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~ The adventures of Richard and Julie Lary

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Monthly Archives: June 2008

Looney in a Tree

26 Thursday Jun 2008

Posted by rajalary in Seattle

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Because Rich works from home, he lets the cats roam in the backyard. Throughout the day, he checks on them, giving them kitty snacks when they come when called.

Being "way up North," it doesn’t get dark until nearly 10 p.m. Therefore, at around 9 o’clock last night, I started to round up the cats. They all came except for Lunetta, who normally only comes to Rich.

A petite tortoiseshell, Lunetta was found late one night about three years ago when we lived in Texas. I had gone outside to put the cats away in Annie House (an air conditioned and heated cat house) and could hear a kitten meowing. Thirty minutes later, after crawling around under the motor home, Rich reached up and snatched her from on top of a wheel. She weighed just a pound and was estimated to be 4-6 weeks old.

She’s never lost her voice because she occasionally meowed last night as we madly searched our backyard for her. Our yard has a high fence and backs up to three other houses… all with high fences. The cats enjoy getting on top of the fences and visiting the neighbors. Conceivably, they can visit a dozen or so neighbor’s yards by walking across the fences and jumping down on one side or the other.

From the sounds of her yowls she could have been in several people’s yards. We kept up the search until 11 p.m. with me growing more frTreeantic and distraught, convinced that she was injured or trapped somewhere which is why she wasn’t coming.

I slept fitfully until around 3 a.m. when I woke from a dream in which our fence parted and I reached out and grabbed her. I leapt out of bed and dashed into the backyard, calling her name. This time, she yowled so loud that even Rich could hear her. 

A few minutes later, Rich located her… in a large tree towards the back of our yard, She was about 20-25 feet up on a narrow branch. Rich rusheTree branchesd into the garage and grabbed his tallest ladder, but it was at least 10-15 feet too short to reach her.

He then devised a plan. He screwed together two 8-foot long 2-x4 inch boards and nailed a small platform on top. He then cut a scrap of carpet, sprinkled it with catnip and stapled it to the platform. He intended to climb up the ladder with the platform, coax Lunetta onto it then slowly descend the ladder while Lunetta clung to the carpeting. 

Amazingly, by the time he got back to the tree, Lunetta had climbed down two branches. Rich was then able to slowly climb up the ladder, reach out and grab her.

It was such a relief when he tossed her in the house! Hopefully, she’s learned her lesson and will stick to fences rather than trees. You can see the size of the tree and our fence in the top picture and the branches looking up.  

Lunetta

25 Wednesday Jun 2008

Posted by rajalary in Cat Diaries

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My name is Lunetta. The night I was found under Rich’s and Julie’s motor home the moon was full. Lunar. Get it?

They call me Looney or Loose Nuts. Even though I’m three years old, they also refer to me as the "baby." And they wonder why I don’t like to associate with them! I prefer to hang-out with Pu’Yi or Zephyra.

Last night, I chased a squirrel up a tree and got stuck. I cried and cried, but only Julie could hear me and she kept looking on the ground and in the neighbors’ backyards for me. The whole time I was 25 feet above her in the tree! Lunetta

Rich was no better. He kept saying that I’d come home when I got tired. Sure. I’d like to see him climb down from a 5-story building using only his fingernails. 

Dumb humans!

I was so upset when they stopped looking for me. When Julie came back outside at 3 a.m. I screamed at the top of my lungs. I was so tired of sitting that tree. I just wanted to be in the house, curled up with Pu’Yi.

They tried to get me with a ladder, but it wasn’t tall enough so then they disappeared. What was I supposed to do? Well, I was desperate so I slide down the tree trunk and landed on another branch. That was so scary!

Happily, they returned a few minutes later with a weird contraption. Rich actually thought that I’d jump onto it and he could lower me to the ground. Ha!

Well because I jumped down a few branches, Rich didn’t have to use the contraption. He could reach me by climbing to the top of the ladder. It felts so good when his hands wrapped around my body. Sigh. 

The Good Pirate

18 Wednesday Jun 2008

Posted by rajalary in Seattle

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One night, a few weeks after closing on our Kirkland house, I zipped over to the house to check on something. At the time, I was still living in an apartment in Redmond and Rich was in Mount Vernon. Because I was running out of food and there was a Safeway a few minutes from our Kirkland house, I decided to zip in there rather than shop in Redmond.

It was a week or two before Halloween and as I rushed into the store, my eyes caught site of a man I thought was wearing a mask. I was moments from congratulating him on the effectiveness of his Halloween guise when I realized that his face was badly deformed. I hoped that he hadn’t seen my facial expression that must have revealed my horror.

He was a Safeway employee. The left side of his face was enlarged with tumors that sagged, covering up one of his eyes, half of his mouth and nose, and deforming his ear. Smaller tumors covered other parts of his face and neck.

My first thought was perhaps he came from other country where he hadn’t received proper medical care. When I got back to my apartment, I spent the next few hours trying to research his facial deformities, deciding that it was perhaps Proteus Syndrome, which causes skin overgrowth, atypical bone development and facial tumor. Only a few case have been conformed worldwide, including Joseph Merrick who became known as the "Elephant Man.

A month or so passed before I saw him again. Once again, I returned to my computer to figure out whether a cure was available. Rich also saw him and was equally distressed.

Then a few weeks ago, Rich came home from the store to tell me that money was being raised to enable him to have surgery. His name is James O’Neal and since May, the community has raised over $100,000 for his medical treatment!!!!

James is no doubt an exceptional person with more goodness than ten people. His story was publicized on local news channels to help the fundraising efforts. Watching the videos on his fundraising site – Friends of James O’Neal Fundraising – you can see the joy in his eyes when he talks with others. Kids calls him the "good pirate."

Hopefully his surgery(s) will be successful. He was born with neurofibromatosis, which is a genetic disorder that cause tumors to grow around the nerves. Only 100,000 Americans have the disorder.

Pot of Doo

09 Monday Jun 2008

Posted by rajalary in Seattle

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When Rich and I lived in Oregon, we attended quite a few cultural events, primarily plays. It was fairly easy to get downtown and parking was somewhat plentiful.
 
After moving to Austin, we tried a handful of companies and settled on regularly attending plays at Arts on Real and Gilbert & Sullivan operettas and musical events. For the most part, we made excuses for staying indoors (air conditioned) and not fighting the traffic.
 
When we moved back to the Pacific Northwest, I wanted to get back into attending plays and musical events. Like Austin, however, the drive to downtown is considerable and wrought with heavy traffic. Nevertheless, attending cultural events is worth the effort.
 
Several months ago, I noticed an advertisement for the Laugh Out Loud Festival hosted by the Pacific Northwest Ballet. It sounded like a fun program and a great way to
introduce Rich to ballet. I’ve taken years of ballet at a kid and seen several ballets at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angles so I’m familiar with dance.
 
While a bit skeptical, Rich agreed to go. The program was exceptional! And McCaw Hall in Seattle’s Queen Anne district was impressive – large, but not intimidating with 2,900 seats and an enormous dark red curtain with bits of sparkles.
 
On Saturday, we signed up to see All Robbins, featuring three pieces choreographed by Jerome Robbins. Robbins is best known for choreographing the Broadway shows West Side Story, The King and I, Gypsy, Fiddler on the Roof, and Peter Pan. He also has an extensive repertoire of classical ballets.
 
We weren’t disappointed. All three pieces were amazing, including Fancy Free. Of course, the Pacific Northwest Ballet is one of the top companies in the country so the dancing, lighting and costumes were spectacular. Afterwards was a question and answer session with the artistic director, Peter Boal and one of the dancers.
 
Waiting for the talk to begin, Rich and I made small talk and I mentioned that we should also see a full-length ballet with a "pas de deux" (French for "dance for two"). I mispronounced it — not that I really know how to pronounce it correctly– as "pot of doo."
 
As the words spilled out, I realized what I said. Rich paused for a moment then started laughing. I followed. Uncontrollably.
 
There we sat in a room of society people waiting for Peter Boal to show up and struggling to control our laughter and squelch the voice in our heads that kept repeating, pot of doo, pot of doo!!
 
Mercilessly, after a moment or two, the humor passed and we were able to appear somewhat civilized. Good thing because it was fascinating to hear Peter talk about studying at the School of American Ballet in New York City when he was nine. He was the prince in the Nutcracker with the New York City Ballet when he was eleven, having learned the part from the great choreographer George Balanchine. He also worked with Jerome Robbins and Peter Martins and retired from the New York City Ballet in 2005, after dancing and teaching for 22 years.

Sweat’n at the Pro Club

04 Wednesday Jun 2008

Posted by rajalary in Seattle

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One of the many amazing benefits at Microsoft is membership at the Pro Club. It’s a humble (cough, cough) facility in an enormous three-story building featuring three cardio centers, free weights center, women’s only gym, four indoor swimming pools, six indoor tennis courts, seven racquetball courts, nine squash courts, four basketball courts, physical therapy clinic, on-site podiatrists, nutritionists, dermatologists, scores of personal trainers, every type of class possible (including special rooms for pilates, spinning, circuit training, and yoga), childcare center, spa and salon, luxury restaurant, café, florist, dry cleaner, car detailing… and luxurious locker rooms.
 
The woman’s locker room has two hot tubs, two steam rooms, a sauna, two sets of showers, a tiled area to recline on chaise lounges and listen to a bubbling fountain, a carpeted area to relax and watch TV or read, and of course, the usual accoutrements, including hair dryers, irons, iron boards, lotions, potions, towels, and a machine to spin the water out of your bathing suit!
 
There are even concierges to schedule a racquetball or tennis court, handle your dry cleaning, sign you up for programs, and schedule an appointment in the spa or restaurant… you name. They’ll set it up!
 
I typically slunk into the gym early in the morning, rush into the locker room, stuff my bag into a locker then scurry to the brightly lit gym to read a TIME magazine while doing a little cardio. I then advance to the less-brightly lit gym (there’s a gym with no lights so you can totally concentrate on working out) to row or work on some of the weight machines. My last stop is the women’s gym for stretching and sit-ups.
 
When I first joined, I would swim two days a week, but got frustrated because my left leg is uncooperative following my accident. I can do a frog kick, but it drags when doing a flutter kick. I feel like a ninny doing the breast stroke (with a frog kick) when everyone is "crawling" across the pool. Plus, my right leg dominates and I spend lots of energy compensating for my right side pulling me across the pool. Grumble.
 
At any rate, I’d rather read and do cardio then gasp across a pool.
 
Several months ago, while deeply absorbed in a magazine, I nearly feel off an elliptical machine when Steve Ballmer walked by. "Whoa," I thought, "the CEO of Microsoft is hanging out with the common folks."
 
I thought it was an anomaly until I kept seeing him… several mornings a week!
 
The Hope Diamond when compared to the net worth of Steve Balmer is a mere trinket in a box of Cracker Jacks. The man has more money than most countries. One would think that someone as "valuable" as Steve Balmer would have a private gym and a legion of strategically placed body guards.
 
Maybe his body guards are cleverly disguised… or maybe not. He’s always with a Pro Club personal trainer and wears nothing like you’d expect the CEO of Microsoft to wear – baggy shorts, worn out shoes, and a t-shirt that some marketer probably gave him or came from a trade show.
 
Yes. Steve Balmer is up with the times. You’re just as likely to see him wearing a t-shirt for "Windows Server 2008" as one for "Windows NT – The next revolution in computing."
 
He’s also not afraid to work up a sweat. Lots of perspiration. By the time he leaves the gym, his shirt is soaked and his head hung with exhaustion.

Weekend that Went Wrong then Right

04 Wednesday Jun 2008

Posted by rajalary in Mount Vernon

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For weeks, we’d planned our Memorial Day weekend get-away. At the back of mind, however, I had doubts. Unfortunately, my premonitions turned into realities when the front brakes of our motor home seized up about five miles into our trip!

Damn!

The plan was to get up early on Saturday morning, throw a pile of clothes, reading materials, and food into the car, drive to Mount Vernon, pack up the motor home, zip over to our lot in Anacortes, and spend the next two and a half days hiking, gardening, talking, watching the sunset, and enjoying “RVing.” The last time we used the motor home was when we drove it from Texas to Washington in December 2006!

The first part of the plan was a breeze. We got out the house early and had a pleasant trip to Mount Vernon. It promised to be glorious day. Once we arrived, Rich got the motor home refrigerator and generator charged up, checked the systems, and tossed in some lawn chairs and numerous garden tools. I went to the store for necessities – ice cream, cheese, crackers, fruit, pasta, pesto, eggs, frozen potatoes, granola, fresh vegetables, fruit, and Orbit Citrusmint gum (yum). We even dropped off Rich’s truck at Les Schwab to get a tire repaired.

After a quick lunch at Taco Del Mar, we picked up Rich’s truck and double-checked to make sure everything was ready for our big adventure. Driving towards Anacortes, Rich commented on how well the motor drove. Five miles down the road, we spied some discarded large plastic bins by the road – perfect for transporting bark dust or loading up stuff for the recycling center.

We spun around and I leapt out to get the bins. When we turned back onto the road, Rich’s face went white. The motor home was pulling towards the right. A few miles down the road, we smelled burning rubber. Ten minutes later, we were turning into Les Schwab.

The prognosis was bad. The calipers, which had given us trouble in Texas, weren’t working improperly. Two weeks before, we’d spent a small fortune to have the brakes and front-end of the motor home inspected and worn out parts repaired. The calipers had been cleaned, but not replaced. Scream!

Deeply (what an understatement) disappointed, we drove back to Mount Vernon and unloaded the motor home. I then expressed my fury by mutilating weeds in the lawn and shaking the dirt out of clumps of grass that I’d dug up the week before to enlarge the flower bed in the backyard.

Rich was much calmer. He constructively repaired his bike’s flat tire. Two hours later, we were back on the road, this time to a hike- and-bike trail by the Skagit Regional Airport. We rode for an hour or so then headed to the Tommy Thompson bike trail in Anacortes. Part of the trail was formerly a railroad bridge that crosses the bay. As we biked, I looked over the side to see a giant seal gliding under the bridge. We smiled at each other. My heart skipped a beat.

Moments later, we saw several Canadian geese and their younglings paddling across the water. One grouping was in a perfect row with a mother goose in front followed by seven or eight babies with another full-grown goose heading up the back like a caboose.

After crossing the bay, we biked around part of the islet then crossed back over the bay and peddled to downtown Anacortes and the marina. We walked around the beach for a little bit, looking for interesting pieces of driftwood. We found many painted pieces; Rich thought they came off of boats that had broken up at sea.

It was 8:30 when we got back to the car. We hurried back to Mount Vernon, made a quick dinner, took a shower then tumbled into bed.

The next morning, we drove to our lot in Anacortes and hiked for a few hours around Whistle Lake, which is accessible from a trail a few minutes from our lot. It was a splendid day and the trail was relatively flat. Stopping for lunch, I saw an interesting wildflower, Harsh Paintbrush, which has pretty green leaves that turn red at the tips so from a distance, they look like flowers. This photograph is from Deception Pass, which less than ten miles from where we were hiking.

After hiking, we rehydrated and started on the work-of-the-day… ripping, cutting, weed-whacking, and gathering plants, trees and grasses on our lot. Going down our curved driveway is a rock format. My job is to remove most of the vegetation off of the rocks. In a couple of years, I anticipate finishing the task!

Rich routinely weed-whacks the driveway and our septic drain fields, which need to remain free of deep-rooted weeds and flora. He’s also fond of cutting unnecessary branches and chopping down small trees that we don’t want on the property. There’s no point letting them grow if we’re going to be chopping them down once we start building and landscaping. Plus, at this point, we want to encourage the growth of the madrone rather than cedar and fir trees.

We’re also clearing spaces for trails and to plant flowering bushes like lilac, azaleas, and rhododendron along with a variety of maple trees.

After a full day of hiking and gardening, we drove back to Mount Vernon for a leisurely evening, watching DVDs and the sunset. The next day, Memorial Day, we headed back to Kirkland… for gardening, unpacking, cooking, laundry, and other weekly chores. Even though we spent most of the day working, it was nice being together in our house in the Pacific Northwest!

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