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JimAndNena

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Posts posted by JimAndNena

  1. 14 hours ago, Dottie Atwater said:

    In David, going toward Concepcion, turn left at the signal light that would take you to the old Super 99, Romero, Nissan dealer, etc. Go two blocks (the first block is a long one), then turn left. The lab is then in that first block on the right. Right now the sign just says "laboratorio" and it is not in great condition. As I mentioned, they are enlarging, so don't let the looks of the place from the outside give you the wrong impression. When you're in David, I suggest going by and talking with Manuel. If you like, you can print out the list of dog tests I attached previously and discuss them with him. Best to call and make sure he will be there. Sometimes he needs to go to a particular farm/dairy to do testing. I know you will like Manuel very much and will be pleased with his expertise! You can tell him I sent you if you wish. He has been a friend for quite some time.

    Is this the place, Dottie?

    https://goo.gl/maps/bPxVret4K5G2

    jim

    • Upvote 1
  2. It does not seem like I am that far out of touch.  Here is another view.

    Quote

    Boquete

    2016-12-14-1481752163-9599189-boquetepanamajardincasa-thumb.jpg

    Say “Panama” and “retirement” in the same sentence, and most listeners hear “Boquete.”

    The tiny mountain village of Boquete was targeted for development for the foreign retiree market by one gringo developer in particular named Sam Taliaferro. Sam introduced me to Boquete on the day that he closed on the piece of land he eventually developed into Valle Escondido, one of the best known private expat communities in all Central America.

    In addition to his Valle Escondido development, Sam invested in restaurants, hotels, and a golf course in Boquete, all intended to attract the foreign retiree buyer.

    As a result, Boquete, Panama, 2016 is home to one of the biggest communities of foreign retirees in the world. That has its advantages and its downsides.

    More English is spoken on the streets and in the cafés of Boquete than Spanish, and the foreign retiree never looks far for other foreign retirees to pal around with. The retiree moving to Boquete doesn’t have to learn a new language if he doesn’t want to and has an instant support network to help with all phases of the transition.

    Maybe that sounds like just the kind of place you’re hoping to find for your overseas retirement reinvention or maybe it sounds, as it does to some, like a gringolandia you’d rather avoid. Lots of foreign retirees with lots of time on their hands and not enough to fill all that time can be a formula for discontent. Idle hands and all...

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kathleen-peddicord/retiring-in-panama_b_13635288.html

    The worker access took a few years of legal battles to clear up before the workers were given access to Valle Escondido.  As to Panamanian ownership, that was after Sam's death.  As for expats participating in any local events, that requires some measure of Spanish for appreciation or to even read the announcement.  The sad part is that the expats are missing out on most of what Panama and Panamanians have to offer by not learning the language.  Best way to do that is to immerse in the local population.

    jim

    • Upvote 1
    • Downvote 1
  3. This is a fairly standard repair to remove the dash on current models. Luckily, the dash mostly just snaps out and is not part of the structure of the car.

    One item to check before heading to the repair shop is the cabin air filter common to cars built in the last decade. When it becomes clogged, it can seem like the A/C has quit working at full capacity.  Checking/changing the filter is simple requiring a screwdriver at most.  The access and location is model specific but generally it is located behind the glove box (does anyone carry gloves in there?).

    Here's a good reference: https://www.cars.com/articles/2013/05/whats-a-cabin-air-filter-and-when-should-you-replace-it/

    jim

    • Upvote 1
  4. Not good, but not surprising. Lots of advertising for Boquete claims it is a retirement community with lots of English speaking expats. The gated and guarded enclave in the center of town does not welcome anyone except those with a pass. Even the workers going to the Finca up the valley were denied access to get to work after decades of using the camino real.

  5. Air conditioning problems are not new to the hospital.  They also have periods of quarantine due to infections which could be connected to inadequate filtering in the ventilation systems.  Generally, staying out of the government run hospitals is a good idea. jim

     

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    Quinto piso del Hospital Regional Rafael Hernández sin aire acondicionado

    Quinto piso del Hospital Regional Rafael Hernández sin aire acondicionado  

     

    •  
    martes 16 de agosto de 2016 - 1:22 p.m.

    Las autoridades del hospital tienen conocimiento de la situación, pero el problema se mantiene.

    Los pacientes de la sala de Estados Especiales, en el quinto piso del Hospital Regional Dr Rafael Fernández de David, Chiriquí, están pasando páramos por la falta de aire acondicionado.

    Llevan seis meses sin aire acondicionado y son 36 pacientes que tienen que soportar las altas temperaturas que se desata al transcurrir el día.

    Delia Pineda, una de las afectadas, manifestó que es preocupante la situación debido a que los enfermos se la pasan sofocados por el calor.

    "Tengo un hijo en esa sala y por su salud tuve que comprar un abanico para poder mantener el ambiente fresco en el cuarto donde se encuentra, pero algunos no cuentan con los recursos", explicó Pineda.

     

    Portada lunes 10 de abril de 2017

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  6. A failure rate of 1 to 2 percent from an article I found:

    http://www.timegoesby.net/weblog/2013/02/elder-fingerprint-failure.html

     

    ”...fingerprinting did have significant engineering issues,' according to Ross Anderson, professor in security engineering at the University of Cambridge [England] Computer Laboratory. ‘There are some people whose fingerprints you can’t scan,' he said, 'people like bricklayers and tilers whose fingers have been worn flat.

    “‘Old people tend to have much less distinct fingerprints than young people for similar reasons,' he continued. 'The equal error rate in fingerprints is about one per cent if everything goes well.’”

    The Scientific American website reports that the failure rate for scanned fingerprints is about one to two percent and further notes,

    ”...the elasticity of skin decreases with age, so a lot of senior citizens have prints that are difficult to capture. The ridges get thicker; the height between the top of the ridge and the bottom of the furrow gets narrow, so there's less prominence. So if there's any pressure at all [on the scanner], the print just tends to smear.”

    That's what happened with my first set of prints – smeared, unreadable. The FBI website has instructions for taking fingerprints of elders and others with impaired “ridges in the pattern area.”

    ”Apply light pressure and use very little ink to record these types of fingerprint impressions. A technique known as "milking the finger" can be used to raise the fingerprint ridges prior to printing. This technique involves applying pressure or rubbing the fingers in a downward motion from palm to fingertip.”

    In my case, it's a scanner not ink, but when I discussed what I learned with the technician – different from the one who was there in January – she was way ahead of me in regard to the difficulty with old people and took a lot of time repeating scans to get my prints right this time

    ----------------------

    There were a couple of interesting weblinks as well:

    https://www.fbi.gov/services/cjis/fingerprints-and-other-biometrics/recording-legible-fingerprints

    https://www.fbi.gov/services/cjis/fingerprints-and-other-biometrics

    jim

     

    • Upvote 1
  7. 34 minutes ago, Brundageba said:

    Yes.  I might add I was an orthopedic trauma nurse in a big trauma center.  All it takes is one real bad motorcycle accident to change your life and the lives of your loved one forever.

    One of the safety riding classes I attended had an ER nurse, Noreen Valentine. She said they called the bike riders perfect organ donors: 19 to 25, healthy, and no electrical brain activity. She rode a Harley and rode to Austin to protest every try to get a helmet law passed. I never got near a bike without gearing up. She is still a mystery me me.

  8. 14 hours ago, Bonnie said:

    I see that last night's quake has been reevaluated and is now a 5.8. That's more like what I felt.

    Earthquake measurements can be all over the map.  The only true measurement is how it affects one personally.  Like tornado measurements, the damage reviewed after the event is more useful than just reading the seismic data reported. Here are two of the measurements used: Magnitude and Intensity.

    https://earthquake.usgs.gov/learn/topics/mag_vs_int.php

    Stay safe, everyone!

    jim

  9. I totally agree with Alison.

    When I discussed moving back to Boquete with Nena after our retirement, she said no. I pointed out that our first 40 years together were mostly spent in the States with only annual trips to Panama to visit family (plus the trips her family made to visit us in the U.S.).  I figured the next 40 years in Panama was only fair but she had become very adjusted to everything the US has to offer that Panama does not.  She was born in Boquete but spent all the time she could in David with her aunts and cousins. She and her older sister moved to Panama City soon after and started jobs there.  Her brothers and sisters all did the same when their chance came.  While we love to visit, living there just does not interest her. In her words, there just isn't much to do there.

    As for chores, since the kids are gone, she and I can keep the house and yard maintained with almost no effort.  We clean up after ourselves and the yard work is our hobby.  It is tough to get the farm out of a farm girl.  Then of course, there are the projects for the four grand kids we see every week. I spent a couple months leisurely building a playground and treehouse out back and the grands helped on the weekends. They had as much fun helping build it as playing on it. They added a request for a zip line! (we added one.)

    If your "quality of life" is suffering from having to do chores, then you might not want to add managing your hired help to the chore list.

    jim

    • Upvote 2
  10. Film at 11.

    I agree about the driving skill in Panama City versus in the countryside.  Outside the city they lack "rhythm".  Here is a video I took a few years back in Panama City.  We watched this "dance" during the week we were there and only saw one minor bumper-to-bumper incident.  Notice the lack of speed as the major factor in merging easily.  No signals, no cops.  Try doing this in the USA!

    jim

     

  11. 5 hours ago, Roger B said:

    Well.  

    As most of you may know, I live in Panama City.  A place with a terrible traffic conditions.  Going from one place to another may take you, instead of some minutes up to an hour.  So I try to drive just only when necessary to do some personal business or visiting my customers.  

    I traveled this last weekend to David, Chiriqui to visit my wife brothers, stay a couple of days resting, visiting Volcan for some purchases my wife wanted to do and of course visit the Feria de David.

    I found that my brother in law's best friend died a week ago in a very traumatic car crash neas Las Lomas.  He was devastated with this situation.  When driving around David, goint to Paso Canoas and also to Volcan I found the reason of so many car accidents with fatal consecuences.   I have to tell that people of Chiriqui seems to be the worst and the most bold and aggressive drivers.  I told my wife that driving in Chiriqui means that you have to be extra careful and drive defensively.  In just only 3 days I was there I saw drivers speeding, not respecting stop signals or red lights, and committing more infractions in a few seconds.  This statistics will increase if the traffic authorities dont take strong measures to fine those drivers.

     

    Hola Roger,

    We usually take the express bus to David, then rent a car the next day for transportation to see Nena's primas and tias around Chiriqui.  Been doing it that way for 40 years. The last several trips have always provided "nail biter" experiences on the road, especially during Feria and leading into Semana Santa. The road traffic is many times the normal amount and everyone is in a hurry to be first.  Panama City traffic is bad but since we just take taxis, we don't worry about the driving.  All our taxi rides have been first class and certainly less stress than driving in the city.

    Sorry about the friend of your cuñado, condolences.

    jim

  12. I have a grand niece who drove for Uber while she was between jobs awhile back. It was a good way to learn some income and she enjoyed meeting most of the folks she transported.  Nena and I always take taxis since we have no problem negotiating the fare. When my sister came with us on her first trip to Panama, we had one driver for the whole day as we showed her the sights from the Causeway to Ancon Hill to Panama Viejo to Miraflores. The driver had lunch with us and we paid him 35 bucks.  Well worth it and it made it possible to see so much of the city in a short time.

    Both services have their pluses if one can speak the language. By the end of the week my sister was bargaining fares.  We collect phone numbers of the drivers we like in the first couple of days and call them as we need them.

    jim

  13. From one of Eric Jackson's articles above:

    The first outage left the Panama City – San Miguelito – Colon metro are without electricity for about 16 hours, and also turned out the lights in large parts of Nicaragua and most of Honduras.

    I remember reading about additions to the grid which allowed increasing amounts of electrical power to be sold to the rest of Central America.  The opposition to new hydro projects may play a part in the future production.  Government involvement always adds a level of transparency, NOT.

    Then there's the new Metro line planned across the canal.  I haven't found any data on electrical usage by the Metro system but with air conditioned stations, electronic surveillance, and fare kioskis the electrical consumption must be considerable.  Just fixing a few transformers at the substation doesn't look like a long term solution.

    jim

  14. The locals who live in Boquete feel that many gringos want to live like gringos but on a Panamanian budget.

    The businesses that cater to gringo tastes want to charge gringo prices without the lawful Panamanian discount being applied and those businesses can be very creative when denying the discount.

    This is not my opinion; it is based on discussions with Panamanians who have lived in Boquete for decades.  I mostly agree with their views.

    jim

    • Upvote 1
  15. I have reached the age (and appearance) where I am given the discount without asking for it.  The restaurant will ALWAYS provide a receipt showing the discount, a copy of which is sent to the government at tax time.  The government approved (DGi) cash registers are supposed to track sales for tax purposes.  I assume those registers are in use?

    jim

  16. Interesting project and very much needed. The Thatcher Ferry bridge needs retirement or a total restoration, not possible with its present use.  The article says the new bridge will be the fourth over the canal, the third bridge in Colón missed its initial completion date so the bridge to Arriajan could be the 3rd bridge.

    http://www.vinci-construction.com/en/project/15892/atlantic-bridge-panama

    jim

  17. I played this for Nena on youtube and she enjoyed it thoroughly.  The audio was a bit difficult with all the background chatter.  She was upset when the chavetas were discussed; she remembers the finca workers getting paid with money that was only good at the finca for buying goods.  She did say the chavetas could be exchanged for actual money if there was any left after buying food; often there was not.

    We bought the book when it was first printed, still have it.

    jim

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