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Sunday 28th 67F/19C [6..45] Heavy overcast with the threat of thunderstorms and cloudbursts. Peaking at just over 27C/81F later this afternoon when the sunshine returns. Light, southwesterly winds. 75F/24C in the room. My ears are running. So I have switched on the heat pump to slightly cool at 22C/72F.
Up at 6am after a quiet night with weird, often repetitive, meaningless dreams.
I checked the car. The Noco Genius 5 charger has yet again resurrected a completely flat battery. It has been worth every single penny. I leave it to do its thing overnight and it has always succeeded. So far.
Car headlights have to be on by law while underway in Denmark. All the lights in my Morris Minor are controlled by a single toggle switch. Well over to the right of the "dashboard."I have added the labels and arrow to the image for clarity. The toggle switch does not easily lend itself to flashy advertising. In the form of a light or brightly coloured extensions.
You'd think it would be automatic to remember to turn the lights off when I park, but no. Most modern IC cars in Denmark are fitted with lights which come on with the ignition. Morris missed this trick at the close of the 1960s. No foresight for the future Danish market and changes in Danish law in 1990.
At least they put the steering wheel on the correct side. And the pedals. The headlight dip switch is a press button on the floor. The bonnet is released with a stiff puller under the passenger side glove compartment. Impossible to reach and requiring considerable strength. This might improve with lubrication of the cable but I have not explored this option to date.
10.15 71F/22C. Humid and overcast with occasional drops of rain. I have just finished strimming both sides of the drive. Then running the big Makita mower over the debris with the basket fitted. To pick up as much as possible. The batteries needed recharging.I really ought to grass rake it all clean but am I too tired for the moment. The robot mower has already discovered the exciting new boundaries and is exploring. I shall have morning coffee while I have a rest. The robot mower has gone back to recharge. Saying that it has completed the mowing task. I have switched off the heat pump at a comfortable 73F indoors. Temperature is entirely subjective.
10.40 Sunshine! I have sent the mower out again from indoors. The security cameras are not being triggered by the robot for Playback. Yet it reliably picks out birds and cats. I have reset it to "All Movement." That didn't help. I may have to increase the sensitivity of detection.While I was exploring the mower's menus I discovered the map can be rotated 90º. Which makes more sense with a long, narrow mowing map. Not that many other users will have such extreme areas of "lawn."
11.30 I became dizzy just from looking at both computer monitors and the phone. I shall definitely be seeking a new optician to have my eyes tested.
The mower is showing increased determination to explore and mow these edges. Even if it is hesitantly at times. Once it has covered this new ground it records its coverage and adds it to the map in its memory. Patience and considerable preparation certainly pays off. Most of this work only needs to be done once. Moreover it would have been done [and repeatedly] using the normal mower and strimmer routine anyway. Just as I have done for years. Now the Eufy mower will cheerfully do everything automatically.
Heavy duty and professional robot mowers will overcome most obstacles. Though usually by demanding alternative means of location. Always at hideously extra cost and tiresome set-up time. Fine for those with the land and depth of pocket to match their needs. Most gardeners just want a neat lawn. Without exhausting their free hours in tedious repetitive chores under a hot sun. Or trying to catch up when the lawn gets away from them. How do you value your free time relative to the cost of investment?
17.00 80F/27C. Bright sunshine. Giving the robot another run at a lower cutting height.
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