Share Your Life Hacks!

Fixing and making things, what tools to get and what skills to learn, ...
BecaS
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by BecaS »

@ Jacob- Aha! Crunchy Betty! I've referred to that site for beauty products but I've never looked at the cleaning products. Thank you for the link!

I am aware of your RV adventure, btw. Hats off to you for that- many people wouldn't have tried it. We have a small travel trailer (18' box) and that's one of the "energy intensive" activities we enjoy. Our travel trailer is our primary mode of travel when we do so.

We've completed several trips of approximately two weeks in duration, plus or minus a couple of days. The trailer has a domestic sized fridge with a separate freezer, and it's possible with planning and careful packing to take along almost all of the food one needs for two weeks out. The galley also contains a double sink, a microwave, and a three burner range with a gas oven that has a smallish baking oven (above the burner element) and a broiler (below the burner element.) The trailer has a double bed, a jackknife sofa, one small slide that pulls the sofa out of the trailer and frees up some floor space, and a bathroom with a shower, sink/vanity, medicine cabinet and a toilet.

Housing, feeding, sleeping, and carrying all the stuff needed to negotiate life for two weeks (clothing, food, toiletries, bedding/linens, dishes/cutlery/cookware, dog accessories/needs, etc.) in approximately 144 sq ft is challenging but it can be done. This also includes cleaning and laundry supplies- because in two weeks time, you'll need to do some laundry and you *will* need to clean that trailer secondary to Labbie shedding and everyone tracking in and out. It is imperative to take what you need and leave everything else at home. :)

It is a lightweight trailer as RV trailers go, around 4000 lbs. fully loaded for a long trip, but without water in the tanks. We can pull it with a mid-sized SUV.

Yes, we own an SUV, but its primary mission is to pull our trailer and to get bags of pellets home to our pellet stove, when we find pellets on sale at the end of the season. (Otherwise we buy pellets by the pallet and have them delivered. That's a whole other thread.) Secondarily the SUV serves as our truck for the occasions when our DIY requires a truck.

Mostly the SUV stays parked in deference to fuel prices.

It is costly to tow a trailer- I won't argue that. So far it's still a cheaper way to travel when we need/want to travel.

If anybody wants to include their RV and/or camping and/or travel hacks in this thread, I'm all eyes! :)

BecaS
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by BecaS »

... and if it really bothers you, I'll stop using the term "hack." For me, it's a catch-all word that encompasses many different types and levels of problem solving. If one is from a culture in which "hack" has negative connotations as a cobbled-together quick fix rather than a real solution, I can see how the term "hack" could be particularly annoying.

oldbeyond
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by oldbeyond »

I think there is much to be said for the definitions of hacking and engineering as you define them jacob. However, I don't think it is always, if ever, possible to engineer a solution that is perfect. Even in sublime feats of engineering, there is usually some small hack present if you look close enough. Is it always sensible to re-engineer a system from scratch if it works almost perfectly, but requires one small hack to be just right? I'd say this is bordering on perfectionism. Then again, if your solution is a series of contrived hacks, building something good from scratch obviously is a very worthwhile investment.

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jennypenny
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by jennypenny »

Huh. That wiki definition is different than what I thought. I always thought a hack was a better version of a bodge.

Seems like we need a new term for ERE micro-efficiencies.

BecaS
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by BecaS »

I'm sitting here laughing at myself and at life.

I started a thread to solicit ideas about what I called "hacks," but what JennyPenny more accurately named "ERE micro-efficiencies."

I've gotten some interesting tips and some validation/commiseration/critiques on my methods- but what I've mostly gotten is a bunch of engineering types sitting around discussing the proper usage of the word "hack," and whether or not any sort of system survives its beta testing without the judicious application of well-chosen hacks, and whether hacks are legit problem solving tools vs. symptoms of poorly designed systems vs. problems in and of themselves.

In the meantime, I'm over in the corner at the other end of the room from the engineers, standing by the punch bowl, trying to get anybody at this party to talk to me, and I'm blathering on about oatmeal and Scrubbing Bubbles and mayonnaise.

Ok, right here is where I punch that BIG RED SHINY BUTTON and light up every engineer at this party. While all of you are gathered on the other side of the party discussing the finer points of the propellant and the ignition system, I'M OVER HERE LAUNCHING THE ROCKET. Neener neener neener! :p

C'mon, YOU KNOW THAT YOU HAVE SOME LIFE HACKS! Not *everything* that you do is pristine, streamlined, economical/waste-free, and dovetails perfectly with your surroundings, fueled by self-replenishing energies. I KNOW THIS BECAUSE I'VE LIVED WITH ONE OF YOU FOR OVER 30 YEARS. YES THERE ARE SOME HACKS AND WE BOTH KNOW IT.

EMBRACE THE BEAUTY OF YOUR HACKS. WALLOW IN THE JOY OF THE MINOR IMPERFECTIONS THAT YOU HIDE FROM THE WORLD. FREE YOUR INNER MERE MORTAL- AND SHARE YOUR HACKS! :)

BecaS
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by BecaS »

BTW, just did a pretty big "daily clean" on the bathroom- took the toiletry items out of the shower, sprayed the tile surround, the tub and the interior of the glass doors, let it soak, cleaned outside of shower doors, door frame, sink mirror, separate wall cabinet glass doors, wiped down sink and toilet, brushed toilet bowl, then wiped out the interior of the tub. Time: 8-9 minutes (I don't have a digital clock in the bathroom, so I had to split the difference on an analogue clock face.)

JasonR
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by JasonR »

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Last edited by JasonR on Fri Mar 15, 2019 8:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.

susswein
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by susswein »

Camping hack: In the western US there are lots of public lands that are administered by the forest service and BLM. In many cases these lands are just as incredible as the nearby national parks but only see 1% as many visitors, and have lots fewer rules and regulations. In most cases, you can legally pull off the road at any undeveloped site and camp for free for up to 14 nights (known as "dispersed camping"). Being FiRE I camp an average of 100+ days per year and pay for camping fewer than 5 nights per year.

vivacious
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by vivacious »

Ya but it's all ruined now because of fracking. Cheney got a lease on the BLM land.

George the original one
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by George the original one »

Like susswein, I rarely pay for camping. Here in Oregon, a few locations even offer up to 21 days before you need to move on, but I've never made use of more than a weekend's worth of nights since there's this day-job to attend and wife dislikes camping...

George the original one
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by George the original one »

6 mil black plastic sheeting to kill everything before turning area into a garden bed. Also useful for keeping clay garden bed dry enough for early tilling if you live in a rainy winter climate. Fold/roll up and store for later use.

BecaS
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by BecaS »

Susswein, George the original one, that is awesome. We drove through some of those places on our way via car from Mt. Rainier to Mt. St. Helen. It was almost magical to drive through that pristine forest and see families who were just off road, camping by a stream in tents, truck campers, trailers, etc. all self-sufficient for whatever time they were camping, cooking over their campfires. Really, really pretty.

We were also aware of some BLM land on which people camped in southern Utah, in the desert. We were actually out there in an off-grid lodge but we didn't see anyone camping at that time. That was also gorgeous.

We have some National Forest land in the western/southwestern part of the state that's available for off grid camping. I will confess that we've not yet investigated it.

I'm sitting here doing the math in my head, calculating whether we'd have the towing capacity, GVWR in the tow vehicle for the added tongue weight on the hitch, and GCWR in the tow vehicle to get over the mountains and into National Forest land if we added a full tank of fresh water, an extra battery and a small genny.

We should; IIRC we calculated our SUV's capacity using full loads on the trailer in various realistic scenarios, where we'd be likely to travel.

At one point I remember doing the math for crossing the Rockies (not like that's imminent) but figuring out what our cargo capacity would be while allowing enough performance margin for higher altitudes. We can do it, but not with a full cargo load on board. We'd have to be conservative about our cargo but we usually are. I wouldn't load the trailer full to its GVWR with cargo and/or water and try to cross the Rockies.

Dang it! Now I want to camp off grid in SW VA! SEE WHAT YOU STARTED, SUSSWEIN and GEORGE! :) To both of you: Where is your favorite place to camp?

susswein
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by susswein »

Too many different places to pick just one, but I spend a lot of time in the san rafael swell area in southern utah because it's just a few hours away. Farther afield, just about anywhere in Alaska or Baja. I took a 2 month roadtrip to Alaska a few years ago and camped for free every single night.

George the original one
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by George the original one »

If you're camping, there's no need for the trailer or generator or battery. That's just taking the city with you. Picnic grounds and rest areas will provide potable water, so you only need a few gallons for several days and refill as needed.

Way back in time, about 1973, there were a couple nights spent camping in the Ozarks in October that was pretty special. Was part of a month-long car trip from Portland to Yellowstone to New Orleans to Brownsville to Albuquerque to Grand Canyon and back to Portland.

Lately I spend a night or two every year camping in the Middle Santiam Wilderness since it's a little far for a daytrip. August is good for watching Persied meteor shower. Have enjoyed time along the Deschutes River, near Fossil (lower John Day River), upper John Day River, Alvord Desert, Blue River, Oakridge vicinity, anywhere on the coast...

BecaS
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by BecaS »

Here's where Beca makes a confession:

We've had some really awesome tent camping trips in which I was very comfortable. I mean, air mattress. Really comfortable. Not roughing it.

That being said, there have been enough weird things that have happened, not to us but within our sphere of awareness, that I strongly prefer sleeping behind a closed and locked door.

Statistics are overwhelming that whatever it is won't happen to me. I know that. Statistics won't matter if it does happen to me. I know that as well.

A lot of times we use our trailer as a mobile hotel room. It costs plenty to haul it down the road but it's still tons cheaper than flying and renting hotel rooms. Also, bedbugs. NOT.

We do still use it for "camping" although with a refrigerator, a hot water bathroom, a propane oven, a DC fan and a furnace, I refer to even off-grid camping as "glamping." (Heck, I'm trying to remember now just how off grid we've been with the trailer... we were certainly off grid in our tent and in our pop ups, but I don't think we've done any off grid camping in the trailer- that must be corrected!)

Also our state parks in VA are so nice, so very very nice, that it's kind of hard to break away from them. :) :)

BTW, I've been cooking all afternoon in preparation for several days of visiting with friends. I thought about you, KevinW, as I moved through the meal prep.

Celery and potatoes that needed to be used up, along with left over spaghetti noodles were incorporated into salads: potato salad and tomato bacon pasta salad. The potatoes boiled along with the eggs for the potato salad. Bacon was fried and set aside; a good amount of bacon grease remained in the pan and was used to fry up salmon cakes for tonight's dinner and for later this week.

I used rolled oats as binder in the salmon cakes, along with eggs, spices, mayonnaise, a splash of lemon juice and a bit of left over onion from the fridge that needed to be used up. Grape tomatoes from the fridge, the above mentioned celery, bacon, mayonnaise, ranch dressing, a little sugar, salt, pepper, granulated garlic, dried Italian herbs and a splash of red wine vinegar were mixed with the left over spaghetti noodles for the tomato bacon salad.

After the salmon cakes were finished frying, half were refrigerated and half went into one of the small crockpots in my dual crockpot/buffet server on "warm" to hold for dinner.

The salmon infused bacon grease was poured over the dog's kibble (along with a stray piece of bacon that somehow always gets into the pan for the puppy <:3~.) What dog wouldn't love salmon infused bacon grease over his kibble? :)

Four small boiled potatoes were set aside; the remaining boiled potatoes were chopped, the hard boiled eggs were peeled and crushed, and this was mixed with the chopped celery and chopped homemade sweet pickles with mayo, mustard and spices for potato salad.

In the second small crockpot in the dual crockpot/buffet server, I mixed a drained can of green beans, a can of stewed tomatoes, a spoonful of brown sugar, a splash of red wine vinegar, granulated garlic and a slice of bacon. I topped this mixture with the four small boiled potatoes and set the crockpot on "low." We have some leftover cooked squash from the garden in the fridge. Voila! Dinner! plus a huge chunk of the pot luck styled cooking we'll share with friends. (I have some more cooking to do- there will be more protein in there to balance the carbs.)

I'm resting for a moment, but when I get up I'll hit the kitchen again: a few straggler pecan cookies will be crushed and mixed with butter for a cookie crumb crust, and some creamed cheese that needs to be used up plus the crumb crust will be made up into mini cheesecakes in cupcake tins. We'll top those with cherry pie filling because we have it on hand and that's easy. (There's enough cooking going on right now without messing with a special topping.)

I have some left over ripened bananas that will join with other left over bananas from the freezer to become banana bread. If I'm going to fire up the oven to bake mini cheese cakes, I'm going to use that electricity and that heat to bake something else as well.

The browned ends of the celery, a few blemishes from the potatoes (I leave the majority of the skins on potatoes, even in potato salad) the banana peels and the egg shells went into the composter. The cans from the beans, the stewed tomatoes and the salmon went into the recycling bin.

There is very, very little waste from all of this cooking!

KevinW
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by KevinW »

jacob wrote:Windex --- try recipe #3 (or #4 which = #3 + denatured alcohol)
The way I understand hacking in the hacker sense---and I may be wrong---is a clever change of an existing system to somehow improve that system. For instance, a software hacker takes existing source code and adds/modifies a feature to solve a problem.

I see this as different from computer engineering which is the construction of a solution to a problem from scratch.
Triangle wrote:@jacob: The way "hacker" is used in Silicon Valley is like you describe, hacker vs. engineer. But the focus here isn't on modifying vs. creating. An engineer takes a systematic approach to solve a known problem. A "hacker" (in SV) skips important steps, doesn't think about all the details and is therefore a lot faster. The point of this is that (according to SV mythology) you can't engineer a solution if you don't know what the problem is exactly, so "hacking" let's you throw together a quick solution to test if you're down the right path or if you're wasting your time. Later, you'll get an engineer and to it right, once you've got paying customers and such.
jennypenny wrote:Huh. That wiki definition is different than what I thought. I always thought a hack was a better version of a bodge.
IMO definition 2 in the jargon ( http://www.catb.org/jargon/html/H/hack.html ) file corresponds closest to how I've heard "hack" used in the software industry:
2. n. An incredibly good, and perhaps very time-consuming, piece of work that produces exactly what is needed.
I would add that "exactly what is needed" means nothing less and nothing more, sort of in the way that a Genie grants wishes literally as they are asked, nothing less and nothing more. You know, you wish to be rich and the Genie turns you into a billionaire on his death bed --- "all you said was rich, and you're rich, right?". In software terms, a hack does everything necessary to meet a current need, but neglects longer term considerations such as adaptability, portability, documentation, ease of maintenance by anyone other than the original author, etc. It might be a work of genius but its scope is limited. By contrast "engineering" seeks to uphold principles such as reliability, sound design, reusability, scalability, economy of maintenance over the entire lifestyle, etc., which is probably the "proper" thing to do, but takes longer to produce.

Essentially the hack--engineering axis is almost the same thing as the expediency--craftsmanship axis.

George the original one
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by George the original one »

@KevinW nailed it. That's the distinction that's been in my mind.

Hildred
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by Hildred »

As someone who does a lot of driving, one of the best things I ever did was cutting my speed from 70 to 60 (saving about 15% on fuel) and increasing my drive time. The extra time spent in the car isn't wasted though. I upload podcasts and books to my phone, and listen to them through earphones while on the road.

JohnnyH
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Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by JohnnyH »

Lot's here (Avoiding Domestic Drudgery):
viewtopic.php?p=29504#p29504

"tips" become less relevant as you approach [0] your optimal simplicity. IE: The more stuff and complications the more "hacks" you can apply... My consumer friends literally spend 1-2 man hours per day keeping their counter-tops clear. Meanwhile, I spend less than 1 hr cleaning a month (this might need increased ;) ).
Hildred wrote:As someone who does a lot of driving, one of the best things I ever did was cutting my speed from 70 to 60 (saving about 15% on fuel) and increasing my drive time. The extra time spent in the car isn't wasted though. I upload podcasts and books to my phone, and listen to them through earphones while on the road.
This varies from car to car... My commuter car gets optimal gas mileage at about 63, meanwhile my truck reaches peak mpg efficiency at about 48.
C40 wrote:I also share the belief that many truly good "life hacks" are merely simplification or setting things up to be mutually beneficial. I believe that they'll nearly all fit into certain categories of improvement types. Some examples:
- 5S principles for organization and simplifying,
- SMED or similar principles for reducing 'wasted time' (maximizing location to reduce travel time, doing things in better order or at better frequency
- Living in accordance with nature for improving health

I think it might be more interesting to discuss these principles in detail (in other threads **). The actual application (deciding on the details and how we actually do things) is often better left to the individual. By optimizing things myself, I get good at optimization and creative thinking (on top of the actual improvement)

** I've already been meaning to make threads on certain principles (Pareto, root cause & action level, others) and now I have some more to add to the list
Great post, I agree with everything... And I'd really like a thread(s) about these principles! :)

BecaS
Posts: 109
Joined: Sat Jul 13, 2013 7:16 pm

Re: Share Your Life Hacks!

Post by BecaS »

Best stain remover ever: liquid (hand washing, not machine washing) dish detergent. Most stains on clothing are food-related; dish detergent is designed to work on food and grease. Thus liquid dish detergent works well on grease related stains.

We use Costco's store brand, Kirkland, and buy it in the gallon jug. We put it in the soap dispenser in the kitchen sink and in the soap dispensers in the bathrooms. Getting undressed to get in the shower- have a stain on your clothes? Pre-treat it immediately. I've never had a problem (no secondary staining, no bleaching, no fading, etc.) with putting dish detergent on a stain then throwing the article of clothing in the washer with other dirty clothes, and letting it sit there for however many days until the washer tub is full and we are ready to wash a load. (Go easy on this, be conservative on the amount of dish detergent you use on clothing stains if you have a high efficiency washer- you don't want too much soap in your HE washer.)

We use Dawn dish detergent in the trailer to keep the holding tanks clean. Using Dawn for washing dishes in the trailer keeps the gray tank walls from building up grease and odor. We do use black tank deodorizing/dissolving chemicals, but we also use a little water softener and a little Dawn in the black tank to keep gunk from building up on the tank walls and on the tank level sensors. Dawn really does break down grease and gunk. Our tanks don't smell and our tank sensors are pretty accurate. (Gunk on tank level sensors cause them to read incorrectly and this is a common problem.) I'd use Dawn in the house as well for the sake of simplicity but it is typically a little more expensive per ounce unless Costco has Dawn is on sale. Ergo I reserve the Dawn for the trailer to get the best use for the cost.

Liquid dish detergent is my go to soap for scrubbing/mopping kitchen floors and kitchen counters. A little bit goes a long way. It cuts through grease and dirt like nothing else I've used in the kitchen- and we use/live in my kitchen.

The homemade shower spray recipes that I've tried with which I've been satisfied typically have a few drops of dish detergent, often specifically Dawn dish detergent, to break down grease and oils.

I do enjoy using a handful of specific cleaners for specific purposes in the name of disinfecting and/or ease of use and time savings. If I ever decide to stop using those products, if in the name of simplicity and costs savings I decided to trim my products, I'd probably use liquid dish detergent in the place of almost everything else.

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