Month: January 2010

  • Doctors Without Borders needs your help in Haiti

     
     
     
    The family and friends of one of the sweetest, dearest ladies on Xanga has suffered terrible losses in the Haiti earthquake, along with tens of thousands of others.
    This poor country, already in dire straits before the earthquake,  needs our help.
    Doctors Without Borders is already in Haiti, doing what they can to help, but they need supplies, badly!
     
    You can go here to donate.
     
     
     

    "Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) surgical units in Port-au-Prince continue to work around the clock to treat the vast numbers of patients with serious injuries from the January 12 earthquake. Prioritizing the most serious cases, the teams have been performing caesarian sections and amputations. Experienced MSF medical staff say they have never seen so many serious injuries.

    An MSF surgical team that relocated to Chocsal Hospital after its facility in Martissant was badly damaged has been working non-stop since early on Friday. At Trinité trauma hospital, where the team is treating people under canvas on the grounds of the medical facility that was hit by the earthquake, surgery has been taking place in an improvised operating theater. In Carrefour, a district that was very badly affected, MSF has just started working in a hospital with two operating theatres.

    One of MSF’s operational coordinators in Port-au-Prince, Hans van Dillen, says there was an immediate reaction when people found out that we were starting medical activities in Carrefour. People began crowding around the entrance. Patients are being brought in by wheelbarrow and on others' backs. There are other hospitals in the area but they are already overflowing with injured people and have limited numbers of Haitian staff or supplies.

    The struggle to find more buildings that could be used for MSF’s medical work is continuing, as are the efforts to get more medical staff and supplies into the country. The major difficulty here is the bottleneck at the airport, which has turned away a number of vital cargo flights. Lack of authorization to land at the airport has already caused a 24-hour delay of the planned arrival of MSF’s much needed inflatable hospital.

    MSF has managed to get more than 70 additional staff into Port-au-Prince, mostly through neighboring Dominican Republic. They are beginning to take some of the strain off the teams who were already there when the quake struck.

    It has become clear that a number of our Haitian staff did not survive the devastation. MSF is still trying to confirm the whereabouts of others and is increasingly concerned about their welfare.

    The teams say that the lack of food and water is also of serious concern and is contributing to tension in the city. There has been little sign of significant aid distribution and there are increasing reports of looting, although not accompanied by violence.

    MSF’s activities are rapidly scaling up and the next move will be to assess different parts of the city, where needs are expected to be equally high. To help address the massive scale and variety of the assistance required, MSF hopes to start other medical activities as soon as possible, including mobile clinics where there are no functional health structures, and mental health for people who have been traumatized."

    Even a small donation to DWB can save lives and make a big, big difference to the quality of life in Haiti. Please help if you can.

     

     

  • If you would like to donate to Haiti

     

     

    A massive 7.0 earthquake struck Haiti on January 12, 2010. Three million people have been affected by the quake and its aftermath. Reports estimate that over fifty thousand Haitians may be dead. Nearly all of Port-au-Prince is either damaged or destroyed, including much needed hospitals and facilities to house the injured. Emergency supplies such as food, water, medical supplies and clothing are desperately needed. The organizations below need your help now to be able to provide assistance in the days, weeks, and months ahead.

    To ensure your contribution goes to Haiti relief funds, please remember to designate your gift to "Haiti Earthquake".

     

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    Quick Links to Most Popular Organizations
    American Red Cross Doctors Without Borders Operation USA
    Americares International Medical Corps OXFAM America
    CARE International Rescue Committee Partners in Health
    Catholic Relief Services Haitian Ministries Save the Children
    Convoy of Hope MADRE UNICEF
    Direct Relief International Mercy Corps World Vision Int'l

    Please Designate Your Gift to “Haiti Earthquake”

     

  • Our New Company Motto

     

    Open memo to all dispatchers

     

    Dear Madams and Sirs,

    To each and every one of you that calls me every morning, to tell me you need such and such trailer ready to load by 10 or 11AM, forcing me to stop what I am doing and get those trailers cleaned and prepped ahead of everything else I have to do around here, and then your drivers come and pick these trailers up at 4 or 5PM or the next day or the day after that, I present to you our new company motto.

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    If you continue to think with the part of your body that's sitting in your task chair instead of the part that is talking to me on the phone, our motto will be changed to two simple words.

    And I think you know what they are.

    Thank you for your attention.

     I hope.

    Management @ CES

     

  • Ice on the Ohio

     

     

    Amazing what a few 11 degree nights in a row will do to a river the size of the Ohio.

    If it wasn't for barge traffic, it would be solid ice!

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    Baby, it's cold out there!

    It's a cold Sunday evening, good day for baked pork chops with mushroom gravy.

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    First, brown 6 or 8 center cut chops in 3 tblsp. of bacon drippings, seasoned on both sides with salt and pepper while browning.

    Here's where I keep my bacon drippings, btw.

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    Cover chops with 2 small cans mushroom pieces and stems, reserving the water for the gravy.

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    Add 1/4 cup of flour to the pan drippings, add a little more drippings if needed, to make a nice roux. Salt and pepper to taste, and cook over med. heat to a nice coppery brown. Add milk to the mushroom water to make 2 cups liquid. Add to the roux and whisk til smooth. Cook over medium heat til thickened, stirring constantly.

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    Pour gravy over chops, cover and bake at 300 for two hours.

    I just put mine in the oven. Karen is making cheddar cheese potatoes and biscuits later. Better make my Sunday beer run now, cause I won't be leaving the house after dinner. 

    Nap time, ya know!