Monthly Archives: April 2012

Fixing Cars and Saving Money

When you do it yourself, you can definitely save money. But before I take on any project, I try to determine whether it is 1) something I know how to do/fix and 2) whether I really want to do it.

In this case it was  a broken heater core in Cassie’s car (her 1989 Oldsmobile). I knew how to fix it because the exact same thing had happened to my Buick years ago. She was driving around and noticed a huge leak coming from under the car. It was green, so she knew it was an antifreeze leak but not much more than that. At first I thought it was just an overflow issue, but when I saw that it was pretty much completely depleted of coolant I knew it was the heater core.

A heater core is important because it takes hot coolant from the engine and circulates it in the passenger cabin, so your heater has hot air. In the summer this isn’t quite as big of an issue but in Colorado’s extreme winters, life without a heater core would not be pleasant -at all. Also having this leak was draining the engine coolant which could have totally destroyed the engine. So, it was important to get it fixed.


Taking the dash out

I knew how to do it, but it still sucked because I had to completely take the underside of the dash out. With my Buick I had to take the dash out as well, but it’s always a little complicated when you don’t do something very often. Why car makers require you to completely remove the dash in order to get at this core is beyond me. Seems like a better engineering solution could be found. In fact in my 75 Corvette, you can change it from the engine side of the firewall. Much easier.


In the process

At least I had most of the tools necessary and the parts store still carries the part for a 23 year old car in a discontinued brand (Olds).


My tools

After I removed the bottom dash and console, I had to get under the car to install the new heater core. It turned out the old heater core had plastic tubes that had broken and that’s what had spilled the antifreeze. The new heater core I bought had metal tubes that are much less likely to break and spill.


Old core with plastic parts versus the new metal version

The total cost of parts was $40 to fix it. It took me about 4-5 hours to scout for parts, take apart the whole dash, install the new heater core and put all back together.  I called a shop just to see what I had saved and they quoted me at $500. So that made me feel pretty good. My time was worth about $100 an hour! It also made me realize how outrageously high the mechanics charge.

I don’t always try and fix things myself, but sometimes it makes you feel good to know I can and the money in my pocket can pay for a ticket to Puerto Rico and back.


Under the car

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Tulip Time!

They’re actually starting to fade now, but last week, the tulips in our yard were absolutely stunning. Rather than attempt to describe them in too much detail, I’ll post a few pics.


I love the stripes in these!


So delicate!


Close upreminds me of bright red lipstick


Red tulips line the walk up to our house


We also have a few other colors of tulips in the backyard like this one, but most have been trampled by the chickens


There’s also a few super strong daffodils back there with them but not many (the dandelions on the other hand….)

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You’re Living in the Wrong Place!

It’s one thing to say something to yourself, and it’s another to hear it from a complete stranger. We currently have two medical students staying with us in our spare bedrooms. I was welcoming them, showing them around and introducing them to the animals and showing them all of our tropical plants in our living room. “…This is the coffee tree with coffee berries that are turning red!”

And this is the banana tree, and the avocado trees, and the citrus collection, and pomegranate, and the Dracaena palm and the aloe vera, and the orchids and this here is our latest collection: a pineapple plant with a mini-pineapple growing on it:


Our pineapple plant we got at Home Depot in Greeley

After I finished with our little botanical tour in our tropical hotel lobby of a living room, one of them exclaimed, “It looks like you’re living in the wrong place! You should be living somewhere tropical.” How right she was. It is funny to hear a stranger point out the most obvious thing you’ve been working for. I suppose our house and lifestyle here really do point to our desire to live in the tropics with lots of warm-loving plants, chickens roaming about and people hosted at our home in the style of a guesthouse. We do it as best we can in Colorado, so I am sure when we move to Puerto Rico we’ll be ready to do the real thing in the right place. In the mean time, we’re starting to amass quite the collection of all things tropical right here in the wrong place! 🙂

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Our WordPress Blogs Were Hacked!!

Over the past few days, some of you may have seen a pop-up from Google notifying you that we may be distributing malware!

Well….As it turns out a hacker got access to our web host. They gained access to all the core files that run this web page as well as our other blog http://fruitfulista.lifetransplanet.com. They were able to insert some kind of redirect that only happened occasionally on certain pages.

Google “crawls” webpages nearly every day for content and in turn this is how they feed their search engine. In addition to scanning for web content, if their Googlebots happen to come across a page that redirects them, they flag your site as having malware. This is bad for a few reasons.

Google, for the most part, controls the internet. If you get on their blacklist for any reason, traffic will simply stop flowing to your site. This is what happened to us. Some browsers like Chrome or Firefox will display a warning based upon this blag flagging by Google:


DANGER!

This was the first time I had this happen to our websites. So it was again, time to learn about it and figure out how to fix it. In some ways I enjoy a good challenge, it seems to be what my brain was tailored for. I checked our webhost and since there were multiple sites that had been hacked I figured it had to be compromised. I updated all the passwords on wordpress as well as on the host. I then moved all the sites from the host back to the Linux box in the basement that I used to host from.

Google’s webmaster page allows you to have them recheck your site for the malware once you’ve done something to try and correct it. So after I moved everything off the host I had it re scanned. Well….Still infected!

At this point the next step was to replace all the core word press files. It’s unlikely that the content was hacked (pictures, music, etc) but was just the core PHP files that run WordPress. So I downloaded a fresh version of WordPress, then copied in all of our content and re uploaded the package. Google re scanned and, it came back clean!! So we are safe to browse again and actually I am not sure if we ever weren’t safe. I never did find the code that was compromised, but rather took a shotgun approach and just replaced it all with new. 

If you’ve noticed that our style looks a bit different, that’s why.  I still have to go thru and add some stuff back in.  Or we may use this as an opportunity to redesign our site.  We’ll see.

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