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Sunday, December 22, 2013

Ten Lessons LEARNED from the LIVING MOBILE School of Hard Knocks


Every new stage in life involves some new learning.   No matter how much anyone tries to prepare you for a new stage of life or how much you read about your new destination; there are some lessons that are only learned through the school of hard knocks. And since this blog is about LIVING LEARNING mobile, why not share some recent “learning”.



I'm not usually a high maintenance girl,  but one thing I've accumulated over the years is a very fun and versatile collection of glassware. I knew that 9 champagne flutes, 4 martini glasses, a dozen wine glasses,  a half a dozen cordial glasses, juice glasses, beer glasses, tall water glasses,  and  the ever so practical size milk glass weren't going to accompany us on this trip, but I could not bring myself to give or sell my collection.  So these made the cut of things that would survive storage in somebody's attic.  


But that doesn't mean I succumb to drinking wine in the multipurpose LL Bean blue plastic cups which Craig has assured me can be a coffee cup, soup container, measuring cup and any other container one might hope for on the road.   I rearranged the dishes and was pretty tickled when I found room for 4 wine glasses and 2 martini glasses.  Craig just shrugged, smiled, and accommodated me.






School of hard knock lesson #1 - Stemware was not made for small RV size kitchen.


Okay…I get it, now.    So when we got down to a single wine glass,  I  had another bright  idea and measured the opening of the wooden glass holder, and found stemless wine classes that were narrow enough to fit these.





School of hard knock lesson #2 -  Stemless wine glasses are  no better at surviving the RV kitchen.   


Down to one solitary wine  glass,  I noticed a set of red trimmed goblets in a thrift  shop in Cedar Key that looked like they might survive our lifestyle. Who would have thought that plastic wine glasses would have made their way home with Lucie.  Ah well.







School of hard knock lesson #3 -  Be careful when opening the overhead bin - contents may have shifted during transit


We  have all heard it many times, but what does it take for us to actually prepare for "shifted content".   Well for me it was when my Chromebook (that was neatly tucked away in my overhead office bin)  came flying out and landed squarely on my once unblemished Macbook air (sitting on the living area table - a.k.a. Lucie and Craig's shared office desk). Who would have thought that  this wimpy little plastic Samsung Chromebook could put a huge dent into my shiny well built Macbook  Air.  Sigh!  I guess having a dent in ones Macbook is something I can live with.



School of hard knock lesson #4 - Strewn wires in small spaces are a trip hazard


Much like an old house, our old bus could use a few more outlets around the couch area. Unfortunately, that’s where I like to sit and my old Windows laptop usually needs to be plugged in making its power cord the perfect trip hazard. In a recent entanglement, my old Lenova offered just enough resistance to bend the connector so the power cord no longer fits snuggly enough to keep the laptop charged.  With just the right amount of tweaking I can get enough of a charge to do the few things I still need my Windows machine for.


School of hard knocks lesson #5 - My Macbook Air does not like coffee - not even a little sip   


Despite the fact that my coffee was in a covered travel mug nestled in one of the two cup holders on the bus ,  enough java managed to to jump out to splatter on my Macbook.


School of hard knocks lesson #6  don't assume that the shiny new red protective cover you just added to your Mac book protects it from all types of damage. Especially when that protective skin traps a dash of liquid inside so you don't know that you have actually marinated your computer for days, until the screen starts to flicker and dark and dim sections of the screen move around from left corner to right corner.


School of hard knocks lesson #7 Don't assume that Apple Care covers all possible damages to your computer

I assumed that the Apple Care I have been buying with all my Apple products was there to help people like me that are hard on their technology.  Last week I learned that all it takes is a little bit of moisture to trigger a liquid sensor that disqualifies your  $700 computer repair  from  being covered by Apple Care.    When we drove to Gainesville to retrieve my “unrepaired” Macbook Air from the Apple 'hospital", I did get to handle a new Macbook Pro Retina and was impressed by the lack of difference between its weight and that of my Air.  (something to ponder) Thankfully I can continue using the Air with an external monitor for now.


School of hard knocks lesson #8 Moving your “work space” from inside to outside sometimes requires a 3rd hand


It’s been great to bounce back and forth between inside and outside workspaces, but all that moving around requires extra precaution.   Hours after unpacking and setting up a brand new iPad mini, Craig gathered his ‘mobile’ tools to move inside when his new iPad mini slid out of his hands and landed on the cement pad outside our bus.  The screen now has a 3 inch crack.   ;-(  Thankfully Craig’s experience handling the technology needs of schools has included repairing  many iPad screens.  Parts are on order.  We’re thinking that the iPad might have had a better chance of survival if it had landed on the the outdoor patio carpet instead of a concrete slab. Note to self:  Always roll out the carpet for yourself!



School of hard knocks lesson #9   Always double check and triple check the pressure of all tires before moving to a new location


We have no idea what caused the right tire of our tow dolly to shred (8 miles before our arrival at Cedar Key)  but we took it as a reminder that we needed to be more diligent about checking the air pressure on all tires (not just the bus, but also the dolly).   Thankfully  this lesson happened on Route 24 instead of on Interstate 95.  A friendly local musician stopped and offered us both help and advice about where we might find a replacement and another local resident agreed to let us store the dolly in his driveway for a few days while we secured a new tire.  We’ve decided to take heed of this warning to double check our tire health frequently.


School of hard knocks lesson #10  Don’t ignore your body when it says “step away from the technology”


Probably the most important lesson learned so far in this trip has been to pay attention to how your body is reacting to change!  Although I was still able to use my Macbook Air when tethered to an external monitor,  it no longer served me when I wanted to move outside.  Craig lent me a new Windows 8 Lenova that he uses to support the students and teachers back in Vermont .  As soon as I started to use this slick new laptop, I found myself cursing the trackpad .  I decided that it was just a matter of my learning the new Windows 8 gestures, and that this would be a “good”  thing for me to practice and would help me better support educators who use this platform.  The more I used it the more I felt  my neck strain as my right hand tried to use a trackpad that was trying to emulate the “touchscreen” functionality built into Windows 8.  (BAD IDEA!)  Craig has deployed 100 of these Windows 8 Lenova laptops  and almost 90% of them have been downgraded to Windows 7 OS by request of the user. 

Between the trackpad and my already questionable posture,  I kept feeling the strain in my neck increase, but I kept working in 5th gear for  long hours at a stretch to support students' final projects, get grades in for my 3 online graduate courses, and also launch a few new projects before everyone left for holiday break.  Unfortunately, I am now going to be spending my holiday break looking for remedies to make my arm, neck, back strain go away and regain the range of motion I seem to have lost in my neck.





I bet that those of us living and learning mobile could add a few additional insights to this study of New Technologies, New Behaviors, and New Postures. I wonder if Steelcase might consider creating a “mobile” chair that could accommodate today’s new generation of mobile workers!






This lesson (listening to my body) has persuaded me to go ahead and order a New Macbook Pro Retina.  I wasn’t quite ready to upgrade yet, but eventually decided that adding a new member to our Apple family”  might be worth it IF


But one thing I am enjoying with my new purchase is that being untethered again is absolutely helping me take fuller advantage of living learning mobile!









Tuesday, December 17, 2013

What is it about Cedar Key?

There is something about Cedar Key that makes the days go by slowly, yet when you think back you can't quite figure out where all the time has gone.

It is a place to lose track of what day it is, even what month it is!

As our family and colleagues back home in Vermont slog through snow storms and sub-zero temperatures we go from having to run the fan at night because it is too warm to great sleeping nights with a couple of quilts on the bed.

Every night we gather on the docks to watch the sun set with our fellow campers. 


Each sunset slightly different, but the consistency of stopping to enjoy the evening with our new friends giving us some measure of the days that are passing.

Many days Lucie and I walk the mile each way to Cedar Key's Main St, maybe to mail a package or buy a few things at the little grocery store.  Those errands in town are really just an excuse because what we really like is the walk along State Route 24 that ends on yet another dock looking out into the Gulf of Mexico.



Several evenings we have taken seats outside at the restaurants on the dock in the village to eat seafood and enjoy drinks and companionship overlooking the Gulf with people we have met at the campground. 
Most recently we watched the Lighted Boat Parade.  Even gaily decorated boats and Santa Clam can't quite spark the Christmas Spirit for a couple of New England natives.












Every day we sit at our computers working, Lucie has created wonderful resources for Vermont Schools to use for the national Hour of Code week that has seen school kids across the country be introduced to computer programming.  She has also completed the college courses she has been teaching for St. Mikes, UVM and Marlboro College.  I have been doing database work and remote troubleshooting for St Albans City School.  It is comfortable sitting outside under our tangerine tree, looking up at the palm trees to rest our eyes.  The campground WiFi is pretty good, enough for my database work.  Sometimes we switch to our Verizon connection to get Lucie the bandwidth she needs  for video conferencing with her students.


All around us there are people who are full time RVers who are working full time too, drawn by the laid back pace of this Florida Key with its good Internet connectivity.  Yet every evening we close down our computers and gather on the dock to enjoy the sunset, scritch the dogs (lots of dogs here) and discuss work and life this laid back December in Cedar Key Florida.

Friday, November 29, 2013

At Cedar Key with our own Tangerine Tree

We've settled into our home for the month of December at Sunset Isle RV Park.  This is a delightfully funky park on an island (Key in local lingo) in the Gulf of Mexico.  We are surrounded by palm trees and tropical plants.  We even have our own citrus tree behind the bus.  There is an interesting community of travelers here, with music at night in the clubhouse and a communal Thanksgiving dinner yesterday featuring smoked turkey from the owners' smokehouse.

Back where we left off with our previous post... Our stay at Huntington Beach State Park continued with Lucie and I working every day from our RV, Lucie on her three online graduate courses and me on Google and Haiku accounts for the K-2nd graders at St Albans City School.  We took time on Friday to walk from the campground to Brookgreen Gardens, a beautiful outdoor sculpture museum situated among formal gardens in what used to be a S. Carolina rice plantation.
















 

There were many pools with blooming water flowers.



On the walk in we saw wildlife. 
 Can you see the Alligator?

Every day we were at Huntington Beach we would take a walk.  Sometimes on nature trails,

















and sometimes on the beach.











Finally on Monday it was time to go.  We headed south through Georgia stopping for the night at a Flying J truck stop just before the Florida border.


Lucie's office while we are driving down the road.

Tuesday we crossed to the west coast of Florida in the rain.  About 8 miles from our destination we had to pull over because a tire on the car dolly had self destructed.

We ended up meeting two very nice locals as we determined that there was no replacement tire to be had in Cedar Key and we found a place to stash the dolly while we completed our journey  with Lucie driving the car while I drove the RV into the campground at dusk.

I had heard about Sunset Isle RV Park on line from a group who call themselves Nu Rvers, people who are working from the road.  So far is has proven to be a good choice.



Yesterday, Thanksgiving, we enjoyed a wonderful feast where the campers here all brought dishes to share and the owners smoked a turkey in the smokehouse that is visible out the front window of the RV.  In the evening people gathered in the club house where the musically talented among us played their instruments and we all sang along.