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Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Sat Jan 06, 2007 10:14 pm
by MacTheWolf (imported)

I sent mom back to hospital at 3:00am...she awoke me with choking..
When I went into her room, she was spitting up foam and couldn't talk without a gurgling sound like she was drowning.
The paramedics said her lungs were clear
That's all I know for now.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 1:43 am
by Riverwind (imported)
I can only imagine how hard this is for you, I sure wish I lived closer at times like this.
Take care my friend,
River
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 2:39 am
by MacTheWolf (imported)
I slept in till 9:30am..called hospital..All they'd say is... "she's doing ok and waiting for a room" but they wouldn't tell me her prognosis on the phone...has to be in person...rules. So I leave for the hospital in a few to find out what happened.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 5:27 am
by tugon (imported)
You are a good man taking such good care of your mother. She is lucky to have you. Please take care of yourself as much as you are able.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 8:59 am
by MacTheWolf (imported)
I just got off the phone with her doctors...mom has Early Pneumonia.. probably caught at the hospital with all those sick people

They might release her home Monday or Tuesday after hitting her with antibiotics.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 9:28 am
by JesusA
You've got at least a day (maybe two or three) to finally relax and catch up on lost sleep. Maybe you can even get out of the house for a while without worrying about your mother.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 9:36 am
by Beau Geste (imported)
In Hawaii, where one of my relatives once lived, geckos are used for roach control. I don't know if you can get rid of all the insects with a reasonable number of geckos. And then, of course, you have the reptiles running all over the place, which could be as bad a having roaches. There is some common substance other than the copper sulfate that Kristoff mentions, which is toxic to roaches. It is something quite alkaline, but I don't remember what the stuff is exactly. I've been told that the number of roaches can be reduced by taping over the cracks where they hide or filling the cracks with silicone rubber, plastic wood, or something of the kind, but, of course, an older house has a great many places where roaches can reside.
Keeping the kitchen and other places where roaches might find food spotlessly clean also will theoretically reduce the number of the bugs. But it's very difficult to remove all possible food sources for the roaches. Kristoff is, incidentally, correct in saying that you have to get the poison into the walls to have any hope of killing off an insect population. This is also true for ants. One method for killing ants is to take off the faceplates from outlets and light switches, and taping containers with the poison in them on the junction boxes in the walls.
I only had a problem with roaches one time when I lived in Southern California, and that was on an occasion when somebody moved out across the hall, and all his roaches migrated to surrounding apartments. Only lasted about a week until I had them all killed, though.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 11:41 am
by Bagoas (imported)
I have heard that cockroaches have been observed running around on operating nuclear reactors which are so radioactive that no human could survive being in the containment structure with them for even a few minutes.
They have been around since the Carboniferous Period, their heyday about 250,000,000 years ago, when they were as large as 6" long. They will probably still be here long after the human race is extinct.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 2:40 pm
by A-1 (imported)
Now there is an idea for a story...
A Cock Roast on a Nuclear Reactor...what's that?>>> OH! CockroaCH!
...nevermind...


Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 3:27 pm
by MacTheWolf (imported)
I heard a rumor in the late seventies that sensible people avoided the El Cortez Hotel in San Deigo. It seems its basement was inhabited by dozens of carboniferous cockroaches which often made it to the higher levels.
If you had paid for a room, imagine your horror of going out of your room to the Coke machine in the hall and meeting up with a six-foot long cockroach.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Mon Jan 08, 2007 2:28 am
by MacTheWolf (imported)
I just now gave the x-ray department at the hospital permission to do a cat-scan on mom's lungs. It appears she has a "mass" in her lungs that they want to examine closer.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2007 5:50 am
by MacTheWolf (imported)
I like to think of myself as fairly intelligent...at least in some areas.
However, not in business/financial matters.
I hemmed and hawed and ignored filling out the Conservatorship papers because they are too deep for my brain to understand. I've tried several times and they are a tough read.
I say this now because a social worker just left inspecting my house. Because of my roach problem, she is recommending mom be placed in a care facility permamently. I'd hire a lawyer to fight but, without funds, that makes my attempt mute.
The social worker said she'd file for mom's income as well. When that goes through, I'll have nothing to cover the utilities, let alone a luxury item called food.
Yup, I'm an idiot.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2007 6:12 am
by tinydick (imported)
bloody social workers cause more problems than they solve i hope you resolve all your problems and have the strength to get through all your problems i might not know you personally but my thoughts are with you at this time
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2007 11:13 am
by A-1 (imported)
tinydick (imported) wrote: Thu Jan 11, 2007 6:12 am
bloody social workers cause more problems than they solve i hope you resolve all your problems and have the strength to get through all your problems i might not know you personally but my thoughts are with you at this time
I agree.
It might take a village, but it does not take a village idiot...you're not the idiot, Mackie.
People are funny. I would question extraordinary life-saving surgeries if your mother's mass turns out to be malignant.
They cannot file to get your mother's incomw without proving you unfit. Tell me, does this social worker come from the hospital or the welfare department?
If she is hospital you had better file for medicade for your mother before they do it. The welfare cannot take the house if you have nowhere else to go.
Find a legal aid society and go ask for help...
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2007 11:19 am
by MacTheWolf (imported)
A nurse at the hospital suggested a two gallon spray from the local Home Depot to kill the roaches. I bought it. Tonight I'll clear out all the dishes, jars and packaged food from the kitchen. Then I'll spray every cupboard, countertop, corner, cracks, hidden area, etc. Hopefully by morning I'll see results.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2007 12:46 pm
by Daughter (imported)
I'll pray for a quick death of those multi-legged creepy bastards..

Good luck..!!
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2007 1:52 pm
by Riverwind (imported)
Yes, me too, I wish them a quick and very painful death.
Macie, Call for free leagle aid which will help you to fight this Low Life do gooder called a social worker.
I wish you and your mom the best,
River
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2007 1:59 pm
by kristoff
MacTheWolf (imported) wrote: Thu Jan 11, 2007 11:19 am
A nurse at the hospital suggested a two gallon spray from the local Home Depot to kill the roaches. I bought it. Tonight I'll clear out all the dishes, jars and packaged food from the kitchen. Then I'll spray every cupboard, countertop, corner, cracks, hidden area, etc. Hopefully by morning I'll see results.
Follow behind in the AM with the vacuum with hose. vacuum up every little bit of carcass and evidence too. If you have to periodically (weekly) spray into every crack crevice, wall cavity accessible, crawl space, etc. That'll usually do it. But get the carcasses out before the SS (social services - same thing) sees them. Carcasses are the same as the live ones as far as they're concerned....
And A-1 is very correct about Legal Aid or similar. This is the very kind of thing they exist for.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2007 3:43 pm
by Blaise (imported)
kristoff wrote: Thu Jan 11, 2007 1:59 pm
Follow behind in the AM with the vacuum with hose. vacuum up every little bit of carcass and evidence too. If you have to periodically (weekly) spray into every crack crevice, wall cavity accessible, crawl space, etc. That'll usually do it. But get the carcasses out before the SS (social services - same thing) sees them. Carcasses are the same as the live ones as far as they're concerned....
And A-1 is very correct about Legal Aid or similar. This is the very kind of thing they exist for.
Sounds like excellent advice. Probably, there is a legal service for poor people--that handles civil cases.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Fri Jan 12, 2007 3:25 am
by MacTheWolf (imported)
A hospital social worker just called me. I assured her the house was clean and that I am actively engaged in combatting the roaches. She "seemed" reassured.
She said my mom is receiving intra-veinous solutions to fight her pneumonia. The hospital social workere reccommended mom go to a nursing home for two weeks so she can continue to receive her IV medications . I can't do her needles so I agreed. The social worker said, "after two weeks your mom can go home."
That bitchy county social worker hasn't returned since I sprayed. BTW, the spraying was ineffective. Yes, I found thousands of dead roaches on the floor and in the cupboards this morning. However, there are hundreds more running on the walls and ceiling. I'm beginning to think that tenting might be the only way to rid myself of them.
And tenting is too prohibitively costly.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Fri Jan 12, 2007 8:41 am
by kristoff
MacTheWolf (imported) wrote: Fri Jan 12, 2007 3:25 am
A hospital social worker just called me. I assured her the house was clean and that I am actively engaged in combatting the roaches. She "seemed" reassured.
She said my mom is receiving intra-veinous solutions to fight her pneumonia. The hospital social workere reccommended mom go to a nursing home for two weeks so she can continue to receive her IV medications . I can't do her needles so I agreed. The social worker said, "after two weeks your mom can go home."
That bitchy county social worker hasn't returned since I sprayed. BTW, the spraying was ineffective. Yes, I found thousands of dead roaches on the floor and in the cupboards this morning. However, there are hundreds more running on the walls and ceiling. I'm beginning to think that tenting might be the only way to rid myself of them.
And tenting is too prohibitively costly.
Keep spraying! It does work. If needed, check around and read content labels. Get different brands/chemicals... Multi-task, er attack em
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Fri Jan 12, 2007 10:32 am
by Riverwind (imported)
Not only that but you must keep the grease picked up, use some bleach, they dont like that. A good cleaning and a good spraying daily will get rid of them.
River
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Fri Jan 12, 2007 2:46 pm
by scottTx (imported)
Cheap, dirty and works! Get some jar lids, put in boric acid (borax) and deposit under the frig etc and where the roach critters run. Doesn't hurt to mix in some flour and bacon drippings. Look up 'roach boric acid' on google.
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Sat Jan 13, 2007 1:03 am
by A-1 (imported)
The bug cases, (eggs) can survive for quite some time. You have to keep up the poisoning routine until all have hatched out and died or you sterilize all of the eggs with substances that are toxic to them...sometimes this takes dedication and months...look here...
Life History
Periplaneta americana
The Oothecae contain 14 to 28 eggs. Incubation time for the eggs is temperature dependant and hatching takes approximately 35 days at 30 degrees C and 59 days at 20 degrees C. Incubation time is more temperature dependant for Periplaneta americana than for any other species of Cockroach so far studied. Nymphs take between 4.5 and 15 months or longer to reach maturity depending on the temperature and the availability of food, females normally undergo 9 moults while males normally take 13. Life expectancy ranges from 2 to 4 years and a female can produce 30 oothecae resulting in 1000 young before dying of old age.
Source...
http://www.earthlife.net/insects/blatodea.html
Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20
Posted: Sat Jan 13, 2007 1:09 am
by A-1 (imported)