Re: Training Centers

@Cinnamon, interesting and good  thoughts. I did a lot of what you describe in terms of using cold  implements while learning, I also did as you said with cooking times, and checking food. Another tactic I've often used is poking things with a fork to check if  they're done, that works well particularly with things  like chicken, indeed on one occasion at my  tabletop rp group one of my friends who was cooking that night  actually couldn't see visually the colour of the chicken  due to a very red sauce, so that skill came in handy big_smile.

I would personally disagree on  using the inside of the oven and shelves being harder than the rings on the top, or at  least that is what I have always found myself, I would also highly recommend  chef's gloves over conventional oven mits. When i do pasta (the only thing I tend to do  consistantly on the rings), I can actually position the pans on the rings while hot with the chef's gloves on, which helps considdrably. 

I also have a rather whacky process for  straining water from the pasta, involving a sieve virtually the same  size as the pan, sticking the handles of the pan and sieve together and holding extremely tightly so that nothing but water can come out, then turning the hole thing  upside down over the sink.

With knobs, well while guestimating can be accurate (even for me), to be honest if it's your kitchin it's not so diff difficult to mark the knobs with  braille, or indeed bumpons, in fact I don't know if you can get bumpons in the Us but they're hugely useful for lots of appliances from cookers to washing machines, they're basically round dots of rubber with glue on the back. I have braille  lables every 50 degrees, and if something say needs 225, getting th e halfway point isn't a problem.

I agree with  you on hot liquids. When I started at university, I decided to give up instant coffee and switch to the propper stuff, however my liquid level indicator wouldn't fit over my cafeteir, so I started using my finger tip and slow pouring. These days I actualy  haven't  used an indicator  for boiling water for  literally years,  whether I'm making coffee, tea, or using boiling water in my cooking. I have had one or two scolds, but nothing that a minute under the cold tap didn't cure, indeed I'd feel a bit weerd using an indicator now even though there was a time I used one constantly the specialist school I went to even had custom built indicators which had one bleep for the amount of milk, and another for the amount of tea or coffee irrispective of preference, and [[wow]] betide you if you wanted something different, which is pretty typical of a certain sort of blind behaviou r.


In general I could  do more serious cooking than I do do, but when there is just me to cook for there never seems point doing anything hugely elaborate, making a serious chilly or spag bol is about as far as I go.

@Cae, well appliances help, but it is working out what you can do with them. In colidge during my masters I actually had! nothing but a microwave to cook with. This had nothing to do with blindness but was a result of some nazi fire  safety regulations, (I actually finished up  smuggling in a george forman at one point just for variety).

However even with a microwave there is more than just ready  meals to do. For example, while I likely could! cook rice on the top of the stove, I don't particularly bother since there  are some very good dried rices that are quick to do in the microwave and  go just as well if I make a curry. Also, if I  decide to  pick up something to chuck in the oven like chicken breast in sauce, well I usually microwave  vedgitables to go with it.

Regarding the  crock pot aka Slow cooker, well all the ones I've seen are like mine, and have pretty simple controls, basically a dial that can click into four positions, off, low, high, and warm. There is also a guide light which changes in brightness, but this isn't necessary, since putting a dial two clicks to the center isn't exactly rocket science.

the only major issue with the crock pot is when whatever you have done is done, you need to lift the pot out of the heater. This is again where my kevlar gloves come in useful, and of course making sure I know where I am going to put the thing.

Regarding mobility, well unfamiliar places will be a problem for most people, there is no magic formula, though i will say a guide dog can be massively helpful in the situation for ability to find common place objects.

The major thing is just practice, practice, practice, an d don't panic. While there are some standard cane techniques I've never really heard of any convincing tests that I'd trust, it's just a matter of doing the thing  repeatedly until you get good enough to do the things you want, and for that to be honest I'd recommend just finding some local places you want to go (or at least places within travelling distance), and going to them many times.

Frankly your parents just sound paranoid to me, and while I understand such attitudes they do sort of  get up my nose a bit just because they become infexious. Being blind is a pain in the arse in a lot of ways, but if you put in enough effort you can! usually find  a way to do things and go places.

Regarding travel arrangements, well it sounds like the states is  very different to Britain. Over here all major cities, and many smaller towns and even tiny ones, have train stations which usually have taxi ranks, thus it is fairly easy to get to most places by train, this is exactly how I went to a vocal performance course in London late last year, to a lady's house I'd never visited before, got the train, then took a taxi (after phoning the firm to  check that the taxi wouldn't rupture my bank). Busses are a cheaper alternative to trains, but are less regular and also as I said, have no guarantee of spoken announcements.

Perhaps what you need to do is A, find the way to whatever your local bus station is, B, find somewhere you want to go that requires a bus, and C, do that journey a lot!

My parents did this with me for years literally from the age of 7, doing the same route over and over again, then doing different  ones, which is why now I can usually find landmarks myself  even for somewhere less familiar, though before I got Reever I wouldn't  try a completely unfamiliar route on my own the first time, or at least I'd make sure I knew some of it and could buil d on what I knew in terms of landmarks.

URL: http://forum.audiogames.net/viewtopic.php?pid=166683#p166683

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