Mood On Monday, Vaccine Trials Volunteer, Guest Post

Fascinating. And thus science moves forward. Welcome and thank you. Been There, Done That.

Update. Part II. [Intruder Alert! The Vaccine Trials Volunteer Returns, Guest Post]

~~~

I’ve been asked why I volunteered for the Covid19 vaccine trials. Before you ask, the Moderna trials are double-blind, which means that neither the doctors, the nurses, nor the injectees (is that a word?) are told what they are getting. So no, I do not know whether I got the vaccine or the placebo, and I won’t know until the trials are over.

Anyway, I volunteered for the trials for the same reason that I am a 14+gallon blood donor. It’s a way to help my fellow man without having to deal with my fellow man directly. I heard about the trials being held at Emory University in conjunction with the CDC (which happens to be just down the street) through an article in the local paper. Since I live within walking distance of Emory, I thought: “why not.” If it helps science put the brakes on this horrid pandemic, anything that I can do is a plus. I’m not a doctor or a nurse, a paramedic, or other health-care worker, but this is something I can do to help. So I signed up and was accepted, since I’m a “mature” adult in reasonably good health.

The research assistant called me a week before my first appointment and spent about an hour taking information. They didn’t want to know what brand of toothpaste I favor, but just about everything else was open season. On the first visit, they reviewed this information overload and asked questions about several of the items including childhood illnesses. They were rather startled that I hadn’t had the measles/mumps/rubella vaccine until they checked my age – I got my immunity the hard way.

After that, I was visited by an RN who did a complete physical workup and took lots of blood samples. They have enough DNA samples now that they could clone me several times over if they wished. Then the injection itself. The assistant puts a flag on the outside of the door once the physical is over, and by magic a box appears in the bin on the door with the injection in it in a sterile wrapper. Pop! In goes the shot and now I sit for 30 minutes to make sure that I’m not going to grow horns or turn into a zombie immediately.

At that point, the assistant trained me on the online log that I’m required to keep for the next two years, and off I went. I was required to check in every night for the first week after the injection and report my temperature and the injection site data (redness, swelling, etc). At the end of the first week, and for the three weeks following, I got a weekly safety check to make sure I hadn’t turned into a zombie yet and that I was still functioning.

A month after the first injection, I came back in for the follow-up shot. Same procedure except that they didn’t have to wade through the mountain of paperwork needed before. Again, I got sent home and had a daily report to complete for a week. After that, again weekly safety calls, and a month after the second shot, another check-up physical.

I am now into the weekly online reports which consist mainly of ‘yes-I’m-fine-here-now-thank-you-how-are-you?’ I will have my next monthly safety call this week. Since the media are reporting that the Moderna trials seem to be 95+% successful, I don’t know how much longer the project will need my services, but I will continue with the follow-up as long as they feel it is necessary.

I don’t know whether I got the vaccine or the placebo, but I have had essentially no reaction to whatever-it-was that they injected me with. If that’s the vaccine, it’s wonderful. There is, of course, the possibility that long-term effects of the vaccine may not show up for another six months or a year … I’m optimistic by nature, so I’m going to go on my merry way, still wearing a mask any time I’m associating with anyone outside my pod, practicing social distancing, and washing my paws on a regular basis.

#dropyourbeautifulhorseheadchallenge, #drop_your_beautiful_horse_head_challenge

Images

 
Awareness of the outside world. In an effort to #supportartists, especially these days, we will hereby commission a portrait of Milton to address his tragic underrepresentation as a solo performer in the farm gallery. Any recommendations?
~~~
All reposts. All worth revisiting.

Photo by Craig Zernik

[Art Week, Day One, The Reveal]
[Art Week, Day Two, Painting Dr Whooves Part 1, Guest Reblog] Reblogged from Tails From Provence
[Art Week, Day Three, Painting Dr Whooves Part 2, Guest Reblog] Reblogged from Tails From Provence
[Art Week, Day Four, Painting Dr Whooves Part 3, Guest Reblog] Reblogged from Tails From Provence
[Art Week, Day Five, Framing Dr Whooves]
[Art Week, Epilogue, Virtual Blogger Meetup]
[Art Week, Image & Letters]

[Ready For Their Close-ups]
[Just Because You Enjoy An Activity Doesn’t Mean You Want To Be Paid To Do It With Strangers]

[Art Friday: Portrait of Rodney]

[Don Me Now My Gay Apparel, Equestrian Blogger Gift Exchange 2019]

[ASHAA Awards for 2017]

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott

Quantum Truck II, Fiction

Words

 
Awareness of the outside world. From the bookshelf, all by P. Djèlí Clark. “A Dead Djinn in Cairo” (Tor 2016) text & “The Haunting of Tram Car 015” (Tor 2019) excerpt. Looking forward to *A Master of Djinn* coming out in 2021.
~~~
An addition to an earlier fragment. You might want start there. [Quantum Truck, A Writing Sketch]
Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott
~~~
She learned not to refuse a person in need. With a great car comes great responsibility?

A while back, her least favorite co-worker created a scheduling conflict. They needed to finish up a presentation for a client meeting that afternoon. At the same time, treats for the meeting needed to be picked up. This person insisted on using a bakery that did not deliver. They claimed the cupcakes were worth the drive. Since they usually did the pick-up, the rest of the office let it slide.

On the day in question, the presentation needed to be redone at the last minute. See above, favorite person, least. The cupcakes needed to be picked up. The obvious answer was for someone with a cute, zippy little pink/green hatchback to offer. She thought the situation was ridiculous. There were perfect decent bakeries with perfectly decent corporate cupcakes. Bakeries that understood delivery deadlines.

She never actually said no. She just made sure not to be around to be asked. She put out of her mind the fact that the hatchback had the ideal space for transporting treat trays. The food was obtained. The meeting went well. The client was pleased. The cupcakes were eaten.

On the way home, she ran out of gas.

The fuel gauge needle suddenly dropped from half to zero. The car rolled to a nearby parking lot. There was a gascan on the backseat and she was an easy half-mile walk from a gas station.

Lesson learned.

It was not up to her to pass judgment on what was important to another person. If there was a truck/hatckback/sedan-shaped hole in someone’s life, it was on her to drive into the space. Dodging equaled refusing.

Was she in thrall to an unknown puppetmaster? Did she have as little control over her fate as a pawn on a chessboard?

Well, yes.

A more positive, less creepy, way of looking at it was that she enjoyed helping people. It was nice to be useful. Usually.

Plus there were often perks – a few hours with a friend, an interesting place to visit, for example a tour of an free-range chicken farm that resulted in a subscription to weekly fresh eggs. She had see parts of town that she never knew existed. She had gone on rides around the state that were both scenic and scary.

It was fun. If you didn’t think about it too closely.
~~~fin~~~

Virtual Kicks On Route 66, Guest Post

Fit To Ride

 
Awareness of the outside world. NPS: Route 66 Corridor Preservation Program, National Trust for Historic Preservation: Route 66, Route 66 The Road Ahead Partnership.
~~~
Another member of Team Peachtree weighs in. Welcome Amy, Quiver, XO, and Atticus, [archives]. [Virtual Kicks On Route 66]

~~~

I was doing some walking anyway. I have in the past, in spurts, when my body cooperates and when my mind pushes me to do it for health reasons. I started doing it for physical health but I have found particularly lately that the mental health benefits are at least equal. During the pandemic for the very short time I was working from home, I started trying to get out multiple times per week to get the dogs and me out of the house and moving. After I was back in the workplace, I still tried to get out for all of our sakes.

Then the blog post asking if anyone wants to join the challenge for community. I like to support my friend, the motivation, and the feeling of community, so I joined. Since then my walks have morphed into being with one of two friends and their dog(s) so I get even more community and mental health boosts too. This has also helped me get out to different places to walk and their appreciation of the outdoors and our walks has also boosted mine. On those walks I usually just take one of my dogs who is more social with other dogs. [Ride Away With Me, Virtually]

I don’t document like the blogger but have take an occasional picture on a walk. I also borrowed some from one of my friends who loves to take pictures and post on social media. My other walking friend is completely the opposite. People are interesting.

Virtual Kicks On Route 66

Fit To Ride

 
Awareness of the outside world. “World Toilet Day is a United Nations Observance that celebrates toilets and raises awareness of the 4.2 billion people living without access to safely managed sanitation.” UN Water: World Toilet Day.
~~~

Team Peachtree has finished virtually walking and biking Route 66, all 2280 miles. Of those, I did 1064 miles. It’s not as impressive as it sounds. I was biking while everyone else was walking. I did 122 rides, for an average of 8.7 miles per ride. The team started April 11. I joined on May 5. We finished November 2. I rode daily in the summer, then dropped of to biking on weekends. What can I say, we were younger then and we had light. 50% of the team lives in Georgia, hence the peach mascot.

Route 66 is excellent for automotive history, early 19thC American history, and/or automotive kitsch. Turns out I have zero interest in any of that. I’ve seen as much of Route 66 as I care to see. I hope it continues. I hope it gets the Historic Trail designation. Long may it roll. Without me. Not a bad thing to learn for the price of a medal.

In addition to shiny, hefty medal, The Conqueror Virtual Challenges did an excellent job of keeping track of the team mileage. One could probably do a virtual walk/ride on one’s own. I am trying this as a long-term project along the Mississippi River [Great River Road]. Coordinating a virtual team is more cat herding than I care to do.

Is it necessary? No. It is fun? Yes. Some things makes sense emotionally rather than rationally.

Virtual Route 66 ride journal, IRL & virtual, [Biking Virtually, Route 66]

Virtual Route 66 visuals, [Biking Virtually, Route 66, Streetview Slideshow]

Team Peachtree current virtual walking, [Land’s End to John O’Groats]

My current virtual biking, [Great Ocean Road]

Previous virtual adventure links, [Will Walk and Bike for Bling]

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott

Going Around and Around, On My Horse and In My Head

Riding Journal

 
Awareness of the outside world. How do I feel about a woman as VP? Well, I’m old enough to remember the symbolism of the Billie Jean King/Bobbie Riggs tennis match. So, I’d say, ‘Holy Shit!’ just about covers it. Billie Jean King: Battle of the Sexes.
~~~
On sunny days, I am content.

On cloudy days, contentment feels like giving up.

A while back, I talked about serenity versus frustration. On one hand, it was lovely to be sitting at the barn in the sunshine. On the other hand, my riding career lay in tatters around me. [Split Personality]

That’s that’s where I am with riding at the moment.

Rodney & I have continued the short, daily walks we started during our last few Virtual Tevis miles. We wander along. We see the sights. We smell the smells. It would be a great retirement for the old man, if we had anything to retire FROM. [The Beginning]

When I think of what I wanted for this horse, I sag. Not just the ribbons, although I certainly had my eye on those. I thought we would become a team. We’d have our ups and downs. We’d have lessons and trail rides and shows. Lots and lots of shows. He’d charge into the ring with enthusiasm. He’d get mad if I messed up. He’d enjoy leading victory gallops as much as I did. We were going to achieve so much. Together.

Should I have tried harder, better, different? Is it too late for a great horse and an amazing riding resume? Should I keep plugging away while hope tears me apart? Should I graciously accept that I’ve had my chance? It that wisdom or defeatism? I’ve had magical rides. Just not with my own horses very often. I appeared destined to give my heart to horses who don’t return the favor. These are the cloudy days.

Alternatively, as I’ve said elsewhere, quiet and peaceful rides are looking pretty good right now.

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott

The Replay, Virtual Trail Report, Tevis Sippy Cup, Milton, Miles 93 to 95, November 2020

Riding Journal

 
Awareness of the outside world. Calling all bloggers. Gift exchange registration ends this Friday, November 20. Alberta Equest: Blogger Secret Santa 2020.
~~~

Overall

This looks familiar.

[An Alternate Explanation]

Back in March, Milton came up lame after a rainstorm. He presented as lame. We treated him as such. He got sound. Eventually, the remnants of an abscess blew out. [Behind Bars, Foot Diagnosis]

Guess what?

After a rainstorm, Milton came up lame. Again. He presented as lame. Again. We treated him as such. Again. [The Temporary Pull]

The symptoms got better and got worse. He went on stall rest to avoid further injury to tender tendons. He got sound. Again. Again. Again. [Milton’s Fugue Moments]

Eventually, to our complete surprise, the remnants of an abscess blew out.

You’d think we’d learn.

Milestones

Lower Quarry, Mile 94. Image source & additional photos, The Tevis Cup: Lower Quarry.

Daily Log
We are doing our rides in 1/3 or 1/2-mile laps around our pasture. Link to standings, Doctor Whooves, Major Milton, All. Daily screenshots from VTevis results page.

Saturday, November 14, 2020. Milton. Today 1.03 miles. Total 93.73 miles. Test of concept. Short ride to see how his foot reacts.

Sunday, November 15, 2020. Milton. Today 2.08 miles. Total 95.81 miles. Attack of the zoomies in the morning. Alrighty then, we ride.

Recent Posts
Mine
[Rodney, Miles 95-100]

Others
County Island finish, complete with faux Haggin Cup.
County Island: The Tevis Trail: Virtually Done
County Island: The Tevis Trail: Grateful, and Full

[Tevis post archives]

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott