Rob and Kristi
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Monkey Update

Jul31
2009
Rob Written by Rob

First off, thanks to everyone yesterday who wished me a happy birthday. I do appreciate it. It was a good day: signed a new client contract (always a smile raiser for me), got good news on the family front, and had a nice grilled Ahi tuna dinner with my wife at our favorite local Italian restaurant. After she left for work, I settled in and spent the remainder of my evening playing the original Metal Gear Solid, from my recently acquired (for a very reasonable price) MGS Essential Collection pack. What can I say? I’m an MGS fan and wanted to catch up.

It was a good birthday. Thanks again to everyone who wished me one.

Long time R&K readers may remember Monkey. Monk’s our local outdoor cat, allegedly owned by the people a few houses down, even though they apparently do nothing at all to care for her except dress her in collar and tag. When it got really cold back in December, we opened up our garage and made a place for Monkey to bunk down and stay warm – we didn’t want a Monkeysicle on below-freezing nights.

Well, since then Monkey has progressively wired us and our next door neighbor for sound. She knows all our schedules and routines. At the crack of dawn she’s at our back door (earlier this year we started locking up the garage at night), banging on the dog door flap until I come out at around 8:30a, open the garage and feed her. (I call it the “Salvation Army Breakfast”; Kristi’s parents go cook breakfast at the local SA homeless shelter once a month, and the name just seemed appropriate to me.)

Anyway, then – from what I hear – Monkey strolls next door, drinks heavy from their dog bowl, wanders into their kitchen and stretches out for a nap. Then it’s back to our backyard for an afternoon of hunting and chasing and playing around in our somewhat overgrown back yard. All day I find myself watching Monkey back there through my office window. On really hot days she’ll seclude herself deep within our garage stuff to stay cool in the afternoon.

She’s usually hanging out in our yard or theirs until I come out at night lockup to padlock the garage door. I always check around to make sure she’s not in the garage before I do it; once in a while she’s there. More often, she hears me rustling around from next door and dashes over to say hello. I lock up and wish her a good night.

Next morning, starts all over again.

Kristi insists that I’ve created a monster. She’s probably right. I’ll know for sure when I go out there one morning and Monkey’s insisting that we run the TV cable into her garage apartment. Will probably have to draw the line somewhere around there, I think.

Posted in Everyday Life, The Animals

Tuck Update

Jul29
2009
Rob Written by Rob

He’s bounced back again.

This time was a pretty close call: he’d deteriorated pretty far, far enough for us to start making decisions about end of life. With Kristi’s prodding, we finally decided to baby-bird him – pull every trick in the book to get him to eat and drink, keep him comfortable, hope for the best.

After a couple touch-and-go weeks, Tuck’s appetite started slowly returning. He drank more, slept less. We weaned him off daily tuna water (pour warm water a little at a time into a bowl of tuna, he would drink the water), got him on ice water (another favorite trick), and finally he’s back on regular room-temp. Now he’s venturing out of the bedroom on his own for food and shoveling down dry Innova without being prodded. He’s starting to gain weight again. He’s jumping up on counters and chasing around with Ruca.

This is the way it is with this cat. 999 lives. But for now at least, Tuck’s back to his demanding, irritable, sharp and active self. Hopefully we’ll have at least a few more months before another setback.

Posted in The Animals

Members Only Update

Jul28
2009
Rob Written by Rob

We’ve made some changes to how we handle the private section of R&K, and we’ve lightly edited some older posts in the public section. We’ve also cleaned up registrations a bit, permanently removing a few accounts. Given events of the last week or so around here, we felt that we as responsible adults had no alternative. So no, you’re not crazy and no, it’s not a technical problem. We did it on purpose, for good reasons that we can’t talk about here.

Coming up: updates on Tuck and Monkey, some talk about Kristi on the night shift, the forward progression of my writing life, a bit of travel and tentative plans for a long camping trip after Kristi rejoins the land of sunlight. Thanks for reading, guys: stick around, good stuff ahead.

Posted in Everyday Life

Bathroom

Jul28
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Sorry we haven’t been posting as often lately. We’ve just been horribly busy, with my way above-average summer workload and with Kristi working nights at the plant. We’ve gotten into a rhythm but there really is rarely any time to sit down and breathe around here.

During the week plant shutdown before cranking up peach pack – the week of our anniversary – we decided to use part of the time to repaint the bathroom. It needed it. When Kristi first bought the house and moved in, everything had to be repainted (the previous owners did a terrible job with the place), and the bathroom was the last to get done. And so, it was the “let’s just get this over with” job. We’d been talking for a long while about repainting it properly, and we figured we’d take a day or two that week and do it.

Right.

Our bathroom is a perpetual cycle of improvement, and any home improvement task we embark on inevitably ends up with something new done to the bathroom. And so it was thus. Paint led to shelves, shelves led to lights, and so on and so forth. So here’s the photos – sorry for the blurs. I didn’t have much time to set up a tripod. In the end we did our latest “remodel” for just a couple hundred bucks, mainly for paint and the new lights. Much of the rest we already had on hand, just needing a bit of repair and paint to look new.

Our house was built around 1940, and we’re trying to keep as many of the original design features as we can. These shower tiles are all original. The shower caddy came from Bed Bath & Beyond not long after I moved in.

shower2.jpg

Other side of the shower. Dual shower head (and curved shower rod, out of frame) from BB&B. A curved shower rod is awesome for the cheap price – put one in and instantly add 50% to your shower area. It also radically cuts down on curtain billow.

shower1.jpg

Kristi’s grandmother died earlier this year, and her grandfather moved in with her parents. Much of their house was distributed among the children and grandchildren, and among other things we claimed this big blue shelf from their utility room. We repainted it white and put it up in the bathroom.

shelf2.jpg

The shelf from the other side.

shelf1.jpg

Okay, this photo is badly blurred but you should get the idea.. we repainted the cabinet white and moved it under the window. Also bought a new trash can (BB&B), repainted the window panes. We’ve had that teak bath mat for about a year and a half. The white towels we got as wedding gifts – we love them.

whitewhite.jpg

Finally, this little shelf had been sitting in the garage collecting spiderwebs. Kristi’s father made this for her a long time ago and now we finally had a home for it. Painted it white and put it up over the toilet, for Kristi’s “pretties”.

smallshelf.jpg

And it’s still not done. It probably will never be done.

Part of the red/pink tiles needs to be fixed, and next up we’ll probably replace the square-sheet-of-glass mirror. The bathroom in general needs to be recaulked. And eventually – though this one may be a while yet – we’re going to retile, replacing the weird 1980’s green tile with honeycomb tiles that more fit the period. Maybe black and white honeycomb; we’ll see. Like everything else, time and money.

We ended up spending five days redoing the bathroom that week, and we enjoyed every minute of it. It’s a good feeling, throwing your energy and elbows into building up the home that you own. The home you’ll raise your family in, where your kids will likely grow up and remember as their childhood home. As their parents home. Not too many years ago I remembered teasing my friend Em about her “domestic” homeowning instincts; that was the teasing that only a renter thinks to do. It’s a whole lot different when it’s your life and your house.

Em finds my gradual conversion endlessly hilarious. 🙂

Posted in House and Yard
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