Monday, July 18, 2005

#286 Storm - Four More Trees Bite the Dust

We had a slambang of a thunderstorm this evening (Monday).  It started with far-off thunder, that got closer and louder as the afternoon wore on.  When the thunder started to shake the house, Miss Thunderfoot headed for the basement.

We got very bad wind before the rain.  The trees in the woods were bent over at right angles in their middles, and those are black locusts.  They don't bend all that easily.  And they weren't whipping.  They bent and stayed that way!

When the rain came, it was so dense I couldn't see the trees at all anymore, and they're only maybe 12 feet from the bathroom windows.

The whole show lasted less than an hour, after which I went out to survey the damage.

Three trees have broken about 15 feet up.  Two of them, a black locust and a wild cherry, have their upper 2/3s lying across the driveway.  The third is the big tree down by the road.  The top half of that one is hanging down its trunk.  (It's too bad it stayed attached at the break.  If it had fallen onto the street, the town would clean it up for free.)  A young locust (maybe 12-14 feet tall) near the bottom of the driveway is partially uprooted and leaning across the driveway.  There are broken branches on the ground all over the yard.

That's just the stuff on the "lawn".  There's probably a lot more trees down in the woods.  I saw some suspiciously open areas in the greenery.

I made a halfhearted attempt to drag the trees off the driveway, but they wouldn't budge.  Doesn't surprise me.  I suspect 30 feet of black locust is rather heavy.   I can still get out, if I have to, by driving across the grass, around the branches, but I'm expecting delivery of a large package soon, and I'm not sure I want the UPS truck on the lawn.  I'm sure if he sees my tracks in the grass, he'll figure he can do it too.  (Hmmm - just realized he probably won't get past the uprooted tree leaning across the drive at the bottom.  Ne'mind....) 

A thought - most of these trees have been here for 80 years or more.  In the first 10 years Jay was in this house, no trees fell.  In the last 10 years, since I moved in, this lot has lost 27 trees (not to mention those damaged, or those that fell in the woods) to wind, or to snow that fell while there were still leaves on the trees.  Is it me and my luck, or has the weather really gotten so screwy?

Oddly enough, I was thinking it was about time to do some trimming and weeding.  Looks like that will be put off for a while, while I wrestle trees.

~~ Silk

#285 To the CarnivAOL!

The first edition of CarnivAOL is up, with pointers to journalers' own favorite entries.  'PLittle' obviously read everything submitted, and individually introduced each and every entry.  Although we much appreciate all the links, I do hope he hasn't bitten off more than he can chew.  I have a feeling this could expand exponentially.... 

~~ Silk

Links in this entry: http://journals.aol.ca/plittle/CarnivAOL/

Sunday, July 17, 2005

#284 Sooty Nails

A strange thing happened to my fingernails in New Orleans.  They turned gray. 

I washed and washed them, but they got grayer and grayer as the days passed.  By the time I came home on Tuesday, they looked filthy.  I was so ashamed of them, I kept my fingers bent to keep the nails tucked into the palm.  

On Wednesday morning at home, I brushed them with an old toothbrush and super whitening toothpaste, and they got almost clean.  (If that hadn't done it, I was prepared to use bleach, even if it would make them brittle.  Better gone than ugly....)

Then I ran my fingers through my hair.  I run my fingers through my hair a lot - it's a habit.   My fingernails immediately turned gray again!  Whatever crud was causing it was in my hair! 

When I was travelling with The Company, in NYC I'd get grit on the scalp, and have to brush my hair hard every evening.  In Chicago, it was an oily deposit, and I'd have to wash my hair every other day (as opposed to my usual 3-5 days between washings).  It's been at least a decade since I'd spent any time in a city, and I'd forgotten how bad the air can be.  The New Orleans gunk seems to be like soot.  Yuck!

It explains why I started sneezing as soon as I got off the plane, and didn't stop until I got home.  I sneezed two or three times an hour the whole time I was in N.O.  I'm not normally a sneezer.

To think people actually breathe that gunk, all day every day, and don't even notice!  (And this is coming from a smoker!)

I guess I'm a country mouse.

~~ Silk

Saturday, July 16, 2005

#283 Weekend Assignment #68:Viva la France!

Scalzi's Weekend Assignment #68:  Take a moment to appreciate something French. Tell us about that French thing you most appreciate. It could be anything, from a particular French wine to your favorite French filmmaker to the fact they like Jerry Lewis more than we.

It has to be Mont Saint-Michel, one of my favorite places.  The photos are from the first several hits on a Yahoo search, almost all tourism sites, so I'm sure they won't mind my using them to extoll the virtues of the place.

Mont Saint-Michel is a tiny (a half-mile in diameter) rock island off the coast of France.  During low tide, the island is surrounded by sand, and the edge of the sea is so far away you can't see it.  Twice a day, the tide comes in at faster than 3 feet per second, and at high tide, there's about 45 feet of water surrounding the island.   Jay and I had walked on the sand during low tide, after consulting the tide tables posted at the gates.  (It wasn't until I visited the tourist sites looking for photos that I found out that every year, people die in the quicksand out there!  Ouch!  Nobody mentioned quicksand to us....) 

There's an interesting abbey at the peak, and a village climbs the rock all around.  This isn't a place you want to visit for a few hours from the mainland.  The best way is to stay at least two nights in a B&B on the island.  At night, it becomes quiet and magical.

~~Silk

Links in this entry: http://journals.aol.com/johnmscalzi/bytheway/entries/4425

Photos from and other information at:  http://www.normandy-tourism.org/gb/02ville/M/MtStMichel.html ; http://www.monum.fr/m_stmichel/visite/index.dml?lang=en ; http://xenophongroup.com/montjoie/st-mont.htm ; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mont_Saint_Michel ; http://www.le-mont-saint-michel.org/ ; http://www.virtualtourist.com/travel/Europe/France/Basse_Normandie/Mont_Saint_Michel-2271913/TravelGuide-Mont_Saint_Michel.html

Friday, July 15, 2005

#282 Shooting BBs

(Later edit: I put something in here that was told to me in confidence, and no matter how annoyed I am, if I keep doing that, no body will ever tell me anything.  So I've deleted those bits.  You'll notice where.)

Well, I'm back from New Orleans.  I have all kinds of mixed feelings about the trip, so I'll have to wait a while to write about that.  But there's one thing that I am so very steamed about, and I'm not likely to get past it until I express it, so here goes.  Daughter, this concerns a mutual friend, and it's likely to tick you off, so stop here.  For anyone else reading, it will be boring.  This is for me only.  Once I write it, I can release it.

I'm really tired of BB. 

She organizes the gift-wrapping at the Barnes & Nobel every Christmas, donations to go to the Mensa scholarship fund.  That's good of her.  It's an hour and fifteen minute drive for me, so to avoid the rush hour traffic, every year for the past four years I have volunteered to arrive at 11 am, and stay until closing at 10 pm.  Note that it has also snowed every one of those days!  Last year was literally a blizzard.  Everyone else volunteers for a two to four hour slot.  There are supposed to be a minimum of two people at the wrapping table at all times.  BB has difficulty getting people for the 9 am to 11 am slot, so she has the nerve to be pissed at me because I won't commit to earlier than 11 am!   Note that she never gets up before noon

She always shows up late for her own slot, late in the afternoon, forcing someone else to stay an hour or more later than their commitment.  Then, she wraps the packages so sloppily that the rest of us are embarrassed to accept a donation.  I'm sure most of the packages she wraps get rewrapped by the customer later.  Several of us have tried over and over to show her how to make creased corners, but she refuses to pay attention, and she continues to scrunch the paper and bunch it at the ends, and then uses yards of tape to hold the mess together.   Books end up wrinkled loose trapezoids.  That isn't easy.  She also will wrap a book using three or more taped-together scraps of paper (patterns NOT matched).  We'll tell her to use a new piece cut to size.  She'll say she's trying to conserve.  We'll say "We can use the small scraps on small packages", but she won't listen.  My God, Woman!  These are customers!  Not relatives!

There's one other woman who has persevered through the years, who also stays for most of the day, and she just moved out of the area.  We two were the backbone of the wrapping operation.  I think I shall not volunteer this year.  As much as I enjoy the wrapping, I simply cannot watch BB wrap one more package.  She's going to be very angry with me, but too bad.  She's a slob.

As I mentioned, she never gets up before noon.  She can't get to sleep before dawn.   She's been whining about this "sleep problem" for all of the two decades I've known her.  I have now, finally, concluded that she won't do anything to correct it because it's convenient for her - this way, since her husband goes to bed at a reasonable hour and gets up early to go to work, she can easily (...deleted...).   And her husband is not the type to insist.  She's gonna be in big trouble if he ever goes on shifts, or retires!

She and her husband (one of the nicest sweetest nerds you'll ever meet) were in New Orleans.   He did the morning tours alone.

I talked with her on Wednesday, while I was doing my volunteer stint at the registration desk.  I talked again with her Thursday outside the hospitality room.  And again on Saturday, after the banquet.  I was wearing my green sari, and she commented on it.  She was telling some woman about how she teaches bellydance in the county adult education program (which ticked me off!  She is extremely poor technically - jerky hip thrusts, no grace, she's a COW! - one of those people who took a few classes twenty years ago and thinks she knows enough, and is now ruining some potentially good beginners.  I'd dearly love to sign up for one of her classes and find out for sure exactly how bad it is.  (Hmmm.  I just realized I KNOW the women who have been teaching the Ulster county classes, and none of them are her!))   Anyhow, I spent most of my time in the company of NJ, and NJ and BB absolutely hate each other.  So it wasn't until Sunday that I spent any amount of real time with BB.

NJ was tired Sunday and went to bed early.  I went down to the lobby to see if there were any dinner groups forming, and found BB's husband sitting with two other guys.  They were planning to go somewhere for dinner, so I asked if I could go along.  Pretty soon BB and another woman arrived with some restaurant flyers.  BB was surprised to see me - having not seen me since my stint at the registration desk!  Huh?  Did I make that fleeting an impression Thursday and Saturday?

For the next 90 minutes, she and the other woman read brochures at us.  They couldn't decide where to go for dinner.  I couldn't believe it.  As 9 pm approached, I finally said hey, let's just cross the street into the French Quarter and follow our noses.  Almost any place is bound to be good.

We ended up going to a place on the English side.  It was listed in their brochure as a tourist trap.  Therefore it must be good?  I didn't get the logic, but it was too late for me to be on the street alone, so I had no choice.  We met a waitress coming out for a cigarette as we were going in, and one of the guys asked her what was good, and she wrinkled her nose and said "You don't want to eat here."  The others panicked.  I just figured she wanted to go home soon, it was less than an hour to closing and she didn't want to start over with us.  Anyway, we ended up at the buffet at Harrah's Casino.  Disgusting.  After all that discussion, and wonderful food in the Quarter, we end up at a place that looks exactly like the Chinese buffets in every strip mall on the east coast. 

When we were in the hotel lobby, BB had been saying that she was extremely sensitive to cigarette smoke (so why did she choose to sit in the smoking section?) and said that some of her coworkers at the library go outside to smoke, and the smoke on their clothes when they come back in has actually caused her to faint three times in the past week.  Oooo, such sympathy that got.  Her husband was very concerned.  So we got to the casino, and the tobacco smoke was so dense you couldn't see the length of the room.  BB announced to the buffet cashier that she must be allowed into the "Private Dining Room", because she is so very sensitive to the smoke drifting into the main dining area.  So that's where we ate.  She's got to be at least 250 pounds now, likely a lot more, and I was disgusted that when desert time came, she went off to the buffet and returned with like seven desserts!

During dinner, the other couple was talking about the finer points of gambling, and BB got interested.  After dinner, they all, including BB, headed off into the interior of the huge room with all the slot machines.  Now, I am a 40-year smoker.  But the smoke was so dense in the casino that my eyes started to burn and water, and I started sneezing.  BB was oblivious to the smoke, and was excitedly hopping from machine to machine.  She didn't look anywhere near fainting. 

There had to be a thousand machines, all of which made noise, and all the noise blended together into one loud fractured constant chord that hurt my ears.  I stood the noise and the smoke as long as I could, then I told BB's husband that I was going to have to leave because "the smoke is really burning my eyes, I can't take it any longer."   I hope he understood what else I was saying.  As I walked away, I heard him say to the other couple that I was leaving because of the smoke, and they all turned to look speculatively at BB, who was happily burbling away.  I hope they didn't say anything to her.  Then she'd have had to fake a faint and it might have ruined her evening. Tsk.

I think BB feeds him, and all the rest of us, a constant load of BS, anything that makes life easy or exciting for her, whatever will get her what she wants.  She doesn't have problems when it's not convenient.  (I noticed that she was able to get up in time for the Friday Awards Luncheon, where she collected an award for the newsletter editor, who was unable to attend, even though there were four other people present from our local group who normally get up before noon who could have gone up to receive the award.)  Woe to anyone who corrects or exposes her.  I'm sure, having pointed out that the casino smoke was too much for even me, I am now on her sh*t list.  And it's time someone clued her husband in.  He's too nice and too naive to have to put up with her crap.

(He'd never leave her.  Besides his niceness, she has him convinced that she is emotionally fragile - which she also had made no effort to do anything about.  I just wish he'd look her in the eye and demand an end to the crap.)

At one time we were friends.  I helped them move into their new house about 8 years ago, and stripped the built-in cabinets for them.  She confided in me that (...deleted...), and that when she and husband first got together, they agreed that she would do NO housework.  Of course, that was when she also  worked full time.  Now her "sleep problems" preclude a real job (and ...deleted...), but she still does no housework.  Their house is unbelievable.   I was shocked to find that she opens the little pull-tab cans of cat food, and then puts the can down for the cats to eat out of  as best they can.  They must have leather tongues.  But she's not about to wash cat dishes.  And I'm really tired of hearing about her menopausal symptoms.  They started about 12 years ago when I first mentioned mine, and they are still going on for her.  Somebody should tell her that eventually it stops, dang it!

I had always thought NJ was too hard on her - they have bumped heads over Mensa issues in the past - but now I think NJ is right.  BB is a manipulator, an attention-grabber, a credit-hound, and a drama queen.  I've really had it with her.  Finally.

The reason I'm having so much trouble is that I once liked her, and it's hard to give that up.  Also, this much personally-aimed nasty feeling doesn't fit my self-image.

~~ Silk

Saturday, July 2, 2005

#281 Yawn.................

I keep saying this, and it's like no one believes me:  I am writing in this thing for me.  Only me.  I am making no attempt whatsoever to make it interesting to anyone other than me.  I mean, hey, I named it after a pile of rocks! 

Daughter checks it daily to make sure I'm ok, but I don't expect even her to read everything.  (First clue - if it's  more than a screen long, RUN!)

I discovered a long time ago that if there's something kicking around in my head, simply writing it down gets rid of it.  It's like the paper (or virtual "paper") serves as secondary brain storage.  Gives a different meaning to "out of sight out of mind."  Amazing how well it works.

It's also a diary.  If I need to know when was the last time I whatevered, I can check the hardcopy and find out.

I don't care if anyone else makes the effort to read it  (and yes, it can be an effort, because it is of interest only to me).  That's not the point of it.  I'm not looking for readers, or approval, or affection, or whatever it is that many other people who do write for readers are looking for.

I am amusing myself.

So why don't I take it private?  Because you are welcome to visit my virtual kitchen anytime, but if I'm scrubbing pots at the time, I expect you to quietly sip your tea and let me continue scrubbing pots.  I'm not going to lock the door just because I'm scrubbing pots.  Anyone can visit.  If you want to be entertained, go next door.  If you're interested in how I scrub pots, stay, and welcome.  We might accidentally learn something.
 
                                                 *********************
I will probably not be updating for the next 10 days or so.  Arrangements have been made for Miss Thunderfoot and the lawn, perishables have been eaten, mail will be  held, valuables have been stored, comfy clothes have been hemmed, house will be boobytrapped, and I'll be off.

~~ Silk

Friday, July 1, 2005

#280 Two Spam Lists

I had been feeling terribly neglected because I'd never received one of those "Nigerian Letter" emails that we've been hearing about for years.  Wassa matter?  I'm not honest or compassionate enough to attract the attention of a scammer?

Well, some website that I went to maybe four weeks ago must have got me on the list.  I've been getting various forms of the letter at the rate of three or so a week lately.  It's always the widow of some government official killed by rebels in some revolting country who needs help getting hundreds of millions of dollars out of some secure account, anonymously.  

Even if I were stupid enough (or greedy enough) to respond, I wouldn't, because I'd wonder how a hated government official in an unstable African country amassed that much money anyway, and why did it have to be hidden?  It's likely dirty money, taken from the mouths of starving babies, and I don't want it, and "I'm not going to help you get it, either, lady."

Oooo, I'm such a prig!

Speaking of lists, when I sold the Highland house, the new buyers couldn't get a conventional mortgage because the house wasn't finished yet, and they couldn't get an occupancy permit.  They'd have had to get a construction loan, which would have been much more expensive.  So I offered to carry a private mortgage for them, for 1% more than the going bank rate but less than half the construction rate, until they finished the interior and could get a bank mortgage.  (That extra 1% was to encourage them to switch to a bank loan as soon as possible.)

That was August 2002, and they paid me off in full in April of 2003 (which was sad, because I was getting used to that nice check every month).   However, every month since September 2002,  I get from three to five (snail mail) offers from various mortgage companies offering to buy the private mortgage.  I thought it would taper off after a few months, but it hasn't.  I'm still getting getting three to five offers a month, more than two years after it was paid off.

The loan companies offer to buy the mortgage from the holder for, say, 90% of its face value.  The letters they send sound like you are in great danger of the borrower defaulting, and then you will get nothing, whereas if they buy it from you, they assume the "risk", and you "get the money (90% of it, anyway) immediately".  

What they don't tell you is that if you hold a 30-year note for say $100,000 at say 6%, over the course of that 30 years you will receive, well, I'm not going to figure it out, but let's just say it's a heck of a lot, like several times the value of the initial loan.  And if the borrower craps out, you won't lose any money because you could foreclose, and you don't have to sell the house for more than the balance of the loan.  Auctioning a $260,000 house for an opening bid of $100,000 shouldn't be hard.  So there's really not much risk.  For the mortgage companies, buying a private mortgage at 90% is a great deal.

So I thought I was on a list somewhere, maybe a list that the county puts out.  I thought I would eventually "age out" of the list.  Last week I called one of the letter-senders, and begged them to tell me how to get off the list.  I mean, I have to PAY for garbage collection!  They said there's no list. 

Then I saw the infomercial.  The one that tells you how you can make a gazillion dollars a year putting mortgage companies in touch with private mortgage holders.  This is how it works - you troll the county records looking for private mortgages.  Then you alert banks and loan companies to the existence of that loan.  If the bank buys a $100,000 paper for $90,000, then you (the troller) get a few thousand, too.  

The fact that my loan has a higher interest rate than most, and the house is appraised for so much more than the balance, apparently makes this one so attractive to the trollers that they get too excited to notice that it's been paid off.  I'm on not one list, but a hundred lists.  Or a thousand lists.  However many trollers there are.  Since it was a 30-year mortgage, and the trollers aren't very smart, They'll likely keep me on their lists, and keep trying.  I may be getting these letters for umpteen more years, and there's apparently nothing I can do to stop it.

Can I sue somebody for harassment?  The woman at the mortgage company I called said that if I tell a company not to send me any more letters, then they are supposed to respect that.  But I'd have to tell each company individually.  I wonder how many mortgage companies there are?  So far, I count at least 150. I'm sure the trollers know of more.

Maybe I could sue the infomercial people....

~~Silk