We got a new fence in the backyard!
If you remember that old collection of wires that used to separate our yard from the neighbors, then take a look at this.
There's no question about it, that is a fence.
action shot...
Strawberries on the shelves <3
This grape vine is doing really well, climbing right up the trellis all on its own.
And of course our tomato harvest.
Check out the overexcited fellow back there in the corner. That is a plant with ambition.
And also in unrelated news I installed a light in the garage.
Which let me tell you, makes a huge difference in terms of usability. It almost seems like a place I might do stuff, now.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
the birds and the beets and the flowers and the cat
by
Nate
at
6:16 PM
Let me tell you about these pictures.
Two separate families of birds have decided that the ledge inside our front porch is the perfect place to build a nest.
It is adorable. But they also get really freaked out whenever we enter or exit the house. You win some you lose some.
Speaking of winning some.
Oh my goodness. (And there's another beet in the garden still that puts this bunch to shame.)
The roses are doing pretty well:
We had to replace a couple of them, but I think we still ended up with a good variety of colors.
Also, a while back Chloe had to wear this collar. You might have seen this scene before on Annie's blog but the picture... well,
Yeah.
Two separate families of birds have decided that the ledge inside our front porch is the perfect place to build a nest.
It is adorable. But they also get really freaked out whenever we enter or exit the house. You win some you lose some.
Speaking of winning some.
Oh my goodness. (And there's another beet in the garden still that puts this bunch to shame.)
The roses are doing pretty well:
We had to replace a couple of them, but I think we still ended up with a good variety of colors.
Also, a while back Chloe had to wear this collar. You might have seen this scene before on Annie's blog but the picture... well,
Yeah.
the front yard
by
Nate
at
6:00 PM
So, the picket fence in the front yard has been done for a while. After that was finished we planted a salsa garden there for the tenants.
Cilantro makes a rather effective ornamental, except for the fact that it's an annual. The tomatoes and tomatillos and peppers seem to be doing well too.
And then more recently we also added some stepping stones.
These stones are really cool, they're basically pieces of a sandstone that formed a stream bed, and they have fantastic colors and textures. We got them from a place called Bourget Brothers in Santa Monica, which has a fascinating collection of...rocks. Maybe someday we'll put some ground cover in there too.
Thursday, June 24, 2010
our windows
by
Nate
at
11:51 AM
We had a window guy come by this morning to talk about replacing all of our (terrible) windows. We'll have an estimate by Monday. We'll have another company coming by next week. This is exciting!
Friday, April 9, 2010
white picket fences
by
Nate
at
5:22 PM
Well since the last post, we've got some great tenants in the front unit, and we've been working on things in front and in back. In particular, we hired our gardeners to install a picket fence in the front yard for the tenants. They did a great job with that, but they didn't paint it white. That was up to us.
So we did that a few Saturdays ago. It was really hard work actually. There are so many surfaces on a picket fence, many more than on a regular wooden fence, because you paint the sides of all the pickets, and all the inner corners, and the two rails.
Well, it was a lot of work, and it made me think that that's why white picket fences are so iconic. Because they take so much work to maintain, they're a symbol of successful suburban domesticity. Color us domestic I guess.
We are stepping out of bounds a little bit though, because we're growing an avocado tree and a salsa garden in the front yard. It's well known that you can't grow food in a stereotypical American suburban front yard. What are you, some kind of hippy? :-)
We're getting ready to redo the side fence too, which I think will really start the ball rolling on more yard projects for our part of the yard. We have plans. Big plans. Well I do anyway. So far Annie's going along with them. ;-)
So we did that a few Saturdays ago. It was really hard work actually. There are so many surfaces on a picket fence, many more than on a regular wooden fence, because you paint the sides of all the pickets, and all the inner corners, and the two rails.
Well, it was a lot of work, and it made me think that that's why white picket fences are so iconic. Because they take so much work to maintain, they're a symbol of successful suburban domesticity. Color us domestic I guess.
We are stepping out of bounds a little bit though, because we're growing an avocado tree and a salsa garden in the front yard. It's well known that you can't grow food in a stereotypical American suburban front yard. What are you, some kind of hippy? :-)
We're getting ready to redo the side fence too, which I think will really start the ball rolling on more yard projects for our part of the yard. We have plans. Big plans. Well I do anyway. So far Annie's going along with them. ;-)
Saturday, January 23, 2010
The Proverbial Putting-Up of Curtains Etc.
by
Annie
at
10:08 PM
Eh, the trying-to-rent continues. =/ We thought we had a family ready to go, we'd done the background/credit checks, made up the rental agreement, and had an appointment to swap the security despoit and keys, but they backed out on us. We've got the ad up again, and have had a couple people come look. Some of the situations are definite no's (Six adults packing into the house, and you can't get us social security numbers for half of them? Ummmm... I don't think this is gonna work.), but we'll see.
In cheerier news, we got a long, low bookshelf thing to put behind the couch and by the doorway, so that we can have a better place to set stuff when we come in, and more storage shelf space is always a good/needed thing.
We also put up curtains in the bedroom! They're just some plain sheer Ikea ones, but we did have to cut and hem them to the right size. This may sound like no big thing to you, but I've always had this really... shall we say, strained relationship with textiles. My talents lie more in the realm of paper, pencils, and Wacom tablets, and fabric is just capricious and uncooperative in my eyes. But armed with scissors, a tape measure, and this totally sweet iron-on hem thing that the curtains came with, we now have functioning fabric window covers!
And also, and also, Nate found these really neato steel "things" to hold wine bottles, all metallic curvy, and he got them mounted to the kitchen wall tonight. Pictures of all this is possible later.
AKC
In cheerier news, we got a long, low bookshelf thing to put behind the couch and by the doorway, so that we can have a better place to set stuff when we come in, and more storage shelf space is always a good/needed thing.
We also put up curtains in the bedroom! They're just some plain sheer Ikea ones, but we did have to cut and hem them to the right size. This may sound like no big thing to you, but I've always had this really... shall we say, strained relationship with textiles. My talents lie more in the realm of paper, pencils, and Wacom tablets, and fabric is just capricious and uncooperative in my eyes. But armed with scissors, a tape measure, and this totally sweet iron-on hem thing that the curtains came with, we now have functioning fabric window covers!
And also, and also, Nate found these really neato steel "things" to hold wine bottles, all metallic curvy, and he got them mounted to the kitchen wall tonight. Pictures of all this is possible later.
AKC
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Monday, January 4, 2010
Trees and Yardstuffs
by
Annie
at
5:44 PM
Last week, during vacation, Nate and I sat down at a coffeehouse and drafted up the Master Plan for the Backyard. I don't have it on me, but maybe we can scan it later.
The reason for this was that we vaguely wanted to go to Home Depot and buy something vaguely tree-like, but once we got the new baby peach and plum trees home, we had no idea where to put them. I was thinking sort of in the back? He was thinking sort of in the front? Both of us were totally open to the sides as well. You can see the problem here.
So we went the whole nine yards, getting a to-scale diagram of the yard ready to draw on. In true planning fashion, we listed out values, goals, and constraints... and then utterly ignored that list and drew trees, pergolas and koi ponds wherever we deemed fit on the page. There's a lot that isn't nailed down yet, but we did figure out that we'll have our row of fruit trees along the side, stretching back to the garden, and we were able to plant those first two yesterday.
It's been a verrry long time since I planted a tree (blah blah you make planet earth cry etc etc...), and I was rather taken aback by the pruning you're supposed to do. Apparently we coerce trees into growing through death threats. We'll see how these guys do... Planting trees is slightly frustrating since you know it's going to be years before you really get the payoff, but it's good stuff nonetheless.
AKC
The reason for this was that we vaguely wanted to go to Home Depot and buy something vaguely tree-like, but once we got the new baby peach and plum trees home, we had no idea where to put them. I was thinking sort of in the back? He was thinking sort of in the front? Both of us were totally open to the sides as well. You can see the problem here.
So we went the whole nine yards, getting a to-scale diagram of the yard ready to draw on. In true planning fashion, we listed out values, goals, and constraints... and then utterly ignored that list and drew trees, pergolas and koi ponds wherever we deemed fit on the page. There's a lot that isn't nailed down yet, but we did figure out that we'll have our row of fruit trees along the side, stretching back to the garden, and we were able to plant those first two yesterday.
It's been a verrry long time since I planted a tree (blah blah you make planet earth cry etc etc...), and I was rather taken aback by the pruning you're supposed to do. Apparently we coerce trees into growing through death threats. We'll see how these guys do... Planting trees is slightly frustrating since you know it's going to be years before you really get the payoff, but it's good stuff nonetheless.
AKC
Monday, December 28, 2009
The Push to Front-Unit Victory
by
Annie
at
9:16 PM
Man oh man... what's been going on in the world of the house?
Well, we've got the front unit officially ready for tenants, so that's exciting. The new (legal! functional! not deadly!) heater got installed just fine, the wall got plastered back up and painted, the moulding got reattached, and we are go.
Oh man, side-rant here: Whoever lived there before obviously thought that the living room was simply getting too much sun on the west side. And instead of getting, oh say, curtains, they decided to implement the most annoying solution possible and get a film of bright purple tinting attached to the three windows on the west side of the house. If you're not familiar with these, let me give you a quick rundown:
1.) They look terrible.
2.) They're a pain to remove.
3.) As you do remove them, they smell revolting.
We thought we'd restore some of the front unit's innate class and take these... what amount to these sticky sheets of purple cellophane... take them down, see? This ended up taking a good number of hours since the sheets were either a.) on the pane behind the screen, in which case they peeled off relatively easily, but left a thin layer of glue that we had to besiege with an acetone-soaked scour pad to remove, or b.) on the pane with no screen, in which case the direct sunlight had made them brittle and unpeelable, requiring us to break out the glass-scrapers.
It was a sticky, purple, toxic-smelling undertaking and I quietly curse whoever installed those, but all this is neither here nor there. The house is ready!
We celebrated by putting the official ad for the place up on Craigslist and fashioning up a rental application (and by eating dinosaur-shaped chicken nuggets and drinking beer). We used the rental application from our Landlording book as a base, added/removed a few things in line with a couple other applications we found online, and I got a chance to flex my atrophied graphic design muscles trying to fit everything we needed onto one page and still have it be readable and look good.
We'll be drafting up the actual rental agreement next (maybe tomorrow... it's a bit longer than the application, and I'm pretty tired tonight), and I personally want to write/copy every word myself, choosing bits and pieces from example agreement as opposed to just grabbing a random pre-made one and calling it a day. That way, not only will it be totally applicable/tailored to our place, but we'll know it inside and out.
Things are starting to move fast. We'll try to keep this thing updated a bit more.
-AKC
Well, we've got the front unit officially ready for tenants, so that's exciting. The new (legal! functional! not deadly!) heater got installed just fine, the wall got plastered back up and painted, the moulding got reattached, and we are go.
Oh man, side-rant here: Whoever lived there before obviously thought that the living room was simply getting too much sun on the west side. And instead of getting, oh say, curtains, they decided to implement the most annoying solution possible and get a film of bright purple tinting attached to the three windows on the west side of the house. If you're not familiar with these, let me give you a quick rundown:
1.) They look terrible.
2.) They're a pain to remove.
3.) As you do remove them, they smell revolting.
We thought we'd restore some of the front unit's innate class and take these... what amount to these sticky sheets of purple cellophane... take them down, see? This ended up taking a good number of hours since the sheets were either a.) on the pane behind the screen, in which case they peeled off relatively easily, but left a thin layer of glue that we had to besiege with an acetone-soaked scour pad to remove, or b.) on the pane with no screen, in which case the direct sunlight had made them brittle and unpeelable, requiring us to break out the glass-scrapers.
It was a sticky, purple, toxic-smelling undertaking and I quietly curse whoever installed those, but all this is neither here nor there. The house is ready!
We celebrated by putting the official ad for the place up on Craigslist and fashioning up a rental application (and by eating dinosaur-shaped chicken nuggets and drinking beer). We used the rental application from our Landlording book as a base, added/removed a few things in line with a couple other applications we found online, and I got a chance to flex my atrophied graphic design muscles trying to fit everything we needed onto one page and still have it be readable and look good.
We'll be drafting up the actual rental agreement next (maybe tomorrow... it's a bit longer than the application, and I'm pretty tired tonight), and I personally want to write/copy every word myself, choosing bits and pieces from example agreement as opposed to just grabbing a random pre-made one and calling it a day. That way, not only will it be totally applicable/tailored to our place, but we'll know it inside and out.
Things are starting to move fast. We'll try to keep this thing updated a bit more.
-AKC
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
light fixtures
by
Nate
at
11:58 AM
We finished our interior light fixtures over the weekend. The florescent overhead light in the kitchen in particular had been grating on me. It made this terrible buzzing sound, and the light was too blue. We took it down and we had to paint the ceiling that had been obstructed by it. We put it in a 3-bulb fixture and we bought some of those miniature 100W replacement CFLs (the ones that use 23 watts each) to put in it. It's really bright and it looks much much better.
So now we've replaced most of the interior fixtures, and everything looks the way we want it to. By the time I did the last one, I was feeling pretty competent at it. Too bad I won't get to use those skills again for a few years. I guess that's how it goes though!
So now we've replaced most of the interior fixtures, and everything looks the way we want it to. By the time I did the last one, I was feeling pretty competent at it. Too bad I won't get to use those skills again for a few years. I guess that's how it goes though!
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Fresh-Squeezed.
by
Annie
at
3:46 PM
You know what they say. When life gives you lemons, you make lemonade.
Seriously.
The citrus tree* in our front yard full of fruit, and while we've assumed the green ones are limes and attempted to give them away and/or make mojitos with them, it's just not doing the trick. So at Nate's urging, we bought a little juicer yesterday and took the (assumed) lemons to it today.
It worked! We made lemonade! It's really tasty!
Amazing how that works.
-AKC
*- I'm always amused when the name of a tree is just "citrus."
"So... is it lemons, or limes, or...?"
"Man, whatever."
"Oranges?"
"Maybe. Who knows."
Seriously.
The citrus tree* in our front yard full of fruit, and while we've assumed the green ones are limes and attempted to give them away and/or make mojitos with them, it's just not doing the trick. So at Nate's urging, we bought a little juicer yesterday and took the (assumed) lemons to it today.
It worked! We made lemonade! It's really tasty!
Amazing how that works.
-AKC
*- I'm always amused when the name of a tree is just "citrus."
"So... is it lemons, or limes, or...?"
"Man, whatever."
"Oranges?"
"Maybe. Who knows."
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Garden 2.0
by
Annie
at
9:20 AM
If you were wondering what Nate was scheming about in that picture of the office, here's what it was!
A garden!
We've got:
-Lettuce
-Green Onions
-Tomatoes
-Beets
-Strawberries (lots of those!)
-Brussel Sprouts (I have no idea how those will work out, but it sounded fun)
-Celery (funny story: I looked up how to grow celery after I bought the tray, and the first sentence I see is, "Celery is a notoriously hard plant to grow; it tastes about the same when you get it from the store, so most gardeners just grow it for the challenge." Well then. Awesome.)
-Mint (peppermint AND spearmint, because that's just how we roll)
-Cilantro
-Oregano
-Rosemary (the little guy wasn't doing so hot recently, but hopefully it'll recover and become the hardy monster we expect it to be)
-Sage
-and a Lemon Verbena (apparently you can make tea with the leaves, and it smelled so amazingly good that I just had to get it)
I think that's about it... not bad for our initial run. Southern California is pretty awesome in that you can almost completely disregard any "seasonal" guidelines. It's all good.
We've got the whole "raised bed" thing going on this time, which is supposed to be advantageous, or at least that's what the gardening book told us. Nate's brother and sister came down this last weekend to help put the whole shebang together, which we greatly appreciated. We also bought a soaker hose (the black tube in the pictures), and we'll have to get a feel for using that (timing, best placement, etc), but I think it'll help us get less sporadic watering, since we don't have sprinklers back here. The idea is that you plug it into the regular hose, turn it on, and it seeps water through all the little holes in it. You leave it for a couple hours to get a decent watering.
I think that having a garden again will be good for us. I'd grown pretty attached to the one at the old house; there's something about just checking in on the little guys every day that smooths out the spiky bits in your brain. Additionally, it'll be nice having herbs only a few steps away from the kitchen.
And this is only the beginning! We've got lots of space around the house and plan on putting most of it "to work" in one way or another(Nate's got ideas, make no mistake). It'll be a long process, but a highly enjoyable one, I predict.
-AKC
A garden!
We've got:
-Lettuce
-Green Onions
-Tomatoes
-Beets
-Strawberries (lots of those!)
-Brussel Sprouts (I have no idea how those will work out, but it sounded fun)
-Celery (funny story: I looked up how to grow celery after I bought the tray, and the first sentence I see is, "Celery is a notoriously hard plant to grow; it tastes about the same when you get it from the store, so most gardeners just grow it for the challenge." Well then. Awesome.)
-Mint (peppermint AND spearmint, because that's just how we roll)
-Cilantro
-Oregano
-Rosemary (the little guy wasn't doing so hot recently, but hopefully it'll recover and become the hardy monster we expect it to be)
-Sage
-and a Lemon Verbena (apparently you can make tea with the leaves, and it smelled so amazingly good that I just had to get it)
I think that's about it... not bad for our initial run. Southern California is pretty awesome in that you can almost completely disregard any "seasonal" guidelines. It's all good.
We've got the whole "raised bed" thing going on this time, which is supposed to be advantageous, or at least that's what the gardening book told us. Nate's brother and sister came down this last weekend to help put the whole shebang together, which we greatly appreciated. We also bought a soaker hose (the black tube in the pictures), and we'll have to get a feel for using that (timing, best placement, etc), but I think it'll help us get less sporadic watering, since we don't have sprinklers back here. The idea is that you plug it into the regular hose, turn it on, and it seeps water through all the little holes in it. You leave it for a couple hours to get a decent watering.
I think that having a garden again will be good for us. I'd grown pretty attached to the one at the old house; there's something about just checking in on the little guys every day that smooths out the spiky bits in your brain. Additionally, it'll be nice having herbs only a few steps away from the kitchen.
And this is only the beginning! We've got lots of space around the house and plan on putting most of it "to work" in one way or another(Nate's got ideas, make no mistake). It'll be a long process, but a highly enjoyable one, I predict.
-AKC
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Some more pictures
by
Annie
at
11:51 AM
A few pictures of things all moved in (including a kitty):
http://www.picasaweb.google.com/nate.austin/HouseMovedIn
In the office picture, Nate's making the plans for... the future garden! DundunDUUNNN. It's one thing after another around here.
-AKC
http://www.picasaweb.google.com/nate.austin/HouseMovedIn
In the office picture, Nate's making the plans for... the future garden! DundunDUUNNN. It's one thing after another around here.
-AKC
Friday, November 13, 2009
Solutions in Heating!
by
Annie
at
12:10 PM
Alrighty so. Turns out we will be able to get that new heater in, thanks to the magic of "Financing With No Interest for 12 Months. "
We talked to the heater guy about our situation with getting tenants into the unit, and he agreed that yeah, it would be dumb to pay for repairs that probably won't work when what you really need is a new heater altogether.* It's in everybody's interests (ours, his, and even technically the future tenants') to make that happen, and since we have decent incomes (of which the tenants will be a part), a financing plan makes total sense in this case.
So yeah, I think that's a big load off our minds. They're supposedly going to start the work next week.
-AKC
*- One that doesn't set off the carbon monoxide detectors when you try to turn it on. (Insert Debbie Downer noise here.)
We talked to the heater guy about our situation with getting tenants into the unit, and he agreed that yeah, it would be dumb to pay for repairs that probably won't work when what you really need is a new heater altogether.* It's in everybody's interests (ours, his, and even technically the future tenants') to make that happen, and since we have decent incomes (of which the tenants will be a part), a financing plan makes total sense in this case.
So yeah, I think that's a big load off our minds. They're supposedly going to start the work next week.
-AKC
*- One that doesn't set off the carbon monoxide detectors when you try to turn it on. (Insert Debbie Downer noise here.)
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
"Ooooh-oooh-oooooh I feel mah temperature risin'..."
by
Annie
at
9:54 AM
Aw man, we figured it was coming. The first "big unexpected expense" is turning out to be the heating in the front unit. It kinda... doesn't work. And it's not just the thermostat, like we had hoped. So we had a guy over to look at it this morning, and I wasn't there for the technical talk, but the takeaway message appears to be, "it's old, it's busted, and even if we could get it to work, it's totally not up to code."
An aside: Now, we could play the "oh, why didn't we have someone check X more thoroughly" or "why didn't we think about Y" moan and groan game, but I feel like we covered most of our bases. The inspector certainly looked under the house around the heating area, but Nate remembers him making a point that heaters were not his thing, so he couldn't in good faith give us advice there. We did put a clause into our offer demanding that the seller fix the heater, but she refused. So it was either fix the heater later or have things get ugly, and we decided that it was something we'd be able to deal with.
So, where we stand at the moment is between any combination of three options:
1.) Say screw it for now and give tenants a bunch of space heaters: Euuugggghhh. That's the absolute last-ditch option. We really don't want to do that.
2.) Have them simply fix what's immediately wrong so that the heating works: This would solve our problem, but we'd still have a really outdated heater, and another fail would be inevitable eventually (of course, whether "eventually" means a few months or a few years makes a big difference to me, but I don't know that right now). This is pretty expensive... under 1000 but still pretty expensive. Also, they're not even sure yet if fixing it is possible, or if it's kaput beyond repair. However, if it's possible, it's much less expensive than...
3.) Putting in a new wall heater: This is the best option, and will probably have to happen in that "eventually" I mentioned up there. It's also by far the most expensive. Like, "yeah we totally can't afford that right now" expensive.
And here's the catch-22: once we get tenants into the front house, that'll be enough extra monthly income to pay for the new heater relatively quickly. However, in order to get tenants in there at a decent rent in the first place, we need heating. So now we have:
3.2) Do the #2 fix now, get tenants in there ASAP, and replace the heater when we've got enough saved up from the rental income. The major drawback here is that we end up paying for both the fix and the new heater, which is techincally wasting money. But the other option is,
3.x) Wait until we can afford the new heater, and delay putting tenants in for a month. Not a huge fan of this idea, since the amount we'd lose from not having tenants for a month is much greater than the amount we'd lose by doing the extra fix when we're going to replace the heater regardless.
So, a lot of this hinges on whether that #2 fix is possible or not. If it is, we'll probably go with that as a temporary fix. If it's not... well, I'm not sure.
It'll all work out one way or another though, and with the blog, if anyone else has dealt with stuff like this, or deals with it in the future, we've started some "collective wisdom" here at the very least.
AKC
An aside: Now, we could play the "oh, why didn't we have someone check X more thoroughly" or "why didn't we think about Y" moan and groan game, but I feel like we covered most of our bases. The inspector certainly looked under the house around the heating area, but Nate remembers him making a point that heaters were not his thing, so he couldn't in good faith give us advice there. We did put a clause into our offer demanding that the seller fix the heater, but she refused. So it was either fix the heater later or have things get ugly, and we decided that it was something we'd be able to deal with.
So, where we stand at the moment is between any combination of three options:
1.) Say screw it for now and give tenants a bunch of space heaters: Euuugggghhh. That's the absolute last-ditch option. We really don't want to do that.
2.) Have them simply fix what's immediately wrong so that the heating works: This would solve our problem, but we'd still have a really outdated heater, and another fail would be inevitable eventually (of course, whether "eventually" means a few months or a few years makes a big difference to me, but I don't know that right now). This is pretty expensive... under 1000 but still pretty expensive. Also, they're not even sure yet if fixing it is possible, or if it's kaput beyond repair. However, if it's possible, it's much less expensive than...
3.) Putting in a new wall heater: This is the best option, and will probably have to happen in that "eventually" I mentioned up there. It's also by far the most expensive. Like, "yeah we totally can't afford that right now" expensive.
And here's the catch-22: once we get tenants into the front house, that'll be enough extra monthly income to pay for the new heater relatively quickly. However, in order to get tenants in there at a decent rent in the first place, we need heating. So now we have:
3.2) Do the #2 fix now, get tenants in there ASAP, and replace the heater when we've got enough saved up from the rental income. The major drawback here is that we end up paying for both the fix and the new heater, which is techincally wasting money. But the other option is,
3.x) Wait until we can afford the new heater, and delay putting tenants in for a month. Not a huge fan of this idea, since the amount we'd lose from not having tenants for a month is much greater than the amount we'd lose by doing the extra fix when we're going to replace the heater regardless.
So, a lot of this hinges on whether that #2 fix is possible or not. If it is, we'll probably go with that as a temporary fix. If it's not... well, I'm not sure.
It'll all work out one way or another though, and with the blog, if anyone else has dealt with stuff like this, or deals with it in the future, we've started some "collective wisdom" here at the very least.
AKC
Monday, November 2, 2009
more odds and ends
by
Nate
at
11:00 AM
This weekend we tied up a lot of the loose ends that have been bugging us.
Back unit:
It's looking like a real, functional house. We had James and Melissa over last night for a game of Descent and our new table and chairs performed admirably.
Front unit:
Now we just need to get the heat working, and get our garbage bins back, and we'll be ready to put our ad on Craigslist.
Fixing things makes me happy :-)
Back unit:
- buy dining room chairs
- clean up the moving boxes
- buy a couch
- get a compost bin
It's looking like a real, functional house. We had James and Melissa over last night for a game of Descent and our new table and chairs performed admirably.
Front unit:
- motion sensor light
- replace gas line
- replace kitchen light
- clean bathroom
- arrange appliances
Now we just need to get the heat working, and get our garbage bins back, and we'll be ready to put our ad on Craigslist.
Fixing things makes me happy :-)
Saturday, October 24, 2009
taking over
by
Nate
at
9:00 PM
Well I fixed the broken sprinkler in our yard, it turned out to be pretty easy since I was able to simply unscrew the broken section. So I didn't need to do any PVC joinery (this time.) I also moved all the concrete scallops out of the garage, in order to organize things so that we can use the door when cars are in there. Annie and I installed some towel racks in the bathroom and put together a shoe rack. I replaced the shower head.
We're slowly taking over control of the place, it seems. More and more of the little house decisions are ours now instead of someone else's. That feels good. We have a long long way to go before we take over everything, but for now it's nice that we've made a few mental leaps: when things break, we fix them, when we don't like something we change it, and when something's in the wrong place, we move it.
Tomorrow, shelves, and maybe some more outdoor work.
The Boxes That are Left
by
Annie
at
12:44 PM
Due to our work schedules, today is the first time we're in the house during the daylight hours (not just morning) with things actually moved in. It's nice to experience that.
I'm not one of those math types, but there's probably some "tailing off" graph that could work for "Boxes Still Not Unpacked After a Move." At the beginning, the line drops really fast while you unpack all the important day-to-day stuff. But as time goes on, the line flattens out, always approaching zero but never quite getting there.
Those piles of not-yet-organized possessions always remind me of little refugee camps. The tissue boxes and the Legos are huddled together in a corner, the power strips are making small talk with the paint tubes and spare towels, and they're all trying to figure out What the Hell Just Happened Here.
-AKC
I'm not one of those math types, but there's probably some "tailing off" graph that could work for "Boxes Still Not Unpacked After a Move." At the beginning, the line drops really fast while you unpack all the important day-to-day stuff. But as time goes on, the line flattens out, always approaching zero but never quite getting there.
Those piles of not-yet-organized possessions always remind me of little refugee camps. The tissue boxes and the Legos are huddled together in a corner, the power strips are making small talk with the paint tubes and spare towels, and they're all trying to figure out What the Hell Just Happened Here.
-AKC
Monday, October 19, 2009
The Great Move of '09
by
Annie
at
11:46 AM
Chapter 1: Preparation
With the walls painted, this last week was split between preparing the house(s) for our arrival and preparing our stuff for the move. This included:
* Cleaning up the slightly sticky tape-and-tarp landscape still covering the floors of the house,
* Getting as much of our current stuff packed into boxes as possible, and
* Having a fridge delivered to the front unit.
Surprisingly, packing turned out to be the most straightforward of the three. Because of the whole one-lot-two-addresses thing, turning on the power only applied to the front unit. The back unit has been powerless for about a week now, which made cleaning it up in the evenings rather difficult, even with flashlights. The fridge got here on Thursday, but it wouldn't fit through the doorway without its own doors being removed. In the process, something got knocked out, coolant started leaking, and the delivery guys had to come back the next night for about an hour to fix it. By Friday night though, there was at least one working fridge on the property, and that was all we needed for now.
Packing happened in small spurts throughout the week. Despite my inherent cheapskatery, I have to admit that buying a bunch of boxes and a taping-gadget was the best way to go on this. They pile easier, and that makes the loading of the truck much less of a puzzle. Speaking of which...
Chapter 2: The Move
Once again, we're greatly indebted to everybody who helped haul, lift, tape, secure, direct, and disassemble all of our earthly possessions this weekend. Time was of the essence because a.) we only rented the UHaul for one day, and b.) there was still no power in the back unit, so we really wanted to get everything in there before our daylight ran out.
The truck got packed pretty tight, but in the end, 2 trips were still required, primarily because of the fridge. This was the fridge we had bought from another roomate who moved out previously, so it was going into the truck for our back unit, but before we moved it, the people still living at the old house had to secure another fridge to replace ours and minimize the time that food would be left out. Sort of a weird game of "musical perishables." Nate can probably tell you more about this, since my involvement in the fridge moving process amounted to "staying out of the way." But long story short, we again had doorway-width issues that required the fridge doors to be removed.
Pro-tip: if you are ever moving a fridge, just take the doors off ahead of time and save yourself a headache. Chances are, you'll need to anyway.
It was already getting dark, but thanks to the magic of extension cords, we were able to run some electricity into the house. Enough to navigate a fridge and its doors by, anyway. And with everything out of the truck, we were able to return the sucker after a nice dinner and bidding our fearless movers a good night. The bed hadn't been assembled yet, so we dug out some sheets and crashed on the mattress.
Chapter 3: The Aftermath
One tricky thing that required moving was our inherited cat, Chloe. We'd heard stories of cats in new houses darting into cupboards and not coming out for 3 days, so we were prepared for the worst. But after a willful resistance to the cat carrier and some inital hiding behind the new washer, Chloe actually took to the new place pretty well. Within a few hours, she was poking her head out of the mud room, where we put her and her stuff initally, and starting to explore. By that night, she was sleeping at our feet again, and by the next day, I'd chaperoned a few excursions into the front yard. There's been no puking, no trying to run away, and minimal hiding under beds and couches; I am pleasantly surprised.
Sunday was mostly taken up with furniture/housewares and the unpacking, building, and buying thereof. We've got the living room and bedroom basically set up, holding off on the office until we get power, which should be sometime today (fingers crossed). There was an excursion to Ikea for a coffee table, TV stand (for our as-of-yet-non-existant TV a.k.a. extra computer monitor), and loads of rugs and mats. I'm quite satisfied with the amount of awesome color.
The evening required one more trip over to the old address to pick up some left-behinds and sweep out the old rooms, and the unpacking will continue throughout this week, I'm sure. We were dead tired last night though, and I konked out around 10pm.
Nate, if I missed anything, feel free to fill in the spaces here. :)
-AKC
With the walls painted, this last week was split between preparing the house(s) for our arrival and preparing our stuff for the move. This included:
* Cleaning up the slightly sticky tape-and-tarp landscape still covering the floors of the house,
* Getting as much of our current stuff packed into boxes as possible, and
* Having a fridge delivered to the front unit.
Surprisingly, packing turned out to be the most straightforward of the three. Because of the whole one-lot-two-addresses thing, turning on the power only applied to the front unit. The back unit has been powerless for about a week now, which made cleaning it up in the evenings rather difficult, even with flashlights. The fridge got here on Thursday, but it wouldn't fit through the doorway without its own doors being removed. In the process, something got knocked out, coolant started leaking, and the delivery guys had to come back the next night for about an hour to fix it. By Friday night though, there was at least one working fridge on the property, and that was all we needed for now.
Packing happened in small spurts throughout the week. Despite my inherent cheapskatery, I have to admit that buying a bunch of boxes and a taping-gadget was the best way to go on this. They pile easier, and that makes the loading of the truck much less of a puzzle. Speaking of which...
Chapter 2: The Move
Once again, we're greatly indebted to everybody who helped haul, lift, tape, secure, direct, and disassemble all of our earthly possessions this weekend. Time was of the essence because a.) we only rented the UHaul for one day, and b.) there was still no power in the back unit, so we really wanted to get everything in there before our daylight ran out.
The truck got packed pretty tight, but in the end, 2 trips were still required, primarily because of the fridge. This was the fridge we had bought from another roomate who moved out previously, so it was going into the truck for our back unit, but before we moved it, the people still living at the old house had to secure another fridge to replace ours and minimize the time that food would be left out. Sort of a weird game of "musical perishables." Nate can probably tell you more about this, since my involvement in the fridge moving process amounted to "staying out of the way." But long story short, we again had doorway-width issues that required the fridge doors to be removed.
Pro-tip: if you are ever moving a fridge, just take the doors off ahead of time and save yourself a headache. Chances are, you'll need to anyway.
It was already getting dark, but thanks to the magic of extension cords, we were able to run some electricity into the house. Enough to navigate a fridge and its doors by, anyway. And with everything out of the truck, we were able to return the sucker after a nice dinner and bidding our fearless movers a good night. The bed hadn't been assembled yet, so we dug out some sheets and crashed on the mattress.
Chapter 3: The Aftermath
One tricky thing that required moving was our inherited cat, Chloe. We'd heard stories of cats in new houses darting into cupboards and not coming out for 3 days, so we were prepared for the worst. But after a willful resistance to the cat carrier and some inital hiding behind the new washer, Chloe actually took to the new place pretty well. Within a few hours, she was poking her head out of the mud room, where we put her and her stuff initally, and starting to explore. By that night, she was sleeping at our feet again, and by the next day, I'd chaperoned a few excursions into the front yard. There's been no puking, no trying to run away, and minimal hiding under beds and couches; I am pleasantly surprised.
Sunday was mostly taken up with furniture/housewares and the unpacking, building, and buying thereof. We've got the living room and bedroom basically set up, holding off on the office until we get power, which should be sometime today (fingers crossed). There was an excursion to Ikea for a coffee table, TV stand (for our as-of-yet-non-existant TV a.k.a. extra computer monitor), and loads of rugs and mats. I'm quite satisfied with the amount of awesome color.
The evening required one more trip over to the old address to pick up some left-behinds and sweep out the old rooms, and the unpacking will continue throughout this week, I'm sure. We were dead tired last night though, and I konked out around 10pm.
Nate, if I missed anything, feel free to fill in the spaces here. :)
-AKC
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