Lockdown diaries - COVID-19 matters!

What are you going to be doing during the lockdown?

  • At home. I’m non essential

    Votes: 70 41.2%
  • Working. The virus doesn’t scare me

    Votes: 41 24.1%
  • On standby

    Votes: 10 5.9%
  • Working from home. Too essential to take any risk!

    Votes: 66 38.8%

  • Total voters
    170
  • Poll closed .
THE FORECAST PETROL PRICE FOR JULY 2020
Taking these forecasts and first estimates into account, here’s what you can expect to pay for fuel (price-per-litre) from the first week of July onwards. However, we have to stress that these mid-month estimates are liable to change by the time the Department of Energy set next month’s costs in stone.

COASTAL
  • Petrol: R14.29
  • Diesel: R12.28
INLAND
  • Petrol: R14.79
  • Diesel: R12.88

My car has done a total of just under 1800km since 21 January.
Realized last night when I started up to run some charge to the battery.
 
My car has done a total of just under 1800km since 21 January.
Realized last night when I started up to run some charge to the battery.
I have driven about 7600 Kms in the past month to work and surroundings excluding the necessary run around at home.
 
I have driven about 7600 Kms in the past month to work and surroundings excluding the necessary run around at home.

Yoh that's alot. I usually doe about 1000 to 1500km a month for work - office return trip is only about 25km, plus the extra client visits etc as needed.

I know my old man does about 120000km a year.
Still no idea where he goes because he is office based and his return trip for work is like 40km a day.
I think it's all his weekend fishing trips and associated nonsense lol.
 
Yoh that's alot. I usually doe about 1000 to 1500km a month for work - office return trip is only about 25km, plus the extra client visits etc as needed.

I know my old man does about 120000km a year.
Still no idea where he goes because he is office based and his return trip for work is like 40km a day.
I think it's all his weekend fishing trips and associated nonsense lol.
+/- 200km return +the run around while there between the two different construction zones on site. Then about 24km return from home to pickup/meeting point.
 
+/- 200km return +the run around while there between the two different construction zones on site. Then about 24km return from home to pickup/meeting point.

Ook ek! I feel you, also doing 200km to work and back every day. Man it gets tiring. But it's worth being able to work during these times.
 
Ook ek! I feel you, also doing 200km to work and back every day. Man it gets tiring. But it's worth being able to work during these times.
Would like to take the trip in a sponsored sports car one day.:facepalm: or maybe hire a two seater and drive with the Mrs.:pontiac:
 
Day 82 -
Popped into work to do another calendar sample for the same customer , they're not happy with the prev pictures ...it took longer to get through security , temp check , bracelet , clocking in , signing in than to do the samples , The factory is freezing and there is about 10 ppl working out of about 60/70. My travelling = 22 km a day there and back .
Stats : Sitting at 76334 -2810 up
Deaths :1625
 
Some veiled threats about alcohol in the President's speech tonight, don't you think?

I’m afraid I’ve completely stopped caring what he has to say. He’s a man without a plan and clearly in thrall to ‘the collective’.
 
Some veiled threats about alcohol in the President's speech tonight, don't you think?

Saw the gazette they published this past week (SARS) relating to the excise deferral for alcohol/tobacco.
I worry when I see deferral of payments being gazetted.

'
This rule applies to tobacco products, beer, wine (including
vermouth), other fermented beverages and spirits and
other spirituous beverages in respect of which payment of
excise duties are due during the period commencing 1 May
2020 and ending 30 June 2020.
(b) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any
rule, a licensee of a customs and excise warehouse
contemplated in section 19A liable for the payment of
excise duty in respect of excisable goods to which this rule
applies who is excise compliant, may defer the payment
of such excise duty by a period not exceeding 90 days:
Provided that the applicable excise duty accounts in
respect of such warehouse shall, despite the deferral of
payment, be submitted on the dates prescribed or as
determined by the Commissioner. '
 
Beijing Announces Emergency Alert ‘Level Two’ And Shuts Schools As A Response To A New COVID-19 Outbreak
https://iheartintelligence.com/beij...ools-as-a-response-to-a-new-covid-19-outbreak
17 June 2020

Coronavirus strikes again: Beijing has ordered all primary and secondary schools to close doors and start practicing online teaching from June 17.

China officials are taking this measure to battle a new coronavirus outbreak, as the recent cases have risen to over a hundred.

As Mail Online reports, the current crisis in the Chinese capital was caused by contaminated goods. Interpersonal communication could also be one of the reasons, according to the city’s officials.

On Tuesday, June 16, another 27 Beijing residents have tested positive for coronavirus. All of them had connections with the Xinfadi market. According to the city’s government, the massive food wholesale market is thought to have spawned the new health crisis. The virus strain found inside Xinfadi likely came from Europe, a researcher from the Beijing Centre for Diseases Prevention and Control claims.

Beijing authorities have intensified the city’s COVID-19 emergency response alert from ‘level three’ to ‘level two’.
What’s more, the government now classifies the event as a ‘severe’ public health emergency.

People living near the market or have visited it in the past two weeks are prohibited from leaving the Chinese capital. The rest of the Beijing population will be allowed to travel outside the city only if they have tested negative for the virus within the past seven days.

On Saturday, the Xinfadi market’s chairman, Zhang Yuxi, revealed that researchers had found traces of the novel coronavirus on a chopping board used to cut imported salmon. Yuxi explained:

“The result of the inspection was a notification received on the morning of June 12, and through our self-examination, the source of the imported salmon was the Beijing-Shenzhen seafood market. Currently, 9 staff members involved in salmon in the new market have been tested for new coronavirus. Their results are temporarily negative and they are currently in isolation.”

However, the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) claimed there is no evidence showing salmon was the host of the virus.

Beijing residents are now forced into quarantine as the city goes back into a lockdown regime.
This comes after mass testing in the capital resulting in drastic lockdown measures. In recent days, COVID-19 cases in the city have spiked, reaching more than a hundred. Authorities locked down nearly 30 communities in the city and tested tens of thousands of people.

WHO emergencies director Mike Ryan said:
“A cluster like this is a concern and it needs to be investigated and controlled – and that is exactly what the Chinese authorities are doing.”

According to Beijing city spokesman Xu Hejian, the current epidemic situation is ‘extremely severe’.

Additionally, Vice Premier Sun Chunlan urged the city’s officials to impose ‘the strictest’ virus control measures to contain the spread of the virus. In response, Beijing officials assured they would test stall owners and managers at all of its food markets, restaurants, and government canteens.

In addition to the quarantine regime, the capital’s transport commission also banned taxi- and ride-hailing services from carrying passengers out of the city. Moreover, all indoor sports and entertainment venues in Beijing were ordered to shut on Monday. Meanwhile, some other cities across China warned they would quarantine arrivals from the capital.

The National Health Commission reported four new domestic infections in Hebei province, surrounding the capital.
Another case from Sichuan province was reportedly linked to the Beijing cluster.

Yang Zhanqiu, the deputy director of the pathogen biology department at Wuhan University, suggests that the high number of new cases could mean a more infectious new virus strain. He believes that in case the virus spreading in Beijing ‘matches the type of virus sampled in the Xinfadi market and from Europe’, then it was most likely imported by people or goods from Europe.

According to Yang, the new strains of the virus make finding a vaccination more challenging:
“No doubt different genotypes of the virus can cause the vaccine to be less effective, or even ineffective. That means the vaccine would have to be effective against both viruses circulating in China and those in Europe, adding difficulty to developing a vaccine.”

‘Wartime mechanism’ in the Fengtai district, where the market is based was announced on Saturday.

They will also establish a command center managing the spread of the new outbreak.

At least 11 neighborhoods near the Xinfadi market have been put under lockdown. Some areas have even been fenced off, while the government has launched a mass testing program. Around 90,000 people are affected by the restrictions.

Furthermore, several Beijing districts reestablished security checkpoints. Authorities closed primary and secondary schools in the area and ordered residents to be tested for COVID-19.

The Xinfadi market, which is believed to be the place where the new outbreak emerged, was closed in the early hours of Saturday.

Beijing Municipal Health Commission spokesperson reported that health workers had given nucleic acid tests to 76,499 people. As a result, 59 of them had been diagnosed with COVID-19.

As CNN reveals, the Fengtai district has collected samples from 8,950 people who worked in the market. So far, more than 6,000 samples have been tested, and the results are all negative. What’s more, officials had also managed to track down and collect samples from almost 30,000 people who had recently visited Xinfadi. Results have shown that the 12,000 tests conducted so far had come back negative.
 
What did CR talked about last night - anybody cared to watch ?
Edit - got some news on My B/B :

The list of industries which will be allowed to return to operation includes:
  • Restaurants for sit-down meals
  • Accredited and licensed accommodation (with the exception of home-sharing such as Airbnb)
  • Conferences and meetings for business purposes
  • Cinemas and theatres
  • Personal care services, including hairdressers and salons
  • Non-contact sports such as tennis, golf, cricket, and others
  • Contact sports for training and modified activities with restricted use of facilities
Ramaphosa noted that the above would be accommodated under the eased restrictions in line with the restrictions on public gatherings that remain in place.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top