Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Knock, Knock

Who's there?

Hairy Woodpecker.

Alison and I walked the dike trail yesterday

This guy was VERY cooperative

He just went about his business

We also spent some quality time with our ol' pals the Lesser Yellowlegs.  First time I've seen many waders this year...



 
In other news, the cruise ship season continues.  Every week one hears of a special cruise for this or that particular interest group.  This week Juneau was blessed by members of the Conservative Political Action Conference.  Our very own Governor Parnell addressed the group yesterday.  The group included former U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, president of Americans for Tax Reform, Grover Norquist, and the President of the National Rifle Association.  I reckon it was hard liquor and handgun night on the M/S Westerdam.

I THINK I heard on KTOO that this august body was going to hold some sort of seminar at the Nugget Mall yesterday afternoon.   I thought about attending; but fell asleep in the recliner instead.  Oh well...
On a more positive note, I hope to hear from the appraiser in the next couple of days.  With luck this house deal should be nailed-down before the week is out.  I will then contemplate a quick trip to the Northwest.

Yippee!

Thursday, August 25, 2011

'Shrooms

Finally!  A day without rain.  I took advantage of the hiatus to mow mom's and auntie's yards.  Mom's looks pretty good.  Auntie's not so good.  And oddly enough it is because mom's turf is still very thin while auntie's is much thicker.  No matter how many times you run a manual mower over auntie's grass there are still ungainly cow licks.  

We've had a shitpile of rain this month.  Everything is soggy.  I will be curious to see how this August ranks in the all time high rain sweepstakes. 

On the other hand, it's prime pickins for mushroom lovers.  I saw Mr. V. Sundberg at the A&P grocery last week and he peddled a line of bullshit of harvesting 20 gallons of the edible fungi.  I dismissed this out-of-hand as mere Norwegian bravado.  However today I saw Ms. Flemming who confirmed that her spouse, Mr. Fisher, was in fact engaged in this serious 'shroom harvest and that Mr. Sundberg was not peddling the proverbial baloney.  I tend to believe Laura.  But on the other other hand, nobody has offered me any proof - if you catch my drift...

Oh.  And my elderly mom REALLY appreciated the dungeness crab (picked) that Mr. S. Rickey provided last week. 

In other news, my house quest continues.  Got the engineer's report today and the place has a clean bill of health.  The appraiser should have been there today...so by early next week we should be in FINAL negotiations.  I am getting more excited by the day...

Life is good.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

The House Revisited

The Masseys very graciously allowed me to come and see the house yesterday.  I took a few pics.  Here's the entire gallery.

I am more and more excited about this endeavor every day.  It will be very nice to have my own digs and this house has at least 80% of what I have been looking for...which is a VERY high percentage given the small Juneau market.

Tuesday is inspection day to be followed closely (I hope) by the appraisal.  The Masseys are hoping to be out by around the first of October.  Works for me.  If the appraisal occurs in a timely fashion and assuming that any final negotiation goes well, I am cautiously optimistic I will be able to spend ten days or so in Portland and Seattle next month.  I feel a need to see my Northwest gals and pals.

While down below I will also acquire some furniture...at a minimum I will need a new bed for the master suite.  I don't want to buy a lot of stuff until I have lived in the place for a bit and have a better sense of what will work...between what the Masseys are willing to leave me and what I have here at the apartment I can make-do for the moment.

The Masseys (and my hot tub)

 Living room -west

 Living room - east

Master bedroom

Max the Dog - he does not come with the house however

In other news, yesterday I attended the celebration in memory of Mark Notar.  It was held at the Moose Club and was VERY well attended.  Saw lots of old classmates and others long-time Juneau folks.  Very nice.  I took a few pics but the lighting was awful and I have yet to determine if any of them are blog-worthy. 

Later gang!

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Stuff

Busy, busy, busy.  Advanced the ball a few yards on the house the past couple of days.  Signed loan documents, disclosures, etc.  Got documents from the realtor - the seller's disclosures, etc.  Have arranged for an engineer and a pest control guy to do inspections next Tuesday morning.

I ran some of the customary errands for the elders today.  When I went back to mom's around 1:30 PM I saw a big fat 'n happy land otter sneaking into the woodshed.  Got mom and we went into the bedroom at the back of the trailer to spy on him.  By that time he was standing by the raging stream at the back of the property.  Jumped in and started swimming upstream.  We legged-it over to the bedroom on the other side of the trailer.  And here he comes up the bank of the creek with a (barely) alive salmon.  He hauled it under the neighbors shed.  Bet it will be mighty aromatic in that shed in a few days...  Very fun to watch the otter however.

In other news, I've been doing a fair amount of reading.  A couple of days ago I finished The First World War - A Complete History by a Brit historian, Brian Gilbert.  It is worthy of a few comments.

It has been decades since I read a history of the War to End All Wars.  I consider myself quite knowledgeable about the Second World War but have never given the first major European conflict of the 20th century the attention I now believe it deserves.

Indeed I do not believe it is possible to have a good understanding of the second conflict, the Cold War, or current  European affairs without a working knowledge of WWI; and in particular how the war affected national and ethnic interests.

For example, the post-Cold War conflicts in the Balkans can be regarded, in part, as simply unfinished business from the Great War.  The Treaty of Versailles created Yugoslavia - a solution that at the time was generally regarded positively by it's constituent parts - the Slovenes, Croats, Serbs and other groups who desperately wanted separation from the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

Similarly, the genocidal mass executions and deportations of the Armenian people by the Ottoman Turks echoes down through the decades.  As does the unsatisfied national aspirations of the Kurds.

Both the Central Powers and the Entente played a ruthless game of promise and counter-promise with groups seeking their own nation-states.  The Poles probably played the game as well as the Great Powers and were duly rewarded (for twenty years at least).  The Zionists and the Arabs who had sweet-nothings whispered in their ears by the British - not so much.  And we all know how that has turned-out thus far...

And then there is the sheer magnitude of the slaughter.  More military casualties resulted from WWI than any other conflict.  Trench warfare was truly hideous.
The Central Powers, the losers in the war, lost 3,500,000 soldiers on the battlefield.  The Allied Powers, the victors, lost 5,100,000 men.  On average, this was more than 5,600 killed on each day of the war.  The fact that 20,000 British soldiers were killed on the first day of the Battle of the Somme is often recalled with horror.  On average, a similar number of soldiers were killed in every four-day period of the First World War.
While Gilbert's history is in most ways quite conventional, he does offer numerous personal stories that serve to make the story both poignant and horrific.  British and American soldiers, it seems, had a particular affinity for writing poetry while in the trenches.  The quality of the poetry varied greatly - but the themes were very consistent.
Among the troops sent forward on the following day [the second day of the Battle of the Somme] were detachments of the Foreign Legion.  In their ranks were several dozen Americans, including the Harvard graduate, and poet, Alan Seeger (Legionnaire No. 19522).  He was with a unit led by a Swiss baron, Captain de Tscharner, in an attack on the strongly fortified village of Belloy-en-Santerre.  During the attack they were caught in the enfilade fire of six German machine guns.  Lying mortally wounded in a shell-hole, Seeger was heard crying out for water, and for his mother.  In his poem 'Rendezvous' he had written earlier that year:

I have a rendezvous with Death
On some scarred slope or hill,
When Spring comes round again this year
And the first meadow-flowers appear.
God knows 'twere better to be deep
Pillowed in silk and scented down,
Where love throbs out in blissful sleep,
Pulse nigh to pulse, and breath to breath,
Where hushed awakenings are dear...
But I've a rendezvous with Death
At midnight in some flaming town,
When Spring trips north again this year,
And I to my pledged word am true,
I shall not fail that rendezvous.
Forty-two Canadians had been killed in the attack on September 16.  Among those killed on the Somme six days later was a nineteen-year-old British soldier, E.W. Tennant.  Having left school at the age of seventeen in order to enlist, he had been in the trenches since shortly after his eighteenth birthday.  His poem 'The Mad Soldier' opened with the lines:
I dropp'd here three weeks ago, yes - I know
And it's bitter cold at night, since the fight -
I could tell you if I chose - no one knows
Excep' me and four or five, what ain't alive.
I can see them all asleep, three men deep,
And they're nowhere near a fire - but on our wire
Has 'em fast as can be.  Can't you see
When the flare goes up?  Ssh!  boys; what's that noise?
Do you know what these rats eat?  Body-meat!

Well, I'm gonna ice the cookies I just baked.  Paula Dean's Loaded Oatmeal/Raisin Cookies with Brown Butter Icing.  Tomorrow morning I am going to make spicy potted shrimp.  Something sweet and something savory for a fundraiser for Loren Jones tomorrow night - my old department colleague is running for the Juneau Assembly.

Cheers!
 

Monday, August 15, 2011

Jubilation

Well, a change of plans.  Got a call from my realtor a few days ago and suddenly found myself back in negotiations for my (almost) dream house.  On Friday promises were made and gifts were exchanged.  I should be meeting with the realtor today to authorize an appraisal and inspection.  I got my bank papers in order on Friday.  With luck...I will be moving into my new home in October.

Here, courtesy of the owners, are a few outdoor pics from my soon-to-be new residence.

 Morning sun on the upper yard

 The deck wraps around the house from east to west

 A portion of the lower yard is fenced (coming next spring- retirement basset hound)  A nice hot tub too...
 A very pleasing design

I am going to be a gardening fool!

I'm going to go over and visit the owners next weekend.  Perhaps they will allow me to take a few indoor pictures.  The living room is fabulous...from one end you look towards town and the bridge...from the other end there is a very nice view of the Chilkat Mountains.  

The upstairs is the master suite...a huge bedroom and large bathroom with a two-seater jet tub.  I THINK I will probably set-up my office in the master suite.  Lots of light. 

Of course no house is perfect.  The house has a galley kitchen which is tiny although certainly serviceable.  And the third bedroom is also mighty small. There is also a fair amount of traffic noise from Egan Drive and the Old Glacier Highway - although you hear zero noise inside the home.  

There is a HUGE fire pit area in the lower yard.  Yippee Skippee!

But all things considered it is quite delightful.  It faces south and there will be LOTS of light in both winter and summer - a VERY important consideration for me in my advancing years.

I am very excited... 

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Disappointed

Well, just spoke to my realtor and, unfortunately, my offer for a home by Twin Lakes was not accepted.   Possible they will reconsider, of course, but it appears we are not close.  Too bad.  I really liked the home; but I am in no rush to move - so we'll see what happens.

It's pouring down rain today.  Don't feel very ambitious.  Think I'll take the day off from the club...I've been working out pretty strenuously for the past week or so and am a mite sore.

Day before yesterday Alison and I walked the dike trail.  There were a number of juvenile Kingfishers flying around; but unfortunately I did not get close enough for a real good shot.  Still, a very pleasant outing...  Got a couple of decent sparrow pics.

Lots of Yellow Rumped Warblers flitting around

Lincoln Sparrow

Nice Kingfisher pose - but just not close enough!

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

A New Home (Maybe)

Sorry gang.  But the weather has not been that great and I have had no photos to share.  That problem was solved this morning when I dowloaded a couple of pics from Eric that he took on a weekend trip to Hoonah.  The pics speak for themselves.

Greetings from the Zip-line Legal Department  Photo courtesy of Eric Swanson

Serious zip-line hardware  Photo courtesy of Eric Swanson

Serious zip-line  Photo courtesy of Eric Swanson

In other news, I have found a home near Twin Lakes that is seriously attractive to me...  Today I will make an offer.  Stay tuned...