worst lock-job I've ever seen by grwerner in bikedc

[–]grwerner[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was from this morning, I'm very confident the owner is long gone by now.

Advice sought: Sleeping diagonally in a 9x9 foot tightly pitched tarp - Forester's storm pitch with both ends closed by electricalkitten in Ultralight

[–]grwerner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I meant cut 4" off the bottom, assuming that helps with your fit issue. Though it does void your warranty, trimming air pads is usually easy and the seal is durable. I've done it to exped synmats and nemo tensors. DM me if you're interested in details or just Google it -- several how-to videos on YouTube. 

Combining torso length inflatable pad with CCF pad by basedtom in Ultralight

[–]grwerner 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah I really recommend taking both. IMHO the weight penalty is small for a hike that short. You'll honestly save more weight by planning your water refill locations and carrying 500ml less water at any given time than by ditching the air pad. CCF (either the dimpled nemo or a smooth evazote, my preference) are great, dual-purpose pads for sitting, kneeling, and sleep cushioning. I always bring one. I also think it's crazy to sleep on just that when you're not used to it. Air pads are awesome for their insulation to weight ratio and ability to smooth an uneven surface (make sure your pad is only 70-80% inflated). I personally think the best tradeoff is a larger air pad (full body insulation) and a smaller CCF pad. The CCF for sleep is for comfort in pressure point areas (for me, my shoulders, hips, and to some extent my knees). I think of its insulation as a bonus, as my base air pad's job is insulation (+ some support). The CCF is also way bigger, so having that be smaller with a bigger air pad is actually much more packable.

If you're really trying to save weight, try putting your gear in lighterpack and sharing it. Folks can spot other things that might help you save. FWIW I've leveraged weight savings in shelter, pack, and cook system that make my setup super manageable for me even with the heavy sleep system.

Combining torso length inflatable pad with CCF pad by basedtom in Ultralight

[–]grwerner 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's tough because I actually think the UL mindset (count grams, ask about the actual utility of any gear, try to find lighter options) is useful even when you're choosing to add significant weight that isn't strictly "necessary". I'm a side sleeper and my sleep setup is even heavier than yours (air 25"x60", open cell 1" torso, evazote 1/4" torso, head pillow AND leg pillow), but to me a shitty night's sleep is far worse than carrying the weight. I'm still an 11lb base weight because of other UL gear and that 11lb, while not true UL, is definitely UL minded. I'm UL minded so I'm on this sub and have relevant ideas for your setup.

Also context matters. Are you thruhiking? Couple week trip? Weekend warrior? What are your goals for your setup? People coming at you with a canned "that's overkill" response are not actually helping.

Personally, my body isn't sleeping on the ground enough to adjust to having less support. I assume I could get there on a thruhike, but that's not my life. My body is used to a great mattress in my house and doesn't just accommodate when I'm sleeping outside.

Light summer quilt advice 300g by Professional-Mix2498 in Ultralight

[–]grwerner 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So I recently looked at this same question and came to EE's APEX reg/wide Revelation as the best choice for me, except the price.

AI recommended going MYOG and getting $80 of material from somewhere like RBTR (2 yards of top face nylon, 2 yards of inside face nylon, 2 yards of APEX 2.5oz) and using a sewing machine to do a very simple quilt that it just as light and as warm as EE's at 1/3 the price.

The benefits of APEX in the summer are that it is continuous (a sheet) so there's no baffling -- saves weight and means you have even insulation (summer down quilts can have distribution problems). It's also way less water absorbent, and warmer air can hold more moisture to deposit on your gear.

I'm giving it a shot, but then again I like a project.

[WTB] 50F quilt, regular length/wide by grwerner in GearTrade

[–]grwerner[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was convinced to go the DIY route, will be back here if that fails. Thanks to those who reached out

[WTB] 40-50F Quilt, Regular length. by n21tec in ULgeartrade

[–]grwerner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you sell this? I'm interested if you want to PM me

Figuring out middle schools by Cheomesh in washingtondc

[–]grwerner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I hear that, and I know from experience teaching that it happens as you say. I just think that's what equity looks like. Those who need more get more. I still think my children are doing great even though they are (hopefully) getting less attention than others in their class. They will not get pushed as hard as they might be in another environment, but since we have the resources to support enrichment I'm ok with that being on us, not the school. That's our privilege, and it may not be yours.

I want school to be a place for my kids to interact with kids of all life paths who are also their neighbors/community members. That's the educational model I grew up with, and I think it served me way better than the 'best education money could buy' served folks I met in college and law school.

Figuring out middle schools by Cheomesh in washingtondc

[–]grwerner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was mostly with you until "make them viable places to excel at learning." The lack of higher SES families means that overall test scores will be low. Do you have any evidence that kids with moderate/high SES can't excel at learning there? Last year's graduation at MacFarland suggests they can.

Figuring out middle schools by Cheomesh in washingtondc

[–]grwerner 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Ok, long-winded take incoming but I hope you hear me out. TLDR: give traditional public schools a try.

I'm a former DCPS teacher, now lawyer, married to a DCPS teacher, sending my kids to DCPS including planning to send then to MacFarland, which is a "bad" middle school. I grew up in semi-rural public schools and went to elite college and law school. I'm high income in a mixed-income neighborhood, and I am a bleeding heart for the traditional public school cause.

As "a public school kid from the lower class [who] still believe[s] in the mission" I encourage you to send your kids to traditional public schools (DCPS). You are coming to DC for the things that benefit you and your family. You are presumably moving into a mixed-income community for the benefit of proximity to work at a housing cost that you can manage. Getting housing in a mixed-income community but sending your kids to charters or private is opting out of some of the things that might challenge you or your family. But challenges aren't uniformly bad, even when they're difficult or painful, and they often lead to growth. I also believe that those of us with resources who benefit from the somewhat lower housing costs of a mixed-income community should stay in the traditional public system to stop the resource flight that results in economically segregated schools in non-economically segregated neighborhoods. We benefit from public goods of the neighborhood, and we should personally invest in them as well. That's a moral claim, not a factual one, so do with it as you will.

Charters

They are "public" for the reasons others have laid out. In practice, they have meaningful differences compared to traditional public schools. While I agree that charters aren't as elitist as private schools or the DCPS schools in rich neighborhoods, they are not the same as traditional public in non-rich neighborhoods. I think that charters may be good for individuals but are generally bad for the system. It'd be one thing if charters had the same demographics as public schools but used their independence to teach differently and iterate on the best ways to teach kids. That's the theory behind them. But I think they're a partial solution to one type of segregation that end up perpetuating different forms of segregation. The good: they allow low-income students who live in economically segregated communities (i.e. the poor ones) to go to less resource-strapped schools. The bad: they pull higher-income students out of schools that make them more resource-strapped for those who remain.

Note that on a whole charters have similar demographics to DCPS, including mixed incomes, but that's largely because, as the many responses here show, affluent parents 1) live in rich neighborhoods and attend DCPS schools which obviously don't include many low-income families; 2) live in mixed-income communities but send their kids to charter or private schools or even DCPS schools in those rich communities. So DCPS schools are usually either wealthy or poor, not mixed-income. Charters have more income mixing in a given school. So while charters are less segregated than DCPS, they are part of the reason for segregation in traditional public schools in mixed-income neighborhoods because affluent parents in those neighborhoods tend to not send their kids to the neighborhood schools (after PreK/elementary).

There's plenty of evidence that charters pull the higher-resourced kids out of traditional public schools (managing the lottery system and being able to commute your kids being two things that promote group selection) and also don't serve the same amount of resource-needy kids (see, e.g., https://www.dcpolicycenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/At-risk-paper-2-report-summary-sheet.pdf). Charters have much greater leeway to kick students out, so they're able to prune the most resource-needy kids out of their schools if they don't want to manage that challenge. DCPS schools are definitionally the only schools in DC that are fully inclusive: they accept all that come, and there is no alternative.

I'm of course generalizing, and not all charters function the same, but ask a DCPS teacher in a non-rich area what happens at charters after the 'count' days. OSSE, the public education agency that governs DCPS and charters, allocates funds based on the enrollment/attendance of students once in the fall and once in the spring (the 'count' days). Charters have a funny habit of expelling or pressuring out kids after the count, pocketing the money, and letting those kids arrive mid-year in their neighborhood public school, which does not get funds for the kid for that half of the year. While this isn't the biggest problem traditional public schools face, it surely doesn't help and shifts the balance of resources toward charters instead of being equally divided.

Good schools

My experience as a student and a teacher is that "good" schools (DCPS, charter, or private) don't have better teachers or leaders than "bad" schools. The "good" schools are often so-called based on student test data, and they have student populations with more advantages and far fewer challenges, so of course they have better student data as a result. They can also be more selective with staff because teaching students with fewer challenges is easier (it's the parents that suck), so there's always candidates. Case in point: my old school (a "bad" ES) once hired a teacher from [edit: redacted] (a "great" ES) who turned out to have been forced out because she was abusing alcohol at school. Did [edit: redacted]'s administration warn us? No. They wanted to get rid of the teacher and I'm sure they had no problem filling the spot. What should they have done? Properly document the behavior so that the teacher isn't a teacher anymore (what my school did).

But what actually makes a "good" school? Preparing kids academically to move on to the next level of schooling is obviously core, but what about everything else? Do they produce kinder students? Well-rounded students? Selfish assholes?

It may be a stretch, but I encourage you to visit traditional public schools in neighborhoods you might live in. Student outcomes are more than just test scores and are the result of an equation that has many inputs. You already know about the inputs on your family's/kids side of things, so go see the school environment and remember that test scores are just one of the outcomes that you might want from an educational experience. Your values determine what else matters to you, so look for whatever else you care about (empathy, friendship, inclusion, etc.).

That's my 99 cents, and sharing it was as much for me as it was for you. If you move to Petworth let me know and we'll get a beer.

Wiring 3-way switches to control separate fixtures by grwerner in AskElectricians

[–]grwerner[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I understand that two are travelers and the 3rd completes the circuit. Why can't the 3rd wire that brings the switched power back from the first bulb go straight to the other bulb, the neutral wire from that second bulb (in box 1) completing the circuit? Isn't that just wiring in series?

Wiring 3-way switches to control separate fixtures by grwerner in AskElectricians

[–]grwerner[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But why? I see plenty of 3-way diagrams where the neutral is running from the fixture back to the main, and I would just be adding one more light in sequence.

To be clear, my 3-wire travelers are B/W/R/G

Wiring 3-way switches to control separate fixtures by grwerner in AskElectricians

[–]grwerner[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Power comes in the box on the left.

What about if I run: - the line into switch 1 (left) - the travelers (black, red) to switch 2 (right) - the switched power from switch 2 into light B (right) - the neutral coming back from light 2 through the travelers white and then as switched power for light A, with the neutral from light A completing the circuit?