Tuesday/ red 🔴 and blue 🔵

There was a red Ford Mustang Mach-E on 15th Avenue at the No 10 bus stop, and then a blue one as I stepped off the bus in downtown.

These new electric vehicles are in their second model year, but Ford’s 2022 inventory has all been sold out.
The Mach-E is considered a crossover SUV.
Car and Driver (magazine) writes very highly of the Mach-E, but notes that it is ‘not as fun to drive as a real* Mustang’ and has uneven ride quality.

*An interesting use of the word real.

Monday/ dishwasher drama, Part 2 💦

Russian troops are using parts from dishwashers and refrigerators to fix their broken military equipment in Ukraine, a top U.S. official has said.
– Fortune magazine, May 12, 2022


It’s now a year later after I had last attempted— and failed— to procure the dishwasher of my choice.

I have now set my sights on a Bosch dishwasher.  The web page of the Lowe’s hardware store on Rainier Ave reported that they had several models in stock, and off we went. (Shout-out to B. who’s invaluable help I had enlisted).

We checked them out, and the quiet Series 800 one with the outside handle bar and hidden controls on top of the door, is definitely the one to get.
‘No. There is one on display, but none for sale anymore’, said the appliance person at Rainier Lowe’s. Six to 12 months lead time, and they have stopped taking orders for now.  We should check other Lowe’s stores for stock, and pounce on any we find. It looked like the store in Issaquah might have inventory. We gave them a call, but no luck. They have black ones, but my whole kitchen is stainless steel and the black will really look out of place).

Right then a guy with a Bosch logo on his shirt walked by (a Bosch representative). ‘Yes, these Series 800 machines are selling like hot cakes’, said the Bosch guy. They are made in North Carolina, but the stainless steel linings come from Ukraine. So: supply chain troubles.

He checked the Lowe’s website, said there seemed to be five machines at the North Seattle store on Aurora Avenue. I jumped on my phone, logged onto the North Seattle Lowe’s store website and ordered one on the spot.
Sure enough, it charged my credit card, and promised delivery on Thursday.

I should know by Thursday if I had ordered a phantom item or not!

Sunday 🌞

Artwork from The Economist newsmagazine.

Today saw one more 95 °F/ 35°C high⁠— and made for a record stretch of 6 days with >90 °F highs.

Monday will be a little cooler, and we may even see rain on Thursday.
Fancy that.

Saturday/ good, better, butter 🧈

We logged another 95 °F (35 °C) for the day’s high here in Seattle.

Help! My butter is melting.
(I removed the lid of the butter dish for the picture .. and putting the butter in the fridge would be a last resort. I hate cold, hard butter).
Some time ago, a  car journalist remarked of the Ford Mustang Mach-E electric car, that  its acceleration is a little rough; not buttery smooth as is the case with Tesla’s cars.

Just for fun, here are some Afrikaans expressions and idioms that use ‘butter’.

Ek het met my gat in die botter geval.
Translation: I have stumbled, with my butt stuck in the butter.
Meaning: I lucked out, in a big way. 

My brood is aan altwee kante gebotter.
Translation: My bread is buttered both sides.
Meaning: I have the best of both worlds.

Dis botter tot die boom.
Translation: It is butter to the bottom.
Meaning: Said of a friendship that is thick as thieves.

Goed, beter, botter.
Translation: Good, better, butter.
Meaning: Slogan from a ’70s ad campaign for butter in South Africa. Butter is better than margarine, and is actually best of all.

Friday/ still steamy 😓

Our stretch of warm weather continues, with a high of 95 °F (35 °C) today.
The meteorologists assure us we will have much cooler weather on Monday⁠— something civilized like 79°F (26 °C).

My lawn is yellowed out (I don’t water it in summer), but the aster shrub in the flower bed is in bloom. I love the golden button and the color of the petals: a pinkish, purplish, lilac.
Greek mythology has it that the aster was created by the tears of the Greek goddess Astraea.

Thursday/ signs of a recession 📉

The GDP number for Q2 is out: -0.2%.
So technically, we’re in a recession (two quarters of negative GDP), but per the New York Times: declaring a recession falls to a private, nonprofit research organization, the National Bureau of Economic Research. The group defines a recession as “a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and lasts more than a few months,” and it bases its decisions on a variety of indicators — usually only months after the fact.

Some economists dismissed the Q1 number as a ‘quirk’ or a blip, but the negative Q2 number is harder to dismiss. Inflation is still running very high, and the economy has definitely slowed down. The higher interest rates (Fed funds rate now 2.25-2.5%) has cooled down the housing market. Unemployment is still sitting at 3.6%, though, and it is unheard of to be in a recession with such a low unemployment number.

Tuesday/ it’s hot ☀️

It was hot outside today— and inside my house!
I don’t have central air conditioning.
We got to 94 °F (34 °C) today here in the city, and the heat is here to stay until Friday night.
Looking west, just as the sun was setting tonight at 8.51 pm. The blue in the distance behind the Space Needle are the Olympic Mountains.

Al lê die berge nog so blou*,
al lê die berge nog so blou,
al lê die berge nog so blou,
haar woorde sal ek steeds onthou.
– Afrikaans folk song

*A rough translation:
Even as the mountains lie there blue
Even as the mountains lie there blue
Even as the mountains lie there blue
Her words I’ll hark back to

Monday/ gas is still expensive ⛽

There are reports from elsewhere in the USA that gas prices have started to come down the last few weeks.
The gas price posted at the Shell station by Trader Joe’s on Madison Avenue is not budging, though.

The average price of gasoline in Seattle is reportedly $5.13 per gallon, so at $5.76 this Shell station’s gas is expensive. That little Veo bike on the pavement is an electric-assist bike. Cost: $1 to unlock and $0.33 a minute to ride. 

Sunday/ U District

You’d better go out today⁠— while you can, I told myself this morning.
We’re heading into hot weather for the whole week, with 93°F / 34 °C forecast for Wednesday.

U District Station  I had just stepped off the northbound train, and started to make my way up the steps. At the same time the southbound train (this one) was is just departing.
This side of the building that houses Crossroads Trading Co. on University Way NE, used to be a bland off-white. Now its scarlet red really catches the eye! On the far side edge is the No 44 bus, about to drive into my picture.
Many eateries catering to UW students line University Way NE. These chickens invite diners to come and try some barbecued chicken and teriyaki chicken at the BBQ Chicken joint.
The Wells Fargo wall panel at NE 41st St and NE 15th Avenue with the historic University of Washington pictures is still there.
The University Manor Apartments just across from U District train station, was designed by architect Earl Roberts and constructed in 1926. It has an eight-story Collegiate Gothic apartment structure with a brick and cast stone exterior. Look for the corbels of grotesque human faces below the second floor, at the bottom of pilasters that separate the paired double-hung windows.

Saturday/ not marmelade!

Here’s what happens when you leave your reading glasses in the car, and you grab a pair of ‘marmelade’ jam tins (at the British Pantry store on Thursday).
It turns out it was apricot jam.
No matter: it’s good stuff— one of the most popular jams in South Africa.

Friday/ let’s play pickleball 🥒

A pickleball court is 20′ by 44′ with a 3′ high net. Serves go cross court as in tennis. One serve attempt only, though, not two as in tennis. Then there is a Two Bounce Rule: the return from the serve must be allowed to bounce before it is hit. The ‘kitchen’ close to the net is a no-volley zone from where no volleys may be hit.

Pickleball was invented in 1965 on Bainbridge Island, not far from Seattle. It is played on a hard surface with paddles and a hard plastic ball.
The game has seen a surge in popularity here in the city, with many tennis courts used for pickleball sessions.

It was a beautiful day (75 °F/ 24 °C). The amigos ventured out to play at the Miller Park Tennis and Pickleball Courts on 19th Avenue.
The pickleball court is the faint green line painted onto the tennis court (a brighter line for the back line of the pickleball court, can be seen on the far left). The net of the tennis court serves as a barrier between the two pickleball courts on it.
Somewhat shockingly— given its proximity to where pickleball was invented— Seattle does not have dedicated pickleball courts just yet.

Thursday/ the red dragon 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

I picked up my notebook computer today in Redmond— and stopped by the British Pantry store to replenish the South African marmalade and chutney in my own pantry.

The Welsh flag outside the British Pantry store, with the Red Dragon (Y Ddraig Goch), passant (standing with one foot raised). The current flag was officially adopted in 1959, and is based on an old royal badge used by British kings and queens since Tudor times. The Red Dragon itself has been associated with Wales for centuries, though, steeped in folklore and myth.

Wednesday/ there’s a tiger on the court 🐯

There is ATP Tennis in Hamburg, Germany, and in Gstaad, Switzerland, this week.

On Tuesday, Aslan Karatsev (28, from a country that shall not be named) played against Nikoloz Basilashvili (30, Georgia 🇬🇪) in Hamburg, in a wild outfit made by clothier Hydrogen from Italy.

Karatsev won 6-4 6-0.

The ‘Camo Tech’ shirt and the shorts worn by Karatsev, both have a camo pattern on the back.
Side note: Basilashvili played in his Wimbledon whites.
The front of the shirt is white, with the front of the shorts in black.

Tuesday/ a lot of heat🔥

The British media, never happier than when the weather goes awry, responded with barely concealed relish.
– British journalist Moya Lothian-McLean writing in the New York Times


So it did get to 40 °C (104 °F) in London, today. Here is a pair of front pages, reporting about the heat apocalypse.

Let’s see .. Hottest Day in History? Hottest day in recorded history, I guess. Earth’s surface temperature was an estimated 400 °F (200 °C) shortly after the planet had formed. And Britain is not really burning, of course— only 0.0000000001% of Britain.
The Hamburger Morning Post says ‘Heat Wave. Today was as hot as it had never been before’. 
Below the headline, it says: 38 °C (100 °F) forecast for Hamburg +++ This is how it is measured +++ Why some parts of the city are particularly affected +++ Fewer parking lots, more trees: governments want to change cities

Monday/ the wrong type of sun ☀

There’s so many different worlds
So many different suns
And we have just one world
But we live in different ones
-From the song ‘Brothers in Arms’ by Dire Straits (1985)


Well, so I had to check the ‘Met’ home page (short for the Meteorological Office, the United Kingdom’s national weather service), for an official reading of the high temperatures there today.

Looks like the high was 37 °C (99 °F) at 15:00.
So: extremely warm, but not quite 40 °C.

All-time record highs were reached in many other locations in the UK and in Europe, though.

Cartoon by Christian Adams (Instagram @adamstoon) in today’s Evening Standard newspaper, a commentary on the extremely warm temperatures in London today.
Best I can tell, the ‘CLOSED’ sign is a reference to train operator Southeastern Rail explaining (this is some years ago) that delays in the trains in south London were due to ‘the wrong kind of sunlight’⁠—the angle of the winter sunlight on the dispatch monitors in the trains.
There are also reports just appearing online now of an unexpected solar flare that had erupted on the sun, and that a solar storm (magnetic field disruptions) is expected on Wednesday July 20.

Sunday/ Dick’s Drive-in is back 🍔

Dick’s Drive-in burger joint on Broadway is open after its remodel .. has been open for a few weeks already, actually.

We had a very mild 20 °C (68 °F) here in the city today.
Whoah at the first-ever red-alert temps of 40 °C (104 °F) forecast for London for Monday.

 

Saturday/ peering into deep space

Here’s a diagram that shows the radiation that the very cool, very cold mirrors and lenses of the James Webb Telescope collect.
The James Webb telescope collects mostly infrared radiation with some from the visible spectrum vs. visible spectrum only, for Hubble.

Friday/ helping to pay for the bridge

I took my notebook computer in to the repair shop in Redmond today.
The right (built in) speaker is crackling badly.
I could bypass the little built-in speakers with external ones, but it’s a cheap fix to fix to install a new speaker, and then the machine would be good to go as-is.

I’m westbound to Seattle, crossing Lake Washington via the State Route 520 toll bridge. It was $2.70 to cross eastbound, and $3.40 for this crossing, so $6.10 total. That’s OK, it’s nice to have a new bridge. (It opened in 2016 at a cost of $4.6 billion). Way out in the distance cloud cover is rolling in from the coast⁠— a weak front that will bring the highs for the weekend down to the low 70s (low 20s °C). We’ve had pleasant, mild summer weather so far.

Thursday/ good night, sleep tight

The display window at the Red Balloon toy store on 15th Avenue has some really cute nightstand lamps for kids.
I assume that’s what these are—or would they be out on the dresser, and not by the bed? I would have a tough time to choose between the zebra and the robot.