Honey Comb Spice Storage

There are a few different places selling hexagonal bottom spice containers with magnetic lids … and maybe the really expensive (over a hundred bucks for like a dozen containers?!?) ones are more than just a magnet under the lid. But the rest? Are literally a hexagonal spice jar with a small disc neodymium magnet attached on the underside of the lid.

Voila — a lot of little spice jars that don’t cost a lot of money. But arranging them all in a solid honeycomb pattern doesn’t work so well. Invariably, you need the spice jar right in the middle of the mass. Instead, I am making a giant circle.

Tableau: Upgrading from 2022.3.x to 2023.3.0

A.K.A. I upgraded and now my site has no content?!? Attempting to test the upgrade to 2023.3.0 in our development environment, the site was absolutely empty after the upgrade completed. No errors, nothing indicating something went wrong. Just nothing in the web page where I would expect to see data sources, workbooks, etc. The database still had a lot of ‘stuff’, the disk still had hundreds of gigs of ‘stuff’. But nothing showed up. I have experienced this problem starting with 2022.3.5 or 2022.3.11 and upgrading to 2023.3.0. I could upgrade to 2023.1.x and still have site content.

I wasn’t doing anything peculiar during the upgrade:

  • Run TableauServerTabcmd-64bit-2023-3-0.exe to upgrade the CLI
  • Run TableauServer-64bit-2023-3-0.exe to upgrade the Tableau binaries
  • Once installation completes, run open a ​new​ command prompt with ​Run as Administrator and launch “.\Tableau\Tableau Server\packages\scripts.20233.23.1017.0948\upgrade-tsm.cmd” –username username

The upgrade-tsm batch upgrades all of the components and database content. At this point, the server will be stopped. Start it. Verify everything looks OK – site is online, SSL is right, I can log in. Check out the site data … it’s not there!

Reportedly this is a known bug that only impacts systems that have been restored from backup. Since all of my servers were moved from Windows 2012 to Windows 2019 by backing up and restoring the Tableau sites … that’d be all of ’em! Fortunately, it is easy enough to make the data visible again. Run tsm maintenance reindex-search to recreate the search index. Refresh the user site, and there will be workbooks, data, jobs, and all sorts of things.

If reindexing does not sort the problem, tsm maintenance reset-searchserver should do it. The search reindex sorted me, though.

Kanban for Kids

I find it interesting that Anya’s school had very good “lessons” for taking notes — the teacher had a class where she would talk and the kids took notes. The kids then submitted the notes, and she basically graded the notes. “This was just a funny story, no need to include in notes” or “when I mention something three times, it needs to be in your notes. Add ‘whatever got mentioned repeatedly in class’ here”. I won’t say that Anya loved note taking class, but she did it. And, since kids got to use their notes for their tests … she saw the benefit of having decent notes.

Time management, though, the school seems to take the “throw in water, if you don’t drown … well, you can swim!” approach. They assign a bunch of stuff, generally due around the same time for extra fun. And then they don’t say anything to the kid if they’re a month behind. So I found myself explaining Kanban boards to Anya.

We do digital things at work, but she needs something everyone can see just walking by. So paper cards, magnets, and white board it is! You make a column for “stuff I am going to need to do” — we call this a backlog. New assignments go here first. We thought color coding the classes would be cool — so take a square of paper, write the name of the assignment, the date it is due, how long you guess it will take to complete (1 hour, 1 day, 1 week).

You then have other columns for “in progress”, “done”, and “stuck” — we have additional columns at work because they make sense for what we do — “UAT testing”, “Awaiting Feedback”. You may find there are other columns that make sense for your classes too — I used to have a “Researching”, “Draft”, “Editing”, and “Final Draft” columns because everything was a research paper.

At work, we plan a week or two of work — you pick enough cards to fill up the week, and that’s what you are working on. This means our cards could represent a week of work — I’m only going to finish one card this week, but that’s a full week of work. For school work, picking the cards daily kind of makes sense because new assignments pop in all the time. It would be difficult to shoehorn new assignments into an already planned out week.

If the “in progress” items will be picked daily, then a card shouldn’t represent more than a day of work. So “Write the paper” is too generic. That would need to be broken out into “select topic”, “start research”, “continue research”, “finish research”, “start draft”, “continue draft”, “finish draft”, “review draft”, “edit draft”, and “finalize report” might all be reasonable items to accomplish in a day.

Using this method, you can see when things are due, realize when you have two or three big things due at the same time (so some are going to need to be finished early), and can keep track of anything where you are stuck (had to ask the teacher for clarification, waiting for a book to be available from the library, etc).

If nothing else, she seems happy about the “moving it to the completed column” bit!

Amazon Luna Black Friday Scam

This is really silly — we ordered a Luna controller on Black Friday because it was on sale, with the idea of it being a gift for when Anya finishes school for the half. I specifically did not associate the controller with our account. Today, we noticed that the “free trial” had already been activated.

Trying to talk to Amazon didn’t really go anywhere — I couldn’t even get the fellow to understand why automatically starting a free trial (before the item actually even arrives) during a gift-giving season where people are generally buying something weeks before it would be opened was problematic. Evidently there’s no such thing as a Luna controller plus 30 days Luna+ bundle — there’s a controller and a free trial. And the free trial starts when you place your order — not when you get the controller, not when you start using it. Ultimately, they say you’ve got to call back during M-F 9-5 kind of hours when someone from Luna is available.

Not something I’m available to deal with today, but a very odd practice for a company that size. Like no one thought through the logic on this one?!? Buy it on Black Friday, 30 days later is December 27th. So people getting Christmas gifts have three days to check it out?

If they’re offering a free trial to anyone who signs up, why bundle it with the controller??? I could have gotten the controller and just signed up for the trial the day the present would be given.

Rose Hips

Anya and I walked down to the farm by way of the river to get the trail camera card — coming up the western side of the river, I noticed there were bountiful rose hips. We stopped for a bit and picked the juiciest looking ones — not quite a cup, so I guess we’ll have to go out again next weekend.

Thanksgiving Turkeys

We butchered ten turkeys before Thanksgiving — all hens. The ironic thing is that I am pretty sure we had some cornish cross that ended up bigger than these. We’ve got 56.956 pounds of turkey in the fridge (plus a couple pounds of trimmings for cat treats throughout the year). The plucker worked incredibly — we were able to completely butcher a bird in about 15 minutes.

Recipe — Walnut Pastry Thing

Walnuts in hard shell — boil in water for for 5 minutes

Pastry:

2 eggs
100g sugar
1 pinch of salt
150g butter
100g sour cream (10%)
600g flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder

Mix all ingredients in a bowl, make into a ball. Split and roll — use additional flour for rolling.

Filling:
1 egg white
100g sugar
120g walnuts

Whip egg whites, fold in sugar and walnuts.

Cut rolled pastry dough into wedges, add dollop of walnut mixture to large end, roll toward pointed end.

Brush with 1 egg yolk

Bake at 180℃ for 40 minutes

Dust with powdered sugar

Does Ohio Home Grow Legalization Include High CBD Hemp?

With the passage of Issue 2, I was wondering if this meant we could grow CBD hemp for personal use too. Quick answer — no, I don’t believe Issue 2 permits home grow of high CBD hemp.

This is an oddity where I think the legislature might want to tweak the text because it’s a little silly — someone who wants CBD can find a strain that produces 0.4% THC and it’s legal. A strain that produces 0.3%, however, isn’t legal. Basically, someone who wants to grow their own CBD needs to ensure their plants make enough THC to be legal. Yes, I know that it would be unlikely that anyone would bother enforcing “your home grow plant isn’t making enough of the psychoactive components”. I am speaking purely to the letter of the law.

 

How did I reach this conclusion? Marijuana is defined in the new code:

Section 3780.01 | Definitions.
(A) (1) “Adult use cannabis ” or “cannabis ” or “marijuana” means marihuana as defined in section 3719.01 of the Revised Code.

Following that reference, the definition specifically excludes hemp — although it also says that the “mature stalks of the plant” are not considered marijuana … so trading clones would be OK?

Section 3719.01 | Controlled substances definitions.
(M) “Marihuana” means all parts of a plant of the genus cannabis, whether growing or not; the seeds of a plant of that type; the resin extracted from a part of a plant of that type; and every compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of a plant of that type or of its seeds or resin. “Marihuana” does not include the mature stalks of the plant, fiber produced from the stalks, oils or cake made from the seeds of the plant, or any other compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the mature stalks, except the resin extracted from the mature stalks, fiber, oil or cake, or the sterilized seed of the plant that is incapable of germination. “Marihuana” does not include “hemp” or a “hemp product” as those terms are defined in section 928.01 of the Revised Code.

Since hemp has been excluded, we need to determine how hemp is defined —

Section 928.01 | Definitions.
(C) “Hemp” means the plant Cannabis sativa L. and any part of that plant, including the seeds thereof and all derivatives, extracts, cannabinoids, isomers, acids, salts, and salts of isomers, whether growing or not, with a delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol concentration of not more than three-tenths per cent on a dry weight basis.

Now that we know what terms mean, you will be permitted to grow six cannabis plants.

Section 3780.29 | Home grow.
(1) Cultivating, growing, and possessing not more than six cannabis plants at the individual’s primary residence …

Cannabis means what it means from 3719.01, which excludes hemp as defined in 928.01 — so, technically, the home grow provision does not legalize individuals to grow their own high CBD, very low THC plants. Your compliant plant needs to generally produce more than 0.3% THC.

Chicken Plucker

We got a chicken plucker for processing birds this year — the metal on the base is really thin, the motor appears to have come pre-rusted, and they somehow consistently put one of the rubber sticks in upside down (although, after using it, we think this might be intentional and kind of “sweep” the feathers from underneath out the shoot).

We have been very hesitant to buy one of these — they are expensive. But it takes us so much time to butcher birds. I see videos on YouTube of people plucking a bird in five minutes. That’s not us. At first, I thought maybe it was a “get better with practice” sort of thing. Or that we weren’t scalding enough. Or that we were doing something else wrong. But it’s been years. We’re not getting much quicker, the scald is fine, and the only thing we might be doing wrong is being too picky about what constitutes “plucked”.

The biggest hurdle was that we couldn’t really see one work to determine if we’d be done defeathering in a minute or if we’d still be spending half an hour plucking feathers. There wasn’t a good way to find out, though. People post videos online, but they also post videos of themselves plucking a bird in a few minutes. So that’s not really trustworthy. We finally decided to just spend money and buy a plucker. They work! There may be a few big wing feathers to pull. There may be a few smaller feathers near the feet. But the bird was plucked within a few minutes. It takes me about fifteen minutes to butcher a bird, and Scott was able to get a bird to the “ready to be butchered” point in fifteen minutes (that includes walking across the yard twice). This is such a huge difference — we were able to process all of our turkeys in a single day. It wouldn’t be a short day, there’s a good hour or two to clean everything up once we’re done. But it’s done in a day. And the birds were plucked very well.