Good morning!!!!

   / Good morning!!!!
  • Thread Starter
#42,071  
Coffee is on, the chickens are out, scratching in the dirt. It's going into the mid 50's here, pretty nice for January. I gotta figure out what project to work on.....

Have a good one!
 
   / Good morning!!!! #42,072  
Boy...the first Black and Tan sure tastes good!!!
 
   / Good morning!!!! #42,073  
59 this morning and headed to 63 today. Cloudy and small chance of rain today.

Sure looks like the Midwest and the Great Lakes region could get their fill of snow this week.

Oh as for today's plans. Don't really know yet. Laughing. :). But do need to get somethings together for the rest of the week. Also have lots of paper work to catch up on.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #42,074  
66°F and no rain

Be safe
Have a great day

David Sent from my iPad Air using TractorByNet
 
   / Good morning!!!! #42,075  
Heavy dark gray skies with a drizzle that's seems wetter than full on rain. No real problem, but I'm a little sad because my favorite lightweight karrimor waterproof jacket has been pronounced dead. Like me, it has been showing signs of years of wear and tear for a while now, though I didn't mind as I now only used it while I'm in the fields, so didn't care that the shoulder was torn and the cuffs so frayed the liner was peeking out. I remember the day I first met karrimor. It was the day we came to look at this farmland, before it was auctioned. Karrimor was hanging alone in the corner of an outdoor clothing shop in Bakewell village , with a sale sticker announcing that all through the winter, no one thought it worth the full asking price. A quick try on and that was it, karrimor and me have been together ever since and had some great times together while chasing sheep, fishing for trout and chasing yet more sheep. Doubt any other jacket can ever take it's place. The end came all so suddenly. One minute it was doing what it always did, keeping me dry and warm, then the next it gave out a faint, agonising zzz sound and the wind started to make it's way inside. As I looked down I could see the poor jacket had come completely open. I reached down and tried hand to zip resuscitation. For a few moments I thought it was with me again, but no, the zip's strength had gone, it just couldn't hold itself together. RIP karrimor, 2003-2016.

A sad, but heartwarming tribute. RIP karrimor

David Sent from my iPad Air using TractorByNet
 
   / Good morning!!!! #42,077  
Good morning all. 56F this morning, clear with light breeze. Going to 65F today with moderate wind. Will work on getting organized for next week for TMA.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #42,078  
Drew,
I'm like you, want to learn to weld but haven't taken the first step and thrown some spark. I've been a welders helper before, he called me sparky. He called everyone sparky. We called him ole Pete.
My dad bought his old welding truck, 60 something chevy with straight 6, back in the 70's. We called the truck ole pete.

I got burnt buying a whole life policy my sr yr in college. Buy term and invest the difference put you way ahead, if you invest the difference.

I got a new job offer last week. Still kicking it around in my head. Same pay, little more in benefits. Similar work, just with new people. If I go i can take an early retirement from my present company, but not a whole lot of money. They stopped contributing to the pension a few yrs ago, rolled it into a 401k.
I've worked 20 yrs one place, now 12 yrs another. Wish they would have given me a little more incentive. This company contacted me, i had interviewed with them yrs ago and turned down an offer then. I had another company contact me last week for an interview, but the work is further away.

50° today, more melting.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #42,079  
Good Evening. 1800, partly cloudy, 61F with 80% humidity. Today's high was 66F, and the forecast low is 53F with a 20% chance of rain tonight. I guess the time got away from me today. I was wrapped up in organic gardening videos on You Tube today, and never clicked on TBN until after supper. Looks like it's going to be a pretty good night for camping.

Drew, you are doing good work helping your lady friend. I have been on the wrong side of the risk/reward scale a time or two. Anyway, my retirement plan is that I plan for Margie to live longer than I do. She will draw a good retirement from the state, so I'll be good as long as she is around. After that I will have to see what condition my condition is in. As far as using welders, I have sliced more tonnage of Styrofoam with one, then welding steel together. I loved working with foam. Back when I drove a truck for Margie's old boss who owned the foam plant in Blountstown, you could always unload without the forklift.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #42,080  
34 going up to a warm 68 today in clear weather. And tomorrow 70 degrees, but come Wednesday a cold wet period starts with lots of rain. Lots of rain here means lots of snow North, so you heard it here first. Of course, the only reliable forecast is Buppies...;) spent yesterday afternoon doing financial planning for my lady friend, who would dearly love to stop teaching at 62, but not sure she can. This is where, like I did for years in my last career, I go through people's financial shoeboxes and find stuff that makes me shake my head. Expensive small annuities written only to maximize broker commission. Inappropriate investments. Crappy cancer policies and other useless insurances sold. Sigh. When I was licensed I had the additional "burden" of being a CFP, which meant I pledged to 110% of the time recommend products and services that were truly best for the client, not the agent's wallet. Now you know this is what they all say...but do? Oh no. So now I have a friend who was sold a variety of annuity products several years ago with long back end surrender charges that are exactly what she doesn't need right now. But she's stuck and illiquid on several of these darling investment products sold to her. My payment for the work was in the form of a delicious chicken cordon bleu and homemade apple crisp. I had to chuckle, when I had my financial planning business, it was almost exclusively in the Quaker community of Pennsylvania. That in itself was invaluable because coming in the door folks knew I was not a wolf in sheep's clothing. And if they could not afford my consulting fee, at least for two little old ladies and one young couple with no money, I had my tea and cookies payment plan. I would spend three hours with a family over their kitchen table (always the kitchen table, never an office) with papers spread everywhere and my fee was a pot of Earl Grey Tea and home made oatmeal raisin cookies. No wonder I gained weight...but those cookies were good. Not very helpful to charge folks money they don't have to tell them they have no money. Pro bono work but all good. Twice I was "purchased" by parents to do financial planning for twenty and thirty year old married kids who were in financial troubles, both times after I did work for the parents. Always I heard "if only I knew this thirty years ago"... No, you don't want to buy penny stocks. Yes you need to study these investment options on your 403B and get out of the fixed fund paying you 2%. No you can't keep all that money in your Credit Union making 1%. (I was actually surprised to see that much interest even being paid...). An expected mix of folks invested too aggressively, 100% in stocks in their 60's, too conservatively with only fixed accounts chosen, etc. So it was actually fun to dust off my rapidly rusting financial brain and do some "work". Not that I think she will like what I tell her...but one has to deal with facts, not fancy. There is legislation in the works that will seriously increase the responsibility of anyone selling life insurance products to do basic financial planning first, vs. selling life insurance like hamburger. Not the highest level of care that I was held to, but at least some level... i think this will change the huge secondary insurance business where we all get the fliers for cheap term and whatever else is being peddled by mail or online. Particularly insurance products aimed at the elderly. Many folks don't like the government sticking its nose in "our business" but here's an area where oversight is long overdue. it's sad when we need more protection from the folks who allegedly are out there to help us. A lot of people cycle through the insurance business, like car salesmen..., and sell whatever they are told to to all their friends and family, and then go on to something else. And then I come along and open the shoebox and see stuff that folks never should have bought. I'm told over 90% of the new entrants into the life insurance business do not last. So think of all that insurance sold by folks who likely were pretty green behind the ears. yes, buy term and invest the difference. Though those of you who have old whole life policies, some of them are crunching out internal yields of 4-6% now due to old guarantees made during times of high yields. So every once in a while, I find a diamond in the rough, something for sure one should not cancel. Now I just wish I knew how to weld...:rolleyes:

Good for you, Drew. What a shame, that basic personal finance isn't a part of our basic education in HS.
I remember, Ray, Metropolitan guy, coming to my parents house every month since I was in 1st grade. Don't know anything about the policies, but as I recall the check was about $10K when my Dad passed at 82.
Back in the mid 80's and I was in my 30's, it finally checked that I needed to be more involved in my financial future other than my future military pension and SS. We sat down with a rep that specialized in working with military. You likely know of the firm. Along with getting into a mutual fund program we also got new life insurance. One paper, it was a good thing - especially if I died. Family would be in decent shape, which I believe is the objective. However, years later I took a small loan and the policy. Didn't really think much about it for a long time. About 3 years ago I ran the numbers. Not pretty. I was still paying same monthly premium, but the term rider had aged out, the loan had tripled, and suddenly it seemed if I died, it wasn't so great, the payout, not the dying part. So after discussion with wife we cashed out, opened an investment account for our granddaughter and that monthly premium amount is automatically deposited in her account. Of course neither granddaughter nor her parents know about this account and being in our trust when we die she can't touch it until age 30. Every now and then a discussion with friends in our age crowd might trigger me to look at insurance. Unfortunately, the only way I see the numbers working is if I die soon - definitely not part of my plan. I wish I knew more when I started working.

Drew, if she has variable annuities I just read an article where some companies are willing to buy them back for all invested, including the commission to get out of the obligation.

David Sent from my iPad Air using TractorByNet
 

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