Thursday, March 30, 2017

Training for our 6th STP in the rain and cold.....and rain and more rain


We are going to ride the STP (Seattle to Portland) bike ride again this year with Jules.  It will make our sixth time doing it together.  That's almost unimaginable when I think back to when we bought Vicky her inexpensive step-through bike shortly after we were married.  We thought we'd tool around the island a little, never dreaming we would do the STP even once.

But the more we rode, the more we knew this was something we wanted to do.  As of now that inexpensive ($400) bike has gotten her to Portland five times. 

And since biking has become more of a thing for us, she has outgrown her inexpensive step-through bike, and could use a real road bike.

But the problem is that this one fits her so well.  She rides in an upright position.  A better road bike would put her more into the commonly-seen riding position bent over the handlebars.  She has a titanium disk in her back which limits her flexibility, and necessitates an upright biking position for her, so a better bike really isn't an option.  The two most important aspects of enjoying riding and being able to ride many hours in one day is being in shape and having a bike that fits you.

For me, I think it is a kick.  When we are on our bike rides, I think it is cool that this Medicare Grandma of nine kids can keep up with younger people on bikes where sometimes one wheel costs as much as her entire bike.  I'm proud.

We came home a month earlier from Road Trip 6 than we had from Road Trip 5, which was itself one month earlier than when we arrived home from Road Trips 1-4.  We were gone almost the same amount of time for all of them, but just left earlier this year so we could catch fall in the mid-west National Grasslands.

Part of our thinking was that we could start riding and getting into bike shape a month earlier.

Good plan, but we forgot to tell the weather to cooperate.  Because it has been COLD and RAINY.

 

We can bundle up for the cold, dressing up in our full armor gear, but when it rains the visibility for us, and most importantly for vehicles, is worse.  So it's not as safe.  It also gums up the bikes.  There have been only a handful of days when we could ride outdoors. 

So this year, we have only gotten in 200 miles.  Most of our riding has been indoors, on our trainers.

  

And that is SO BORING.

I admire people who can ride exercise bikes consistently or ride exercise bikes at a gym consistently, because it is absolute torture for us.  You ride and ride......AND DON'T GET ANYWHERE!!

And there's nothing to see, or to talk about.

To keep from going crazy we started watching movies on Amazon while we cycled on the trainers. 

That lasted for only a few movies:  Steven King's Graveyard Shift, and all of the Indiana Jones films (seeing them altogether leads to this conclusion about them:  All of them are good except the second one which is just a bunch of screaming by some kid and Kate Capshaw).

What we realized was that movies move slowly.  Even good ones. Even Indiana Jones!   And when you are sitting in a theater or watching it on your television that is OK.  But when you need distraction it doesn't work.

So we shifted to documentaries.

An amazing difference.  Time goes much more quickly.  Learning something and being able to talk about what we are learning has made it doable.

So, what have we learned?  I know you are interested.

Well, we are now experts on WW-II.  We learned about the glider corps--didn't even know there was one.  After these boys landed their gliders (hopefully) they were more or less on their own to get back, to be able to do it again.  Many didn't.

We learned about the 10th Mountain Division, and the horrific battles they fought in Northern Italy.  Most casualties of any unit that fought in WW-II.

We learned about the British Air Corp's bombing in the Lancasters.  It was slaughter in the skies, and slaughter on the ground.

We learned about the great naval battles of WWII between the Hood and the Bismarck.  What seems on the surface to have been a great battle was actually, of course, just another a great slaughter.  The Hood was obliterated in seconds.  Three survivors.  The Bismarck, the pride of the German navy, lasted only 8 days after it was launched!  Because German submarines had been called to the area where it sank, the British ships had to immediately leave instead of rescuing the German sailors.  Hundreds of potential survivors drowned. 

War:  Young men dying and old men talking.

The most fascinating thing we learned was about Garbo. The spy referred to by the allies as Garbo, not the Greta Garbo.   Garbo single handedly probably saved hundreds of thousands of lives.  He was a double agent spy.  He actually received the German cross for service to Germany!  This guy was good.  He had a network of spies reporting to him......all made up.  The main thing he did was convince Hitler that the invasion of France was going to be in a different place than Normandy, so Germany moved all of their troops away from Normandy.

He told Hitler that the Normandy invasion was a feint, and he bought it.  After it was clear that there was no other invasion he told Hitler that because the feint went so much better than expected that the allies just decided to skip the real invasion.  And Hitler bought that too.  This guy was good. 

When you watch Saving Private Ryan again (if you have the guts to), consider what the slaughter would have been like for those boys landing at Omaha Beach if Germany had actually been fully prepared for it.  Normandy was successful basically because of one man who neither one of us had ever heard of.

We learned about ancient history:  Napoleon's Navy, Alexandria, Genghis Kahn. 

Then we got into psychopaths, an interest I'm sure everyone also has.  We watched some of the latest about psychopaths which, given our professions and experience, told us that there was nothing new.  We watched a show about Aileen Wournos, the female "serial killer."  A movie was made about her (Monster, with Charlize Theron).  Her attorney convinced her to plead guilty, so she did, and got the death penalty.  Her attorney was someone named something like Mr. Attorney.  Seriously.  Then we got into Bernard Madoff.

So, ask us anything about psychopaths.  Anything.  We've got it.

Now we are in to Ken Burns.  Our first one we watched was about prohibition.  It got boring---after awhile it was just a bunch of stories about different criminal enterprises.  We did learn one interesting fact:  The origin of the term bootlegger.  It came from the 19th century in places where selling alcohol was illegal.  Guys would walk down the street with flasks in their boots, and would sell drinks from them.  I think that would ruin the experience of my Chianti, though, quite frankly, but apparently I'm alone about that.

Now we are watching about the Dust Bowl, which is much better.  Those poor settlers.  They did it to themselves, and if we had been there we would have done the same thing.  Just feeding their families, and desperate.  When you-know-who says that our country is experiencing "carnage, " it is clear that he has never really talked to people who really experienced carnage, or have even spent two hours watching The Grapes of Wrath.

So, our bodies and minds are getting better and better!!!  Sheesh.   Talk about taking ourselves too seriously.  Minds getting better?  Right.  Bodies getting better?  We're in our late 60s.  We're treading water with our bodies, at best.

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Project #6: $$$$$$$ Redoing the crawlspace


Do you think a lot about what is under your house?  I know I am obsessed by it.  Ask me anything and within a short amount of time I'll get around to talking about crawlspaces.  That's why I was so shocked a few weeks ago when the pest control service we have a contract with said we had a couple of "leaking pipes."

Ah, no biggie.  Just call the plumber..............and call another plumber.............and call another plumber...............and another........

Well, what we found is that plumbers on Whidbey Island either have heard about us and don't like us, or they have so much business that they just call people back at their leisure, or we live on Whidbey Island and everybody just kind of makes it up as they go along.

Finally got a plumber out who said.......he wouldn't work on the house because there was too much debris under it, including dead rats, etc.

What?

So, we contacted a company that cleans out and repairs crawlspaces.  Did you know there were companies that specialize in this type of difficult work?

These are the photos from under the house.  It had really deteriorated.









Yech.  And I mean, YECH!

I knew it had been a couple of years since I had been under the house, and I could tell at that time that the insulation wasn't all that great, but I thought we had everything basically done.  And we should have had it basically done.  The guy who I contracted with 10 years ago to repair the house had put in insulation, etc., but now we see he had not done as good of a job on this as he did on the carpentry.

One thing he forgot to do was to hire a pest control service to close up all of the potential entry points.  In the 10 years too much damage had been done.  Mostly by rats, which are interesting creatures around here.  They do tons of damage if you are not careful, but (and this is the weird thing, so cue creepy music) you never see them.  Never.  You see mice, voles, chipmunks, squirrels, etc., but never see rats. 

I really don't like having to do something twice.  If it's done right the first time you shouldn't have to.  But we had to.  It wasn't done right. 

So, we hired an off-island company to completely redo the underside of the house.  The first step was pulling out all of the old junk.  A crew of five spent almost an entire day doing this:



 Looked kind of empty and bare:


The next stage was to get a plumber out. We finally got one from Oak Harbor, 50 miles away.  As we said, the ones closer to us must be flush with money because they just didn't call us back.  (Note to people who live elsewhere----if you are a plumber come to South Whidbey and open a business!).  We also had the local pest service (Surety Pest Control---a shout out to them because they were always reliable and on-time) come out two times and closed up holes where pests could come in.

The final stage was installing the new insulation:




This whole enterprise was not cheap.  However, it was necessary.  It illustrates the value of budgeting for the unexpected.

It is also worth noting that the nine or so men who worked on this project didn't speak English as their first language.   It was hard work, and I didn't want to ask too many questions.  They got paid, were willing to do it, and if any people who spoke English as a first language would have wanted to they could have.  Not only that, anybody who spoke English as a first language could open this type of business on Whidbey Island.  We had to contract with someone whose business was located several miles away.

We are pleased with the results.  Our home is more secure, more solid, as a result. 

Sunday, March 19, 2017

Project #5: Making the grandkids' bedroom into a combo bedroom/work room









This one was pretty easy, although bunking the beds required some effort.

Cleaned out more clutter, created more space, and got a desk and organizer for our hobbies.

We like it:


Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Rufous Hummingbirds are arriving

We haven't seen many, but they are here--after traveling as much as 2000 miles.  JUST TO SEE US!

Our birds are beginning to appear.  We have seen Chickadees, Robins, Juncos, Sparrows, a Northern Flicker, and a Hairy Woodpecker.

Within a few days we won't be able to keep our hummingbird feeders filled.  We are so excited!




Thursday, March 9, 2017

Project #4: Painting the "master" bathroom

It really needed it.  It had not been painted since the house was built in 1980, and looked kind of bad, but with potential.  About six years ago I had the overhead fluorescent light fixture removed, but the ceiling had not been painted so it was two colors (both kind of gray---yech).

The light fixture that I had installed at that time never worked correctly.

It was time for a complete make-over:











First step:  painting the ceiling.










Then the walls:



Trim for under the window:  (and for a few other windows in the house)


Getting there:









Painting done:  Installing new light fixture:









Wow.  Does it look nice.