Forgot I hadn't responded here. I seem to have two speeds these days - idle, and 90 mph. But the idle phase, is when I'm doing a ton of head work. It just looks like I'm being a slug. LOLOL.
I'm careful not to mess around with the daily affairs at the shop, so I check in once a month or every two weeks depending on what's going on. The employees have been there 10-20-30 years for the most part and they know what to do. My guy in charge and the bookkeeper have been there close to 30 years. Thanks to strange economic investments nationally and internationally - we've been kinda treading water for the last 5 years thinking/hoping that things would "wake up" and starting building/making again. It hasn't happened.
And now, Covid and shutdowns, transportation delays, and item availability and social distancing requirements are impacting the companies who generally buy our stuff. Catepillar's sales are down 20% so far this year -- and I'm sure their production is slower than that because they built up dealer inventory at the end of last year.
We're "essential" - and the employees wouldn't have been able to make it on unemployment anyway - so we kept going. For their sake. No one's been sick, thankfully. The bookkeeper is in her 80s now; she's been working at night for even more distance. We're small... so we can have more flexibility like that. If we had to, we could separate people in the shop even more by running multiple shifts... with shipping working to get product out the next morning.
There is just a strong sense of fear and uncertainty running through all levels of society right now and it's impacting businesses and the economies around the world. With 50 states having 50 different ways of addressing the virus - and all kinds of variables in their production/sales environments - it's generating some additional chaos; supply issues; and the whole process is starting to look very very shaky.
It's just like the toilet paper shortage - Kimberley Clark, et all - have two kinds of production facilities, each specializing in either home or commercial products. When the run on home TP hit - there wasn't any way for the commercial facilities to retool (think big money and time; and if you want quality - it either takes more time or more money) and then put it all back, IF the situation was temporary and short-lived.
Welcome to one of my worlds. LOLOL.
That's actually been hard for me to get across to Hol. It's not like I have a job, with set hours and things to do every day. I'm spending time doing the research, gathering information/data, and trying to create a strategy that will let us adapt to whatever conditions we might have to face... always keeping the best interests of the employees and long-term sustainability of the business as the most important criteria. She is having trouble grasping that or seeing the things I actually DO. Because I'm usually parked in front of a screen doing research, reading government economic reports... networking with some contacts who are well-placed to assess the same kinds of things.
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Hol can actually move some of her kitchen stuff this weekend; the tile along the single galley wall is done. Well - not her personally. John had to stop in to pick up some mail, so the guys will move it and Hol will drive using my trailer. Her kitchen counter is really just a long narrow table affair she had custom made by friends she knows in the city; it's gorgeous. She'll use open shelving for everything else. Hickory hardwood is done too; the rest of the tile would be done, except somehow the grout she ordered is the wrong color. No idea how that happened. Lots of tile left over from both of our projects and I think the colors will even work together.
The woodstove will be downstairs backing up to the wall supporting the stairs, so she's thinking about using the extra tile under the stove (floor's concrete anyway) and up the wall behind the stove.
Rick will be back, with his backhoe to dress up the driveways with the shale he's already dug -- clearing out the space where Buck's metal shop is going to be. Which I have to size/get a ballpark number and try to get ordered asap.
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Hol's healing up pretty good. Doc told her 6-12 weeks, and because of how fit/young she is (42 is young?) that she'll probably heal in the shorter amount of time. She is walking to the hut & back every day; doing some packing to stage for the move; and cooking. A little sewing, but her stool isn't stable enough to spend much time on it and she hasn't tried to get my chair (which I know will work at that table) yet. She's not in the mood. Speaking of mood - that seems to be stabilizing these days. (Fingers behind back; crossed)
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Buck is busy too. He's trying not to slow down - even though heat indexes there are through the roof - to keep to his timeline goal of late August/early Sept. for his move. Navy hasn't contacted him yet with specifics, so next week. He did say often he only got 5 hours notice before being expected to be ready to deploy... so this is SOP.
This couple of months feels like the home stretch to me. He and I have said all that needs saying for now. So we're mostly "doing" the stuff that makes it happen. I tend - sometimes he does too - to drift into/out of highly emotional states. I know it's a more of a shock to him, because he's just now phasing out of a long time of it not being safe for him to feel. Too much pain. I just feel a little goofy; slightly embarrassed that even at my age someone could rock my world like this.
Fortunately, we're both very practical and our needs are aligned on the goal of turning the farm into a sustainable system, so there is never going to be a time when there isn't "something to do", if we need something to do. Our skills/knowledge compliment each other to make that happen.
And I think he's going to find that he can have a social life again here. Rick's already invited him to hunt rattlesnakes... LOLOL. That is right up Buck's alley. Rick's wife is nice too. Ronnie, his brother, is getting around alot better and those two can compare notes on spinal injuries. As long as Ronnie minds his manners. Even Rick tries to rein him in.
It's been difficult to cope with this heat wave. My poor plants are pretty much compost. I MIGHT be able to save the medicinal herbs by getting them in the ground - the bigger ones anyway. Grow lights are a necessity; not an option anymore... and covered growing space, too. Hol is going with a walapini; I'll probably go high tunnel. Only thing I got in the ground before it got hot was potatos & half the herbs; and they're doing well.
Honestly, having fewer hats would be nice some days. I find myself spinning around looking for the next thing that needs to be addressed RIGHT NOW... and never getting caught up, much less a little ahead. Still have one more legal thing to deal with - but the business stuff comes first.