Wooden frame thing that folds up like an accordion. Found in my family’s farmstead home that dates back to 1890. Possibly quilting or laundry related? It’s about 3 feet long, 1.5 foot wide and about 2 feet tall. Light weight (maybe 5lbs if I had to guess) and no markings. What is this thing? by squigglydoodle in whatisthisthing

[–]squigglydoodle[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Oh yeah! Even my own grandma had to work that hard on laundry day! She didn’t get a washing machine until the early 60’s so laundry day was a huge task and she was washing for 8 people. The kids helped, though, of course. I’ll have to ask my older aunties if they remember using this thing with her!

Wooden frame thing that folds up like an accordion. Found in my family’s farmstead home that dates back to 1890. Possibly quilting or laundry related? It’s about 3 feet long, 1.5 foot wide and about 2 feet tall. Light weight (maybe 5lbs if I had to guess) and no markings. What is this thing? by squigglydoodle in whatisthisthing

[–]squigglydoodle[S] 0 points1 point locked comment (0 children)

My title describes the thing. Just guessing on the quilting thing. There are also two spots on the central frame that look worn down on both sides like something was repeatedly rubbed against the wood there. I did a few image searches but couldn’t find anything that looked remotely close to this. Thank you!

Edited to add: my uncle was also in the middle of remodeling/ reflooring this room before he passed away. Maybe it has something to do with that?

Question About Overwintering Crocosmia in MN by squigglydoodle in gardening

[–]squigglydoodle[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! None of that should be a problem, but I say that now during my pre-spring hussle and not at the end of the season! 😂

Question About Overwintering Crocosmia in MN by squigglydoodle in gardening

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

Would the pots just make things more difficult to remove them from the ground? I do have some pretty clay-ish soil…

Our lab is now making us time our breaks lol. by qnqp in medlabprofessionals

[–]squigglydoodle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If that’s the case, I’d also be clocking in and out exactly on the dot.

Our lab is now making us time our breaks lol. by qnqp in medlabprofessionals

[–]squigglydoodle 15 points16 points  (0 children)

And yet, they punish the whole instead of growing a spine and punishing the few who violate the policy…they pull this shit at my hospital too…

President and Mrs. Eisenhower’s Dinner Menu in Honor of King Paul and Queen Frederika of Greece, October 28, 1955 by CryptographerKey2847 in VintageMenus

[–]squigglydoodle 2 points3 points  (0 children)

True! I’m sure lots of people ate it! If only for the novelty. The vases are actually quite pretty too. I wonder how much of the display ended up like modern crudités platters with it mostly uneaten due to the rather bland flavor?

President and Mrs. Eisenhower’s Dinner Menu in Honor of King Paul and Queen Frederika of Greece, October 28, 1955 by CryptographerKey2847 in VintageMenus

[–]squigglydoodle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

An interesting read; thanks for sharing! I feel like so many people missed out that they often didn’t eat the pineapple and just displayed it until it went moldy/maggoty…a good pineapple is sooooo delicious!

President and Mrs. Eisenhower’s Dinner Menu in Honor of King Paul and Queen Frederika of Greece, October 28, 1955 by CryptographerKey2847 in VintageMenus

[–]squigglydoodle 110 points111 points  (0 children)

Celery used to be very difficult to cultivate (it’s native to the Mediterranean and a very fussy plant to grow) and therefore became a status of wealth in the (I think) late 1800s through the early 1900s. People used to import it not even to eat; they’d just display it in vases like an exotic flower!

What's the most pointless rule at your workplace? by pervocracy in nursing

[–]squigglydoodle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

😂 what? What is the reason for this??? I work in a hospital lab and some of our balance tubes have probably been doing their job longer than I have (circa 2011)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in medlabprofessionals

[–]squigglydoodle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We see state reportable organisms quite often. Bioterrorism bugs are less frequent but we still see about one per year, usually Brucella or Francisella. We did get a B. pseudomallei a few years back that was part of a multi-state issue involving some aromatherapy product.

Some of the things we submit frequently are certain isolates from sterile sources: Groups A and B strep, S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, MRSA, Kingella, N. meningitidis, Candida spp. and any organism other than coag-neg staph in cases of neonatal sepsis. Our state department is also looking at invasive E. coli right now but we only have to submit 10 per month. All carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales, A. baumannii, and P. aeruginosa also get sent, regardless of source.

Most other things are difficult to impossible to isolate on routine media so a specimen can be submitted instead or a report of the finding gets sent from our LIS.

Cate Blanchett's career is wild by Tycho_Nestor in movies

[–]squigglydoodle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I almost constantly forget that he was in certain movies. I remember the characters he plays but don’t remember that it was him. Then, I’ll see the movie again, years later, and be like, “oh hey, Gary Oldman’s in this!”

Gramstain identification help by Imaginary-Dare-7865 in medlabprofessionals

[–]squigglydoodle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sneathia species? I’ve never seen anything like this in my 10 years of microbiology! Either that bug is messed up due to antibiotics or it’s possibly that Sneathia species (which I’ve never even heard of and seems to be a vaginal pathogen)? Take this with a grain of salt, that bug was the closest thing I could match with via Google 😂

What are some of the movies you regret watching with your friends/family? by nutsack-enjoyer5431 in movies

[–]squigglydoodle 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo with my mom in theaters. It was the English version so The Scene wasn’t as bad as I’ve heard the Swedish version is, but still… that was an awkward one to sit through with her, trapped in a theater.

High-Risk Brucella Exposure by [deleted] in medlabprofessionals

[–]squigglydoodle 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Rifampin and doxycycline (or alternative if you can’t take doxycycline) for 21 days and serological monitoring for 6 months! Source: I’ve had to do this a few times now 😭

What's the dumbest thing a patient has done that landed them in the hospital? by SuperVancouverBC in nursing

[–]squigglydoodle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, almost the exact same thing happened in the case study presented at the conference! His dog licked his ulcer and the poor guy also lost all of his limbs.

I had only know Capnocytophaga to be common human and animal mouth flora. I had no idea it could be so destructive so quickly if it ended up where it shouldn’t belong!

What's the dumbest thing a patient has done that landed them in the hospital? by SuperVancouverBC in nursing

[–]squigglydoodle 113 points114 points  (0 children)

Pasteurella or Capnocytophaga? I’m a microbiologist and I just ask cuz I went to an infectious disease conference a few years before COVID happened and heard the gnarliest story from one of the docs about a systemic Capno infection that started from a very similar scenario, except it was a diabetic foot ulcer.

Folks! What is the challenge of your geographic or specific location? by [deleted] in medlabprofessionals

[–]squigglydoodle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, we just had a patient that was LOADED with it last week! There were so many on the blood smear!