Monday, 17 January 2022
A week ago children returned to school and
several people returned to work after holiday. I expect new cases to take off
very soon.
Tuesday, 18 January 2022
The 7-day average of new infections increases above 15,000 again, after staying
below such level for 24 days. New infections are now bound to soar, we will
follow the path of other countries.
In France 1 in 141 citizens tested positive.
Wednesday, 19 January 2022
More than 30,000 new infections, up by 89% week-on-week, the highest number
since early April 2021. The surge has started. I spend the day in the office
and meet around 30 people…
Thursday, 20 January 2022
New cases up by 95% vs. last Thursday and nearly 3,000 new infections in the
capital of Poland.
The 7-day average of new infections increases above 20,000, after staying below
such level for 34 days.
In Israel 1 in 136 citizens tested positive.
Friday, 21 January 2022
New infections up by 128% week-on-week, with a record-breaking number of new
infections. I see no point in informing about new records, since they will be
reported several times a week.
In the evening I attend a party to celebrate the success of Szlachetna Paczka after which I will
self-isolate. Putting the booster to the test…
1 in 133 citizens tested positive in Denmark.
Saturday, 22 January 2022
As I wake up into my self-isolation, I just see an increase in new by nearly
150% week-on-week. But the really ghastly piece of information is that the
number will be going up until around 10 February 2022 and reported stats will
be just the tip of the iceberg.
The 7-day average of new infections increases above 25,000, which means the
fifth wave is already higher than the second and fourth one.
Sunday, 23 January 2022
The number of patients hospitalised hits its low at 13,491. Does not bode if it
is the starting point for the Omicron
wave. Just to remind you, the starting point for the Alpha wave were 11,962 beds occupied on 14 February 2021.
The fifth wave is already higher than the third one.
Positivity rate creeps above 30%.
Monday, 24 January 2022
New infections up by 179% week-on-week.
The 7-day average of new infections increases above 30,000. From now on hitting
round number will be reported after each 10,000 more. 40,000 expected on
Thursday in an optimistic scenario. In a pessimistic one – the day after
tomorrow.
Tuesday, 25 January 2022
P1 system in which referrals for tests are issued clogged up yesterday and has
not been lifted until today afternoon. What a mess!
My employer forbids coming to the office by the end of February.
Wronki is the first municipality in Poland where 80% of residents have had at
least their first jab.
The decision to partly close schools is taken. Except for pupils up to the
fourth year of the primary schools, remote learning will be in place by 27
February.
In France 1 in 131 citizens tested positive.
Wednesday, 26 January 2022
For this day:
- on 29 October 2021 I predicted new infections would hit 4,000,000,
- on 22 December 2021 I predicted new infections would hit 5,000,000.
The outturn of 4,637,776 came closer to the latter prediction. I missed it by
363,224 infections, but it will be caught up with within a week, I suppose.
In Slovenia 1 in 119 citizens tested positive.
Thursday, 27 January 2022
From today on, each individual is allowed to take a free-of-charge antigen
rapid test in a pharmacy. In theory the opening lists of pharmacies has 64 such
places across the country, therein 3 in Warsaw and around (1 pharmacy for
1,000,000 residents). In practice tests are not delivered to pharmacies anyway,
so the efforts to boost testing are a flop.
The 7-day average of new infections increases above 40,000 – the optimistic
scenario materializes.
The number of people quarantined in Poland exceeds 1,000,000 for the first time
in history. To decrease the figure which has impact on absences in workplaces,
the government has shortened the quarantine duration from 10 to 7 days, coming
into effect on 24 January 2022 and not applying retroactively.. Add up more
than half a million in isolation and you get 4% of Poland’s population stuck at
homes.
Friday, 28 January 2022
I read the draft law of workplace testing which imposes potential financial
penalties on employees who refuse to get tested. The law is ludicrous, but I am
so underwhelmed by absurdities that I hold back from commenting on it.
In Denmark 1 in 116 citizens tested positive.
Saturday, 29 January 2022
In Warsaw as of today:
- new infections down by 13% week-on-week,
- tests carried out up by 17.5% week-on-week,
- positivity rate down by 7 p.p. from 27% to 20% week-on-week.
Hard to believe the capital has just gone past the peak. Albeit the general
trend will be disrupted by school closures and school holidays just commencing.
Sunday, 30 January 2022
Pandemic diary – weeks 97 & 98
Sunday, 23 January 2022
Behind the wheel in 2022
The most impressive flop of early 2022 is definitely the overwhelming mess subsequent to the rollout of the Nowy Ład. What goes on around the new tax legislation is a topic for a separate posting, yet today I refuse to have my nerves frayed by it. It is no secret I am not a beneficiary of it, yet I would agree to pay higher taxes, provided the tax law is simplified and tax proceeds and spent wisely. Sadly, neither the latter not the former holds true for Poland.
But wallets of motorists might be hit not only by higher taxes and other contributions, but also by fines for violations of the highway code. The penalty rates in Poland had not been revised since late 1990s and were laughably low in comparison to other countries. The fine rates for speeding, the most common offence on Polish roads have been revised upward, as shown on the chart. The lawmakers have turned out to be lenient for minor speeding, yet the higher the deviation of the actual speed from the limit, the more severity of the punishment increases. The point beyond speeding gets painfully expensive is 30 kmph. Besides, there is no flat fine for speeding above 50 kpmh, but fine amounts rise along with the scale of offence (or rather crime, given somebody driving 120 kmph in town where the speed limit is 50 kmph is already a criminal).
The upshot is that on the New Year’s Day Polish roads got similar to what I witness abroad. When venturing beyond the border of Poland I was always careful not to exceed speed limit, so that my holiday budgets were spared costly fines. Poles have been legendarily obedient abroad and careless in their homeland. Today it has changed for the majority of drivers, but I still see reckless idiots, usually in quite new premium-make oversized vehicles who do not give a damn about the higher fines. Nevertheless, the general tendency bears out a financial punishment serves best as a disincentive to commit offences.
Another change mentioned by some experts which should follow is the verification of speed limits on specific roads. I have no idea why the stretch of ul. Puławska along Wyścigi, with merely one intersection and no pedestrians crossing has lower speed limit (50 kmph) than the section between ul. Poleczki and the boundary of the city, where the speed limit is 60 kmph. I hold the view there are thoroughfares in Warsaw where speed limits could be increased by 10 or even 20 kmph, while traffic on minor roads should be calmed, as 50 kmph is far too much for several narrow streets.
Other pricing reshuffles which are taking place in early 2022 are:
- the increase in long-distance train ticket prices,
- the decrease in excise tax for fuel,
which given the effort to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, work the opposite
way round than they should.
I have taken the trouble to compare a cost of a business trip taken in 11 days (planned yesterday for 2 February) for a six-hour workshop (which cannot be held online) in another bigger city (I have chosen 4 which have decent train connections to Warsaw – Poznań, Wrocław, Kraków and Gdańsk).
My assumptions:
- my destination is located 1 kilometre from a main train station so that I can
walk there,
- start time of the workshop can be adjusted to match the train timetable,
- by car I drive door to door and pay a parking charge of 30 PLN in each city,
- I travel on my own,
- the cost of fuel is based on petrol price of 5.10 PLN per litre (envisaged
after the excise tax cut) and the average consumption of petrol is 7.0 litres
per 100 kilometres – this gives 0.357 PLN per kilometre,
- since I have no travelcard, I need to buy two 75-minute tickets each to get
to W-wa Centralna Station,
- I travel in second class by train,
- on my way to Poznań I pay motorway charges, to Gdańsk I take S7 expressway,
- the cost of car journey increases by the cost of accelerated depreciation and
higher upkeep costs on account of higher mileage – 0.10 PLN per kilometre
- journey time by car to each destination is calculated with Google Maps
(mid-time for bracket) with 30 minutes added each way,
- I need to set off to the train station 55 minutes before train departure and
return home 45 minutes after train arrival
Here come the results (cost and journey duration):
Poznań – still cheaper and faster by train
I am positively surprised by the outcomes, especially with respect to the journey duration. But note with 2 passengers the journey by car gets cheaper. Is the proportion right?
Sunday, 16 January 2022
Pandemic diary – weeks 95 & 96
Monday, 3 January 2022
Everything seems to indicate deaths peaked in
Poland yesterday, with 7-day average topping out at 466. Ghastly.
Tuesday, 4 January 2022
75% of Warsaw’s residents received at least one dose of a vaccine. Figures are
boosted by the recently launched campaign of jabbing children aged 5 – 11. In
Ustronie Morskie 75% of residents are fully vaccinated.
In Greece 1 in 206 citizens tested positive.
More than 2 million new cases reported worldwide, therein more than 1 million
in the US, the UK and France only. Deaths keep falling so far.
Wednesday, 5 January 2022
Poland’s president, with track record of infection (October 2020), double
vaccination (April / May 2021) and a booster (December 2021) is tested
positive. I am not fond of conspiracy theories, but would not be shocked if his
vaccination certificate was fake. He dislikes needles around his arm, besides
he has track record of declarations of being sceptical towards vaccinations.
Konfederacja, a Polish far-right
corona-sceptical party has its profile removed from Facebook for spread
misinformation on vaccines. The move sparks a debate on limits to freedom of
speech.
In France 1 in 197 citizens tested positive.
The United Kingdom hits its high of new infections with 7-day average topping
out at 182,069.
Thursday, 6 January 2022
Frankly speaking, I feel the same sense of uncertainty as exactly 22 months
ago, in early March 2020. Relying on maths, I expect a disaster when omicron
takes over unconstrained in Poland. Too many will pay the ultimate price.
300,000,000 officially reported cases worldwide. I believe the 400,000,000 threshold will be crossed on… 12 February 2022. Let’s see!
Friday, 7 January 2022
There are provinces in Poland such as Mazowieckie
and Małopolskie where infections
visibly rise week-on-week. Even despite scant testing on bank holiday
yesterday.
Saturday, 8 January 2022
In Ireland 1 in 192 citizens tested positive.
Records are getting harder to beat, but once the New Year’s tide ends, schools
and businesses resume full-scale operations, in some countries new infections
will break out.
Sunday, 9 January 2022
In Warsaw new infections rise by 66% week-on-week, in Kraków by 122%. You may
partly put it down to scarce testing on New Year’s Day (i.e. base effect), but
the two cities are becoming the first hotbeds of Omicron, which will soon spill over the entire country.
Monday, 10 January 2022
R(t), the reproduction number, inclines in Poland above 1.00, which means the
pandemic is taking over again, for good.
Tuesday, 11 January 2022
100,000 deaths from COVID-19 miles a sad milestone of the pandemic. Yet the
better measure of the epidemic’s death toll is a number of excess deaths which
by now has reached around 170,000.
In France 1 in 178 citizens tested positive.
Wednesday, 12 January 2022
More than 3 million new cases worldwide (3.2 million to be precise), with the
United States, India, France, Spain and Italy making up a half of the
statistics.
In Poland new infections decline by 2% week-on-week, which is positively
startling. Yet the frequency of social interactions was low by 9 January, since
schools were closed by then and many people took days off.
Thursday, 13 January 2022
In Australia 1 in 172 citizens tested positive.
Friday, 14 January 2022
In Israel 1 in 157 citizens tested positive.
In Poland 13 out of 17 members of the Medical Council (board of voluntary
advisors to the government) submit their resignations. They have had enough of
government’s indifference to their counselling and succumbing to anti-vaxxers.
Saturday, 15 January 2022
Poland has been faring better than foreseen by the prophets of doom. New
infections (7-day average) rose by merely 28% within a fortnight, while there
were countries where the figure saw a 1,000% increase. Nevertheless, it is not
the right time for complacency. Calm days will soon be over.
Sunday, 9 January 2022
Don’t look up – film review
A belated review (though Michael beats it to me), since I watched the film on 27 December, after reading several recommendations on Twitter on it.
My very first reaction before watching the film was that the title had been translated incorrectly into Polish. Don’t look up sounded to me as nie sprawdzaj, nie weryfikuj informacji. Such worked my fondness of phrasal verbs, yet I was wrong. I literally tells you not to look at the sky.
The film which premiered in cinemas on 10 December 2021 and on Netflix on Christmas Eve went absolutely viral among well-educated people I follow on Twitter during Christmas. While at my parents’ for Yuletide I could not watch it, my only access to Netflix is via application on my TV set (shared account).
Michael as he summarises the plot claims the film, dwells on dumbed down masses. The first word which sprang to my mind when I tried to describe Don’t look up with one word was ignorance. Overwhelming, dazzling, overpowering ignorance individuals feel comfortable with. A portrait of omnipresent ignorance and a bunch of pundits trying to tear down the walls of ignorance to save the planet is dejecting.
While watching the film I saw two parallels. First was about early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. In late 2019 Chinese authorities strived hard to shut mouths of doctors who warned of a perilous new virus, then their reaction to contain the spread of the virus was delayed. They failed to nip it in the bud, so now we have what we have. Second was about the global warming, which unlike the pandemic is a relatively slow process with long-term rather than immediate implications. Experts presage how bad it might get in a few decades, but politicians remain deaf to it or make inconsistent moves to combat it or just pretend they do something, not to wind up their voters with inconvenient decisions to curb carbon dioxide emission.
If I were to choose one picture which conveys the same message as the film, I would opt for the one to the right. I first saw it nearly a year ago, in the context of people who worship self-styled experts who claim SARS-CoV-2 does not exist / is as dangerous as ordinary flu, mask and vaccinations do not work, etc. Those individuals are either too thoughtless or too cowardly to face the complex situation the mankind need to get to grips with. Some humans have a tendency to deny facts which are inconvenient to them, searching for a comfort and peace of mind. I realise why this happens, but advise to rise above it.
The film deftly depicts the worst human traits – greed, selfishness, unjustified self-esteem, ignorance, laziness and many more. The moving picture is well-crafted, but has left me exhausted after watching it. If the film is meant to be an eye-opener for many, I hope it keeps going viral, though I keep in mind the human memory is short-lasting and it soon will be forgotten.
Sunday, 2 January 2022
Pandemic diary – weeks 92, 93 & 94
Monday, 13 December 2021
R(t), the reproduction number, drops in Poland
below 1.00, which means the pandemic is winding down.
Tuesday, 14 December 2021
If you look carefully at the map of new infections, you will be the epidemic
has trundled from eastern towards western Poland. In eastern provinces the
number of new infections is 5 – 10 times lower than over a month, with the
number of tests carried out holding steady.
Wednesday, 15 December 2021
New restrictions are in force as of today. The number of visitors in several
venues is limited to 30% of capacity, but holders of the COVID certificates are
excluded from the limits. Ludicrously, the government has not passed any law
empowering entrepreneurs to demand the certificates. Therefore a visitor may
voluntarily show the certificate to a enter a venue. The strategy of the Polish
government is to pretend to fight the virus and not to mess with the
anti-vaxxers.
Thursday, 16 December 2021
In Poland vaccinations of children aged 5 – 11 kick off. On the first day
around 10,000 children get their first jabs, while more than 100,000 are signed
up by their parents. No big success.
In the UK after over 88,000 new infections are reported (therein more than
23,000 in London only), the 7-day average of new infection has an all-time
high, going above level reported in early January 2021. The omicron takes over
and stands a chance to wipe out the health care system.
Friday, 17 December 2021
The 7-day average of new infections declines below 20,000, after staying above
such level for 25 days. It is a matter of less than a month before it bounces
back and returns above that level.
Saturday, 18 December 2021
The ministry of health has published some time ago a detailed database of all
infections and deaths in Poland, broken down into dates, sex, age and
vaccination status. This substantial source of analytical material has passed
unnoticed in the public discourse.
Sunday, 19 December 2021
I thought fake vaccination certificates were a marginal problem in Poland, yet
more and more frequent news of hospitalised patients admitting to have bought
one suggests the scale of the forgery is larger than I supposed. A fake
certificate is an expense of 500 – 2,000 PLN.
Monday, 20 December 2021
Early in the morning I get my booster shot. After 2 doses of Pfizer I mix it up
with Moderna, which is meant to boost my antibody count. Tomorrow I will learn
that only 6.5% of Poland’s population aged 25 – 49 has taken the booster on
that day and 14.7% of the entire population. Too little to bode well.
Off-topic: today the tunnel beneath
Ursynów is opened; thus the Southern Bypass of Warsaw is completed.
Tuesday, 21 December 2021
I look at Omicron-related data from South Africa and wonder whether the world
is not overreacting. The surge there was short, reversed quickly and did not
result in many hospital admissions nor death. Keeping an eye on the UK.
Wednesday, 22 December 2021
On 29 October 2021 when the number of officially detected cases exceeded
3,000,000 I predicted the number of new infections would hit 4,000,000 on 26
January 2022. I got it wrong, by 35 days. The fourth million was reached within
merely 54 days. For comparison:
- the first million was reported within 275 days,
- the second million was reported within 105 days,
- the third million was reported within 224 days.
I foresee 5,000,000 mark will be crossed on… 26 January 2022.
775 deaths reported on that day come as a negative surprise to me.
Keeping an eye on the UK – so witnessed over 106,000 new registered infections.
I suspect 7-day average of new infections peaks out at around 130,000 (got it wrong already).
Thursday, 23 December 2021
More than 980,000 cases registered worldwide breaks the previous record of less
than 905,000 new infections reported in late April 2021, when Delta was in overdrive in India. One
million will probably be hit next week and I safely bet two millions will be
detected on one day in January 2022.
Friday, 24 December 2021
Deaths (7-day average) peak at 453, lower than during the previous waves
(604 in spring 2021, 506 in autumn 2020). Vaccines save lives, but not for
thousands of families who will sit at Christmas tables in mourning.
Saturday, 25 December 2021
The 7-day average of new infections declines below 15,000, after staying
above such level for 39 days. The metric will see an accelerated decline
because of scant testing during the festive period. I predict it will bottom
out sustainably somewhere around 9,000 cases.
Sunday, 26 December 2021
178 vaccine doses administered yesterday in Poland. I realise it is Christmas,
but warfare against the virus ought to continue.
Monday, 27 December 2021
The Omicron wave, even if
patients do not clog up hospitals and if a hard lockdown is not imposed, might
have economic implications. A large number of infected isolated and persons in
contact with them quarantined might paralyse the country.
Tuesday, 28 December 2021
In Malta 1 in 342 citizens tested positive yesterday. I believe such records
will be broken several times in coming weeks.
Worldwide more than 1,200,000 new cases reported, with several countries on
northern hemisphere breaking records. 2,000,000 expected next week.
R(t) in Poland bottoms out at 0.68.
Wednesday, 29 December 2021
In Denmark 1 in 264 citizens tested positive. This wave will definitely have a
high tide, but will burn out quickly, hopefully with few fatalities
Thursday, 30 December 2021
In Ireland 1 in 244 citizens tested positive. Experts say this is not the last
word.
Friday, 31 December 2021
Today could have been the turning point between the fourth and the fifth wave,
with 7-day average of new infections bottoming out at 10,774. Or this was just
the effect of increased testing on New Year’s Eve vs. Christmas Eve. I hope the
latter explanation is correct.
And the customary month-end report of the sluggish pace of vaccinations in
Poland.
1. Vaccine uptake in age groups – sadly ECDC has taken a Christmas break, so
this time a bit outdated, but in a new layout, with a booster.
2. Vaccination status in the entire population of Poland
Saturday, 1 January 2022
In Warsaw alone 6 more new infections than a week ago. For some 6 weeks the clear trend of 20% week-on-week decline was visible. It is the thing of the past probably.
Don't know whether delays in reporting are to blame, but 7-day average of new deaths reaches a new high of 464.
In Ireland 1 in 216 citizens tested positive. This wave will be a flash.
Sunday, 26 December 2021
Szlachetna Paczka 2021 , past the final weekend.
As some of the readers might remember, my experience with Szlachetna Paczka last year was rather bitter and shortly after the 2020 edition was over, I was intent on giving up on it (as a volunteer).
In mid-2021, as the virus eased and the vaccination programme was giving hope to put the pandemic closer to an end, I reconsidered my decision. In July, when I learnt a fellow volunteer had been appointed the leader of Ursynów area, I have made up my mind to join.
This year we started out early and closed our ranks in early September to look out for families which could become beneficiaries of programme. Thanks to concerted efforts we have managed to visit 74 families (vs. around 30 in 2020) and decided to organise aid for 46 of them (vs. 14 in 2020); thus we achieved a decent hit ratio of 62%.
I personally visited 15 families, 9 of them were brought in, for 4 I was a primary volunteer, which meant I had to do all the paperwork for them and co-ordinate contact with donators.
Back in July I was appointed to be in charge of logistics. This meant I had to find a centre of operations (magazyn) for the final weekend. I have fixed us up with the space in a newly opened Ursynowskie Centrum Kultury “Alternatywy”. The location and the very facilities have turned out to be a perfect venue. I have also drawn up a plan for collection and distribution of gift packages. Picking up 46 packages from donators and transporting them to 46 families seemed a big challenge, but thanks to an excellent planning (I will not spare myself praise this time) and execution (hats down to fellow volunteers), it all worked like a dream.
Human-wise, delivering packages to families, seeing their emotions and hoping the aid would kick-start them and open a door towards a better tomorrow brought off a lot of joy.
Although delivery of packages is over, the edition has not come to an end. I shall visit my families in coming weeks to see how they are faring and help them overcome some of barrier that hold them back.
Although we definitely pulled it off in 2021, there are lessons to be learnt before the 2022 edition in which I will definitely get involved. Firstly, we will start even earlier. Secondly, donators will need to instructed how to pack the gifts (nobody feels like lugging huge boxes whose weights reached 30 kilograms) and their preferences regarding pick-up timing will need to be agreed earlier. Thirdly, volunteers ought to handle transport of furniture and heavy white goods well ahead of the final weekend, so that those gifts do not go through the centre of operations.
Sunday, 19 December 2021
A collision
2 November 2021
Early morning. After spending much of the long weekend at my girlfriend’s
mother’s I have decided to wake up at 5:30 a.m. and return home before the
morning rush hour. Streets are nearly empty, so the drive is smooth. Less than
a kilometre from home I am on the right lane of ul. Belgradzka, driving exactly at the speed limit of 50 kmph. A
red Toyota Yaris on the left lane trundles slowly, probably is about to do an
illegal U-turn. My prediction of a fellow driver’s intention is wrong. She swerves
right unexpectedly, trying to turn right from the left lane into a roadside car
park and hits the left side of my Megane.
My car is turned around and pushed into the lanes running in the opposite
direction. Fortunately, no car is there, so a serious smash-up is averted.
After cooling down for a moment I fire up the engine and cautiously pull
up into the car park. I get out. The damage to the vehicle is not as bad as I
thought. The culprit of the accident right away admits her fault. Without undue
unrest we set off to a nearby meat shop where she was supposed to have a
training, to fill in the accident form I used to keep in the glove compartment for
years. Suddenly it comes in useful.
Half an hour later I return home. I am still a bit of nervous, but first
things first. I go to Lidl to do the shopping, eat breakfast, get down to work
to handle the most urgent stuff. As business is taken care of, I learn what my
rights in this situation are and how to ensure the car is repaired properly.
Early in the afternoon I report the accident to the culprit’s insurer (Uniqa).
4 November 2021
After two days of not being contacted by any representative of Uniqa, I call them. It turns out my
accident report went astray and had to be recovered from the abyss of similar
reports manually.
An hour later I pick up the phone and they already offer me a repair of
my vehicle at Alfa Romeo’s garage. I refuse to have my car repaired by a
different garage than a Renault authorised dealership. Then they offer me cash.
I also turn down that proposal.
After two hours of studying my rights carefully I call Uniqa again and disconnect after exercising
my right to have my car repaired by professionals and with original spare parts.
The damages will be paid directly to the garage.
5 November 2021
I turn up at Renault Warszawa
Puławska to have the sighting of the car. I sign documents which entitle
the garage to claim the costs of the repair from the insurer. Since my car is
theoretically roadworthy (but practically it ought to be driven cautiously,
since the left-rear rim is dented and nobody knows whether undercarriage geometry
is correct) I am not eligible for a substitute car. I hence have to borrow a
company car if I am to move around safely.
Advised by a friend, I calculate the car’s value at Uniqa’s page, just in case they claim the cost of repair is above
the car’s market value.
9 November 2021
The valuation of the repair is drawn up. It would cost approximately
15,000 PLN to restore the car to its pre-accident shape. Fortunately, this is well
below the car’s market value, which is around 24,000 PLN.
11 November 2021
I hope for the best, but prepare for the worst, hence I download a guide
on supreme court ruling which states the rights of drivers whose cars were damaged
in accidents by other drivers. Just in case I brace for a nasty dispute with Uniqa.
15 November 2021
A car rental company contracts me. They want to fix me up with Kia Sportage, a SUV. I detest SUVs,
besides, that car consumes 40% more petrol than my Megane. I kindly ask them go give me a compact car, if they lack
one, a small city car.
16 November 2021
After two weeks of waiting I drive my car off to Renault Warszawa Puławska, then pick up the substitute car, which eventually
is a Renault Megane IV sedan, with
1.5 diesel engine, automatic gearbox and nearly 60,000 kilometres on the clock.
The car, driven by tens if not hundreds of drivers is rickety.
19 November 2021
I receive a letter from Uniqa. The
insurer informs they have resolved to pay out 50% of compensation to Renault
garage and pledge to pay the remaining half once an invoice is issued.
Finance-wise all goes well.
21 November 2021
I park the substitute car in my garage and discover a scratch on the front
bumper. Needless to say I refused to pay for insuring against my participation
in the damage. I find the paint code and order a 10 ml paint with a brush on Allegro.
23 November 2021
For no apparent reason the car rental company wants the car back immediately,
as the clock went past 60,000 kilometres and they need to have it serviced. I
lie I am not home and cannot give the car back.
24 November 2021
The car paint does not arrive at my Paczkomat,
although shoes for Szlachetna Paczka
ordered on Monday came yesterday. I lie again to the car rental company I am
away from home and the car stayed at home and cannot hand it over. Fortunately
in the evening the paint arrives.
25 November 2021
I spend an hour in the morning cold carefully removing and painting the
scratch. The effect is not awesome, but when a guy from the car rental company
turns up at 4:00 p.m., he inspects the car carefully with a smartphone scorch
and does not find the scratch. Several hundred zlotys are saved in my wallet. I
pick up a Hyundai i30 with 1.0 engine from a lawn mower, with an automatic
gearbox, which I dislike.
1 December 2021
I drive to Pyry to pick up a washing
machine delivered to one of families I look after in Szlachetna Paczka. On my way there, the locking system conks out
and driver’s door opens while I cross a speed bump. It’s all downhill now I
hope.
7 December 2021
I pick up the car from repair. Done professionally, at the cost close to
two-third of the vehicle’s value, but I do not give a damn about that expense. I
am finally happy to have my well-run-in, looked-after reliable car with manual
gearbox. With hindsight, I discover that the window opening mechanism in the
left-rear door replaced during the repair does not work correctly. It will be
fixed free of charge after Christmas.
Sunday, 12 December 2021
Pandemic diary – weeks 90 & 91
Monday, 29 November 2021
In reaction to the new Variant of Concern (Omicron) the government announces
tightened restrictions, which are… laughable and not enforceable.
Tuesday, 30 November 2021
Over the weekend I need to part with my girlfriend for a while. She moved to
look after her (unvaccinated) mother down with COVID-19. Her saturation varies
from 90% to 93%.
And customary month-end report of the sluggish pace of vaccinations in Poland.
1. Vaccine uptake in age groups – age groups reported by ECDC have been changed
and booster status has been sorted out.
2. Vaccination status in the entire population of Poland
Wednesday, 1 December 2021
My girlfriend’s mother boosts today’s statistics of new infections. She will be isolated until 9 December, but actually is recovering. I believe it takes weeks before she pulls through.
Thursday, 2 December 2021
During the current wave infections of children aged below 12 are prevalent. Lots of friends whose offspring go to nursery or elementary schools now see their daughters and son down with COVID-19 (i.e. no longer asymptomatic carriers).
Friday, 3 December 2021
In Slovakia 1 in 358 citizens was tested positive the day before, in which the country sets the new record, hard to be broken, unless we underestimate potential of Omicron and testing capacities.
Saturday, 4 December 2021
70% of Warsaw’s population fully vaccinated. No idea how many unvaccinated słoiki hang around, no idea, how many of those people have deceased in the meantime, how many had previously been infected, how many no longer have antibodies, how many have had a booster. Statistics seem good for nothing.
Sunday, 5 December 2021
Ustronie Morskie as the first gmina in Poland reaches the threshold of 75% of population vaccinated with at least one dose.
Monday, 6 December 2021
Number of new infections reported within last 7 days: 163,687
Number of first doses administered within last 7 days: 161,593
The figures speak for themselves.
Tuesday, 7 December 2021
More than 2,000 patients on ventilators. Hospitals in Warsaw.
With hindsight – the Delta wave hits its peak of new infections with 7-day average of 23,425; lower than during two previous waves. Officially.
Wednesday, 8 December 2021
After a stay in hospital last week, my mother has symptoms of potential infection. She refuses to get the referral for a regular PCR test, so I buy an antigen test in a pharmacy and learn how to conduct it on my own. The result is clearly negative.
4 days later – all symptoms are gone
Thursday, 9 December 2021
The chart of new infections shows a plateau. Since 28 November the 7-day average number of new infections has been in a narrow range from 23,100 to 23,500 daily.
Friday, 10 December 2021
The 7-day average of new deaths hits 400. There is some chance hitting 500 is out of reach this month.
Saturday, 11 December 2021
Szlachetna Paczka final weekend is… also a great opportunity to catch the virus. A pity I have not been eligible for the booster ahead of it.
Sunday, 5 December 2021
Reasons to worry
Being in a swing of things, I write for posterity, to record my mindset.
Note many reasons for optimism, but I keep hoping the future is brighter than today.
I worry about my country, about how it is ruled.
I worry about the rising inflation, since it impoverishes those already underprivileged. I do not worry about myself. The recent pay rise has offset the higher costs of living and my savings have been parked in inflation-linked government bonds. I know how to take care of myself.
I worry about my compatriots, stupid enough not to get their jab and merrily spreading the virus which takes away more than a thousand lives every three days.
I worry about my girlfriend’s mother, who is pulling through from COVID-19 (also unvaccinated) and possible long-term implications for her health.
I worry about my parents whose access to healthcare has been impeded by the pandemic. I worry about my mother’s cardiac problems which prevent her from having a hip joint surgery. I worry about my father who is facing a diagnosis to confirm or rule out a prostate cancer.
I worry that 5 out of 46 families looked after volunteers from Ursynów area in Szlachetna Paczka have not found their donators, less than a week ahead of the final weekend. More on this on Boxing day.
I do not worry, but have had several stressful moments after a car collision I had over a month ago. More on this in two weeks.
I long for a peace of mind. I long for a restful sleep and waking up later than 5:00 a.m. Fortunately, some of those issues will be sorted out. Others, which cannot be influenced by me, should not worry me excessively. Keeping a healthy distance towards whatever the life brings sounds like a good recipe for not ending up as a bundle of nerves.
Sunday, 28 November 2021
Pandemic diary – weeks 88 & 89
Monday, 15 November 2021
The first full week of November should bring normalisation of statistics,
distorted by two long weekends and consequent scant testing.
Tuesday, 16 November 2021
The 7-day average of new infections exceeds 15,000 (in 2020 it hit the mark on
30 October, 18 days earlier), but is 36% lower than on 16 November 2020. I got
it wrong, this time fortunately, but by just 3 days. I predict the 20,000
hurdle will be crossed on 24 November.
Wednesday, 17 November 2021
What a wipe-out! Nearly 25,000 new infections and more than 15,000 hospital
beds occupied. The Czech prime minister announced a lockdown for the
unvaccinated. The Polish government does not want to mess with anti-vaxxers.
Thursday, 18 November 2021
The 7-day average of new deaths exceeds 200. With such statistics of new
infections and 53% of population vaccinated, I believe the number hits 500 in
December.
Friday, 19 November 2021
Austria imposes a lockdown for everyone, including the vaccine, for 10 days
starting on 22 November and mandatory vaccinations starting from February 2022.
They’ve got balls.
Saturday, 20 November 2021
My girlfriend’s unvaccinated mother is down in bed with some sort of infection.
She refuses to go to a doctor nor to get tested…
Sunday, 21 November 2021
The 7-day average of new infections exceeds 20,000 (in 2020 it hit the mark on
4 November, 17 days earlier), but is 7% lower than on 21 November 2020. I got
it wrong, this time, as the number was hit 3 days earlier than foreseen. I
predict the 25,000 hurdle will not be crossed during this wave.
Monday, 22 November 2021
In Romania and Latvia where the delta wave has taken a heavy toll, people
rushed to get vaccinated. In Poland the health service begins to get
overwhelmed, daily number of deaths is three-digit, though 4 times lower than
in early April 2021, but local morons do not seem well convinced they should get
their jabs. There has been some increase in first doses (up by more than 50% since trough), but crowds have not
rushed to get immunised.
Tuesday, 23 November 2021
Had an antibody test done, more than 5 months after the second dose. My
antibody count is 163 BAU/ml, vs. cut-off of 33.8 BAU/ml. Of course there is
the humoral response, but definitely I can’t feel comfortable with such immunity.
I will need to sign up for the booster in late December or early January.
Wednesday, 24 November 2021
A day of sad records broken:
- 1 in 415 citizens in Czech Republic was tested positive yesterday,
- Warsaw sees record-high number of new infections, i.e. 2,449,
- more than 570,000 people are under quarantine in Poland, the highest number
since the onset of the pandemic.
Thursday, 25 November 2021
The 7-day average of new deaths exceeds 300. Most of those deaths could have
been avoided. The pace of the pandemic slows down and the inflection point is
not far ahead. I bet it is on 2 December.
Friday, 26 November 2021
Just when I thought the record would not be broken, in Czech Republic 1 in 387
citizens was tested positive. This happens in a country where 58.7% of
population have been fully vaccinated and 19.4% had been tested positive since
the pandemic began. Herd immunity is out of reach.
Saturday, 27 November 2021
The R(t), i.e. reproduction number in Lubelskie and Podlaskie provinces has
declined sustainably below 1.0, which means the epidemic is past the peak in
new infections. Even without restrictions, this is a natural course of the
epidemic driven by patterns of social interactions.