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~ The adventures of Richard and Julie Lary

Rajalary

Category Archives: Seattle

Sweat’n at the Pro Club

04 Wednesday Jun 2008

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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.

Rich Turns 56

13 Tuesday May 2008

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Cinco de Mayo is the only way I can remember Rich’s birthday, which is on May 6th. This year, he lamented how old he’s become and how his life has evolved from being a photographer and crime scene investigator for the Los Angeles Police Department, when he was 18, to an advisory engineer who oversees the implementation of Linux device drivers for all of IBM’s fiber channel interface adaptors (he dictated that last sentence to me).
 
Unfortunately, we were both up to our necks in work projects so Rich had to celebrate his birthday by eating left-overs and sharing his banana split cake with Jujube. Along with the cake, I got him a bottle of Chateau St. Michelle dry Riesling. The winery is a whooping two miles away and has replaced our favorite wine from Oregon, Sokol Blosser MullerThurgau. The wine will probably remain in our refrigerator for months before we get around to drinking it!
 
Meanwhile, for Rich’s birthday, the azaleas and rhododendrons started to bloom in Mount Vernon. We also enjoyed visiting our lot in Anacortes and planting three maple trees and admiring the three lilac bushes that I planted a month earlier. Spring is an exciting time in Washington!
 
Jujube and cake  Flowers in Mount Vernon   White rhodi 

Where Did April Go?

28 Monday Apr 2008

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I can’t believe that I haven’t written for over a month! My excuse, like everyone’s excuse, I was busy!
 
April was unusually hectic with the start of the final three months of Microsoft’s fiscal year and Rich and I throwing ourselves into finishing the flooring at our Kirkland house. First, a comment or two about my job. While I was thrilled to have been hired by Microsoft, the job description provided during the interviews bore no resemblance to the actual job. Instead of doing a three-year strategy, I’ve been doing content management for a 4,000-page website!
 
The silver lining (and it’s a huge lining) is that I work for Microsoft whose slogan is "Your potential. Our passion." Within a few months of starting on the job, I created a Powerpoint presentation that showcased how the website could be revised. This document became the starting point for the transformation of the site. I’ve seen written several other strategy documents and created numerous mock-ups of potential templates and navigation scheme.
 
In spite of my recognized strategic vision, I’m still stuck in the weeds. Not a problem. In late fall, I entered a contest and became a seed finalist for one of my ideas. This idea provided the groundwork for collaborating with an engineer. Together we wrote a Microsoft ThinkWeek paper, which a few weeks ago was reviewed by Bill Gates. Okay, he reviews about a quarter of the 400 or so papers.
 
The paper also provided an opportunity to pester the Microsoft Health Solutions Group, where I’d eventually like to work. For the past few months, I’ve been doing informational interviews with the group and feel optimistic that after I complete a year in my present job (July 2, 2008), I’ll be able to transition to a better role… possibly with the Health Solutions Group. Yeah!
 
The best news, however, is that two weeks ago, Rich finished putting bamboo flooring in our four bedrooms, hallway, living and dining rooms! That means that last weekend, we were able to bring most of our furniture down from Mount Vernon! We’re months (years) away from finishing everything we want to do, but at least, I get to unpack my collectible, lamps, pillows… pictures… and everything that’s been boxed up for nealry two years!!!!!
 
Check out the finishing of the floors:
 
Dining Room Taping the last few boards
 
 

Why I’m Miserable

16 Sunday Mar 2008

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It’s been six months since Rich and I bought our Kirkland house. Why I wanted to buy a low-maintenance townhouse since we need to do extensive work on the Mount Vernon house, Rich wanted a house with a yard. We look at houses for about two hours then Rich’s attention span wanned and he decided to purchase our Kirkland fixer-upper. It’s been six months and look at the progress… below.
 
Yes sir. Much of my stuff has been packed for going on two years. Rich doesn’t care because he life revolves around having two pairs of jean, some tee- and sweat-shirts, working from home (his office is decked out with what he needs), going to Safeway to buy his lunch (he rarely buys anything for "us" since he only needs food for his immediate needs), purchasing music CDs and tools, and having a place to sleep. Nothing else is important to him. He could essentially live in a one-room hut and be happy.
 
Meanwhile, I long to be have a nice place to live and to be surrounded by my pictures, collectables and furniture.
 
Most of our rooms continue to bare light bulbs for lights, limited or no flooring, and boxes everywhere. Take a look.
 
Dinning rooom with no lights or flooringFamily room with boxes of flooring and other boxesHallway with no flooring or doorsLiving room with tools and not flooringRich's officeStairs inside house

Gonna’ be a Sailor

12 Tuesday Feb 2008

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Two weeks ago, Rich and I attended the Seattle Boat Show. Actually "show" is an understatement. It was more of a colossal collection of every type of vessel that floats. Held at the 67,000-seat Qwest Field (Safeco Field’s less attractive twin) and on South Lake Union, the 10-day event featured more than 380 exhibitors with 1,200 recreational watercraft, including multi-million dollar yachts, house and pontoon boats, aluminum and fiberglass fishing boats, sailboats, trawlers, ski boats, jet skis, rowboats, kayaks, and inflatable dinghies.
 
In "Rich style," we got to the show an hour (or two) before it opened so we walked around on the quiet streets. It was kinda’ fun peaking into an art gallery, its front doors flung wide open in spite of it being in the low 30’s. Inside, we could see a group of men in short-sleeves gathered around a fiery furnace, shaping and blowing glass.
 
At Pioneer Square, a cat-sized seagull pecked at a loaf of sour dough bread that it either stole or was given. A flock of pigeons nearby waited patiently. Across the street was a sculpture dedicated to fallen Seattle firefighters. It featured life-sized figures in full gear, ready to extinguish a fire.
 
A block away was a non-descript brick building. On the outside was a plaque, proclaiming it Waterfall Park. Curious, I rounded the corner and was taken aback by the site. Inside the alcove was a majestic waterfall, wisteria covered walkways with several tables and benches, raised planter boxes… an oasis in a grand and crowded city. The small park is maintained by the Annie E. Casey Foundation to mark the birthplace of the United Parcel Service.
 
Walking back to the convention center, we passed the Klondike Gold Rush Museum, operated by the National Park Service to commemorate how the gold rush helped shape Seattle. According to their website, various miners on their way up to Alaska decided to stay in Seattle to make their fortune in a warmer climate. An early miner who "stayed behind" was John W. Nordstrom, the founder of Nordstrom department stores.
 
After getting our hand stamped at the convention center, we boarded a bus to Lake Union to check out the boats in their native habitat, the water. We were most interested in the sailboats, which may be long, but not overly high below deck. Poor Rich clunked his head after going below on the second or third sailboat we visited. He still has a scab on this head.
 
At 5’2", I have no problem with every hitting my head and had fun climbing into the smallest sailboats. Rich promptly decided that if we invest in a sailboat or charter another sailboat, it would be over 30 feet and hence, tall enough for him to stand up inside.
 
At the far end of the dock were the luxury yachts. They don’t look overly impressive from dockside. In fact, they’re clunky compared to sleek sailboats with tall masts and stiff white sails. We chose to go on a seemingly plain, but large yacht. We stepped onto the swim deck, which was level with the dock. We were required to take off our shoes then entered through a sliding glass door.
 
I could barely get my feet to move once I got inside. At the far end of the galley was a upscale kitchen with a huge refrigerator and matching freezer, full-sized Wolf stove and oven, granite counter tops, elegant cupboards, exquisite flooring… plush upholstered sofa and chairs, in-laid wood tables, recessed flat-screen TV, stereo system, cushy carpeting, shelves, and ornate curtains. A circular staircase led down to the master suite, which featured a king-sized bed, large flat-screen TV, marble-floored bathroom, double vanity, glass shower and tub. The next room could comfortably accommodate two people. It may have been the crew quarters.
 
Circling to the left, we came to a cluster of four built-in washers and dryers (maybe one set is for the crew). Down a short hallway, the door to the engine room was open so we could wander inside! It was huge with banks of batteries, compressors, electrical panels… tons of equipment… and a little step down to an area with tool boxes and a small sink for washing up once you’ve worked on the equipment.
 
Just past the engine rooms were two more bedrooms, each with its own bathroom. Above the main galley was the pilot house with another bathroom and two small beds. There were also several decks outside. And of course, a small boat on the main deck that could be lowered to the water using an on-board crane.
 
For a mere $4.5 million this slightly used boat could be yours! The owner wants a bigger one!
 
Just for fun, I went onto the Nordhaven site and looked up what constitutes a 72-foot yacht. First, it holds 800 gallons of water (a necessity with five bathrooms) and 4,100 gallons of diesel (at $5 a gallons, a fill-up is $20,500 without tax). Yes, you can buy a new car for the price of a fill-up.
 
Standard features are products from Bose, Sony, Sub Zero (side-by-side refrigerator/freezer), Thermadore (stove/electric oven), GE (microwave, trash compactor), Bosch (dishwasher) along with granite counter tops, stone and ceramic flooring, handcrafted teak cabinets and tables, and high-quality carpeting.
 
Having a multi-million dollar yacht would be very surreal when much of the world has inadequate housing!
 
After touring the boats on the water, we headed back to the convention center. On the way, we stopped at FX McRory for cups of clam chowder and a bowl of steamed clams with tangy sour dough bread. The restaurant was made famous by LeRoy Neiman’s painting of F.X. McRory’s Whiskey Bar.
 
We spent a couple of hours looking at various boats at the convention center. It’s very overwhelming with hundreds of watercraft, accessories, and associated "stuff" in every nook and cranny of the center, including the football field, where there was a little trout pond and some service group was conducting a contest, whereby kids and adults who successfully kicked field goals could enter to win something wonderful.
 
I was in awe, standing on the same field where the Seahawks play. It must be very intimidating to be a player on the field and look up and see all the seats filled with screaming and hopefully not angry fans.
 
A few days after the boat show, Rich investigated classes through San Juan Sailing in Bellingham, Washington. Anxious to improve my sailing skills, and frustrated with trying to teach me, he signed me up for a week-long class on a woman’s only cruise in the Puget Sound in mid-July. Between sailing, I’ll be taking tests. By the time I’m done, I will have earned three American Sailing Association’s certifications… he hopes.
 
In the meantime, I’ll be reading sailing books and dealing with the idea of having to actually sail and not just take orders and mispronounce sailing terms. Drats. I prefer leaving the sailing to Rich.
 
In late September, Rich and I will be chartering a 34-foot boat from the same company and sailing through the Puget Sound and possibly into Canadian waters. I’m looking forward to this trip and having Rich do most of the work!!! It’s much easier to do what I’m told then to figure out which direction the wind is coming and adjusting the sails accordingly.

Protecting Seattle from aliens in fuschia jackets Waterfall Park Boat show II Boat show

Lots of Snow

29 Tuesday Jan 2008

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Nearly every week for the past few months, frozen material falls from the sky in the form of snow, sleet, hail, or icy rain. Sunday evening, I woke in the middle of the night and thought the light reflecting from the window looked strange. Sure enough there was a blanket of snow on everything. It continued to snow and when we got up around 6 a.m. there was several inches on everything.
 
Not having my computer, I had no choice but to get dressed and trek to work. To determine the feasibility of my plan, Rich decided to test drive my Honda FIT in the snow. He carefully backed out of the garage and turned the wheel to head out of the driveway when the car start to slide sideways. Miraculous, he was able to stop the car from cascading down the hill,
 
After easing it partially onto the driveway, he placed a plywood board under the front wheels then shoved a pathway in front of the car so he could slowly drive it back into the safety of the garage.
 
Plan II.
 
Because I needed my computer in order to work, Rich had no choice but to drive me to Microsoft in his truck, which has 4-wheel drive. The scenary was spectacular and fortunately, traffic was light. Within an hour, I had my computer and was back home to spend the rest of the day working and enjoying a winter wonderland. Throughout the day, it snowed on-and-off. As evening approached, however, it started to warm up and by Tuesday morning, most of the snow was gone.
Snow out front window Snow out kitchen window

Receipts in the Pocket

07 Monday Jan 2008

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Rich and I are slowly moving boxes and furniture from our Mount Vernon house to our Kirkland house. Yesterday, Rich found his suede coat in a wardrobe box along with his summer clothes.
 
Before hanging up the coat, I reached in the pockets. Along with finding the obligatory toothpick and pen, I found a handful of receipts. They were all dated Friday, February 16, 2007. One was for Ross Dress for Less. The other two were for Lowe’s and U-Haul.
 
Seeing the receipts took my breath away.
 
On that day, I was getting ready to go home from HealthSouth after a week of rehabilitation for a fracture pelvis and broken ribs following a horrific car accident a week earlier. I had mixed feeling about leaving. On one hand, I was happy that Rich didn’t have to worry about taking care of me. I had gotten into a routine of getting up at 7 a.m., struggling into my wheelchair, finding a nurse to give me my pain medications, waiting until they kicked in before I changed into fresh pajamas (I refused to wear clothes) then wheeling myself into the common room for breakfast and the start of my physical therapy.
 
In the evenings, I enjoyed lying in bed, reading and seeing the lights of downtown Austin from my second story window, especially the stunning Frost Bank Tower.
 
On the other hand, I’d spent four days at the Brackenridge Trauma Center and five days at HealthSouth. I was anxious to go home and resume a more normal life with Rich and the cats. Getting poked and prodded by nurses and doctors wasn’t much fun. And I’d grown weary of having no privacy.
 
On that Friday, while I was blissfully doped up on Hydrocodone (codeine), Rich was anxiously driving around town, gathering what he needed to care for me. Because I’d have to stay downstairs, Rich scrambled to buy a bed. He found a queen-size set at Costco. However, it wouldn’t fit in his truck, so he rented a trailer from U-Haul.
 
Once he got it home, he realized that we had no queen-sized sheets so he zipped to Ross Dress for Less for a mattress cover, sheets, comforter, pillows, and blankets. He also bought a very cute Easter-themed decorative pillow with perky yellow chicks and pink tulips.
 
Having met with my social worker, he went to Lowe’s to get a shower chair, hand-held shower nozzle, and other necessities.
 
Seeing those receipts, reminded me how much Rich cares about my well-being. The next morning, Saturday, he nervously picked me up at HealthSouth. I clung to the seat the entire trip and winced every time he went over a bump. When we got home, I screamed as he awkwardly lifted and pulled the wheelchair, with me in it, over the ledge leading into the house.
 
Exhausted from the trip and in lots of pain from the car ride, I wanted to immediately go to bed so Rich wheeled me into the family where he’d set up the new bed. I cried seeing how much work he’d gone through. When I stood up and turned around to plunk my bottom on the bed, however, we realized that the bed was at least 6-8 inches too high. There was no way that I could get into it using only one leg and one arm. My other arm was okay, but using it aggravated my cracked ribs. Poor Rich had to remove the bed frame and place the mattress on the floor.
 
For the next 10 weeks, Rich not only worked from home, but ran up-and-down the stairs throughout the day and sometime at night to get me in-and-out of bed, remind me to take my pills, prepare my food, drive me to therapy and doctor appointments, and much more.
 
It’s amazing how many memories a few receipts can generate!

Boxes and More Boxes

07 Monday Jan 2008

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In spite of having owned our Kirkland house for over three months, we’ve moved very little furniture into the house and still have several hundred boxes to unpack. While that sounds like an outrageous number of boxes, it’s no exaggeration. Take a look at the picture below, which show the family room and garage of our Mount Vernon house.
 
  Boxes in the front Boxes to the left  And boxes to the right  Boxes in our garage

Lakefront Property

07 Monday Jan 2008

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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

 
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