Daily Archives: April 9, 2009

My Winter Garb

I’m OK on jackets and jeans, have a couple polartec headbands but may have some additional headgear coming our way. My choice of winter boot is Crocs. Crocs with holes. In a storm I’ll switch to hole-less black ones. Otherwise it’s funeral shoes.

This is definitely not a Girl Scout moment, preparedness-wise, but then I didn’t get many of those, did I Mrs. Nasty Lady who laughed at my sewing and camping and failed me on my first badge.

To buy hiking or winter boots nearing May is folly in my book. I’m going to stick with what I’ve got. Jim’s got solid casual shoes to get him through the next couple of weeks so we hope to save some money on this.

I haven’t seen a crocus or daffodil in weeks here so think the winter storms were too much for them. Too bad. I used to love them back east, and the forsythia and lilacs came out later and were wonderful, along with pussy willows.

Right now we’re excited to see the birds and am sure more Spring and Summer will ensue at some point, whenever that may be in Utah. Cheers, Dee

The House on the Hill

You’ll probably hear many stories of this home, which brought my sister and I from town prisses to outdoor gals. All in three years. I was eight when we moved in from our modest village home, the first our parents had ever purchased. This was great bones of a home. Today, I’d do a signature version of the living areas but the bedroom wing would be transformed. We had a 20′ cathedral ceiling in the living room and our first fireplace, four bedrooms plus basement and a gorgeous view of the lake. We had 23 acres in which to frolic with our neighbors. My sister was six, brother two going on twenty, and youngest sister not even imagined yet.

It was a house, and on a hill. The front door was situated 10-15 feet from a straight 150′ drop. Mom wouldn’t allow us to use it unless we were weeding by the door. So we had to use the back door, which had no steps and was 18″ from mud that took us into the laundry room/mud room. This house was sold because the folks who owned it built their dream house and then ran out of funds. No drywall, molding, we painted the rough-sawn hemlock with creosote (there’s a child safety violation now, but not then). The home had a septic tank but no plans with which to find it, a natural gas tank and at age eight I pumped our own petrol from a hand pump coming from a 1,000 gallon tank that could only be filled halfway because of a leak. We were our own regular hazmat site.

I digress. Because we were not to enter or exit through the front door, the first project was to put up a front stoop in the back so we could wipe our feet and not fall over the cliff. Ironically, all the guests who ever came to the house came around back, it was to Mom’s chagrin that no-one saw her Cannas et al and the lovely foyer complete with a baby grand piano from the local priest.

So Dad knew a guy who had sand. It was our kid joke that his name was Sandy. So Sandy dumped 1/2 ton of sand where a sandbox would be made next to railroad ties to make it and also a swingset with leather seats.

We went to the hardware store 20 minutes away and bought concrete mix for what Sandy told us to make. In the kitchen we had linoleum in the two brick horizontal, two brick vertical pattern so that’s what Dad wanted to make, two stairs going up to the entryway. Sandy said we should dig a hole 4X3X3 and meant four feet across, three feet to the door, and three inches deep.

Dad got out the shovels and started digging. A couple of hours later things were going more slowly than anticipated. See, Dad was digging that hole three FEET deep!

Finally came my part of the action, which I see now as “Concrete Chef.” I rolled the wheelbarrow to the sand pile and shoveled in the requisite amount, took it back to the work site and added a bag of Portland cement, mixed, measured out buckets of water and mixed the stuff. Again, again, and again. I believe we went back to the hardware store for more cement at least twice. In the end, we started throwing in boulders and anything else to bring it up to working height. Shortly thereafter the stoop was built and set.

If a tornado hits and the entire area is blown away, that stoop will be there forever. Heaven forbid someone wants to tear down the home and rebuild on this cherished site where I picked my first wild strawberry and Papa made us a serviceable rope to get to and from the creek so we could swing and catch crayfish and have the neighbor boys throw 3′ black snakes at us or chase us to put cherry bombs down the back of our shirts. And we ate grapes, tons of them.

Luckily the owner who bought the home from us is still there, many years later. Something in my heart says I want this home for our retirement and that of my siblings, but a stronger part tells me the memories are better.

Caveat: We all have different memories. I’ll take two, Dad and the sister closest to me in age. Mom’s not around to share her version, pity, but I do remember going to the farm stand and sitting outside with her and my sister and consuming a quart of cherries. Yum. Memories are funny and interesting things. Hope you liked the story. Cheers, Dee

More Snow, New Pics

Hey folks,

It’s another day in near-paradise. Three weeks ago Jim and I drove 1,500 miles without incident, except getting used to the altitude after several hours driving in the high plains of Wyoming. Since I was young, I always wondered what a “high plain” was as plains are flat. Now I know.

Yesterday I drove to the grocery store, about 1/4 mile each way. While there I stopped to get the mail and pick up Jim’s drycleaning. I placed the car back in the garage, closed it electronically and all was well. Jim wanted “my” car this morning because of the snow. He called from 100 feet away with a flat tire. Upon putting on the spare, finding a garage and assuring “dog towels” and garbage bags to stow the wet and snowy flat in the car, he left. I neglected to tell you there is a construction site about 1/8 mile down the road, which I passed twice yesterday. At the garage, Jim found the tire was repairable but had two nails and a screw in it. So, that’s how the day began.

And Zoe has become a barker. For weeks she was terrified we’d leave her and followed us (me) everywhere. Now she leaves me at my desk downstairs to head for the guest bedroom, which provides her with her only front-of-the-house view. Driveway shoveling, bark then run downstairs to tell me. Dog and owner walking by on trail, bark and run up to the laundry to see me. I know, she was used to being on the 4th floor and we got her used to it (even got her a backpack that Jim had tailored and took bottles of water to the guard at the municipal lot downstairs). It’ll work out and it’s not that she yaps all day long, but she is a darned good watchdog.

Here are the photos, I’ll tell you the stories. Most are of the sunniest (of two) days we’ve had in the past nearly three weeks since our arrival in Utah.

Looking west to east, there’s the Olympic ski jumps across the way, The Canyons Resort, front side of Park City, and the bald mountain behind is Deer Valley. Then I believe you’ve two photos of the overnight wet snow, a tree and a bush. I promised myself years ago I’d never shovel snow again but did the downstairs deck this morning. Then the Sandhill cranes came on this side of the stream. I heard them coming so rushed to get the camera. Impressive birds. There were two pair out this morning, and one resident told us they’d seen up to 20 in the past, but only in the Spring before they migrate north to Canada.

I’m going to have to find out who is doing construction so I can let them know to clean the road of debris. It’s very expensive for Jim to take two hours off work. He’ll make it up but won’t be home until after eight this evening. After all, he’s on contract and that’s hourly, no matter his level of expertise in writing software. My only alternative is to find my way through the adjacent townhome community to avoid the construction site. They have ominous signs at the entry, that no dogs are allowed to be walked on the property except service dogs. I wonder if I can drive Zoe through or if they’ll pull me over and confiscate her. Ha! Let them live with Her Neediness for a day and she’ll be back.

Hope you’re having a great day. Cook something great for your family. I’ve a roast chicken and some red potatoes and carrots and onions to … perhaps make Lazy Chicken? Just thought of that, thanks for the inspiration. Cheers, Dee