Well. The Great Toiler Paper Famine of 2020 may be subsiding. We
got a package of six rolls (one package only!) this morning, and we
should have enough now for a couple of weeks.
We have the stores to thank for that. Both Fry's and Safeway are
now limiting quantities on hoardables and even non-hoardables like
milk. One per household is the general rule. We know that Fry's
usually gets a truck on Monday nights, so we were there first thing
in the morning. Like many other grocers across the country, Fry's
reserves the first hour for people over 60. We got there at 5:50,
and there was already a considerable line. At 6 AM sharp, they
opened the doors, and everybody made for the toilet paper aisle at
a dead run. And lo and behold: Piles and piles of toilet
paper! And paper towels. And baby wipes. And rubbing
alcohol.
Alas, no bratwurst. What, they're hoarding bratwursts now?
So we got our one package of TP and one package of paper towels.
Carol got a bottle of rubbing alcohol, and a few other things
before we ran through Mickey D's drive-thru for breakfast. All in
all, a good and useful morning.
Oh--and at 5:45 AM when we backed out of the garage, I
remembered that this morning is Mercury's maximum elongation, so we
jumped out of the Durango and searched for that most-difficult
planet. Even at max elongation, the little snot is unholy hard to
spot, but spot it we did. (It helps to have few trees and no
two-story houses in our neighborhood.) Jupiter, Mars, and Saturn
were in a tight little group much higher in the southeast.
The lockdown here in Arizona has been cordial and mostly
voluntary. Local government is not harrassing people who walk for
exercise. My barber shop closed last Thursday, but others are still
open, so if I get a little too pointy-haired, I have options. The
Jewish Community Center is closed, so we're not doing our usual
weight training every Monday. I'm going to buy an 18-pound
ketttlebell if I can find a store still selling 18-pound
kettlebells. You can do a lot with an 18-pound kettlebell.
We had to cancel our writers' workshop because restaurants can't
provide indoor or patio seating. We meet in a biggish sandwich
place, so we're out of luck. We're trying to figure out a reliable
teleconferencing system for the interim.
We no longer go to Costco. That's a shame, since I like their
frozen blueberries, but with conventional grocery stores limiting
quantities to stop hoarding, all the hamsterin' is now being done
at Costco. People line up around the block to get in and buy
truckloads of TP and cart-sized bricks of plastic bottled water.
I've seen photos. It's surreal.
We've learned the secret: Go to small stores. I don't mean
convenience stores. I mean specialty stores, like the little
Polish/Russian grocery down in Mesa. We bought six bags of their
excellent hand-made pierogies a few days ago. They had a lot of
other stuff I couldn't quite identify, since I don't read Polish,
much less Russian. But nobody was hoarding pierogi.
Our days are heating up. It's still snowing in Colorado Springs,
but in Phoenix our daily highs are beginning to creep up into the
80s. We're about to engage in an interesting experiment: Warmer
temps slow down most viruses. There's a debate raging about whether
or not that's true of COVID-19, but we're going to find out.
Arizona is not a virus hot zone by any means, with only 326 cases
and 3 deaths. (New York has 26,000+ cases and 271 deaths.) Is it
the warmer temps, or just good clean livin'? Nobody
knows...yet.
One thing I'm pretty sure of is that UV light can kill viruses,
and we lead the nation in the production of UV light. In fact, when
we get a package from Amazon, I put on gloves and take it out to
the backyard, and set it down on the pool deck. I turn it a couple
of times to make sure all surfaces get a dose, but if 15 minutes of
Arizona sun can cause sunburn, it will damned well kill
viruses.
So here we are. I read books, or write them. I program. I tinker
in my workshop. I throw the ball around the yard for the dogs. I
cook. And I wash my hands. Hoo-boy, do I wash my hands. So life
goes on. Don't let the panicmongers mong you any panic. We don't
know how bad COVID-19 will ultimately be, but it will almost
certainly not be as bad as the media are insisting. I see a lot of
people on Twitter trying to stir up panic, and they sure sound and
act like paid operatives. If you catch them with a question they
can't answer, they vanish. If you ask them for their credentials,
they vanish. Do whatever you can to discredit such screamers. And
carry on. This too will pass, perhaps sooner than we think.