I’m back! Travels went smoothly, even with a new airport opening in Lima (arrived at the old, departed from the new); Addison is a graduate, I had a nice visit, enjoyed some wonderful meals, and there was lots of love & laughter.
Lots happened when I was gone…
Malina doesn’t need training wheels anymore!
Davy got dirty, then clean… and also gave himself a funny little haircut.
But I’m mainly here to mark this occasion…
Ali & the kids spent their first night in their new home last night! There’s still plenty — PLENTY — to do, but this is a huge milestone!
I returned on Sunday from a quick Mother’s Day (me)/Birthday (Kate’s) weekend getaway to Milwaukee & found this:
Be Happy With What You got! Happy (Grand) Mother’s Day!!
Malina does not mince words! I haven’t had such a great laugh in a while.
I hadn’t been to Milwaukee in… a while! We did a lot of thrift shopping on Friday & Saturday, splurged on a fancy dinner at Sanford on Friday night, and hung out at our cute Airbnb. Seriously, it was one of the cutest & comfiest Airbnbs I’ve stayed at — and in over 10 years, I’ve stayed at about 40! The neighborhood was nice, too, and we walked to breakfast on Saturday morning at a place called Centraal Grand Café & Tappery — inspired by train travel & Centraal Station in Amsterdam. We ordered in (gyoza & ramen) on Saturday & watched some ‘flix. If you haven’t seen Nonnas, I highly recommend, especially if you’re looking for a feel-good almost RomCom but mostly a story about mothers/grandmothers/women & Italian cooking — and it’s based on a true story. I laughed & cried. We followed that with a couple episodes of Chef’s Table: Legends (José Andrés & Jamie Oliver). I guess we had a theme.
I’ve been busy, otherwise, but I can’t tell you what I did last couple of weeks. It’s all a blur! I can tell you what I’ve done the past couple of days.
I put together the girls’ bunkbed! I did it single-handedly — some parts were trickier than others & I have a few bruises to prove it! I had to ask Rusty to help me move it in place after it was assembled… I didn’t want to scratch the floor.
I started another Hitchhiker a while back, using some Olivia & Oliver Fibers yarn that I bought at Stephen & Penelope in Amsterdam last summer. It’s very pretty, but I haven’t taken a photo. I had to rip back a tooth or so due to a dropped stitch & insufficient bandwidth to figure out how to fix it, but I did that on Saturday night & I’m back on track. Maybe I’ll have a photo in time for Unraveled Wednesday next week.
I had to make a stop at the credit union for work on my way home on Friday…
…and ended up stalking a sandhill crane! From the drive-thru, there’s a row of employee parking, then a large expanse of grass, before reaching an apartment complex. I have seen sandhill cranes there before, but never so close — it was just on the other side of the row of cars! I stalked/took pics from my car… didn’t want any trauma.
I also stopped at Ali’s on the way home from work.
The upstairs bathroom/laundry wall, now with plumbing and electrical roughed in. Rusty’s been working on priming & painting baseboards and acquiring/installing sheetrock/flooring.
Saturday was low-key. The kids had an early visit from the Easter Bunny, and it was nice enough for a trail walk.
The ravine has exploded with snowdrops. Ginny is holding one of many bouquets. She also found an old bottle down there, which she cleaned out & used as a vase for some of that handful.
Had a funny teaching moment later that day when Junah emerged from the bathroom & said, “Oh, I used up the toilet paper.” Well, thank you very much for telling me, but… “AHEM!! Whoever uses it up installs a new roll!” Ta-da!
Sunday was spent doing some laundry at Ann’s. The NFL Draft is in Green Bay this week and we have some people driving over from North Dakota to attend! I did a little seaming on the Family Temperature Blanket while I was there — there’s just a little bit to go with joining panel #4 to #5, then the seam between #3 and #4 will join it all together. I should have some time this weekend to hopefully get that done!
While the washer was going, I walked down to Ali’s & removed all the prisms from an antique chandelier that was left in the house — 120 of them, from little buttons in a couple of different sizes, to various sizes of teardrops & other dangly shapes, some of them close to 4″ long. They were filthy, so I washed them all & assessed. There’s at least one medium size teardrop missing, but I likely have a replacement. I spent a little time watching YouTube videos on how to join the prisms together, and will be ordering some parts… and a special pliers… adding “antique chandelier restoration” to my list of skillz. I brought that chandelier, along with another, in for re-wiring/repair today (which I thought about doing myself, but naaahhhhh).
Yep, it’s Ali’s birthday today! A cake will be delivered this afternoon & we’ll have a nice celebration with the family. We’re taking her out for a nice dinner on Saturday night, too.
I spent a little time at her new house over the past few days, and there’s still plenty more of that. It’s pretty rough, but thought I’d share some progress photos (click any to embiggen).
The refinished floors are amazing. They even did the hall/cubby under the stairs — the girls, especially, love hanging out under there. The little entry into the enclosed front porch (originally an open porch, and that was the front door) was covered with black tar/gunky stuff, so that’s a vast improvement!
This wall of plumbing is pretty impressive in the upstairs bath/laundry. The washer & dryer will be on the left, double-sink vanity on the right.
As I’ve done for 40+ years, I helped Rusty rip some wood. There was a pile o’ pine that’s destined to be simple baseboards throughout — except for in the (future) foyer (where the stairs are), where there’s enough of the fancy old woodwork to patch.
Kate finished painting the girls’ room yesterday, and except for the floor, that’s a wrap!
This is the doorway to the stairs under the hall. It had a cheap, accordion-fold plastic door on it, which we tore off (literally) and threw into the dump trailer. There were a bunch of little clips holding it all on & they were kind of a pain — the screw slots were really thin — but I persevered & it’s ready for patching & painting!
I saw a great tip somewhere recently about cleaning ceiling fan blades by putting an old pillowcase over them to enclose the dust/dirt, instead of spewing it out into the air with a cloth or Swiffer. These blades needed it SO BADLY, and I’m happy to report that the pillowcase tip worked great! I then wiped off each blade with a damp cloth and gave her a spin!
That horrid shell of an air conditioner has presented a problem. There’s a big (falling-off) wooden box over it on the outside, and Ali started pulling it all apart to remove the unit & close the window. EXCEPT, that the genius who installed it CUT & MODIFIED BOTH THE WINDOW & THE STORM, so there’s no closing it. It’s an odd shape, different from any other that I’ve measured in the house (except for it’s intact counterpart on the other side of the room), so it’s going to have to be replaced. Who knows how long that a/c unit’s been there — I’m guessing decades — and there’s probably some damage inside the wall due to moisture, so there’ll likely be some structure work, too.
I’m reminded (as was Ann), of the time Brian was replacing a window or two on the east side of their old house in Madison and had to call in reinforcements & take emergency time off of work because it was basically the windows that were holding everything together!
The other thing I did yesterday — after my third trip to the hardware store — was to finish replacing the hardware in the kitchen! The false drawer fronts at the kitchen sink had been fitted with tip-out hardware. One of them wouldn’t close properly, so I affixed a magnet closure (that took way too many tries to get lined up). I discovered that a rivet in the tip-out mechanism had failed, so it can’t be fixed… though I just had a thought to try for rigging it. (Not a priority!) Anyway, those fronts needed extra washers so there wasn’t a gap, and a stubby screwdriver.
Lordy, it’s been a week. I’m thankful that it’s one of my long weekends coming up!
Saturday was a great day, though, so let’s go back…
Ali usually has Saturdays off & has the kids, so Kate & I decided to give her a “work day” — free of kids so she could just have at it all day at the house. Kate took the younger three to the Milwaukee Public Museum, which they’d never been to before — actually, Ginny was there when she was about 3 but doesn’t remember. I took Junah to get a haircut, then we finished his birthday shopping (yeah, his birthday was in January).
I learned of “Survivor Saturday,” a cooperative effort of our public library & local nature center (with a lot of help from local scouts), and thought that would be fun to do with Junah.
Orientation / WayfindingBuilding a Fire w/FirestartersNew boardwalks at the nature center!Shelter BuildingAll Complete!Goofball (it was a little breezy)Total goofball
There were tasks to complete & then we turned in our sheet to enter a drawing. The tasks were Orienteering (wayfinding with a compass), Knot Tying, making Fire Starter Kits (two different types), Fire Building (we used a firestarter… and a Dorito, though learned that Fritos are even better), and Shelter Building. He complained a little along the way, but actually had a lot of fun!
After that, we grabbed some lunch, stopped at the new house, chilled at home for an hour (nap time for Nona), then went to the MINECRAFT movie! I can’t say I’d have gone to see that movie otherwise, but it was fun. Have you see the crochet?? Jason Momoa has been known to sport the occasional crocheted garment, but for Minecraft, he had a cardigan made for himself & for Jack Black (just google their names + crochet). The cardigan pattern (Etsy) was designed by TreatYoSelfCrochet (IG).
Anyway, we stopped at the store to pick up dinner things & arrived home just as Kate & the rest of the kids!
And Alison painted the entire kitchen!
I helped Ali clear the downstairs hardwood floors on Sunday in preparation for the floor refinisher’s appointment on Monday.
Kate had picked up where the girls left off with painting their room, so we continued doing that after Ali left for work. The house you can see through the window in the middle pic is the house that Annie almost bought — before it all fell apart & she ended up buying her current house. It’s only a block away! Anyway, I love that little curve in the wall (reminds me of my Grandma Blum’s house, which featured a couple of curvy areas).
There’s a “before” and a “during,” which Rusty just sent me this morning — first coat of varnish is being applied in “the green room.” You can see a little of Rusty’s handiwork with the rebuilt stairs… there will be a door relocated to that gray “door-shaped” area beyond (someday hopefully fairly soon).
We’ve really entered the “finishing” phase! There’s a long way to go, but it feels so good!