- Joined
- Oct 31, 2018
- Messages
- 7,825
- City
- Dirtman's Basement
- Vehicle Year
- 1988
- Transmission
- Manual
- My credo
- Give 'yer balls a tug. Fight me.
First thing I ate, obvi ??Got any jalopeno cheese spread?
Damn chili Mac is still awesome. Your favorite?
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First thing I ate, obvi ??Got any jalopeno cheese spread?
I just had an in depth conversation with a close friend turned tinfoil hatter.
Crazy spreads fast....
Facebook has doomed us all. I guess. Idk haven't been on it since 2014
The memes are out of control...It’s the internet, you find what you want toon there like anywhere else.
Only thing on mine for the virus is memes and people regurgitating symptoms. Still lots of car, truck, aviation, tractor, navy and Coleman stuff in my feed.
EVERY funeral home in my county uses a Chrysler minivan to pick up deceased folks. Lower cost and more discreet.@JohnnyO can probably chime in but I don't think it is all plush pillows and Caddys getting from the hospital to the funeral home on a good day.
With you being in the funeral business, how are you handling bodies of the deceased that died of covid?My dad gave me an N95 mask the other day. He has health problems and someone gave him a few. I'm diabetic so my risk is greater than average IF I get it, but I am not more likely to get it. Except that I'm still going to work.
My brother-in-law's brother died from it earlier this week in Florida although he had other health problems like COPD. However he wasn't that old, only 67.
We're finally getting bored of black mirrors.To combat cabin fever local small towns are having "scoop the loop" nights. My hometown's was tonight so we did that. Being a Leukemia survivor my wife is pretty much under house arrest and is getting cagey so it was an outing for her. My current closest town is having one Friday night... so I gotta get the Ranger back together for that.
I think the whole town was out tonight:
Everything was out, old trucks of all kinds, old 442, a couple hotrods, old Nova, a couple triple 5's, a couple Chevelles (one '69 with a very nice cam) a couple 'vettes, a plethora of late model Mustangs (new edge and S197's) Camaros and Challengers. And of course a lot of people like us in late model blah cars (2008 Edge was our mount)
Kind of a fun outing, rules are you can't have passengers that you don't live with (unenforceable obviously) and you can't park and get out to BS like we did in high school.
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My dad gave me an N95 mask the other day. He has health problems and someone gave him a few. I'm diabetic so my risk is greater than average IF I get it, but I am not more likely to get it. Except that I'm still going to work.
My brother-in-law's brother died from it earlier this week in Florida although he had other health problems like COPD. However he wasn't that old, only 67.
With you being in the funeral business, how are you handling bodies of the deceased that died of covid?
Current recommendations are not much different than normal. If they're already in a body bag when you pick them up, don't open it. Spray disinfectant on the outside of the body back and extra on the body when you get back to the funeral home including inside the nose and mouth, which we always did anyway. I work for a direct cremation place now and don't embalm anyone any more but when I did I was dressed up like a surgeon anyway, gown, double gloves, face mask, face shield, head and shoe covers. Embalming will kill the virus. You are more likely to get it from someone else in the funeral home than you are the dead body. That's why every state as far as I know is limiting funeral visitations to ten people. I've not had any Covid-19 cases where I work so far but we are relatively new and not that well-known or busy.
Current recommendations are not much different than normal. If they're already in a body bag when you pick them up, don't open it. Spray disinfectant on the outside of the body back and extra on the body when you get back to the funeral home including inside the nose and mouth, which we always did anyway. I work for a direct cremation place now and don't embalm anyone any more but when I did I was dressed up like a surgeon anyway, gown, double gloves, face mask, face shield, head and shoe covers. Embalming will kill the virus. You are more likely to get it from someone else in the funeral home than you are the dead body. That's why every state as far as I know is limiting funeral visitations to ten people. I've not had any Covid-19 cases where I work so far but we are relatively new and not that well-known or busy.With you being in the funeral business, how are you handling bodies of the deceased that died of covid?