On Tuesday I agreed to demonstrate the new SLAARC WordPress website at our ham radio club meeting this coming Sunday. I would like to spend some time working on the site between now and then but it is well enough along at this point to give folks a preview at the meeting, time permitting. My current goal is to unlock the public portions of the website by the August meeting and then supply each of the members with their username and password shortly thereafter. My “stretch goal” is to have the site set up so a member’s username and password also allows them to edit their roster record in the Participant’s Database. It’s a stretch goal because it is unlikely I will meet it unless I really stretch myself, which is to say, I put aside a lot of other tasks to concentrate on this on, or I work more/harder and sleep less. Yeah, like that’s going to happen.
In fact, it was a nice enough day today that we both decided to work in the yard. I concentrated on pruning branches, mostly dead, from two fir trees and cutting them up into manageable size pieces for the fire pit. Linda took some time to weed the plant beds on the east end of the house and the juniper beds behind the garage. By mid-afternoon I’d had enough of this work for the day and turned my attention towards reorganizing our RV-related computer files.
Steve (Village Landscape Development) showed up mid-afternoon with the excavator and re-positioned several large boulders on the west retaining wall so one of his crews could continue working on the walls first thing tomorrow morning. He also brought samples of three different color bricks so I could select one for the front sidewalk. The one I selected is slightly darker than the pre-cast steps and similar to the reddish color mortar used on the main house bricks. The pavers will be solid, rectangular, and installed flat in a herringbone pattern on a 45 degree bias. We also discussed placing one or two medium size boulders on either side of the upper steps to keep folks from stepping off of the porch or the side of the stairs.
For dinner we had a large salad with lots of “extras” and then opened a bottle of NV Cesar Florido Moscatel Dorado. This is a sherry from Jerez (Spain) that our son and daughter-in-law got me for Father’s Day. It was recommended by their friend, Jorge Lopez-Chavez, who manages the wine department at The Produce Station in Ann Arbor, MI. We each had a small glass (it is 17.5% alcohol by volume) served at ~50 degrees F and agreed that was very good.
After dinner I finished re-organizing our RV-related computer files, backed them up to our NAS units, and the copied them to my Windows 8.1 laptop. We watched the last episode of season four of Doc Martin using our Amazon Video account.