canne50
Songster
- Apr 26, 2021
- 248
- 537
- 166
Oh, yes! I want to tell ya’ll about raising rechargeable batteries from death!I’m in my late 60s. I was raised in SE Arkansas to poor farmers. These sweet folks were my great aunt and great uncle. My great grandma & pa lived with us for some time. After a meal and clearing the table, I remember my g-grandma circling around the table saying, “Here. Eat this it’s just a bite and not worth trying to save it. You are so skinny! Eat!” I laugh at the memory and wish I could still have her following me around with the loaded tablespoon!
.These people had lived through the post civil war reconstruction, WWI, The Depression, Dust Bowl, and WWII. They knew first hand the deprivations of the poor plus the rationing of the most basic of necessities.
My aunt told a story as a young newly wed, my Navy uncle away on the USS BANDERA, her heavily pregnant & riding with great grands going to town to get their rationed flour, salt, and coal oil. The wagon was an old buckboard with no shocks bouncing and rattling them to and from town. On the return trip grandpa must have been surprised when the wagon bucked hard. The coal oil broke open and soaked the flour and sugar. They did what they could do to save the food and oil. She said she still can taste coal oil whenever she thought of the meals made with the flour and sugar flavored with coal oil. They could not afford to even throw away what we’d consider ruined food.
Everything was used until it wore out and the patches were no longer holding. Then the cloth would become a food siev or cleaning rag. When my great grand pa passed away, in his pockets he still carried the nub of a pencil with a slightly worn eraser. I have it now. He had not worked for several years, but tenaciously held onto his anchors.
we would have conversations about just about everything that needed repurposed. My first bicycle was an second hand bike my uncle had refurbished and painted sky blue. I felt so rich!
Not much was ever thrown away in our households! We canned everything we could. Our freezers were stuffed with wild game, fish, fruits and vegetables. We bought automobile gas at 29 cents a gallon. My aunt spent about $30 every week for groceries to stretch whatever was in season or in the pantry.
Thanks for the opportunity to share!
I probably won’t have an EV before I leave this world. I wouldn’t mind a flying car, though!
I tore off the end of an old cell phone charger and carefully laid the bare wires onto the corresponding poles. Hold it there about 2 mins. Plug in the phone charger. Take care not to zap yourself. Place the battery back on its charger. If it still shows error, zap it again, try on charger. Do this until you give up or have enough charge on the battery for it to trigger the recharge chip of the charger. I extended my Makita battery about 5 years doing this.