March 2014 Beeson Banner

 

 

1 March 2014

"I'm going shopping whether we need anything or not!"

I thought I'd take a long walk in Lowe's and learn what's to be had in the way of washing machines, but I stopped at Lowery's and Marsh on the way, and then it was one o'clock and a misting rain had begun.

I did walk the full length of every aisle in Marsh.  And I made two trips back to the car, having forgotten my Marsh card and my grocery bags.  Which I naturally remembered at separate times.  Hint:  when you have to go back to the car, leave your cart beside the rest rooms so they won't put all your stuff back on the shelves.  Fortunately, there was nothing but a bicycle helmet in my cart when I learned how alert cart boys are.  (The bike was only a few feet from the door the cart was parked near, so that was *alert*!)

There was a Boss Barbecue in the Marsh parking lot, but I didn't even go over to see what they had.  Warming up rice at home seemed more appealing.

I ended up making fried rice, first frying minced celery, chopped onion, and finely chopped corned beef.  Hardly any of the corned beef is left, and what there is is mostly fat, but I couldn't find corned beef at Marsh.  Perhaps I was looking in the wrong place; I don't know Marsh very well.  I can get some at Kroger on Monday.

I slept late and the meatloaf wasn't even thinking about getting cooked at suppertime, so I served sliders and now I have one ready-to-go meal in the fridge.  But I intend to bake a Cornish game hen tomorrow.

 

2 March 2014

I'd been thinking about giving my snow boots a coat of paste wax and putting them away for the summer — but it's going to be more like give them a coat of wax and put them back into the snow.

I slept half an hour late this morning and left in such a hurry that I forgot the bag with my shoes in it, so I had to wear boots for the service.  Kicking your shoes off under the pew is a bit difficult when they lace to the calf.

I'm waiting for my fried rice to get hot for lunch.  Celery, minced corned-beef suet, onion, yellow rice, a bit of sesame oil I put in before I realized it wasn't tamari sauce, tamari sauce, and some Aldi giardiniera.

Had I known I was going to put in giardiniera, I'd have used less tamari sauce:  it came out a touch salty.  But I still enjoyed the giardiniera.

The instructions on the game hen said to bake it at three-fifty for an hour.  I'm starting to think that one hour at three-fifty is universal.

I stuffed a quarter of an onion inside the bird and put the remaining raw pea pods, a carrot, and three diabetic potatoes in the skillet with it.  I zapped the potatoes a minute and a half first.  No rolling in oil, but I'm supposed to butter the chicken every five or ten minutes.

 

 

3 March 2014

Didn't baste with butter much, but I draped a square of bacon over a tear in the skin.  It was delicious, and we ate nearly all of it.

Tonight was warmed-over meat loaf.  (I poured a little vegetable cocktail on it and baked it another hour.)  Tomorrow will be corned beef — I made a special trip to Owens before starting the laundry this morning.  Also bought a small bag of small potatoes and a bag of onions.  Dave grated some potatoes to make into hash browns for his breakfast tomorrow, and discovered that the red ones are red all the way through.

 

 

4 March 2014

Began the morning with a little sewing before breakfast, standing up at the White.  (I don't think I could operate the electric machine standing up.)  Yesterday evening, I tore a rectangle of white all-cotton rag and boiled it to be sure there was nothing in it that would cook out, then hung it over the side of the pot to dry.  This morning I made it into a bag, put the spices for the corned beef into it, and sewed it shut.  Ever since I started cooking corned beef (which, come to think of it, hasn't been that long) I've been annoyed at having flakes of bay leaf and the like rendering what I filter out of the broth inedible.  Then came the well-known moment of "well, duh!", and Wikipedia tells me that I have re-invented the bouquet garni.  It also tells me that I should use leek leaves, coffee filter, or cheesecloth to confine the spices.  The only leaves available right now are rosemary, which is no use for wrapping, and lemon grass, which is more of a tie than a wrap and probably would taste terrible in corned beef.

Lemon grass is great in boiled iced tea.  Put the grass and a tile sliced off a brick (using a band saw) into a glass saucepan, fill with cold water, boil, strain off, refill with water, boil again, allow to cool in pot, strain into the first boiling.  Guaranteed to keep you awake.  The lemon grass tempers the bitterness of the tea.  A little fruit juice helps a lot too.

 

 

6 March 2014

I found a website that says that if I bring my lemon grass in next winter, I'll need a pot four feet wide.

But it also says that I can break off a little piece of root and pot that.

It further states that if I plant it in the garden, it will crowd everything else out.  If I planted lemon grass next to mint, Who Would Win?

Probably the mint, since it gets another round the following summer.  But this winter, the lemon grass probably would have survived in the herb bed — that spot has been under a snowdrift ever since the weather turned cold.

It's thawing out there now.  32.3°F seems just right; I hope it holds there for a week or two.  But the weather service predicts highs in the forties.  At least it doesn't predict any rain in the next seven days — there's a chance of snow on Saturday, but that day the predicted high is 35°F.

I was so *liberated* when I first started riding a bicycle; it was like getting out of jail.  I've learned to drive since then, but driving is limited when you have to find a spot close to the door instead of parking a up to a mile away and walking, and there are places where you can't go in a car at all.

I have discovered that if you chop a fresh kumquat small, it makes a great relish on meat.

Tomorrow we're going to Mad Anthony for Po Boys; tonight we had canned soup.

 

 

7 March 2014

Today I decided to cook some rice for the fridge, and the first packet that came to hand was "black & mahogany field blend" from Marsh.  Since it was a fancy rice, I seasoned it simply:  two hot-pepper pods that had been boiled before a few times, and a cup of corned-beef broth for salt.

It's delicious just plain, and I snacked a substantial amount of it before it was cool enough to put into the fridge.

The corned-beef broth is weird.  I had half a gallon of it in the freezer, and assumed that it would cook down and I'd have to add water.  Instead, I couldn't get all of it into a half-gallon container to put it back into the freezer.  Can one cook that much juice out of half a head of cabbage?

So that's why there was still some broth in the fridge when I put rice into the cooker.  I don't know what I'll do with the rest.

That broth has cooked so many pieces of corned beef that I suspect that it would float an egg.  The cabbage and onion were very salty, which Dave liked a lot.  The potatoes and carrot didn't take up a detectable amount, presumably because I didn't peel the potatoes.  (They were fingerlings.)

I'm planning to get another piece of corned beef after St. Patrick's day.

Dave wants to get rid of the sofa in the living room and buy one the Roomba can get under.  We are shopping for a futon, so we might soon have beds for two guests.

I should look harder for folding screens.  All they have at Reinholt is art works, but there are lots of furniture stores in town.

 

 

9 March 2014

The rest of the broth was just enough to salt the brown rice I cooked this evening, after eating the last of the mahogany rice for supper.  I didn't put quite enough water into the brown rice; it came out a little firm.

 

 

11 March 2014

I'd like to try again, using one cup of rice, one cup of broth, one cup of water, and one cup of tomato juice or vegetable cocktail.  (Plus italian herbs and a stalk of celery.)  But there's only half a cup of rice left and the broth is frozen.

For my bedtime snack tonight, I warmed up the last of the rice in vegetable cocktail (which doubled its volume) and added a little onion fried in sunflower-seed oil with a dash of sesame oil.

A post on SFF Net titled "The Shrinking Mountains of Madness" turned out to be about snow banks.

SFF Net is like Usenet, but it's a private server for a club of SF writers.

Andy posted on Facebook that he thinks Nature is off her meds.

We were running low on milk and sweet mini peppers, so I went to Owen's this morning and spent forty-three dollars.  I stocked up on frozen meals; we had been down to one pot pie.  It was a nice day for it, but when I crossed the parking lot, I had to watch where I was stepping to keep my feet dry.

Further spring news:  Yesterday I hung a load of pillowcases and dish towels out in the sun, and today I carried the garbage bucket out and emptied it onto the compost heap.  A misplaced pile of garbage from the last trip before I started emptying the tidy into a bucket in the garage reminded me to be careful, but the sitzmark is long gone.  On this trip, I learned that my sheepskin slippers leak.  When it was colder they didn't!

The latest prediction is for three to five inches of snow tomorrow.  I'm planning to stay home and make pizza.  I've already put oat bran, red-wheat flour, white-wheat flour, yeast, salt, and ascorbic acid into the big mixing bowl.  I haven't decided whether to make the left-over dough into mini-muffins or freeze it.

Dave has hit every furniture store in town except the new one on Market Street.  Which probably doesn't sell futons, but he does plan to check them out before buying the one at Reinholts.  Which is longer than he would like, so we may be looking for a home for our Ethan Allen "doughbox" end table.

 

 

12 March 2014

Awwww.  I'd take a picture of Dave asleep in his chair with Al asleep on his chest, were it not that I'd almost certainly bump him getting the camera out of the drawer.

The only exercise we get from our dumbbells is moving them from the bedroom to the hallway and back again.  So I guess the Roomba is helping us keep fit.

The three-kilogram weights are just right for wrist extensions, but I ought to have a six-kilogram pair for curls.  I looked in the sporting-goods store once, but they pasted stickers over the kg marks and I can't convert pounds to grams without a copy of the Rubber Bible.  Not to mention that all the handles were too short to keep all fingers on the same side of the bar, as old arthritic people are apt to prefer.

I wish the pizza was ready *now*, but I've just turned the oven on, and that's for the muffinlets, which I plan to bake first.  Take two chocolate chips and call me in fifteen minutes.

To muffinlet or to freeze?  I pinched off twelve little balls of dough to make one tray of muffinlets, and formed the rest of the left-overs into one big ball and put it in the freezer.

At which point, says I to me:  "Do I remember putting salt in this dough?"  I have an uneasy feeling that I didn't.  I like unsalted bread, but Dave can't eat it.

The bad news:  it takes a lot longer to thaw a batch of bread dough than to mix up, raise, and bake a fresh batch.  But thawed dough will keep in the fridge for days.

 

 

13 March 2014

The muffinlets are very good — and definitely unsalted.  There are so many toppngs on the pizza that you can't taste the bread, so I don't think Dave noticed.

So what do I feed him *tonight*?  The eternal question.  [spaghetti]

There is no sheath of ice on the clothesline this morning.  The north sides of the trees are still frosted white.

Ice on the clothesline was so thick yesterday that Dave went out and bought five gallons of gas for the generator.  Later on he turned it on, plugged a heater into it, and left it running for a while to make sure it still works.  (This should be done every month or so.)

And no, we wouldn't run an electric heater off a generator — it was a convenient load.

About sunset, it started raining geese, and the thawed pond at the mouth of the creek is pretty crowded.  I presume; I can't see them any more, but I hear honking.

I bet they are all gone when we get up in the morning.  We plan to go futon shopping right after breakfast "at the crack of noon".

Being retired rocks.

 

 

14 March 2014

I woke up, walked to the window, said "The geese are still here", and two or three skeins took off.  Didn't make a dent in the number of geese left.  Then I saw one coming in for a landing, but it veered off and perched in the willow — a hawk or a crow.

At 9:43, there are none left.

 

 

15 March 2014

When the creek gets a little way out into the lake, it makes a right-angle turn for the purpose of dumping sand under our pier, and one can see signs of the current as far south as the boat ramp.  When I looked out yesterday evening, I thought that the lake was starting to thaw along that track, but this morning there's no sign of it.

The ice looks rotten all over.  I suspect that it still has a little way to go before it's unsafe to go ice fishing.  I don't think there was one skater all winter, but I haven't been anywhere near the canal.

The goose pond is significantly bigger, but I saw only three geese at sunset.  There were still three when I woke at eight, but there are none now.

Yesterday morning, we went to Reinholt's and ordered a futon, dark brown suede-like fabric.

The new sofa is a tad longer than we would have liked, and there is storage in the arms, so we may be looking for a home for our Ethan Allen "doughbox" end table.  It's only a depository for "where can we put *this*" anyway; the ammo box I use as a step stool in the sewing room is a more-logical spot for the curtain hooks.

We also looked at dining chairs.  Evelyn's need re-caning, and we're getting to the age where we need arms and wheels.  We'll only get two, as they take up a lot of room in our small kitchen.

Later, there were ducks swimming in the goose pond, seagulls on the ice, and geese in the park, but the geese took off soon after I noticed them.

It looks as though the boys from Reinhold will be able to get at the patio door by the time our futon is ready.

10:26 — the geese appear to have chased out the ducks.  Still seagulls around.

 

 

16 March 2014

There are daffodils or something in the fern bed.  The ends of the leaves are curled up as if they had been pushing against the snow.

A milestone.  I was coming home along Park Avenue, walking in the street because the sidewalk is still intermittent.  I saw a car coming toward me, and the walk beside me happened to be clear, so I stepped up on the curb — leading with my bad leg *and* not using the cane, and it didn't hurt a bit.

So however slow progress has been, there *has* been progress.  I still intend to go to Trailhouse tomorrow to look at the flat footers.

Then I've got to go to Owen's to pick up my pills.  <pedant>Which are two tablets and one capsule, not a pill in the bunch.</pedant>

Probably not on a flat footer.  I want a luggage rack and two wire panniers, and they may have to hunt around to find them.  Not to mention that my trial run should be once around the parking lot.

The goose pond is much bigger.  I don't see anything but sea gulls at the moment, and those are mostly on the ice.

The dilemma of the cell phone:  I kept forgetting to put it into my pocket, so I decided to store it in my pocket.  Now I forget to turn it off and the battery is low the next time I want to go out.  But it charges really fast; if I put it into the charger before I finish dressing, it gets enough to last a few hours.

The Roomba also charges quickly; one can run it several times a day.

I don't recharge quickly; it was nearly suppertime when I got up from my nap.  But then, I don't know how late it was when I lay down.

No wash tomorrow:  right after breakfast, I'm walking to the Trailhouse to look at bikes.  And they are also having a clearance on winter clothing.

A noxious critter who signs his snarks "jimbino" annoyed me so much that I looked him up a few minutes ago.  Thank God he's "childfree", and I pray that that means that he's had his tubes tied.  (I wouldn't put it past him to mean that he abandons his bastards.)

And now I'm going to look up something else just to get his pollution off my screen.

Sunset:  the goose pond is full of geese.  Not near so many as before, and it isn't raining geese, but I did see one pair come in for a landing.  Uh, splashdown?

Right purty sunset.

 

 

17 March 2014

Went to Owen's, forgot the pills.  Dave picked them up later.

I think I have a flatfoot selected, but have yet to ride it around the parking lot to make sure.

It's called a "Trek Pure".  No place for a frame pump, but I won't be going so far on a flatfoot that I can't walk back.  One can get a basket that simply lifts off for shopping.

Forgot to wear my green scarf on both trips.  Dave wore his green sweatshirt today.

Wanted to read Alex a little earlier than usual, checked the UTC clock to see whether tomorrow's London Telegraph would be up yet — more than an hour before midnight.  Oh, DST.

 

 

19 March 2014

Bought the bike yesterday, also a bottle cage, rack, basket, and helmet.  Then I got home and realized that the helmet doesn't perform a helmet's primary function:  there is no way to attach a rear-view mirror.  *That* is why I've been wearing a ratty old helmet I never liked in the first place all these years!

But it *is* possible to adjust the chin strap while the helmet is on your head.

Riding the flatfoot back from the Trailhouse was a lot easier on my knee than walking back.  So tomorrow (it's raining today) I'll check out whether I can ride up Chestnut Street.  Chestnut is fairly strenuous on the Fuji even though the Fuji still has its Albany-County gears, but the Trek's chainwheel isn't much bigger than the Fuji's smaller chainwheel, its biggest cog might be a tad bigger than the Fuji's granny, and one can switch to walking without actually getting off.  (I just went out into the garage and checked.  Have to be careful how one arranges the pedals, but it works.)

If I can climb the hill, I'll work out how to ride in my Sunday clothes.  I expect my best bet would be to wear jeans instead of a slip, and put my skirt in the basket.  Since I'm the only cyclist in the church, I can park in the ramp room.

Probably would be room for several of us in there, if nobody else is using the room.  It was a greenhouse the last time I noticed.

Hrrm.  I've parked the Fuji in there several times, but the Trek is bigger.

 

 

20 March 2014

There was a brisk fall of partly cloudy a while ago, but it faded back to token flakes before there was any visible accumulation, and the radar map says that we're on the tail end of it.

But I used the garden hose to rinse out the infuser after dumping Dave's tea leaves on the strawberry bed.

I finished reading "Sour Puss" by Rita Mae & Sneaky Pie Brown yesterday evening.  (It's up for grabs now, by the way.)  It ended with Harry making Fair a cheese omelet with capers in it, which made me want scrambled egg with stuff in it for breakfast.

I forgot to put in the cheese, and put in too many capers, so I'll have to have it again tomorrow.  I ate it with a couple of the breadsticks I made from left-over pizza dough.  In the pizza, I couldn't detect the "italian herbs" I added to the dough at all, and the herbs were rather subtle in the hot bread sticks, but they are very pronounced in warmed-over bread sticks.

It's beginning to look as though I'll have eaten them all before I get around to making garlic butter and splitting one to make garlic toast.

So guess what I'm having for lunch?

I put too much salt in the garlic butter.

Too cold for a rehabilitation ride today.

Sliders for supper.  I'm going to have to buy more soon.

I took a quick spin a while after eating supper and reading yesterday's paper.  (When I was about halfway through today's paper.)  A few observations:

Upon returning, I was careful of the mirror I haven't got while placing my new helmet into my new basket.

The chain guard does not obviate the need to pin my jeans at the ankles.  I didn't notice my jeans rubbing on my knees, but I was wearing them over a pair of sweat pants.  I may yet need the strings.

The Trek's lowest gear is not adequate to Chestnut Street, but might be if I were at normal strength and not afraid of straining myself — and if I could assume a less inefficient position.

One *can't* walk without dismounting entirely, but walking beside the Trek is much easier than walking the Fuji.  The bars are so high that one can tip the bike until they are more-or-less in front, so one doesn't have to bend to reach them.

Being able to push with your feet does not make up for not being able to lift the pedal, unless one can coast for a while after pushing off.  But I don't think I'll be going back for pedals that accept toe clips.

The bike is getting a little less antsy.

I have praise for RevereWare tonight.  I think; the logo has long since worn off the pot.

I put a rag just big enough to make a bouquet garni sachet into the stainless-steel pot I plan to cook corned beef in tomorrow, added a very small amount of water so it would come to a boil quickly, turned the fire on high, and went to read the paper.  After a while Dave said "are you cooking something?"  One sniff and I knew the pot had boiled dry — when I dashed to it, the rag was black and sparks were crawling around in it.  I took it outside, then opened the patio door, the door into the garage, and the garage door.  Dave suggested that I turn on the big squirrel-cage fan he has been using to dry the garage floor, but the wind was from the right direction and quickly cleared out the haze — after I moved the pot away from the door.  But I suspect that if I were to go outside and come in again, the house would still smell of hot muslin.

The rag was gone entirely when I went back to hose out the ashes, but aside from requiring a very thorough scrubbing, the pot wasn't injured in the least.  When I pulled a similar stunt in Hawaii, the bottom melted right out of the pan even though the food was only scorched, not ignited.

I looked up Revereware in Wikipedia to check my spelling, and learned that Corning stopped making Revereware in 1998.

Ugh.  The hallway, under the air intake for the furnace, still smells of scorch.

 

 

21 March 2014

When I looked out this morning, March was a fluffy white lamb.  Most of the grass is visible now, but most of the snow that fell on ice or snowbanks, and some of what managed to stay in the shade, is still around.

Corned beef today.  Since it will keep until May, I bought two pieces on clearance on St. Patrick's Day.  I forgot that the left burner gets hotter than the right one and it came to a boil; I hope that it hadn't been boiling long when Dave commented on the aroma.

I experimented by throwing in a chunk of jicama.  One tiny potato each, a piece of carrot, and half a slicing onion for flavor.  I plan to put in small flat cipalino onions for eating at the same time as the cabbage.

I went out and chipped at the snowbank between the house and the shop with a hoe so the sun could get at it better.  There is already enough space for the boys to carry our new futon around it, if Dave moves the truck.  And it will be a week or two before they get it.

 

 

22 March 2014

It's time for lunch and I just finished breakfast.  I think we overslept this morning.  During breakfast, I cut up an old shirt for skillet wipes, then opened up the table and put the flowered cotton jersey and a pattern for a T-shirt on it.  Dave reserved a hotel room for the wedding.  Isn't our life exciting?

The Roomba is sweeping the bedroom.  I considered moving the stuff on my side of the bed into the hallway, then realized that I'd left all the covers folded over onto Dave's side, so I'd have to find a place for all the stuff on that side too.  I think I'll take my nap on the sofa.

I ran around the neighborhood on the flatfoot yesterday afternoon.  If I'm going to exercise by riding in circles, I'll have to borrow Dave's GPS so that I can tell how far I've gone.  I wouldn't go in a straight line because I don't like to be seen in my slopping-around clothes.

And I don't go downtown without a full complement of pockets.

I took a short ride, out Boy's City to the top of the Heritage Trail, back by the same route.  I should have worn gloves.

 

 

23 March 2014

Rode the Trek to church.  It worked quite well, but I should have worn a jacket instead of a shawl.  The Trek is harder to wheel through a doorway than the Fuji, despite lacking a basket on the far side, because of the wide, wide handlebars.

I think that I could ride in a floor-length skirt by pulling it up in back before sitting down, but perhaps not the very full floor-length skirt I wore today.  (I carried it in the basket.)  In any case, I definitely need pants underneath!

It was easier to get out of the sweat pants than to put them back on.

 

 

24 March 2014

For some time I've been saying that I should be touring appliance stores so that I'd be ready when the washer died.

It died today.  In the final spin of the final load, luckily, and the stuff wasn't quite dripping.  I hand-wrung a bath mat and a pair of socks, and hung everything else up as it was.  Dave turned the breeze from his air filter on his jeans.

The other load is on the line.  The prediction was for sunny today, so yesterday evening I put some pillowcases and my grocery bags in the washer to soak, then added bleach and washed them this morning.  After hanging up the first two pillowcases, I went back inside to put on more clothes, and when I came back out they were quite stiff.  And there were stiff spots on the last few items to come out of the basket.

When I got up this morning, I commented that the wind was so still that I couldn't tell open water from what had skimmed over during the night.  Dave said that his weather station said there had been one gust of wind:  one mile per hour.  It had picked up considerably by the time I went out to hang the clothes.

Which are fluttering in the wind, so they must have freeze-dried.  I'd better bring them in before taking my nap.

And put the racks outside?  But the clothes might blow away.

I put one rack outside when I got up from my nap.  It promptly blew over, so I brought it back in.

That was while I was fooling around getting into my jeans and T-shirt.  I moped around saying "what do I feed you tonight?" and suggesting TV dinners and Dave said "how about the Great Wall?"

I noticed the ski poles standing convenient beside doorways and put them back up on top of the skis.  This was rather strenuous, because I'm an inch too short to reach.  Dave's were easy; I got them almost up and tossed the heavy end.  But when I tried that with mine, they bounced off Dave's.  I got one up by pushing it with the other, then tossed the other hard enough to land on top of the pile.

The outside clothes were dry except where they overlapped under the pins.  Some of those were wet enough to have frozen together.

This just in:  the sea anemone, renowned for being an animal that looks like a plant, has just been determined to be a plant that acts like an animal.  (Sensationalized oversimplification.)

I dithered over what to serve for supper until Dave suggested Great Wall.  We overate, as usual.  We should ask the waitress to bring three boxes with the meal, so we can package up the left-overs before we start eating.  Or, gasp, order one dish and share it.

 

 

26 March 2014

I saw corned beef at Aldi yesterday, but didn't buy any.

Also saw some agave nectar and wanted to know what it tastes like, but, drat, it's Simply Nature — wait, here in the fine print it says "certified organic by Ecocert Co." — I can have it!

This morning I noticed a very prominent "USDA" sticker, so I have supported a gross violation of church and state.  Not to mention spreading the notion that USDA has some faint idea of what "organic" means.

And there's no agave flavor — or any other kind — in the nectar at all.  It's for people who want white sugar and think that if you get it from a plant other than sugar cane, it doesn't count.

The trip was precipitated by getting down to half a coffee can of dry cat food, so I went to Big R, Aldi, and Aunt Millie's Outlet.  Spent seven dollars and nine cents at Aunt Millie's — that's a lot of bread!  When he heard that I'd bought bagels, Dave put a can of kippers on the counter, but forgot about it and ate Muesli for breakfast.

Our piano is a hundred and six years old, I heard Dave tell the piano tuner.  Yesterday, a while after the tuner left, Dave plonked a hesitant tune on it, and that is the last time anyone will touch it until the next visit from the tuner.  We really ought to get it into the hands of someone who will play it.  None of the kids have room for a piano, but we could sell it.  Kinder like getting rid of a pet, though, you want to be sure it goes to a good home.

Tomorrow we get our new sofa!  I was thinking that I needed a set of bedding for it, but one can make a double bed with king-size sheets.

On the other hand, I have only four king-size sheets.  That's an ample supply for one bed, but a long way from guaranteeing that there are enough clean sheets to make up two.

On the third hand, I have three flannel sheets.

The Roomba beeps while it's backing out of its dock, just like an earthmover.  (Not quite so loud!)

When we decided to buy a futon that was a little longer than we wanted, I said that we might want to get rid of the "doughbox" end table, so yesterday Dave took it out into the garage and loaded everything in it and on it into the wagon.  Then we looked at the table and said "Hey, this is a pretty nice piece of furniture."

I put the back brace into the bathroom drawer with the slings, wandered around for a while with the heating pad, then put it on the pile of table cloths in the recipe-book compartment under the microwave, to keep it near the rice bags.  (Which are filled with stale popcorn instead of rice.)

This morning I sorted the bag of window stuff and put the pleater hooks and pleater tape into the ammo box I use as a step stool in the sewing room, and put everything else into the ammo box in the laundry room.  I knew that getting step stools I could store stuff in would pay off!

It was a very large bag, so I was surprised that everything went.  Helped that I neatly rolled the pleater tapes; several of them had been loosely crumpled.

All that's left in the wagon now is a table lamp and my to-be-read pile.  The wagon is still full.

I have often remarked that Al regards human food as disgusting, with a grudging exception for liverwurst.  When preparing a belated lunch yesterday, I discovered that when it comes to Deutsche Kueche braunschweiger, the exception isn't all that grudging.

 

 

28 March 2014

All three of us test-napped the new sofa, and all of us approve.  Al was the only one who stayed down for more than a few seconds, though.

I went for a ride around town shortly before sunset yesterday; regretted that I'd never gotten around to putting a bottle in the bottle cage.  When I got back, I took one from the Fuji.

Before that, I walked around the edges of the property — and forgot my cane!  Didn't miss it, even on rough ground.  I picked up a few sticks; I was surprised at how few there were after such a long time.  I've seen more than that come down in a single storm.

I haven't been washer shopping yet.  I'd better find out where the nearest laundromat is.  I'm not sure I remember how to operate a laundromat.

I've been unenthusiastic about getting things done, even when I consider them exciting.  I've been blowing my nose every few minutes.  I suspect a connection.

So I took a zinc tablet.

Future shock:  somewhere up there I said that I was putting on jeans and a T-shirt to indicate that I was getting dressed up to go out.

 

 

29 March 2014

There isn't a lot left of the hummus I bought at Aldi.  I also bought some "taquitos rojos":  round tortilla chips that have been rolled tightly into thin cylinders and then covered with a powder composed primarily of red #40, capsaicin, and citric acid.  These chips *seriously* need dip, but between the shape and the loose powder, dip won't stick — but one can butter them with hummus on a knife.

I drove to Owen's this morning, to buy four cartons of seltzer and two gallons of milk.  I made a point of driving past Krebs Trailhead on the way back, and saw that they took the benches away last fall.

But that need not scuttle my plans to use the park as a rest stop on my first ride to Owen's; I can be comfortable sitting on concrete, and doing it in the shelterhouse should fend off ambulances.  Displaying a book will also help.

It's three times as far to Owen's as to the church, but the ride to the church is no strain at all, so I think I'm ready.  But if I'm to spend five or ten minutes reading a book outdoors, the weather is going to have to be a bit more pleasant than it was today.

It snowed in the night. and was still snowing (but melting as it came down) when I went shopping.  At noon, the snow is gone except where it landed on old snow, and the lake is no longer white.  The Weather Service promises me sunny weather for riding to church tomorrow.

The open water at the mouth of the creek extends well into the park to the north, and goes clear out of sight to the south.

Yesterday, Dave fell asleep while driving his lawn mower.  He is never going to hear the end of it.

Dave and Jeanie dropped in this afternoon, and took away Evelyn's cedar chest.  Not the one Claude made; I'm using that one to store my blankets.

My hope chest is filled with miscellany, including a beautiful apron Mom made for me that I've never worn.  I've been thinking about making a trapezoid skirt out of my black silk crepe, and that would set off the apron beautifully — I wonder whether I could finish it in time for our fourth-of-July party?  Considering that it's a week since I cut out my new T-shirt and I haven't gotten beyond stitching the darts, probably not.

Did I buy my hope chest, or was it a gift?  I seem to remember it both ways.  It sure looks as though it had been around for fifty years!  Evelyn took better care of hers, but someone broke into it once upon a time.  I have no key to mine; perhaps I should have the lock disabled.

 

 

30 March 2014

Spring spring:  I looked out the window and saw three children on the trampoline.  Further observation showed five children and a supervising adult.

The big news at church is that the upstairs restrooms are back in service.  I hope the last person out of the church props the doors open — they still smell of paint.

I took an extra loop around the block on my way home from church.

 

 

31 March 2014

Got to Smith Appliances, saw that the GPS said 1.7 miles — only a tenth farther than to Owen's.  Aw, I could have had my ride today after all — but I *hate* riding on Winona Avenue on a real bike; no way I'm going to do it on a pedal-powered wheelchair.

Besides, I went on around so I could buy some rice at Warsaw Health Foods.  They were out of long grain, but my query got it on the list of stuff to be delivered next Thursday.

So I bought short-grain and have a pot of spanish rice in the cooker.  When I'm using a rice for the first time, I'd rather cook it plain, but there was left-over chili in the cooker pot, so I threw in all the seasonings I could think of.  Except for onion and sweet mini peppers.  I'd rather fry those and add them after the rice is cooked.  I also left out the butter that the recipe on the package called for.

I got a Whirlpool washer.  I kinder think maybe I should have gotten the Maytag that's identical except for having an impeller instead of an agitator.  Won't be delivered until 10:30 tomorrow, so I *could* call and change my mind.

Dave didn't have a good time while I was gone.  He decided to pull the old washer out so he could mop the floor before they put the new washer in.  He turned off the water valves — but apparently not quite tight enough.  He was still mopping up when I got back.  Didn't get anything wet that would be damaged by it.  A box of dryer sheets got wet, but just the box, not the sheets, so we took the sheets out and set the box aside to dry.  I was minded to put it on a register, but on a warm day like this that wouldn't speed things up any.

 

 

1 April 2014

An April fool on me:  upon reading the manual, I find that my washer has a wonderful new feature:  to "save energy", if you set it for "hot", it delivers warm!

And they are all like that, so I needn't say I should have investigated more thoroughly.  Another surprise:  if you try to soak for more than ten minutes, the washer will pump the water out.

My hot whites won't be so hot or so white as before.  But nearly all of my wash is washed on "warm".

A puzzling feature:  When set for "warm", instead of filling with warm water, it admits hot and cold alternately.  This causes the water to come in significantly more slowly than the old washer.

On the other hand, it will rinse twice without I run back to reset it.  On the first hand again, I have absolutely no control over how long it washes; it doesn't even tell me how long the pre-set times are.

When I was a teen-ager, I sprained my knee.  Somehow I'd got it into my head that when a joint hurt, one must not bend it, so I spent several weeks conscientiously faking a limp, which formed an unbreakable habit:  whenever I'm distracted and in a rush, my left leg stiffens until I notice and manually switch to a natural gait.

That fake limp has been having a field day with my sore knee.  And, I suspect, slowing my recovery.

I accidentally rode to Owens and bought a package of cream cheese yesterday evening.  Didn't need to stop at the Trailhead, which is fortunate because I hadn't brought a book and it was too cold to sit on concrete.  Well, if I'd felt the need of a rest, I wouldn't have gotten that far.  I did feel the need to use low gears on level ground on the way back.  Coming back is all level or downhill.