I just got off the phone with Todd, who let me know that he is the proud papa of triplets, at approximately 10:20 this morning. Mother and children are doing well. Right on!

Date posted: April 26, 2005 | Filed under life | 1 Comment »

This morning, I made reservations for a trip to Ireland for our first anniversary. Originally, having fallen in love with the laid-back, Dolce Vita atmosphere of Italy, we talked about returning there, but plane fare and other considerations ruled out that idea. Other exotic locales beckoned: we talked about Barcelona, Tahiti (one of our honeymoon picks, sidelined due to the exorbitant cost and lengthy flight) and Paris. Gradually most of these fell aside and we seriously discussed Ireland. I’ve always wanted to see the country of my ancestry, and a self-guided tour seemed to be the way to go. We found a preplanned package online through AAA, including lodging and car rental, and signed up for it this morning. We will be driving a compact automatic over hill and dale on the wrong side of the road in search of blarney, real beer, and bland food for nine days in June.

Plane fare was shaping up to be the expensive part of the trip, but I found some dirt-cheap fares from American using Kayak.com, and got us a one-hop flight to Shannon thru Boston for less than the cost of the tour package. There are some more things to be ironed out (we need a place to stay in Dublin and Shannon for a night each and a lift across the country to our return flight, for example) but the major part is done. I’m absolutely thrilled to be going—it’s been a dream of mine for years. The fact that I get to go with my wife and best friend for our anniversary makes it that much better.

In other news, we broke down and ordered $80 worth of groceries from Peapod last night. I figure $6 is worth the hour it would take to go and pick all this stuff up ourselves, and we have better things to be doing with our time right now. Besides, we are lazy consumerist yuppies. Now, to arrange for Starbucks to deliver to our door…

Actually, this is the first time the conveniences of the dot-com days have reached our leafy door; while hipsters in San Francisco and Manhattan could call Webvan back in ’99 for a Penthouse, Coke and candy bar to be delivered to their door free of charge, we never got the option here in Mobtown. It’s (relatively) cheap, it’s available, and we’re taking advantage of it at least once.

Date posted: April 25, 2005 | Filed under travel | Comments Off on The Auld Sod and Peapod.

Kayak.com
The best low-cost flight search engine I’ve seen so far. Thanks, Pete.

Date posted: April 25, 2005 | Filed under shortlinks, travel | Comments Off on Kayak.com

WFMU
Jen’s been trying to get me to listen for a year now.

Date posted: April 25, 2005 | Filed under music, shortlinks | Comments Off on WFMU

I found, through circuitous channels, that Mike Doughty has a blog. Soul Coughing was always one of my favorite bands from back in the day, ad I had the good fortune to see them live twice—once at the old Bohager’s, which is now an empty lot (and being reclaimed as some kind of new building), and once in the old 8×10 as one of about fifty very lucky fans. That small club date remains one of the best live shows I’ve bever seen. (This weblog takes its name from one of my favorite S-C tracks.)

Anyway, he’s been kicking around playing small gigs for the past couple of years, and is in the middle of releasing a new solo album and going on tour to promote it. If you haven’t heard any of his newer work, it’s a departure from the old S-C sound, but still features ace songwriting and melodies. He’s an excellent writer, and comes off as an extremely down-to-earth kind of person.

If you haven’t heard it, I recommend Skittish. “Rising Sign” is one of my favorite tracks from last year.

Date posted: April 25, 2005 | Filed under music | Comments Off on Rockity.

This weekend I took advantage of the lousy overcast weather to completely strip and re-cover our greenhouse.

south-before

As you can see, it was nasty with a capital “N”. Years of mold and dirt were stuck on the outside and in between the sheets of plastic.

north-before

Once the new plastic was up, the inside of the greenhouse was a completely different place.

north-inside

I re-arranged the clutter and set up our tables so that there’s one whole dry side and one irrigated side. During the rain on Saturday, I cemented the piping together and drilled holes for the sprinkler. This afternoon we finally got to test it out—everything works great. I have to drill another length of pipe with a smaller bit and adjust the pattern for better coverage, but everything works as advertised. (there’s water dripping in this photo:)

irrigation

Now I’m too tired to write anything else. Oh, yeah, we bought about $300 worth of plants. More on that later.

Date posted: April 24, 2005 | Filed under garden, greenhouse | 4 Comments »

Amazon MP3list
Every promo non-DRM’ed MP3 on Amazon’s site.

Date posted: April 22, 2005 | Filed under music, shortlinks | Comments Off on Amazon MP3list

2004 Best Design books
According to Design Bookself. Some good selections in here.

Date posted: April 22, 2005 | Filed under design, shortlinks | Comments Off on 2004 Best Design Books

I pride myself on being a very DIY sort of fellow. It’s a perverse sort of pride sometimes. Most people, given the right set of five tools, a short, well-designed instruction sheet, and an afternoon free of interruption, can do stuff like replace a toilet tank valve or install a GFCI outlet in their kitchen. I tend to take this crap to extremes, though, like building and installing my own arbor (Try this sometime: lift a 13-foot 2×6″ pressure-treated beam on a ladder fourteen feet in the air by yourself. Now repeat that six more times. Watch out for that high-voltage electrical line), transporting four sheets of drywall on the roof of a Ford Taurus (transporting drywall is hard with two people and a pickup truck) or gutting and rehabbing the only functioning bathroom in my house (that was a smelly month.)

Most of this stuff wouldn’t be necessary if I could afford certain things, like, say, a Toyota Tacoma. Or the day rate of a local plumber. Or even some of the hourly charges at the local rent-a-center. Often times there’s a tradeoff between what it would cost to have somebody come in and do the stuff I need vs. eating, and sometimes it’s even more extreme than that (our kitchen rehab estimate comes to mind here.)

It was a no-brainer, though, to have a fellow come in yesterday and haul away the huge pile of brush we’ve been collecting between the greenhouse and the garage. I normally would have called a friend in and paid him happily to help me haul it away, but I decided that he probably wouldn’t appreciate the poison ivy either. Hopefully I won’t have to do any more radical pruning jobs like I did last fall—which is where the brushpile came from—although the holly tree needs a major haircut and the gnarled fruit tree in the side yard appears to have finally kicked off. (And I’d love to chop that nasty cedar tree right down, too.)

While he was stuffing the back of his truck with my skin-irritating brush, I replaced the first of four panels on the greenhouse with new UV plastic. The job went pretty quickly and easily, which was a relief. I also tested out a few different solutions for the water piping and settled on a row of small drilled holes instead of the misting nozzles; the amount of water released seemed to be steadier and covered more area. When he was ready to leave, I helped him toss one of the old rotten picnic tables on top of the load and waved goodbye. He had bagged up all the leaves and raked the area, so we are left with a patch of empty dirt, ready for grass seed where uneven weeds used to lay. I’d say that was $100 well spent.

treeflower2

Date posted: April 22, 2005 | Filed under general, greenhouse | 1 Comment »

dandelion

This morning I popped the macro lens on the Canon and went outside to shoot some of the local flowers before the forecasted rain beats them all up.

Date posted: April 21, 2005 | Filed under photography | Comments Off on dandelion