Tuesday, November 30, 2010

fun things continued...

As part of my relaxing weekend, I re-watched Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind - which was just as great as the first time I saw it. I signed up for Netflix.ca for a free one month trial, so I started watching Mad Men season 3 too. On Friday I attended the annual Christmas parade with family and got sore legs from bouncing adorable children on my hip in tune to Christmas carols for several hours. Saturday we went over to a friend's house to play games and drink wine. I even had a nap mid-day on Saturday!

I can't imagine why, but I'm still apparently very tired. Body tells me so: I dreamt of falling asleep last night AND my eye muscles spasm when I'm tired, so that's been happening all morning. Might be hormones, I might be getting sick. Ugh.

A mountain of wet lab work awaits, my bosses return from their three-month stay abroad next week. Eeek!

Friday, November 26, 2010

A few things before the weekend

The first weekend I might take time to do something fun (!).

  • Our insulation is getting installed! We went to check out the walls last night and found purple goo seeping over my beautiful house. I was brought to tears. I am 100% confident in my choice of product, but the exposed beams and wood in my house were so beautiful it hurts to see them now. It reminded me of watching this childhood trauma-inducing film.

  • Three eggs in total so far. Woohoo!

  • I feel bad for American flyers. Show-and-dance, people. TSA jazz-hands!

  • An interesting discussion on "science cheerleaders" being held all over the science blog-o-sphere. It prompted an amazing 45 minute discussion with my husband about science outreach & feminism. Love him.


Pictures @ Stage 0:





Monday, November 22, 2010

Friday, November 19, 2010

holy smokes

Between Olenka and the Autumn Lovers and Regina Spektor, I think my musical tastes as of late lie somewhere in eastern Europe. The three languages in this song, so impressed...

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

If I were rich

I would wear leather or wool all the time.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Yeatsian yearning


And again. Minus twenty years and the orchestra/plus twenty ounces of pain and six prominent forehead lines.

Kick.Ass.

hazy mist of solitude

My co-worker is gone temporarily (five weeks). Conclusion: I can play my music VERY loudly in the lab. Yesss...this will make all the experiments I need to run much more fun to do.

And at home, the tiring pace continues. We tackled a giant to-do list this weekend, working furiously through several meals and (on Saturday) well into the early morning. We kept ourselves amused by imagining the pie we would eat at the local trucker's restaurant and we were crushed when we cruised up to the restaurant at 3 am on Sunday morning to find it closed. Noo!! Stale coffee shop baguette sandwiches were the only thing available around the clock, so we chewed our sandwiches in silence. That'll teach us for working so hard.

We worked on the outside of the house, removing the last of the siding, framing windows & installing wind barrier Typar paper (covered in lattice in preparation for new exterior finish). I didn't take any pictures of the interior work we did - removing all the lathe and plaster from our front entry. No more plaster work until next year!! Yay!


And Sunday afternoon was the big event - culling the roosters from our flock. I did the actual slitting of throats, a big step for someone who hasn't even killed a fish before. My great-grandmother did it, my grandfather did it, I would do it too = prepare meat for eating the old-fashioned way. And I decided if I were to die, a sun-speckled orchard on a beautiful fall day would be one of the nicest locations I might pick.

This is where we set up the for rooster processing. Killing cone attached to the old Spruce tree on the left and plastic covered work table just behind it, set up in the grass among the hundred year old apple trees.
Just across the bridge, the fire pit & cauldron were prepared for de-feathering the birds.

All in all we had three roosters found their way to our freezer yesterday. At the pace we are working, combined with the lack of sleep and the season, I'm sure their services will be needed in the form of chicken soup very soon. I just hope we have the heat turned on by then because having a cold in a cold house suuuuucks.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

aye. aye. aye.


Music to spin anabena cells to, test the BenchPro to, find flights to Black Rock City to.

Friday, November 5, 2010

updated kitchen post

Confession: We had to turn the heat on overnight one day last week. The temperatures were dipping to minus 8 celsius and we were worried the water might freeze in the pipes. On came the oil furnace for 12 hours, and off again in the morning. Blessedly, we are back up in the +double digits this weekend. I hope it lasts.

Lots of things going on this weekend for the house because WE HAVE A DEADLINE (for insulation). I called the company that I decided on hiring again (they spray this stuff) to see when they could come out to do our walls. Their date: November 24th. Twenty days from yesterday, three weekends from now.

To help us with the long list of things to do before the insulation gets sprayed in, we are inviting friends over this weekend who have expressed interest in helping with the house (aka those who pity our cold cold living conditions...). We need to pull thousands of tiny nails out of the wooden studs, put up windproof wrapping on the exterior of the house followed by lattice for our new exterior finish, remove hardwood and plaster from the front entry, shovel gravel around the cistern to be covered by poly plastic (making a barrier between wet ground and the inside of our house) and kill our roosters. The last step should be interesting, but upon arriving home last weekend we found an ominous feather pile that suggested something (mammal or large bird) had made our job easier by one. We still haven't found the body.

So tons of things to do. And hopefully some hands to help do it.

We tried to consult our local, well-respected kitchen guy about our kitchen. We could tell right off the bat he was not really impressed with our design (cooktop in the corner, unconventional refrigerator, no upper cabinets on one side of the room), didn't believe it was large enough given the size of the house, etc. etc. Depressing really, because I was hoping he could give me hints on efficient design and working around our interesting architectural features. No dice.

Instead I hopped on Ikea to use their kitchen planner and re-convinced myself this design would 1) work in our space and 2) work well for us. Here are some images of my rough draft where there are obvious alignment issues and blank white spaces where there should be black fridges or doorways into opposite rooms. Anyway, here's a few screen captures with lengthy explanations.



This is the view from the (currently invisible) door of the hallway entry. The hallway door will be an arched entry, and will be centered on the sink of the peninsula. On the left will be a bar countertop (currently too low and wayy too wide). On the right will be a wall of cabinetry and appliances (wall oven and glaring white fridge). The room is open to our "den" on the left and although not pictured in this set-up, we will have a small couch under the left-most window, and of course our wood stove in the opposite corner.



This would be the view from the woodstove corner. I was using Ikea website for ease and choice of cabinetry, but the wall heights on their program are too low. In reality our walls are about 1 foot taller than shown here, enough room for another small set of swing cabinets above the cabinets shown here. I want to line the ceiling with glass-front, back-lit doors because I think that will just highlight the incredible ceiling height. To make the most of our single corner, I have two pull out cabinets that operate from the other side of the work space. I was thinking this would be a good spot for re-useable grocery bags, giant bags of dog food, and pull-out recycling centres for newspapers/bottles/cans.


From above you can see the 30" cook-top in the corner over a bank of pot drawers next to the 24" dishwasher (with a panel), and two additional drawer banks tucked into the "workspace" corner. For whatever reason the sink function sucked donkey balls on the Ikea site so I left it out, and our end-piece is currently a 12" drawer bank but we aren't so keen on the aesthetics of that piece. We'll likely switch the a sink-side operating skinny bank of drawers there too. Space above the cooktop will stores oils and spices (attractive so it can be glass-fronted), and the blank space along the right hand side of the cook-top can either be a single length of wine bottle holder OR a tall upright stacking space for cookie sheets and such.

Looking from the bar top, the deficiencies in the Ikea program are apparent. I couldn't make my fridge black or stainless steel so it sticks out like a sore thumb between those two dark brown timbers. Further, the two symmetrical skinny banks of doors should open opposite to one another and be topped by a line of glass-fronted cabinets over another arch into the dining room (ie the big blank space of white on the right). The really deep cabinets on the left will hold dry goods in a few pull-out, pantry-style cabinets while the ones on the top and right will hold dishware, plastics, and small appliances. The moveable table under those giant windows will be our expandable prep space or storage space (if need be).


That turned into one giant post. Man, I love this part of construction :)


Monday, November 1, 2010