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Tuck Makes A Break

Feb28
2008
Rob Written by Rob

As a Snowshoe (basically a Siamese/Shorthair mix), Tuck’s a real smart cat. Always has been, way too smart for his own good. I’ve had him since 2001 and learned after about three days not to turn my back on him, not to underestimate him.

Ruca’s a normal cat. Tuck’s more like one of the velociraptors from Jurassic Park: when you look at him, you can see that he’s figuring things out. He’s problem-solving intelligent in a way that’s unsettling at times.

I knew back in December that the dog door was eventually going to be trouble. When we first moved in, it was a free-swinging door with no locking mechanism; there was no doubt in my mind that, if we kept that door in, Tuck would have it figured out in under a week. He’d watch Sam go in and out, and he’d solve the problem before long, and then shortly after he’d be a dead cat because he can’t survive for long without his meds. So we bought and installed a fancy electronic dog door that locks and unlocks on a sensor hanging around Sam’s neck.

Anyway, for a long time Tuck just had no interest in the door. So when the batteries went dead, we never got around to replacing them – the cats never went near the thing and so we figured our concerns were just overblown.

In the last week or two, Tuck’s been inspecting the door subtly but definitely more closely. He’d sit by the door (which is about eight inches off the ground), get up on his hinds and start testing the edges around the flap with his paws. We watched as he did this several times, but he couldn’t get the heavy flap open, so again we figured it was safe. Tuck didn’t have the strength to push the big door open on his hinds.

So this afternoon I’m standing out on the patio and talking to Kristi on the phone. She was on prep and waiting for the final bell to ring so that she could go home; I’d been chopping vegetables for dinner (chicken casserole) and taking a break to step out and talk to my girl. And then while we’re talking, I hear the dog door flap come down hard and I’m thinking the Sam came out (as he often does) to try to lobby an orange that he wasn’t going to get.

I look over and there’s no Sam.

Instead, Tuck was standing outside the kitchen door, looking around with a “HAHA NO DOG DOOR CAN CONTAIN ME!” look on his face. And then I freaked. I dashed back to the kitchen, scooped him back inside and locked down the kitchen. So now we’re all still trying to get the door programmed right so that we can leave the animals alone with the door without Tuck making his escape again.

Tuck’s come back several times this afternoon, poking around the flap and trying to crack it again, trying to reproduce his success, but he hasn’t managed it yet. We did learn how he managed to do it, though: he learned that he could lift the heavy plastic flap liner with one paw while pushing the flap itself with the other. The flap then opened just wide enough to get his nose through, and them boom, out he went.

Sheesh. Seven years, and that cat’s been trouble since day one. We love him to death. But I’m telling you, Kristi knows now – we can’t turn our back on him. He’s a schemer.

Posted in The Animals

Mornings

Feb28
2008
Rob Written by Rob

I don’t know if I’ve mentioned this lately, but I like it here.

The mornings are getting beautiful now. Stepping out into the backyard this morning, the first thing you notice is how it smells: the flowers just started blooming this last week, and you can really catch it now. That sweet botanical garden smell. It’s warming up and we still have a whole lot of oranges left on the tree – really big, sweet oranges – so part of my morning ritual is wandering out back with a small kitchen knife and peeling a couple right from the tree. It’s a nice way to get my brain in gear to write that day.

If I’m outside during the day for longer than a minute or two, Sam figures I’m out peeling oranges and wanders out to see if he can score any. Dog loves oranges. But his mama says I can’t be feedin’ him no more oranges, ’cause he loves them going down but just soon as that sun goes down his ass is on fire and we’re diving for the gas masks. So he was annoyed today that he wasn’t getting any of the good stuff, but I was like, man, suck it up. ‘Cause every time we do this, Sam, eight hours later the cats are gagging and rushing out of the room with their paws over their mouths. Some folks are delicate about orange dog farts, okay?

Posted in Everyday Life, The Animals

Lights Out Everybody

Feb27
2008
Rob Written by Rob

So yesterday afternoon I get a call from our friend Em in Orlando. I’d had a busy day and hadn’t checked the news, so that was the first I’d heard about the massive power outage Tuesday in Florida.

Man oh man. All the way from Miami up to Tampa on the west, and all the way to Jax on the east. And all (apparently, according to Florida Power and Light) caused when a fire took down a Miami substation. The station went down and others tried – and failed – to take up the slack. Even the nuclear plant at Turkey Point shut down, in a cascading grid failure that took out power to millions of people statewide.

I’ve been ranting on this all day. It was 75 degrees in Miami on Tuesday afternoon, and somehow the grid was stretched so far to capacity that a single local substation failure shut down half the state. When I left, monthly power bills had been going steadily up ever since the grid got smashed by four hurricanes in 2004. FP&L and Progress Energy prorated the repair costs over the next several years. So what, did they fix it with cut-up Coke cans and rubber cement? Why in the name of everything good and holy was the grid at capacity in LATE FEBRUARY, AT 75 DEGREES?!

It’s scary that the Florida power grid is that fragile. It’s always been a bit flaky, with the power going out locally with every daily 4pm thunderstorm. But what happens this summer when oil’s trading at $150/barrel, the daytime temperature is averaging 98 degrees and the humidity is over 80%?

Even better: what happens if Florida gets hit by a serious hurricane this fall?

Grumble grumble grumble. The state’s just going straight to hell, it is. And mainly because it’s full of shortsighted, self-interested people who don’t get the relationship between cause and effect. I wonder if it’s still going to be the happiest place on Earth in five years when half the place is in foreclosure, the school system is funded mainly by bake sales and the most popular energy source is a bicycle generator.

It just makes me mad. That blackout should never have happened. Stupid, stupid, stupid.

Posted in Current Events, Family and Friends

Cause You Know – Stuff Happens

Feb26
2008
Rob Written by Rob

The life of a freelance copywriter isn’t for the faint of heart. Most days, it’s quiet and boring and more than a little bit tedious. Occasionally you find yourself giving the same basic speech to a prospect that you’ve given to a hundred others over the years, and most of the time the work is about pushing numbers around on a screen and sending out letters and invoices. Many days, you don’t have anything in particular scheduled and so you spend some afternoon time playing video games, watching TV and doing laundry (so that the better half lets you play video games on company time).

When it rains, though, it pours. And then it’s just drama drama drama.

After several days of procrastination, I couldn’t put off Big Website Revision anymore. This was a very big (i.e., expensive) job that we signed back in January, that’s languished on the client’s desk for several weeks pending review and revision. I got the revision spec back from them on Friday; the thing was just a mess. Mangled grammar. Misspelled words. Revised points that made no sense. Other revised (and major) points that flatly contradicted most of what I was told in the original client interview. Worst of all, the spec doc itself is a jumbled collage of MS Word markup and formatting/margin psychoses. So I’ve been grumbling under my breath (and in email to Kristi) about my feelings sometimes about clients. Oh well: billable hours. Suck it up.

In other news, a very important check arrived today. The check itself wasn’t so vital, but it enables us to finally pay a pretty big bill that I brought with me from Florida. The last major one I brought with me. So combined with the stellar February we had – not quite as good financially as February ’07, but still pretty excellent – and the fact that I’m already booked very healthy for March, I feel like we can finally start to breathe a bit and really start tackling wedding bills. It’s going to be a very good March around here.

We’ve also started talking again about honeymoon ideas. Those plans have been in constant flux since October, starting with a B&B in St. Augustine and then shifting over the West Coast and now we’re talking about an Alaskan cruise. Of course, it depends on money and time, but I’ll admit I’m looking forward to getting the pre-hitched phase of our relationship over and enjoying a peaceful getaway as a married couple. Now that the rings are here and everything, it’s real.. and all can’t come fast enough.


PS – I’d like to say hello to the individual who told us recently that they’ve decided to boycott R&K for some unknown reason. We really don’t get it; it doesn’t make any sense to either one of us, all things considered. But it’s your call, and we’re not going to claim to understand it. Hope everything is going well with you.

Posted in Everyday Life, Romance, Travel, Wedding, Work
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