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Lakefront Property

07 Monday Jan 2008

Posted by rajalary in Seattle

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In early December, torrential rains hit Washington, resulting in flooding in southern Washington, overflowing creeks and other waterways, and turning our Mount Vernon house into lakefront property. About half a mile from our house is the Skagit River. When it rained, the banks overflowed.
 
The picture below shows the house across the street from ours. While the land in front of the land is part of a wet land, it usually doesn’t turn into a lake. According to Rich, it took several days for the water to recede.
 
The other picture shows the pastures, which is about an eighth of a mile from our house. In the distance is a dairy farm.
 
 The

The view, a short walk from our house

Enjoying the Puget Sounds

28 Friday Dec 2007

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The day before Christmas, we took the ferry from downtown Seattle to Bainbridge Island, one of the largest in the Puget Sound, about five miles wide and ten miles long. We sailed on the M/V Wenatchee, a huge ferry, capable of carrying up to 2,500 passengers, 202 vehicles and 60 commercial vehicles. Being mid-morning, traffic was light with a hundred or so cars, an ambulance, a UPS truck, a lone bicyclist, several motorcycles, and a couple dozen walk-on passengers. It’s a pleasant and very scenic half hour ride, especially from cushy seats overlooking the bow from the passenger deck.
 
After getting off, we stopped in the "big town" on the island, Winslow. Hip and upscale, Winslow is comprised of trendy gift, clothing, home decorating, floral, furniture, and kitchenware shops. It feels like Brentwood, California with the beautiful people zipping down the streets in their BMWs, Lexus’ and Volvos in search of just the right placemat or table setting for their holiday dinner.
 
Our next stop was Poulsbo, located on the east side of the Puget Sound, and a short bridge ride off Bainbridge Island. Founded by Jorgen Eliason from Fordefjord, Norway, Poulsbo is known as the Viking City. Its majestic snow-peaked mountains and fjords attracted others from Norway and other Scandinavian countries. For many years, Norwegian was the only language spoken by the citizens.
 
The city has retained its Norwegian charm with many quaint art galleries, restaurants, and boutique stores located a block or two from the spectacular waterfront. We enjoyed a tasty lunch of clam chowder, fish and chips (Rich) and lox, capers and sliced red onions on flat bread (Julie) at a crowded seafood restaurant.
 
The east side of the Puget Sound is sparsely populated and very scenic making it an ideal place to live… if you can find employment.
 
With some daylight remaining, we headed north to Port Gamble, a 120-acre National Historical Landmark situated on the shores of the scenic Hood Canal. Founded in 1853 by Maine businessmen Andrew Pope and William Talbot (Pope and Talbot), Port Gamble was the longest continuously operating mill town in North America.
 
Its New England-style houses and turn-of-the-century buildings have been meticulously restored and are now shops and rentals. I think most of the area is owned and managed by Pope Resources and has few permanent residents. The day we visited, we saw only four or five people. All of the shops were beautifully decorated, but disappointingly closed for Christmas Eve. It was like visiting an amusement park before it opened. The lawns and landscaping was perfectly manicured, every house carefully painted and the sidewalks swept clean, ready for visitors.
 
Rich and I plan on visiting Port Gamble again… this time when it’s open for business!
 
With the sun setting on the snow-covered mountains and over the Puget Sound, we headed back to Bainbridge Island and the Suquamish Clearwater Casino Resort where we meet Stacey (Rich’s daughter) and her boyfriend, Jesse, Chris (Rich’s son), June (Stacey’s and Chris’ mother) and her husband Gary, Chiemi (June and Gary’s daughter), June’s sister Gail and her husband Ed along with their son Justin and his girlfriend Tomei.

 
It was a nice get-together. We exchanged gifts and ate at the casino buffet before boarding a ferry back to Seattle.
 
The weather was perfect all day. Traveling across the smooth water, the lights of Seattle got brighter, welcoming us to home to the Emerald City.
 
House in Port GamblePolsboroPort Gamble HousesPort GambleSeattle from the Ferry

 

Bye-bye Apartment

12 Wednesday Dec 2007

Posted by rajalary in Seattle

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On Friday evening, Rich and I moved my "stuff" into our Kirkland house. I had mixed feelings. First, I was thrilled that we were consolidating down to two residences instead of three. It was getting tiring packing clothes, food and tools every weekend to accommodate where we’d be spending our time.
 
On the other hand, I had grown fond of my tidy, compact apartment with its close proximity to Lake Sammamish, Microsoft, Uwajimaya (oriental grocery store), and the Belleveue Goodwill (great clothes and collectibles). Plus, my apartment building, with just eight one-bedroom apartments, is a short walk from the rest of the complex, across a footbridge that goes over a culvert. Another, larger culvert is opposite my apartment. When it rains, the water roars through the culverts into Lake Sammamish.
 
Plus, the apartment has a little gym with TV screens on the eliptical machines. It was my only opportunity to watch TV!
 
Nevertheless, it’s nice to be a house and starting to unpack my stuff, putting clothes in the closets, cooking in the kitchen, and planning other home improvements. In addition, we had Comcast installed last week, which means cable TV, Internet access, long-distance… the whole she-bang.

Snow

01 Saturday Dec 2007

Posted by rajalary in Seattle

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Last year, the first snow of the season was on Thanksgiving weekend. It waited an extra week this year. Saturday morning, we woke to a light dusting of snow in Mount Vernon; by the time we reached Kirkland, the dust had turned into flakes. A few hours later, the streets, trees, houses… everything was coated with several inches of snow.
 
We were toasty inside, having gotten a new furnace the day before and busily installing bamboo flooring in our third bedroom. Tomorrow, we’ll install flooring in our fourth bedroom, which will allow us to start putting furniture in the rooms. Yeah! Although, we still need to add molding, new closet doors… new plug covers, etc.
 
By the time we left Kirkland, at around 7 p.m., to eat dinner and go to my apartment in Redmond, the roads had gotten quite treacherous. Happily, Rich had driven down his truck, which has four-wheel drive.
 
My apartment, which is at a lower elevation than our Kirkland house, and is located on Lake Sammamish, had slushy snow, which is icky to walk in, but not dangerous for driving. Hopefully, it doesn’t freeze overnight, turning the slush into ice. And I’m hoping the snow will melt tomorrow afternoon so I can drive my FIT back to Redmond (it’s in the garage at Kirkland) and Rich and drive an hour north to Mount Vernon.
Large tree from our Anacortes lot with snow outside

Snow across the street from our houseLooking up the street from our house

A Fabulous Day in Seattle

01 Saturday Dec 2007

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A couple of weeks ago, Rich’s son, Chris and his wife, Shawnie, visited us. It was a gorgeous day, slightly cool with screaming blue skies. Because parking is a challenge and expensive in downtown Seattle, we took the bus to Pike’s Market, the big tourist spots downtown.
 
Stacey, Rich’s daughter, along with her boyfriend, Jesse, took the ferry over from Bainbridge Island, and met us downtown. For the next few months, Stacey and Jesse are living and working on a tall ship, anchored in Port Townsend.
 
We had lunch at a "fast food" Thai restaurant, which provided huge portions at a great price. Afterwards, we walked through Pike’s Market then headed past the Ron Paul (Libertarian for President) event to Olympic Park. Opened in the past year, and part of the Seattle Art Museum, the park features huge art piece by prominent artists like Alexander Caldera and Claes Oldenburg.
 
Rich is helping me write this blog and he’d like to add that he’s bus-schedule challenged (we had to wait an extra half hour for a bus) and park-and-ride challenged (we went to the farthest possible park-and-ride in Kirkland, which added an additional 20 or more minutes to our ride).
 
Below are pictures from the day.
Chris and ShawnieDowntown SeattleOlympic parkOn the Bus with RichStacey and Jesse
  

Busy on Rennovations

27 Tuesday Nov 2007

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Last Saturday, Rich and I set aside a day to simply do nothing (or very little). For the past few weekends, we’ve been working on our Kirkland house, which is slowly shaping up. After painting every room twice to cover up the stunning pink, avocado green, and neon blue walls, we started to prep the floors to lay strand bamboo. Happily Rich had an epiphany and decided to sand the original construction floor boards instead of cover them with thin sheets of very expensive plywood.
 
The floors where sanded within a day. We finished getting them ready by using a hand sander along with getting on our hands and knees to remove, scrap, sweep, and vacuum up staples, bits of paint, ceiling goo, and other imperfections that could potentially prevent the bamboo flooring from laying flat.
 
On Thanksgiving, we started to lay the bamboo. Rich, using his CAD skills, laid out the boards to minimize waste. He then cut them using his "pattern" while I prepared the Thanksgiving feast. After gobbling shrimp-stuff tomatoes on greens, turkey, dressing (rosemary bread, leeks, onions, celery, dried cranberries, pecan), yams with two types of apples, red potatoes mashed with garlic, gravy, and broccoli with leeks and carrots, Rich measured out the depth of seven boards then used a trowel to spread thick, goopy glue in the measured-out the area. Afterwards, we began to lay out the boards according to Rich’s pattern.
 
We then used our hands to squish the boards tightly together and tape them. We also rented a 100-pound roller thingy, which we rolled over the floor. Once a section was done, we started on the next. It took until 10:00 p.m. to finish the master bedroom floor. Fortunately, we had vanilla ice cream and warm blueberry crunch to give us strength.
 
On Friday, we continued our floor-laying efforts and happily finished Rich’s office. This weekend, we’ll lay flooring in the other two bedrooms, which leaves the tricky hallway, living room, dining room, and stairs to do. Groan.
 
After having our fourth meal of turkey, we drove to Mount Vernon on Friday evening. Saturday morning, it was a treat to wake up next to Rich with the "beasts." Zephyra and Jujube climbed up the covers at the foot of the bed and nibbled on our toes. Ouch! Pu’Yi bumped us with his head, and when we didn’t’ pay attention, kneaded up with his paws. Ouch! Ariel and Lunetta also demanded attention in their subtle ways.
 
Along with visiting our lot on Anacortes and cutting down a Christmas tree (it was growing in the area where we want to plant fruit trees), we had lunch at my favorite place, Geri-A-Deli in downtown Anacortes, bought a new washer and dryer at Sears, got Jelly-Bellys, Zip-Frizz and other necessities at Costco, had ice cream at Diary Queen, watched a video, looked at photos on Rich’s computer… and had a great Saturday.
 
Sunday, work resumed on our house in Kirkland, but at least we’re making progress and I’ll be able to move into the house in early December after my apartment lease expires.
 
.DisasterBoxes of bamboo flooring downstairs

Fall Leaves

01 Thursday Nov 2007

Posted by rajalary in Seattle

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Many weeks ago, the leaves started to turn color. I had forgotten how rapidly the leaves can go from green to yellow, gold, orange, red, and maroon. In addition, the more north you go, the more vibrant the colors. Some trees and bushes in the area were covered in bright red leaves as if they’d been spray painted.
 
To capture the shades of the season, I gather a handful of leaves from around the Microsoft campus and took pictures of them. The images below are untouched and were taken on my kitchen table and floor.
 

The leaves look like artwork!The variety of leaves is astonishingLaying the leaves shows their size and variety

Great Food and Lots of Fun

01 Thursday Nov 2007

Posted by rajalary in Microsoft

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Rich recently commented that Microsoft’s brown bag events are accordingly named because you might want a brown bag to take home the excess food. At Dell, a brown bag lunch consisted of three lukewarm pepperoni pizzas, a few bottles of water and paper towels from the bathroom.

Microsoft lunches and events, on the other hand, consist of huge spreads of scrumptious food. It’s not unusual for a reception or conference to have cheese platter with every type of imaginable cheese from brie to goat, cheddar, gouda, provolone, fresh mozzarella, and veined cheeses with a various crackers, olives, marinated and roasted vegetables (peppers, eggplant, squashes, artichoke hearts), fruit trays, and large pans of mini spanikopita, quiches, savory pastries, skewers of seasoned meats, hummus and baba ghannouji with pita bread and crudities… cookies, chocolate dipped strawberries… and so much more.

A brown bag I attended a few weeks after joining Microsoft, consisted of two types of fajitas meat, rice, beans, several types of salsas, tortillas, lettuce, tomatoes, sour cream, cheese, and guacamole. For those who didn’t care for Mexican food, they had several pizzas.

Even the pizza they serve is amazing. This week, during a diversity lunch, I had a slice of pizza that had a sweet, slighMicrosoft execstly crunchy, whole wheat crust. The topping was vegetables with stringy mozzarella cheese. Delicious!

The most memorable food that I had was at the open house for the Microsoft Studio. The food was extraordinary with little potato pancakes with blueberries, smoked salmon with capers, roasted vegetables, tartlets, ethnic hors d’oeuvres, desserts… The picture below, taken with cut-outs of Steve Balmer and Bill Gates, shows my delight!

If you’re wondering, the Microsoft Studios comprise almost an entire building. Along with having rooms of equipment, editing suites, audio facilities, a large tape library, and rooms to host talent, they have three 2,000-square foot sound stages. That’s like having three mid-sized houses in which to shoot productions!

Click here to see a video of the studio.

Popcorn Removal

08 Monday Oct 2007

Posted by rajalary in Seattle

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The deed is done! Last weekend, Rich and I successfully removed the popcorn ceilings from the four bedrooms, living room, dining room, hallway, and entry hall of our new house! Not knowing whether it contained asbestos, we decided to wear respirators, gloves and highly attractive protective suits. Mine had a hood for added glamour.
 
We’d done extensive reading on the topic and were therefore prepared for the worse. Much to our delight, nothing was too terrible or too difficult aside from getting the popcorn off the entry hall ceiling because of its height.
 
After covering the windows and floors of each room with plastic, I’d repeatedly spray the ceiling with water from a garden sprayer while Rich scrapped off the goo using a sharp metal scraper. We’d then carefully gather up the plastic and place it in large garbage bags. Still wearing our respirators, we’d sweep every inch of the floor, including getting on our hands-and-knees with a small brush and dustpan to get the bits of ceiling that fell into the corners and under the walls.
 
We’d then proceed to the next room.
 
The most time-consuming aspect was spreading the plastic and sweeping up. Each room was swept at least three times this past weekend to ensure all of the popcorn was picked up.
 
Next weekend, we have a hiatus while Rich visits his step-father in Bullhead City, Arizona. The following weekend, we’ll prep the ceiling for retexturing, remove the wallpaper from the dining room and entry hall (awful job) and ensure the walls are ready to be painted.

New for a Minute

05 Friday Oct 2007

Posted by rajalary in Seattle

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Last Friday, barely an hour after getting the keys, we started yanking the carpet out of the house we just purchased in Kirkland. Located 8 miles northwest of Microsoft (Redmond), the house was built in the mid-1970’s and is a typical split-level with 4 bitty bedrooms, two small baths, living room, dining room and kitchen upstairs, and large family room and laundry room downstairs.
 
I was hoping we’d purchase a newer, more hip house with a view of the surrounding area or quite possibly Lake Washington in the distance. However, housing prices are through the roof in the Seattle and surrounding area. If I wanted to live within a reasonable driving distance of Redmond (traffic is horrific), we needed to settle for either a smaller house or a fixer-upper.
 
We went house-hunting the second weekend that Rich arrived in Washington. We gave our realtor a list of twenty possible houses in Woodinville (north of Redmond), Kirkland (west of Redmond), Kenmore (northwest of Kirkland), and Bellevue (southwest of Redmond). Rich liked the first house in Woodinville, but I found it very dark and dingy with lots of paneling and windows that were obscured by tall pine trees.
 
Next, we saw five or six houses in Kirkland. Rich gave them all "thumbs down" because of poor construction or obvious problems that would have required lots of money to fix. The next house we saw was the one we ended up purchasing. The brochure listed it as 2,700 square feet, but we later learned that the square footage included the garage. Because we made an offer based on the wrong size, we made them take $5,000 off the price!
 
At any rate, Rich was thrilled with the house from the moment he walked in the front door. While it featured ghastly lighting from the 70’s, dreadful paint, and rather small rooms, it has a new kitchen with maple cabinets, huge, two-level deck, meticulous backyard, and large family room. In addition, it’s in a good area. And more importantly, the owners were very motivated to sell. The house had been reduced nearly $50,000!
 
Because an open house was planned for that afternoon, we decided to immediately make an offer. Less than thirty-days later, the house was ours.
 
As we suspected, the home inspection report revealed few problems aside from average wear-and-tear on the roof, heater, carpeting, and driveway. No huge red flags!
 
Both of the houses across the street from us have been updated and look fabulous. Visible from our front window and up the street is a house that belongs to Michael Jackson, formerly of the Seattle Seahawks. A woman that I worked with who knows several of the players confirmed that several former Seahawks live in the areas.
 
The day we took possession of the house, it appeared that the former owners got tired of moving and just left because plugged into the wall and in the middle of the family room was a perfectly good vacuum cleaner. In the garage, along with the instruction manual, was a large boom box along with a trash bag full of unused decorative pillows. Upstairs, in the kitchen, was a fabulous Danish table and two matching chairs. In the dishwasher, I found a set of glasses and a glass plate. On the deck was a barely used, rather elaborate Kenmore barbeque. Also found in the drawers and closets were fabrics and sewing notions, a small electronic piano, brass fixtures on the walls, second refrigerator the garage, 25-foot extension ladder, hoses, tiki torch, and 48 boxes of puzzles and games in the attic (see the picture below).
 
I’m thrilled with the kitchen, which has oak floors, a bay window, and maple cabinets that have pull-out drawers, a lazy susan, and other neat features. It’s going to be a pleasure to cook in it.
 
As far as the rest of the upstairs… where’s the hammer, chisel, screwdriver and pliers?
 
Last weekend, we ripped out all the carpeting (padding, tack strips and staples), baseboards, closet doors, and three areas of tile. Rich brought everything to the dump. It weighed almost a thousand pounds.
 
This weekend, we’ll be tackling the popcorn ceiling and removal of wallpaper in the dining room and entry hall. Yes, we know that the former can contain asbestos. We have matching disposable bunny suits, high-quality respirators, goggles, and gloves. We intend to complete the task in one day then wrap up and dispose of the goopy mess.
 
Towards the end of October, we’ll repainting most of the upstairs. The previous owners proudly documented the paints they’d used in the various rooms – dreadful "pina colada" green in the master bedroom, eye-popping "robin egg" blue in the guest bedroom, and Pepto Bismo pink "inkling" in another bedroom, hallway and dining room. To add to the explosion of color, they even painted the baseboards, closet doors and inside the closets to match the wall colors. Yes. Pink and robin egg blue closet doors.
 
Rich bought industry-sized containers of off-white paint that will be used on the ceilings and all the walls and closets. A single wall in several rooms – master bedroom, Rich’s office, etc. – will be painted with very pale shades of yellow, tea green or blue-gray.
 
In November, we’re hoping to start laying bamboo flooring in the bedrooms, living room, dining room, hallway, and stairs. We’ll also be placing tile by the front door. And finally, we’ll replace some of the stunning light fixtures from the 70’s, in particular, the three clear globes hanging from chains in the entry hall.
 
Other home improvement projects that are on the docket for the next few years are replacing the amber windows in the entry hall, installing double-pane windows, replacing the roof, and redoing the laundry room, which features mismatched cupboards, a laundry tub, toilet, ancient washer and dryer, and a large sauna that takes up much of the room. The sauna is very nice, but it’s doubtful we’ll ever use it. It’ll make nice planter boxes or a deck for hot tub.
 
If everything goes according to plan, we’ll be moving into the house in early December. Meanwhile, Rich is working from home in Mount Vernon and has the cats and birds. And I live a simple live in an apartment within walking distance of Microsoft.
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