Mouse Envy
16 Saturday May 2009
16 Saturday May 2009
06 Monday Apr 2009
Posted in Seattle
It was bound to happen… I talked Rich into allowing me to buy dog food to feed the raccoons that wander through our backyard. Every evening, I put out bowls of food for the raccoons and opossums.
Several months ago, when it got dark in the late afternoon, the raccoons would sneak onto our porch and chow down. I had to turn on the deck lights to see them.
Now, with it staying light longer, they show up long before dark. And if I haven’t put out their food, they stand on their hind legs, plant their paws on the french doors, and look inside to see if anyone is home!
Last Saturday, we got home around 6 o’clock at night. There was still several hours of light so Rich let Pu’Yi and Jujube outside. A few minutes later, he checked on the cats. They were sitting several feet apart on the deck. Equal distance between them was a raccoon, looking into the house!
I quickly got some dog food; Rich gingerly opened the door. The raccoon skirted around Jujube and hid until Rich put the bowl of food out. Check out the pictures.
We have at least two visiting raccoons. The smaller one is Sweetie-Pie and the larger is Pot-Pie. We also have visiting opossums. They have long, bright pink toes. Our most frequent visiting opossum is named P.T. (Pink Toes). A smaller, more elusive opossum with a deformed back foot also visits. He or she has yet to be named.
21 Sunday Dec 2008
Posted in Seattle
Rich and I lived in Oregon for over twenty years.It would snow once or twice a year and on a bad year, the snow would last two or three days. Kirkland (and Seattle), Alaska is a different story. It snows, sticks, snows some more, sticks, then snows again!
It started snowing on Wednesday afternoon and continued for most of Thursday. Friday there was no snow, but the streets were unsafe to drive… at least getting out of our driveway and up or down the steep hill. The picture of people sledding outside our front door tells the story…
Saturday, we ran some errands in Rich’s truck with Rich using 4-wheel drive in the slippery areas. That evening, it snowed again, leaving around a foot of snow in the area and many drifts from the wind.
Stacey, Rich’s daughter was supposed to fly to Seattle from San Diego, spend a few days with us then fly to Hawaii. However, SeaTac (Seattle Tacoma Airport) is canceling flights and already over 15,000 people are stranded in the area. Stacey was told that earliest flight to Seattle is on Wednesday… three days from now.
Here’s the scene around our house in Kirkland, Alaska:
21 Sunday Dec 2008
Posted in Seattle
As I write this blog entry, we have at least a foot of snow around our house. It’s been snowing on-and-off for four days, with more storms coming. Nevertheless, why dwell on the snow when you can admire the fall leaves in our backyard and next door…
This is our backyard… one mass of leaves with the grass barely visible beneath. We bought a shredder to grind up the leaves, but the leaves never dried out so we could use the shredder. The leaves are now under the snow.
Here’s Pu’Yi surveying the leaves and wondering if his days of lounging in the sun and chasing bugs is coming to an end.
With Rich working from home, the cats were able to go outside in the morning then come indoors for a nap then go back outside in the afternoon. Rich would bribe them with kitty snacks to get them to come back inside when he called them.
Our neighbor has many Japanese maples, which were spectacular this year. The leaves vary in size, shape and color, depending on the variety.
We have a large maple tree in our backyard, which earlier this year Lunetta decided to climb. It took until 3 a.m. to coax her down to a lower branch so Rich could plunk her out of the tree, using his tallest ladder. She’s since stayed out of the tree, which now has no leaves.
11 Saturday Oct 2008
Posted in Seattle
28 Monday Jul 2008
Posted in Seattle
The day after my Cruise-and-Learn, Chris (Rich’s son) and his wife, Shawnie, came down from Camas, Washington to visit with us and several of their friends. Stacey (Chris’ sister) who works for Argosy Cruises, offered to get us tickets for the locks cruise. What she didn’t say was that the locks cruise is fabulous. There aren’t even words to describe the wonderment and enjoyment of this cruise!
Everyone had an amazing time!
We initially took a bus from downtown Seattle (Pier 56) to Lake Union, a few miles north. We then cruises through the lake and see many wonderful shoreline neighborhoods, house boats (including the one from the movie Sleepless in Seattle), and historical sites. There were also fishing boats of varying sizes, including the Wizard and Northwestern from the TV series Deadliest Catch.
We then went through the locks, in Ballard, which consisted of tying off to the walls of the locks and descending until we were level with the salty water of the Puget Sound. Many other boats were in the locks and rafted (tied) together — small power boats tied to large yachts, sailboats tied to fishing boats.
Once out of the locks, we circle to the west then south back to downtown Seattle.
Check out the panoramic pictures I stitched together!
02 Wednesday Jul 2008
Posted in Seattle
26 Thursday Jun 2008
Posted in Seattle
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 frantic 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 rushed 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.
18 Wednesday Jun 2008
Posted in Seattle
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.
09 Monday Jun 2008
Posted in Seattle