believed I had figured it out by Monday morning.
Before we could work on the 'FIX' we needed to isolate the roller so it couldn't roll up, and then place a 10' 2 x 4 under the roller to relieve the tension on the aluminum and fabric. Once that was done, and it didn't take more than 20 minutes, I used a large flathead screwdriver to spread the aluminum slot so I could push the fabric back into it again. Once the fabric was in place I used my metal dollies, which I've carried with us for at least 10-12 years to close the slot over the fabric, and secure it firmly in place. All of that took another hour, but it worked, and now for the first time in a few years there is no daylight coming through the gap anymore. I wish I had taken more pictures of the process, but suffice it to say my plan made it much easier to fix this time around....in all we worked about 90 minutes, not hours like last time.
Once the awning was fixed we were able to redeploy it for the first time in a couple of weeks, and since the weather so delightful we brought out our anti gravity chairs and spent a few hours on the 'lido deck' reading (both), and napping (me).....
....I would have been content to spend the rest of the day doing that, but I had another solar powered lamp like the one I installed in the greenhouse to install in the dog kennel house. You will recall that last year I thoroughly cleaned all the mice, and rat poop out of the kennel, and left the door open, but that didn't discourage the little buggers, so I decided to install the solar lamp so when any vermin enter the light will come on and, hopefully, discourage them from residing there. I also ran another string of solar powered rope lights in there, and put them on intermittent flash mode. We'll see if that combination does the trick....
....I'll take time Tuesday to tack down the rope lights so they cover the whole floor. And with that final task done I returned to my anti gravity chair for another couple of hours.
Based on the clouds I could see on the western horizon I believed we were in for another great sunset, so we headed out to the 'sunset deck' around 6 pm to see if I was right, and I was. We another slowly evolving sunset that went on for 40 minutes...





















































