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Posted

According to my immunologist friend, it can live on cardboard for up to 24 hours, so risk seems smaller on delivered packages. Best to wash hands after handling, dispose of packaging, etc. 

Most transmission is from person to person contact, that is why social distancing is so important. 

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Posted

Apparently hard surfaces are easier for the critter to live on, go figure. In other news my germ and cleaning fetish is finally working out, not in a way I would have wanted though. 

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Posted
18 minutes ago, RecentChange said:

According to my immunologist friend, it can live on cardboard for up to 24 hours, so risk seems smaller on delivered packages. Best to wash hands after handling, dispose of packaging, etc.

Yes... I heard that as well.  I mixed up a bleach/water solution (CDC Recipe) and spray any boxes that get delivered, let the solution dry, then open them up and throw the box in my recycling bin/can.

Speaking of trash cans, after the garbage truck picks up my cans; I coat them in the same bleach/water solution and let them dry in the sun.  I have no idea how many cans that lifting arm has touched, so the cans get sterilized.  I understand bleach is very effective at killing the virus.

Posted (edited)

my ex-GFs have all told me i have the emotional equivalent of a robot... so social distancing shouldn't be too hard for me....

I don't know what they have against robots... though....

Edited by 2BGoodAgain
Posted

I'm on the extrovert side of the scale, so I'm restless. I'm on page 600 of a 700 page book though. I've managed to freak myself out a bit by watching documentaries on the Spanish flu on You Tube. 

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Posted
5 minutes ago, BC1980 said:

I'm on the extrovert side of the scale, so I'm restless. I'm on page 600 of a 700 page book though. I've managed to freak myself out a bit by watching documentaries on the Spanish flu on You Tube. 

are you reading War and Peace BC1980??

Posted
47 minutes ago, alphamale said:

are you reading War and Peace BC1980??

Ha! No, but that book is actually in TBR pile for the year. I'm reading "Dragonfly in Amber," which is the second book in the Outlander series. It's good but not great. I'm ready for it to end. 

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Posted

We’re in total lockdown here now. No one except essential workers are allowed out.

The super markets are still open but there is a limit on how many people are allowed in the store at one time and you have to be alone and spend no more than 30 minutes in the store, some items are limited in numbers. 

Liquor sales are also restricted. Limits on how much and where you can get it from. All essential workers have PPE, no delivery except for essential needs. 

Our government has hit this hard, hopefully we’ll contain it here sooner rather than later, by the looks of the numbers around the world and the actions or inactions of some leaders we might be cut off from the rest of the world for some time to come. 

Stay safe/ stay home!

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Posted
19 minutes ago, mrs rubble said:

Liquor sales are also restricted.

wtf? that's where i draw the line

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Posted
1 minute ago, alphamale said:

wtf? that's where i draw the line

LOL! I'm in PA and our state Wine & Spirits stores closed over a week ago.  Beer distributors are still open and local wineries are offering free delivery.  Everyone who needs it will get their liquor :).

 

Posted
3 minutes ago, CautiouslyOptimistic said:

LOL! I'm in PA and our state Wine & Spirits stores closed over a week ago.  Beer distributors are still open and local wineries are offering free delivery.  Everyone who needs it will get their liquor :).

 

it's an essential business... i mean, all that alcohol to rid us the virus.. :)

Posted
Just now, 2BGoodAgain said:

it's an essential business... i mean, all that alcohol to rid us the virus.. :)

I think it's more so emergency rooms are not inundated with folks in withdrawal!  

Beer distributors in PA are going to get a boost to their businesses since liquor stores are closed for those who prefer hard liquor.....they will have no choice but to revert to beer.  

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Posted
1 hour ago, alphamale said:

wtf? that's where i draw the line

The government makes the rules, I’m sure there are plenty of home brewers out there making their own. 

We have several bottles of spirits here, we don’t really drink them. Maybe good for trade in a few weeks time though! 

Posted

In TX laws have been temporarily relaxed to allow pick up/delivery of alcohol with food orders.

People are social distancing well, except it's hard in the supermarkets, things just aren't set up to be six feet apart; but out in the parks people are just stepping aside and giving a smile or wave, all very civilised.

 

 

Posted

I bought a case of my favorite beer at Costco on Sunday (it's a 24 pack). Hopefully that will help the local brewery that makes it, and I will have it on hand. That being said, I never feel like drinking beer when I'm home alone. I guess I'm truly a social drinker because I only drink beer when I'm with my  BF and right now I can't stay over at his house, which means the beer won't cross my lips for a while. But it's still nice to have it. 

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Posted

I’m truly concerned for the USA, I did a quick search of numbers. 

New York has a population of approximately 20 million & 75000 cases of covid, New Zealand has a population of nearly 5 million, we have just over 700 cases, of you multiply our numbers by 4 to match New York, we should be at 2800. 

Your president needs to search virus numbers instead of economics! 

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Posted

New Zealand was one of the countries that shut down international travel early on, like Denmark. Which is something our public health officials swear doesn't work.

Oddly enough all the places that did that have a fraction of the cases we do. What a strange coincidence. 🤔

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Posted
On 3/31/2020 at 11:59 PM, mrs rubble said:

I’m truly concerned for the USA, I did a quick search of numbers. 

New York has a population of approximately 20 million & 75000 cases of covid, New Zealand has a population of nearly 5 million, we have just over 700 cases, of you multiply our numbers by 4 to match New York, we should be at 2800. 

Your president needs to search virus numbers instead of economics! 

you have to realize most of NY's cases are in NYC... the population density is MUCH higher...hence the mad infection rates.

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Posted
4 hours ago, 2BGoodAgain said:

you have to realize most of NY's cases are in NYC... the population density is MUCH higher...hence the mad infection rates.

We also realize that this virus has an exponential pattern of spreading.  Do you think it recognizes the city limits of NYC?  

Today there are 102,863 confirmed cases in NY state.  57,159 of these are in NYC.  That leaves 45,704 confirmed cases in the state outside of the city.

New Jersey, the state with the 2nd most cases, has 25,590.  So, even without NYC, the state vastly overshadows any other in the USA with confirmed COVID-19 cases.  Also deaths and daily rate of deaths (total jumped by 300 in the past 24 hours.)

Posted (edited)

I just traded half a loaf of my homemade bread for a few rolls of toilet paper so, you know, things are going fine.

Edited by lana-banana
Posted (edited)

I only take the car every 10 days for a food shop. When I drove it last I freaked out about being less than 2 meters away from other cars...I also catch myself being on edge watching a film on netflix when the characters get far too close to each other.  The secondary effects of social distancing...

Edited by littleblackheart
Posted
4 hours ago, littleblackheart said:

being on edge watching a film on netflix when the characters get far too close to each other

Me too!  I was watching something that showed a park filled with people and I started feeling anxious and felt like yelling at the screen "what's wrong with you people, spread out!"    

Posted
On 3/25/2020 at 8:46 PM, alphamale said:

wtf? that's where i draw the line

Essential services apparently in TX...

Posted
25 minutes ago, FMW said:

Me too!  I was watching something that showed a park filled with people and I started feeling anxious and felt like yelling at the screen "what's wrong with you people, spread out!"    

Same here! I wondered why the people onscreen were having in-person meetings! 😅

Posted

Re: NYC. I don't know if there are any other cities in the US that have the particular public transportation setup that would mitigate to lots of infections.

Factors:
- a lot or people from outlying suburban counties commute to work in NYC. Looking at the county breakdown in NY state, those counties are also heavily hit. See the dark colored counties on this map https://covid19tracker.health.ny.gov/views/NYS-COVID19-Tracker/NYSDOHCOVID-19Tracker-Map?%3Aembed=yes&%3Atoolbar=no
- Once in NYC, people 'getting around' are (or were) packed like sardines into subway cars and buses.

How many of the thousands of cases in NYC now were infected on the subways and in the buses before the government closed businesses down in NYC? I don't think we can ever know for sure.

But .... Japan also has very crowded public transit. Were they just more proactive about 'shutting down'? Or is my speculation about the role of crowded public transit in spreading the virus off target?

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