26 Jul

Today, Pippa ate a spider.

I’m not sure what the karmical ethics of getting your cat to eat bugs so you don’t have to deal with them are, but I’m glad.

Hopefully the spider was not in any way poisonous.

22 Jul

This morning, according to my housemate, I won the Rosie the Riveter award for the month. After consulting Dare to Repair, a book my sister gave me for Christmas a while back, I unclogged the bathroom sink, which has been draining in an increasingly sluggish manner for some time.

This involves sticking a rag in the overflow hole, filling the sink with water (quite easy, given the circumstances) and then putting the plunger over the drain and working it vigorously. I did this three times, and it pulled up all manner of black gunk, which I scooped out with a little bowl to put in the toilet, which is better suited for particulate matter. After the third time, there was no longer any suction with the plunger, and now the water goes down fine.

I have to say I’m a little disappointed, because I was sort of hoping to take apart the u-bend sink trap thing underneath, which is certainly filled with all manner of sliminess.

And the kitten, of course, was on hand and extremely intrigued with all matters in the bathroom involving water. She fell in the full bathtub the other day!

09 Jul

forum: vegans in hummers versus meat-eaters in hybrids

In summary:

  • argument: people eat cows
    • subargument: cows produce methane
    • subargument: people are omnivores
      • counter: gorillas have sharp teeth & are strict vegetarians
      • counter: humans can live healthily making the choice to be veg

    • subargument: if we don’t eat cows, they will take over the earth
      • counter: quit with the organic crack, mmm-kay?

    • subargument: need calcium/protein/b12
      • counter: eating meat doesn’t automatically make a healthy diet
      • counter: veganathlete.com etc
      • counter: cows eat grass and they have muscles

  • argument: hummers vs hybrid emissions
  • argument: people eat not-cows
    • subargument: impossible to convince 6 billion ppl to be vegan
    • subargument: local cow vs imported soy
    • subargument: less cows bred
    • subargument: instinct of human vs instinct of puppy to kill
      • counter: puppies develop quicker than babies

    • subargument: eating cows is cruel
    • subargument: carbon resources needed to produce beef (or burgers)

My argument: Birth control.

  • less people
  • eat less meat and less vegetables
  • less driving
06 Jul

Been a busy week, focusing on the Lake Union Wooden Boat Festival.

Friday was setup, and I was the staff person designated as least busy and therefore nominated to be the spokesperson for a public service announcement on television. I got to work a bit after 8 am, but then it was canceled as we didn’t have enough people to bring as audience members.

Saturday was the first day of the festival, which began with a 7:30 am staff meeting, and, for me, ended about 13 hours later. In between was tons of directing people to go this or that direction, and how to do this job, and sign them up for shifts later in the Festival. The first six or seven hours of the day, I spent entirely in Festival/Volunteer HQ.

Sunday we began at 8 am for more of the same as Saturday, but only 11 hours of it.

Monday was slowish, so I got to go out and about, and wrote up my ‘staff pick,’ only to find that my favorite boat left on Sunday night! One of our long term volunteers bought me an ice cream cone, however, which is almost consolation, and I chilled a little in the beer garden before heading home.

Tuesday, presumably, was much like Monday, except that I ran away to go hiking with Alex and a couple of his buddies, down by Mt. Rainier. It’s about three hours to drive down there, so I still got up at sixish. Actually, I woke up at a quarter to six, due to kitten. I woke up a little, looked over, and she was curled up in a perfect circle by my head — with her head stuck under the pillow! I tried to get up very quietly to grab the camera and photodocument this oddity, but she woke up, and then she was monstery, so I just got up and made buttermilk biscuits for eating in the car. At the mountain we saw wildflowers, and several frogs (! — too fast for me to catch, though), but no marmots, and none of the big damage from the November storms.

Wednesday, last day of the festival, I was back in Festival HQ for a good chunk of the day, and ended up making a fair number of announcements, as we had no particular announcer. I got a lot of comments on how great I sound amplified, something I’ve never thought about before. I guess with radio show in high school, and call center experience, I modulate my voice pleasantly. People also seemed particularly taken by the last few closing announcements, which I phrased to kindly emphasize that at six o’clock the Festival was over, and that included the beer garden.

Spent an hour or two on cleanup, then had dinner with the volunteers, and chilled on the docks for the fireworks. Alex and I ended up sitting on the Pirate, which was at the end of the dock, and therefore a front row seat. The fireworks were lovely, included a few shaped as smiley faces, cubes and hearts, but were nowhere near as many as New Year’s in China. Very nice to watch them on the water, though.

The only thing we did wrong was to leave too early, and get stuck in traffic snafus on the way home. I’d asked Alex to come with car, so I wouldn’t have to bike home, assuming I’d be tired and tipsy, but even biking tired and tipsy we would have gotten home quicker!

Today, you won’t be surprised to hear, I took a long nap!