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What do you do for a living?

Assuming I got that right, that's the coolest description I've ever read for an ambulance driver! :lol:

I'm sure you don't mean anything negative, but there are a number of professionals in EMS who take offense to the term "ambulance driver." Especially if they're paramedics.

I have a degree and a scope of practice equal to and in some ways beyond an RN.

I usually don't mind unless it's someone who should know better.
 
and an example of medical humour (which is almost as bad as biologist humour :D )

Is there still a heatwave in the US? I imagine with that you'll have a lot of elderly patients with heart failure, stroke and other blood-pressure related problems.

There weather down here's a pretty average summer. Upper 90s, high humidity, occasional rain. Heat isn't as much a problem overall as people are pretty used to it.
 
RN myself......and I agree with the scope of practice sometimes being exceeding by a paramedic. I don't intubate :) and a few other things.

Oh and don't get me started on our weather :)
 
Assuming I got that right, that's the coolest description I've ever read for an ambulance driver! :lol:

I'm sure you don't mean anything negative, but there are a number of professionals in EMS who take offense to the term "ambulance driver." Especially if they're paramedics.

I have a degree and a scope of practice equal to and in some ways beyond an RN.

I usually don't mind unless it's someone who should know better.
Yeah, definitely didn't mean anything negative, but now I know better! I get a bit squeamish around anything medical, so I tend to give that whole world a wide berth.
 
and an example of medical humour (which is almost as bad as biologist humour :D )

Is there still a heatwave in the US? I imagine with that you'll have a lot of elderly patients with heart failure, stroke and other blood-pressure related problems.

There weather down here's a pretty average summer. Upper 90s, high humidity, occasional rain. Heat isn't as much a problem overall as people are pretty used to it.

The Northeast, where I live, has been excessively hot this year, and it seems to rain every other day.

Most of the country is in a drought and going through a heat wave, which does not bode well for fighting off wildfires.

In the farming heavy states, corn is dying, cattle are being slaughtered since there is nothing to feed them, and crops in general suck. Can't wait to pay twice as much for groceries next year.
 
in Bavaria spring and summer have been dry but not too hot with a medium-high risk of wildfires. The heat wave has only just started last week so that we'll have an average crop. Wheat, rye, barley and corn even better than usual (but the latter is used almost exclusively as silage for feeding dairy cows and pigs). It's been too dry for potatoes, our main vegetable, and for cabbage too, so no good Sauerkraut and dumpling harvest this year ;)

The heat is taking its toll on the elderly. I live near the local hospital and the helicopter flies over my house about 5-6 times a day atm. The average is 4 times a week. Lots of strokes, heart attacks, sudden drops in blood pressure; accidents from lack of concentration and the occasional case of dehydration or heat stroke.
I don't envy the emergency services guys - they must work overtime atm, I guess. Nor the personnel at the hospitals or the patients: over here hardly any building has air condition. On hot days we lower the blinds and air during the night when it's cool, but most hospitals lie rather exposed so that the helicopters can land and without shady trees in the vicinity the walls heat up considerably.
At my office, I fight the heat by starting work at 6 am and sticking my feet in a bucket of cold water hidden under my desk. Plus I have a wet bedsheet hanging across the open window (evaporation is cool! Literally :D)

I pity the firemen in their dark uniforms and thick protection gear!
 
in Bavaria spring and summer have been dry but not too hot with a medium-high risk of wildfires. The heat wave has only just started last week so that we'll have an average crop. Wheat, rye, barley and corn even better than usual (but the latter is used almost exclusively as silage for feeding dairy cows and pigs). It's been too dry for potatoes, our main vegetable, and for cabbage too, so no good Sauerkraut and dumpling harvest this year ;)

The heat is taking its toll on the elderly. I live near the local hospital and the helicopter flies over my house about 5-6 times a day atm. The average is 4 times a week. Lots of strokes, heart attacks, sudden drops in blood pressure; accidents from lack of concentration and the occasional case of dehydration or heat stroke.
I don't envy the emergency services guys - they must work overtime atm, I guess. Nor the personnel at the hospitals or the patients: over here hardly any building has air condition. On hot days we lower the blinds and air during the night when it's cool, but most hospitals lie rather exposed so that the helicopters can land and without shady trees in the vicinity the walls heat up considerably.
At my office, I fight the heat by starting work at 6 am and sticking my feet in a bucket of cold water hidden under my desk. Plus I have a wet bedsheet hanging across the open window (evaporation is cool! Literally :D)

I pity the firemen in their dark uniforms and thick protection gear!


Is there not a Das Walmart you can drive over to and pick up a window unit?
 
Just got some good news, my days as a welfare snitch are numbered! In a few weeks I will be starting a new job adjudicating appeals of drivers licence suspensions (primarily for impaired driving) and ignition interlock orders.

For those that may be thinking it, I assure you that the irony is not lost on me. :alienblush:
 
Just got some good news, my days as a welfare snitch are numbered! In a few weeks I will be starting a new job adjudicating appeals of drivers licence suspensions (primarily for impaired driving) and ignition interlock orders.

For those that may be thinking it, I assure you that the irony is not lost on me. :alienblush:

I feel I remember what you're referring to, but I'm not sure if it was you or another poster, sorry. The irony is the about the licence part of the job, right? If so, the phrase "poacher turned gamekeeper" has rarely been more appropriate. :cool:
 
I just started my third year teaching high school chemistry. It's kind of an awesome job.
 
Is there not a Das Walmart you can drive over to and pick up a window unit?
No, that's no option, I'm afraid. AC units are very expensive, hard to get and not common in Germany. We consider them a waste of energy and not "environmentally correct". Even most hospitals don't have any. Instead, we invest in better thermic isolation and build our houses so that they don't heat up too much (not so many windows facing south, for example).
Indoors it's usually nicely cool. The prob is outdoors. Today it's rainly and pleasantly cool, though :)

As for jobs: tomorrow I have a PR event. How I hate them! Gotta show life water animals to an expected 6.000 people (not so life animals, after they got poked and harrassed by the first 50). The press and TV will be there and there are bound to be highly unpleasant questions about water pollution and why we always blame the poor farmers for it (well, because sadly it's them in 99% of all cases, with all their herbicides, fertilizer and corn mono-cultures).
And at the last minute I learned that I must give a highly annoying colleague a lift to the event. Can't deny it as he outranks me. But the driver picks the music and I am planning to bring my worst heavy metal CD. And Purcell's arias for two countre tenors as alternative. That should suffice to give the guy a nervous breakdown :devil:
 
Is there not a Das Walmart you can drive over to and pick up a window unit?
No, that's no option, I'm afraid. AC units are very expensive, hard to get and not common in Germany. We consider them a waste of energy and not "environmentally correct". Even most hospitals don't have any. Instead, we invest in better thermic isolation and build our houses so that they don't heat up too much (not so many windows facing south, for example).
Indoors it's usually nicely cool. The prob is outdoors. Today it's rainly and pleasantly cool, though :)

Wow, I wouldn't want to be in a hospital in the summer w/o AC.

But I'm with you on the rest. I don't have AC in my house, just a ceiling fan in every room. That's unusual around here. I can't tell you how many neighbors have offered me their (very old and inefficient) unused window units because they assume I can't afford to buy one. The reality is that I don't want one.
 
With the kind of heatwave we've had this year, I can't imagine living without an A/C.

That being said, I've seen at least two different companies (one here in Omaha, the other in NJ) which have used the phrase "Your wife is hot. Get her a/c fixed!" in their ads. :lol:
 
LOL ingenious slogan! Btw, if I am not mistaken we had nobody in this thread yet who is in the advertizing business. Would that mean, they are no Trekkies or that they are too busy to post on board, I wonder?
 
I'm a technical translator and proofreader. Currently, I am translating a catalogue of staplers and other office paraphernalia from German into Portuguese and English.
 
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