Snow Day!

All week, we’ve been waiting for the snow to start in earnest. Schools were cancelled on Wednesday and nearly everyone decided to work from home on Wednesday, only to spend all day waiting for the snow that never came.

Thursday morning, I woke to a before-dawn thunderstorm, and apparently the flakes started falling in earnest shortly after that. Kevin roused me at 10:30 (a bit of sleeping in since work was not on) and there were already so many inches of snow that the backyard had lost definition – just whiteness and the ground seemed oddly elevated.

All of our big rockwork, ferns and bushes were almost entirely mounded over. You can see the tracks of some creature who’d been snuggled up by our grill in the bottom left corner of the photo and apparently decided to break for it up the hill after we already had many inches.

The light in the house was so unusual during the day. Our bumpout window in the kitchen and the skylights in the family room were entirely snowed over.

Meanwhile, the snow reflected the light back up and so it seemed much brighter outdoors than usual. I set up at the dining room table with a laptop and a mug of tea so that I could watch the snow swirl around the backyard. Neither of us was able to log into work or email, too many people stuck at home and the servers couldn’t handle it. I kept trying every so often, but it was a real snow day. (And the best part of that as an adult is that you don’t have to make it up at the end of the year!!)

A little after two, when it became clear that the snow wasn’t stopping, we headed out for a trek to see the neighbourhood. I finally got to use the cross country skis that I got as a Christmas present the year we moved out here. I had to take the stickers off before we went out – I’d forgotten what a great deal they were. 🙂 With no plows or sand trucks, our home is ski-in/ski-out, so I clicked in at the top of the driveway and off we went. Kevin manned the camera.

No trash pickup today!

Our street Ts onto a larger one, and at the corner we were surprised to see signs that the road was closed.

Kevin went to investigate later (he ended up doing a much larger loop to trek to the grocery store for apple cider) and was deeply amused to find three metro buses, clad in their chains, stranded halfway up the hill.

There were only a few sets of tire tracks on our street, but the main road was quite compacted. There were occasional cars, moving slowly, and the first appropriate use of tire chains that I’ve seen in Seattle. We headed down the street to Grasslawn Park, and I was impressed (as usual) by how much use it gets. There was very little pristine snow left, and plenty of people out building snowmen and igloos, plus a few groups of teenagers and some intrepid people passing through on bikes. The playground areas were more compacted than the roads! Even with all of the activity, there was more than enough snow for skiing.

And for admiring:

We were most impressed to come across a postman out on his route on the way home.

Amidst all of the reports of people abandoning cars on roads and highways, and metro buses spinning out everywhere, and general Seattle snow-related grinding to a halt, it seemed like an unusually brave and steady sight.

Tank

Our shrimp seems to be settling into a nice, regular schedule of molting and then producing eggs! I’m pleased, since that seems to be a sign of good health. It’s very hard to get a picture of the eggs, since he (she?) gets much more cautious and shy when carrying them, but I managed to get a reasonable view at feeding time. He was working away on the food.

You can see areas of yellow on the underside of his tail. The eggs are yellowish (slightly green) and about the size of a poppy seed, and you can see the masses of them through his skin. I’m not entirely sure what happens to them (I’m guessing the shrimp eats them? They seem like they’d be nutritious) but they disappear after a few days.

Cold!

It’s been in the 20s here and is supposed to stay that way all week! Brr!! Not the typical Seattle temps at all.
Kevin and I were quite pleased to find icicles on the kitchen window this morning. This one is all of three inches long:

And these little icicle nubbins are a half inch or so each:

For further proof of the temperature, look at our rhododendron bush out front!

Rhododendron leaves curl up when it gets below freezing (the lower the temps, the tighter they get), and this was what they looked like at 24 degrees. Much more of a Massachusetts sight than a Pacific Northwest one! We were both somewhat amused to hear that the temps set records today and yesterday. It’s so temperate here.

Snow!!

When Kevin’s sister was here for Christmas last year, she decorated our tree out back. We left the lights up, and it’s so fun that we’re back in the season again.

Kevin’s been plugging it in at night, and it looks so pretty glowing away out there at us. Plus, it snowed last night!! Just an inch or two, but it’s so pretty to see all of the accumulation in the backyard, and it’s supposed to stay cold enough that it might actually stick around.

Time to cut off the water

Our granite top for the vanity came in!

The countertop and attached sink are currently upside down on a towel to the left of the vanity (we need to get a piece of 3/8” plywood for them to rest on) so you can’t see the color and pattern of the stone, but this photo of the backsplash pieces is at least a glimpse!

Mostly mottled grey with a bit of background pink. (As usual, click for bigger.) I’m very happy with it. Right now they’re sitting in the fish room. We have to remove the old vanity, redo the walls, and paint, and then we’ll be able to put the new vanity in. A good project for the week after Christmas?

Larry and the Olympics

Our friend Larry not only took care of the fish over Thanksgiving, but he left us a gift: a poster of the Olympics with all of the peaks labeled!

I’ve been wishing for something like this for ages. There are just so many peaks in the Olympics, and such depth that it’s impossible for me to translate the standard map to the actual view. This method is perfect. It’s been living on the coffee table (I’m trying to relax the roll a bit) and I’ve been studying it when I walk by.

Rumours have already started that we’ll be moving offices in Feb/March, and I’m sure that this will go perfectly on my new office wall.

It’s so nice to finally have names for those mountains!

Craigslist

At this point we have a semi-long list of furniture for the house that we’re keeping an eye out for. We still have money from wedding gifts that we would like to spend on it, but the problem has been finding furniture we like in the proper dimensions. I cruise the local furniture stores pretty regularly, but keep not finding the perfect kitchen table, cabinet to store games and puzzles for the family room, side table for the family room, DVD shelf for the hallway, or cabinet/dresser for our closet.

In a change of fate, we found two Craigslist items off the list in under two weeks. First of all, a cabinet for our bedroom:

I was having a hard time envisioning what could go in the space. A dresser would be more traditional but we don’t need dresser-style storage. The combination of one drawer and then the adjustable shelf inside seems ideal for storing sweaters, blankets, pillows, etc or things in baskets. Nice and flexible and while the color isn’t necessarily what I was picturing initially, it fits perfectly with the shelves in the closet and looks surprisingly coordinated.

Our second find was a kitchen table. We were pretty set on white legs and a blond top, with matching white and blond Windsor chairs. I’ve been just missing perfect examples on Craigslist for months. This table was a little bit smaller that we were hoping for (38” vs. 42”), and it has folding sides, but it only cost $30 and we’re quite pleased with it.

That big window is one of the brightest spots in the house in the afternoon, and it’s nice to have a spot to sit and work and soak in whatever light is out there. The stools and side table were already there, and we’ll leave them for now.

Seasonal

View of the Christmas lights from my computer desk.

I’ve been leaving my curtains open in the evenings so that I can see them glowing away as I work. It’s a small but happy bit of consolation for the short, short December days.

(We were both rather impressed how very blue the LED lights are once they were strung up again. They’d kind of whitened in my mind over the course of the year. It’s interesting to walk around the neighbourhood, since you can really see the difference between last year’s LEDs and this year’s. Perhaps we’ll wait a little bit longer and then upgrade ourselves…)

Potential

We finally had the guys come out to grind up the four stumps. Here’s a last photo of one of them from our bedroom window.

Now we just have big piles of sawdust. 🙂 The guys were great and also ground the tiny stump from the tree I cut down myself last fall.

We’re considering what to do with that side yard. It feels so much bigger without those trees, and it actually gets morning and afternoon sun now – probably the only place on our property where that’s the case. There’s no easy way to get water over there, but part of my brain has been chanting away about a real herb garden and a veggie garden…

Look what I made at work today

At work, we are building collages. (A long blog post in itself.) My group already had plenty of cooks making layout decisions, so I decided to make a mosaic of our logo out of chopped-up clippings from magazines.

It’s fiddly (each of those blocks are about 4″x4″, and the paper bits are usually less than a quarter inch per side) and wonderfully colorful. Still have the blue panel to go!