Monday, October 31, 2005
Peace
I have been taking pictures at my little church in Edmonds to share at a potluck dinner next weekend. This one makes me happy. This is the point in the service after the sermon and after quiet prayer where we exchange God's Peace. We greet, hug, kiss, or shake hands with other members of the congregation.
I have been taking pictures at my little church in Edmonds to share at a potluck dinner next weekend. This one makes me happy. This is the point in the service after the sermon and after quiet prayer where we exchange God's Peace. We greet, hug, kiss, or shake hands with other members of the congregation.
// posted by Janet @ 8:31 AM
0 comments
Saturday, October 29, 2005
Scary, Creepy, and I Apologize
Hubby and I attended our annual Halloween party with our monthly wine-tasting group. Dave decided to go as our son. Hey, you have to get some use out of those expensive letter jackets, right? Then Kaley decided to dress me up in some of her clothes, her make-up and her perfume. So Dave and I basically went to the party as brother and sister! Ok, this is strange and a little too creepy.
The wine of the evening was Pinot Noir. I don't know what that depressing, souless movie, "Sideways", saw in Pinot Noirs. Dave and I usually share the wine tasting so there is no question that either or both of us can drive home from Seattle, but last night we could have shared our glasses with at least three other people. One of our friends kept saying, "Wash the garlic bread down with it--then it is not so bad!" Sorry, but we don't see the point of the Pinots.
WARNING: The following pictures may cause those with weak hearts or weak stomachs to keel over.
"Yea, well, Um, Like, OK!!!"
Sorry, Lucas. I married him for his genes!
Hubby and I attended our annual Halloween party with our monthly wine-tasting group. Dave decided to go as our son. Hey, you have to get some use out of those expensive letter jackets, right? Then Kaley decided to dress me up in some of her clothes, her make-up and her perfume. So Dave and I basically went to the party as brother and sister! Ok, this is strange and a little too creepy.
The wine of the evening was Pinot Noir. I don't know what that depressing, souless movie, "Sideways", saw in Pinot Noirs. Dave and I usually share the wine tasting so there is no question that either or both of us can drive home from Seattle, but last night we could have shared our glasses with at least three other people. One of our friends kept saying, "Wash the garlic bread down with it--then it is not so bad!" Sorry, but we don't see the point of the Pinots.
WARNING: The following pictures may cause those with weak hearts or weak stomachs to keel over.
"Yea, well, Um, Like, OK!!!"
Sorry, Lucas. I married him for his genes!
// posted by Janet @ 10:55 AM
0 comments
Thursday, October 27, 2005
Yesterday Was Gorgeous
The orcas are hanging out around Seattle again. Sometimes they come around this neighborhood and I have been so lucky to see them a few times from my own windows last year. Literally, I walk around the house with binoculars. With my naked eyes, I look for spouts and fins and a couple of days ago it was breezy with whitecaps which can cause a hopeful imaginative person like me to see possible whales every minute of the day.
Anyway, yesterday brought some lovely sights with calm water even if I did not spot my orcas. For some reason, this ferry was going between Mukilteo and Edmonds---not the normal route and I do not know why.
Washington State Ferry
And last night the sunset was spectacular. They are coming earlier and earlier as we go into our dark time. Dave leaves in the morning in the dark and now is beginning to get home in the dark. He wants to retire just so he doesn't miss the sunsets.
The Olympics
The orcas are hanging out around Seattle again. Sometimes they come around this neighborhood and I have been so lucky to see them a few times from my own windows last year. Literally, I walk around the house with binoculars. With my naked eyes, I look for spouts and fins and a couple of days ago it was breezy with whitecaps which can cause a hopeful imaginative person like me to see possible whales every minute of the day.
Anyway, yesterday brought some lovely sights with calm water even if I did not spot my orcas. For some reason, this ferry was going between Mukilteo and Edmonds---not the normal route and I do not know why.
Washington State Ferry
And last night the sunset was spectacular. They are coming earlier and earlier as we go into our dark time. Dave leaves in the morning in the dark and now is beginning to get home in the dark. He wants to retire just so he doesn't miss the sunsets.
The Olympics
// posted by Janet @ 8:20 AM
0 comments
Wednesday, October 26, 2005
Days of Hunting
Hunting season was always such an exciting time while I was growing up. I still get the phone calls from my Mom telling me whether my brother got his deer or elk---or whether his boys did. I love those phone calls because it keeps me connected to Montana and to my childhood.
There was a time years ago when our children were little that we thought about moving back to either Bozeman or Missoula. Dave's only opportunities would have been at the universities in those cities. But then we thought about the winters and about whether this would have been a good step in terms of Dave's career. And we love Seattle and it has turned out to be a great place to raise children after all. He needs to be at a major medical/public health/ biological sciences university like the UW. Luckily, though we have lived here for 26 years, Dave's job has not been the same. He has done many different things and has had several different offices. And evidently, my husband told me last night, he has an opportunity to move on up yet again.
My husband makes me laugh. He is truly brilliant and one of the smartest people I have ever known or met in my life. He doesn't think so; I guess when you are a kid from Montana State University and you hang out with Nobel prize winners and human genome mappers, you feel a tad inferior. This promotion, according to hubby, will prove the peter principle and that this may be the time he reaches his level of incompetence. But I know better.
Whoa! What does this have to do with hunting? It is just that it is that time of year. My husband and I started dating during deer hunting season. One of the first times I flirted or talked much to him was while I was decorating for a school dance. Dave, a senior, had skipped school to go hunting but he stopped by the dance venue to see his friends and I guess, me. And then not our first date but our second or third date was during Thanksgiving break. I had been deer hunting with my Dad. Usually, I did not go hunting with my Dad; my Mom hunted and brother did, of course, but I was younger so usually I stayed with my Grandma. Knowing me, probably I refused but then in high school, women's rights came to the forefront so I thought I should go hunting.
I'll never forget that day. There we were in the woods somewhere near Helena and a buck was standing not far from us. I had been in rifle club; my Dad had taken me shooting and I was a good shot. I aimed and fired....and missed. My Dad knew why I missed and it was ok. It was ok. I couldn't.
That night, Dave came to our house and we went to an Elvis movie. But of course, I told him all about the day I had spent with my Dad.
Hunting season was always such an exciting time while I was growing up. I still get the phone calls from my Mom telling me whether my brother got his deer or elk---or whether his boys did. I love those phone calls because it keeps me connected to Montana and to my childhood.
There was a time years ago when our children were little that we thought about moving back to either Bozeman or Missoula. Dave's only opportunities would have been at the universities in those cities. But then we thought about the winters and about whether this would have been a good step in terms of Dave's career. And we love Seattle and it has turned out to be a great place to raise children after all. He needs to be at a major medical/public health/ biological sciences university like the UW. Luckily, though we have lived here for 26 years, Dave's job has not been the same. He has done many different things and has had several different offices. And evidently, my husband told me last night, he has an opportunity to move on up yet again.
My husband makes me laugh. He is truly brilliant and one of the smartest people I have ever known or met in my life. He doesn't think so; I guess when you are a kid from Montana State University and you hang out with Nobel prize winners and human genome mappers, you feel a tad inferior. This promotion, according to hubby, will prove the peter principle and that this may be the time he reaches his level of incompetence. But I know better.
Whoa! What does this have to do with hunting? It is just that it is that time of year. My husband and I started dating during deer hunting season. One of the first times I flirted or talked much to him was while I was decorating for a school dance. Dave, a senior, had skipped school to go hunting but he stopped by the dance venue to see his friends and I guess, me. And then not our first date but our second or third date was during Thanksgiving break. I had been deer hunting with my Dad. Usually, I did not go hunting with my Dad; my Mom hunted and brother did, of course, but I was younger so usually I stayed with my Grandma. Knowing me, probably I refused but then in high school, women's rights came to the forefront so I thought I should go hunting.
I'll never forget that day. There we were in the woods somewhere near Helena and a buck was standing not far from us. I had been in rifle club; my Dad had taken me shooting and I was a good shot. I aimed and fired....and missed. My Dad knew why I missed and it was ok. It was ok. I couldn't.
That night, Dave came to our house and we went to an Elvis movie. But of course, I told him all about the day I had spent with my Dad.
// posted by Janet @ 12:54 PM
0 comments
Sunday, October 23, 2005
Sunday Afternoon Nap
Amongst the newspapers....
"Hey, leave me alone and let me sleep!!"
...And amongst the lap top and coffee cups, he is oblivious to the world.
Amongst the newspapers....
"Hey, leave me alone and let me sleep!!"
...And amongst the lap top and coffee cups, he is oblivious to the world.
// posted by Janet @ 5:46 PM
0 comments
Saturday, October 22, 2005
The Sought After Mukilteo View
Across the ravine, past the tail-eating blackberry bushes, and behind the banana tree, the developers came with their bulldozers.
Purple Mountains Majesty
Got a million bucks?
The Olympics were hazy today but visible so Apolo and I found a little different vantage point besides our house to take a picture--from a lot for sale. It is so hard to capture the view in one shot without a wide angle lens.
Across the ravine, past the tail-eating blackberry bushes, and behind the banana tree, the developers came with their bulldozers.
Purple Mountains Majesty
Got a million bucks?
The Olympics were hazy today but visible so Apolo and I found a little different vantage point besides our house to take a picture--from a lot for sale. It is so hard to capture the view in one shot without a wide angle lens.
// posted by Janet @ 2:04 PM
0 comments
Thursday, October 20, 2005
My Favorite Newspaper Writer
Besides Mukilteo's own newspaper columnist and author Chuck Sigars, my second favorite is the Seattle Times' Ron Judd. I look forward to Thursday because his outdoor column is in the "Northwest Weekend" section of the Times. Frequently, including today, I laugh out loud reading him---even when I am alone. Well, I guess not totally alone because Apolo is always with me.
"Are you laughing at me? What did I do? Aren't I cute?"
"No, Apolo, I'm laughing at the newspaper!"
Today Judd wrote about being in Colorado to interview Winter Olympic athletes at the training center in Colorado Springs. Humor exists when the reader can completely identify with what is said. I get it when he talks about the dryness and the altitude. When we travel to Montana, I can't get enough moisturizer on my face and my hands. I always feel like a potato chip. And then, I must suffer the laughs of my son when I pant a little hiking up Mount Helena and it is only 4000 feet! It is kind of a claustrophobic feeling when you cannot take a really deep breath. Needless to say, nobody can describe the travails of Puget Sounders trying to enjoy themselves in the Rocky Mountains quite like Ron Judd.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/traveloutdoors/2002571163_nwwtrailmix20.html
And some quotes:
Shortly after landing in Denver, I was explaining this to my friend, Prickly Phlox, by talking on my cellphone, which, like anything else we People of the Sea Level do within an hour of arriving in a high place, was making me pant heavily and want to go lie down for a week....
"And did I mention the dry air? Walking out of Denver International is like walking into a pottery kiln: It sucks every last bit of moisture out of your being — as thoroughly as listening to a Dick Cheney speech vaporizes any trace of hope in your soul."....
While it's clearly easier to adjust to altitudes and dry air if you're in better shape, everyone going from sea level to high level feels the big lead balloon tied to their head for a few days; it's simply a question of the size of the balloon.
Genetics clearly are a factor: Some people adjust to altitude changes fairly easily. Others feel their body wanting to crawl up inside itself and die, at least for a few days....
Sample question to speedskaters: Are you nuts?
Answer: Well, yes.
Anyone who intentionally attempts to get what passes for sleep in dry, thin air is clearly at least a half bubble off plumb — or wants to win awfully badly....
Note to Bonnie Blair: Our own personal altitude rooms at the Hilton did not have DVD players. But they did offer all the other high-altitude advantages, such as waking yourself in the middle of the night by suddenly feeling the urge to inhale with the force required to suck a kosher dill pickle through a straw.....
And perhaps it was. The beautiful thing about spending time in the high/dry lands is the way all that moisture deprivation gives way to replenishing ecstasy the instant you return to the wetlands.
Half an hour after stepping off the plane last week, I was driving through a tasty Seattle mist when the cellphone rang again. It was Phlox.
"I can't talk right now," I snapped.
"Because you're driving?" she asked.
"No," I said, my eyes rolled back in my head with pleasure.
"I'm reconstituting."
Yes! I completely understand the "replenishing ecstasy" with lungs full of oxygen and dewy skin once more. It happens when you get off the plane or if driving---the moment you start to descend down into Seattle from the summit of Snoqulamie Pass.
How does one photograph moisture at 7:30 AM??
Besides Mukilteo's own newspaper columnist and author Chuck Sigars, my second favorite is the Seattle Times' Ron Judd. I look forward to Thursday because his outdoor column is in the "Northwest Weekend" section of the Times. Frequently, including today, I laugh out loud reading him---even when I am alone. Well, I guess not totally alone because Apolo is always with me.
"Are you laughing at me? What did I do? Aren't I cute?"
"No, Apolo, I'm laughing at the newspaper!"
Today Judd wrote about being in Colorado to interview Winter Olympic athletes at the training center in Colorado Springs. Humor exists when the reader can completely identify with what is said. I get it when he talks about the dryness and the altitude. When we travel to Montana, I can't get enough moisturizer on my face and my hands. I always feel like a potato chip. And then, I must suffer the laughs of my son when I pant a little hiking up Mount Helena and it is only 4000 feet! It is kind of a claustrophobic feeling when you cannot take a really deep breath. Needless to say, nobody can describe the travails of Puget Sounders trying to enjoy themselves in the Rocky Mountains quite like Ron Judd.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/traveloutdoors/2002571163_nwwtrailmix20.html
And some quotes:
Shortly after landing in Denver, I was explaining this to my friend, Prickly Phlox, by talking on my cellphone, which, like anything else we People of the Sea Level do within an hour of arriving in a high place, was making me pant heavily and want to go lie down for a week....
"And did I mention the dry air? Walking out of Denver International is like walking into a pottery kiln: It sucks every last bit of moisture out of your being — as thoroughly as listening to a Dick Cheney speech vaporizes any trace of hope in your soul."....
While it's clearly easier to adjust to altitudes and dry air if you're in better shape, everyone going from sea level to high level feels the big lead balloon tied to their head for a few days; it's simply a question of the size of the balloon.
Genetics clearly are a factor: Some people adjust to altitude changes fairly easily. Others feel their body wanting to crawl up inside itself and die, at least for a few days....
Sample question to speedskaters: Are you nuts?
Answer: Well, yes.
Anyone who intentionally attempts to get what passes for sleep in dry, thin air is clearly at least a half bubble off plumb — or wants to win awfully badly....
Note to Bonnie Blair: Our own personal altitude rooms at the Hilton did not have DVD players. But they did offer all the other high-altitude advantages, such as waking yourself in the middle of the night by suddenly feeling the urge to inhale with the force required to suck a kosher dill pickle through a straw.....
And perhaps it was. The beautiful thing about spending time in the high/dry lands is the way all that moisture deprivation gives way to replenishing ecstasy the instant you return to the wetlands.
Half an hour after stepping off the plane last week, I was driving through a tasty Seattle mist when the cellphone rang again. It was Phlox.
"I can't talk right now," I snapped.
"Because you're driving?" she asked.
"No," I said, my eyes rolled back in my head with pleasure.
"I'm reconstituting."
Yes! I completely understand the "replenishing ecstasy" with lungs full of oxygen and dewy skin once more. It happens when you get off the plane or if driving---the moment you start to descend down into Seattle from the summit of Snoqulamie Pass.
How does one photograph moisture at 7:30 AM??
// posted by Janet @ 7:24 AM
0 comments
Tuesday, October 18, 2005
Global Warming affecting Puget Sound
Lest there be any doubt--this is Mukilteo NOT Miami
Both of my Seattle papers this morning had huge front page headlines about global warming and what is happening to us right here. It is positively frightening and it infuriates me that certain people in power in this country ignore science. The articles are about the University of Washington's new report today about the impact of global warming on Puget Sound.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/244995_soundclimate18.html
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2002567659_psclimate18m.html
Evidently, Puget Sound waters are warming rather rapidly in the grand scheme of things. In 1925, the temperature was 48 degrees but in 1965 a steady upward trend began so that now the water is 50 degrees and rising. Our winters have warmed by three degrees since 1950. Furthermore, our waters are rising and the glaciers in the Olympic and Cascade Mountains are shrinking rapidly. Six inches to a foot more water along the shoreline will cause havoc to flora and fauna but, of course, to homes and businesses, too. For example, a coffee roasting company in Olympia is located by the bay a mere 6 inches above sea level. Needless to say, they are concerned.
When my kids were little we would take them on a hike to the Ice Caves not far from here. The Ice Caves are at the bottom of a glacier and existed even in the hot August sun. But just in the last 15 years, they are melting so quickly that they have caved in and killed people. No longer is hiking encouraged to this destination and walking inside is forbidden.
We have lived in Mukilteo for 17 years. And in the last few years, I have noticed palm trees in the neighborhood. Our house is a few hundred feet from this huge body of water. With the water warming and our winters warming even a few degrees, tropical trees are not only surviving but thriving! In the land of cedar trees and mushrooms, we can now grow dates, figs, and bananas?? We might as well start growing our own coffee instead of simply roasting it. What would Lewis and Clark say? This is just nuts!
Four houses from me
On my street
Disturbing is the description of the effects on our delicate ecosystem:
"It's frightening and baffling," said Brad Ack, executive director of the Puget Sound Action Team. "I was surprised by how much we've already experienced — some of the most significant change in North America....
Runoff from the 10,000 rivers and streams that spill into the Sound is already shifting, according to the report: About 13 percent less freshwater flows to Puget Sound now than in 1948, and snowmelt is coming an average of 12 days earlier.
With lower snowfall, more of the Northwest's precipitation comes as rain, the study says, so flooding is likely to increase because the water isn't held in mountain snowpack. And that could affect how sediment and debris is washed into the Sound.
Such simple-seeming swings can have wide impacts.
Rising water increases erosion, and also threatens the habitat of kelp and other grassy plants that incubate dozens of species of fish and vegetation that can't survive without it.
Warming water could increase harmful algae blooms, which can contaminate shellfish. When those blooms die, they suck oxygen out of the water, causing "dead zones" like an area in Hood Canal where thousands of fish have been killed.
Lower water levels in rivers and streams already have hurt salmon runs." (Seattle Times)
So what do we do about this?? This UW report was basically a study and included observations and predictions but not necessarily solutions. As such, first of all, we recognize that there is a problem and it is caused at least in part by us. Of course, there are natural climate changes but unnatural global warming must be faced and accepted. Secondly, we need to reverse the trend. From what I understand, it is not too late. We need government recognition and government action. And we need it now!!
A little blurry--didn't want people to yell at me.
A Banana Tree--a fricking banana tree!
All photos were taken this morning along my street. I did not have to drive around Seattle looking for these. I see these things every day on my walk and it's not right. This is not California. I love to see palm trees and tropical plants but only when I get off an airplane in HAWAII!
Lest there be any doubt--this is Mukilteo NOT Miami
Both of my Seattle papers this morning had huge front page headlines about global warming and what is happening to us right here. It is positively frightening and it infuriates me that certain people in power in this country ignore science. The articles are about the University of Washington's new report today about the impact of global warming on Puget Sound.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/244995_soundclimate18.html
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2002567659_psclimate18m.html
Evidently, Puget Sound waters are warming rather rapidly in the grand scheme of things. In 1925, the temperature was 48 degrees but in 1965 a steady upward trend began so that now the water is 50 degrees and rising. Our winters have warmed by three degrees since 1950. Furthermore, our waters are rising and the glaciers in the Olympic and Cascade Mountains are shrinking rapidly. Six inches to a foot more water along the shoreline will cause havoc to flora and fauna but, of course, to homes and businesses, too. For example, a coffee roasting company in Olympia is located by the bay a mere 6 inches above sea level. Needless to say, they are concerned.
When my kids were little we would take them on a hike to the Ice Caves not far from here. The Ice Caves are at the bottom of a glacier and existed even in the hot August sun. But just in the last 15 years, they are melting so quickly that they have caved in and killed people. No longer is hiking encouraged to this destination and walking inside is forbidden.
We have lived in Mukilteo for 17 years. And in the last few years, I have noticed palm trees in the neighborhood. Our house is a few hundred feet from this huge body of water. With the water warming and our winters warming even a few degrees, tropical trees are not only surviving but thriving! In the land of cedar trees and mushrooms, we can now grow dates, figs, and bananas?? We might as well start growing our own coffee instead of simply roasting it. What would Lewis and Clark say? This is just nuts!
Four houses from me
On my street
Disturbing is the description of the effects on our delicate ecosystem:
"It's frightening and baffling," said Brad Ack, executive director of the Puget Sound Action Team. "I was surprised by how much we've already experienced — some of the most significant change in North America....
Runoff from the 10,000 rivers and streams that spill into the Sound is already shifting, according to the report: About 13 percent less freshwater flows to Puget Sound now than in 1948, and snowmelt is coming an average of 12 days earlier.
With lower snowfall, more of the Northwest's precipitation comes as rain, the study says, so flooding is likely to increase because the water isn't held in mountain snowpack. And that could affect how sediment and debris is washed into the Sound.
Such simple-seeming swings can have wide impacts.
Rising water increases erosion, and also threatens the habitat of kelp and other grassy plants that incubate dozens of species of fish and vegetation that can't survive without it.
Warming water could increase harmful algae blooms, which can contaminate shellfish. When those blooms die, they suck oxygen out of the water, causing "dead zones" like an area in Hood Canal where thousands of fish have been killed.
Lower water levels in rivers and streams already have hurt salmon runs." (Seattle Times)
So what do we do about this?? This UW report was basically a study and included observations and predictions but not necessarily solutions. As such, first of all, we recognize that there is a problem and it is caused at least in part by us. Of course, there are natural climate changes but unnatural global warming must be faced and accepted. Secondly, we need to reverse the trend. From what I understand, it is not too late. We need government recognition and government action. And we need it now!!
A little blurry--didn't want people to yell at me.
A Banana Tree--a fricking banana tree!
All photos were taken this morning along my street. I did not have to drive around Seattle looking for these. I see these things every day on my walk and it's not right. This is not California. I love to see palm trees and tropical plants but only when I get off an airplane in HAWAII!
// posted by Janet @ 8:27 AM
0 comments
Monday, October 17, 2005
Follow Up from "Ah, Man!" Below
Our View of Mukilteo Ferry Dock clears!
My street is about a mile and a half along the water between two deep ravines. On the waterfront side, we have two mansions. One is lived in and the other is under construction. The first 9000 sq. ft. brick mansion, now worth 4 or 5 million, was built by some very nice people with pizza franchise money. They moved on and the home was occupied for a couple of years by snobby people who kept the gate closed all of the time. Word on the street is that they sold it because they wanted to live in a neighborhood full of homes and people just like them. It is unclear if this place is for sale again but it is being lived in at least temporarily by a friendly real esate agent and his family.
Typical Edmonds or Mukilteo "northwest style" house with trees and no sidewalks (On the next street up.)
This second home being built is about 9 or 10,000 sq. ft. but rather than being brick and pretentious, it is craftsman style and it fits better on our street. Two houses were torn down to make way for this one. The talk is it is being built by local (meaning Seattle area and not out of state) people who made their unending fortune from either Microsoft or a dotcom. My husband met them while walking Apolo and evidently they have a Golden Retriever, too. He said they were amicable, down to earth, and in my opinion, Golden Retriever people are special anyway. Believe me, this place has an "8" view as you can tell. Everyone in the neighborhood has watched the construction and chatted now and then with the workers. For a while, they had the siding choices on display and those of us who walk would discuss our favorites.
I like it but I am not sure how a family lives in 10,000 sq. ft. We spend most of our time in one cozy little room and I have a hard enough time keeping the whole house clean. Funny how this looks smaller in the photo than in person.
No doubt our street is changing. Other small older homes along the water will eventually be razed to make way for upscale houses. And our house and lot will become more and more valuable. Obviously, this is great for our kids' nest egg but not so good for our property taxes. This very same thing is happening down the road in Edmonds to a greater extent where there are even fewer empty lots; so older homes are being gutted and redone or completely torn down to make way for the multi-million dollar structures.
Our View of Mukilteo Ferry Dock clears!
My street is about a mile and a half along the water between two deep ravines. On the waterfront side, we have two mansions. One is lived in and the other is under construction. The first 9000 sq. ft. brick mansion, now worth 4 or 5 million, was built by some very nice people with pizza franchise money. They moved on and the home was occupied for a couple of years by snobby people who kept the gate closed all of the time. Word on the street is that they sold it because they wanted to live in a neighborhood full of homes and people just like them. It is unclear if this place is for sale again but it is being lived in at least temporarily by a friendly real esate agent and his family.
Typical Edmonds or Mukilteo "northwest style" house with trees and no sidewalks (On the next street up.)
This second home being built is about 9 or 10,000 sq. ft. but rather than being brick and pretentious, it is craftsman style and it fits better on our street. Two houses were torn down to make way for this one. The talk is it is being built by local (meaning Seattle area and not out of state) people who made their unending fortune from either Microsoft or a dotcom. My husband met them while walking Apolo and evidently they have a Golden Retriever, too. He said they were amicable, down to earth, and in my opinion, Golden Retriever people are special anyway. Believe me, this place has an "8" view as you can tell. Everyone in the neighborhood has watched the construction and chatted now and then with the workers. For a while, they had the siding choices on display and those of us who walk would discuss our favorites.
I like it but I am not sure how a family lives in 10,000 sq. ft. We spend most of our time in one cozy little room and I have a hard enough time keeping the whole house clean. Funny how this looks smaller in the photo than in person.
No doubt our street is changing. Other small older homes along the water will eventually be razed to make way for upscale houses. And our house and lot will become more and more valuable. Obviously, this is great for our kids' nest egg but not so good for our property taxes. This very same thing is happening down the road in Edmonds to a greater extent where there are even fewer empty lots; so older homes are being gutted and redone or completely torn down to make way for the multi-million dollar structures.
// posted by Janet @ 7:48 AM
0 comments
Saturday, October 15, 2005
The Practice of Law
To keep up my Bar license, I need to get 15 credits a year. And I need to do that because every other month or so I get to be Judge Janet in arbitration cases which allows me to order men attorneys around and write brilliant decisions which may or may not be appealed. The work, which I love, is a teeny tiny sliver of the rest of my life.
So yesterday I attended my required continuing legal education (CLE). Basically, it was a course designed to teach us how miserable the practice of law is and to help us cope with it in two ways: 1) by changing the profession...and/or 2) by changing ourselves. Nobody, to my surprise offered the solution of CHANGING PROFESSIONS. Some of the statistics were shocking. One third of all attorneys suffer from anxiety, depression, obsessive compusive disorder or all of the above. But 70% of all attorneys suffer from problems related to alcohol.
The thing is none of this was new to me. I left my law firm exactly 20 years ago when my son was a newborn. He was a screamer and frankly, I couldn't bear to leave him in day care. I loved him and even I could hardly stand his screaming. How in the world could someone who didn't love him take care of the colicky little thing? But frankly, he was just the excuse. I hated my job and I was surrounded by the most dysfunctional people ever. Marriages were falling apart; one of the partner's daughters had become a prostitute; the legal assistants were sleeping with the expert witnesses; I had to represent the senior partner's son in a criminal matter for masturbating on a public bus.....and.....oh yes, this is the book I'm planning to write.
The sad thing is I was really good at what I did. As I have written before on this blog, one of my cases made the law books and if I do say so myself, I was quite persuasive to juries. But the ideal was not the everyday reality of life in a law firm of terribly bright but crazy people.
Yesterday, I was in a room full of lawyers grappling with issues that I resolved 20 years ago. The day convinced me that nothing has changed in all of these years and clearly, I made the right choice to become an almost full-time parent. It was fun because I love to meet quirky people.
One of the discussion leaders was a late fiftyish small woman. Immediately, there was something about her I didn't trust. Perhaps it was her resume. She started with oil law firms in Houston but now she "sustains the human spirit and well being in the context of the legal profession". I don't know--maybe it was the perpetual smile or her slow response of "thank you for sharing" when someone offered a comment. Somehow, I could completely imagine her screaming abusively at the gardner or the cleaning person or flipping someone off in traffic. I think she may have screamed at her husband because she had no wedding ring.
The woman my age who sat next to me was, in her words, requiring an incredible amount of "healing" to recover from years and years of her stressful law job. We were to share with one another two pie chart circles that we made with crayons--one representing our ideal life and the other our actual life. Sadly, she kind of indicated she'd had a major break down. But at the end of the day, she handed me her business card which showed her expertise and new part time work to be that of a "Life guide--guiding the hearts and souls of leaders."
Finally, I enjoyed the man to my left. He was a criminal defense attorney whose main complaint was the lack of ethics and reward of such behavior in a good number of the prosecutors he opposes. But at lunch, he disappeared which I thought was odd because he had driven three hours from another city to attend this special seminar. He missed the crayon drawings but then showed up and I figured he'd had a long lunch but no.....! He explained that his way of coping with the miserable practice of law is to run barefoot. Though it was a cool fall day and we were downtown amongst concrete, he had taken off and had run five miles around the Space Needle and back without any shoes or socks.
My eyes were very wide and I was trying so hard to control my twitchy smile as he explained the reflexology and the science of it. I asked if it hurt--no problem. I asked about the rain--no problem. I asked about the roughness of his feet--no problem. The woman on the other side of him commented that maybe he wasn't as interested in wearing sling back sandals without socks like we were. Well, what a deal!
All in all, I had a good time at the conference. The previous seminar a month ago was "Advanced Non-Profit Organizations II--Complex Governance Issues". Nobody talked to one another and I did not understand a word that was said the entire day; and it was actually in English. The Seattle iciness had melted with yesterday's group, that's for sure. It was held at a law school and I wished I could have dragged in all of the students I saw during breaks. I would have asked them to sit and listen carefully--very carefully. Certainly, I made the right choice 20 years ago and yes, I was the only one in the room whose "ideal" crayon life matched up fairly closely with my "actual" life.
To keep up my Bar license, I need to get 15 credits a year. And I need to do that because every other month or so I get to be Judge Janet in arbitration cases which allows me to order men attorneys around and write brilliant decisions which may or may not be appealed. The work, which I love, is a teeny tiny sliver of the rest of my life.
So yesterday I attended my required continuing legal education (CLE). Basically, it was a course designed to teach us how miserable the practice of law is and to help us cope with it in two ways: 1) by changing the profession...and/or 2) by changing ourselves. Nobody, to my surprise offered the solution of CHANGING PROFESSIONS. Some of the statistics were shocking. One third of all attorneys suffer from anxiety, depression, obsessive compusive disorder or all of the above. But 70% of all attorneys suffer from problems related to alcohol.
The thing is none of this was new to me. I left my law firm exactly 20 years ago when my son was a newborn. He was a screamer and frankly, I couldn't bear to leave him in day care. I loved him and even I could hardly stand his screaming. How in the world could someone who didn't love him take care of the colicky little thing? But frankly, he was just the excuse. I hated my job and I was surrounded by the most dysfunctional people ever. Marriages were falling apart; one of the partner's daughters had become a prostitute; the legal assistants were sleeping with the expert witnesses; I had to represent the senior partner's son in a criminal matter for masturbating on a public bus.....and.....oh yes, this is the book I'm planning to write.
The sad thing is I was really good at what I did. As I have written before on this blog, one of my cases made the law books and if I do say so myself, I was quite persuasive to juries. But the ideal was not the everyday reality of life in a law firm of terribly bright but crazy people.
Yesterday, I was in a room full of lawyers grappling with issues that I resolved 20 years ago. The day convinced me that nothing has changed in all of these years and clearly, I made the right choice to become an almost full-time parent. It was fun because I love to meet quirky people.
One of the discussion leaders was a late fiftyish small woman. Immediately, there was something about her I didn't trust. Perhaps it was her resume. She started with oil law firms in Houston but now she "sustains the human spirit and well being in the context of the legal profession". I don't know--maybe it was the perpetual smile or her slow response of "thank you for sharing" when someone offered a comment. Somehow, I could completely imagine her screaming abusively at the gardner or the cleaning person or flipping someone off in traffic. I think she may have screamed at her husband because she had no wedding ring.
The woman my age who sat next to me was, in her words, requiring an incredible amount of "healing" to recover from years and years of her stressful law job. We were to share with one another two pie chart circles that we made with crayons--one representing our ideal life and the other our actual life. Sadly, she kind of indicated she'd had a major break down. But at the end of the day, she handed me her business card which showed her expertise and new part time work to be that of a "Life guide--guiding the hearts and souls of leaders."
Finally, I enjoyed the man to my left. He was a criminal defense attorney whose main complaint was the lack of ethics and reward of such behavior in a good number of the prosecutors he opposes. But at lunch, he disappeared which I thought was odd because he had driven three hours from another city to attend this special seminar. He missed the crayon drawings but then showed up and I figured he'd had a long lunch but no.....! He explained that his way of coping with the miserable practice of law is to run barefoot. Though it was a cool fall day and we were downtown amongst concrete, he had taken off and had run five miles around the Space Needle and back without any shoes or socks.
My eyes were very wide and I was trying so hard to control my twitchy smile as he explained the reflexology and the science of it. I asked if it hurt--no problem. I asked about the rain--no problem. I asked about the roughness of his feet--no problem. The woman on the other side of him commented that maybe he wasn't as interested in wearing sling back sandals without socks like we were. Well, what a deal!
All in all, I had a good time at the conference. The previous seminar a month ago was "Advanced Non-Profit Organizations II--Complex Governance Issues". Nobody talked to one another and I did not understand a word that was said the entire day; and it was actually in English. The Seattle iciness had melted with yesterday's group, that's for sure. It was held at a law school and I wished I could have dragged in all of the students I saw during breaks. I would have asked them to sit and listen carefully--very carefully. Certainly, I made the right choice 20 years ago and yes, I was the only one in the room whose "ideal" crayon life matched up fairly closely with my "actual" life.
// posted by Janet @ 7:19 PM
0 comments
Friday, October 14, 2005
Lawyers
Ah, yes! I have spent the day with lawyers. It doesn't take much for me to have my recurring anxiety dream that I still work at Schroeter, Goldmark, & Bender and there are missing files I was supposed to be working on to get ready for trial.
More later! And darn--why is it whenever I head down the freeway to downtown, I do not bring the camera along when Mount Rainier was peaking out a little?? Never have I put Mount Rainier on this blog.
Ah, yes! I have spent the day with lawyers. It doesn't take much for me to have my recurring anxiety dream that I still work at Schroeter, Goldmark, & Bender and there are missing files I was supposed to be working on to get ready for trial.
More later! And darn--why is it whenever I head down the freeway to downtown, I do not bring the camera along when Mount Rainier was peaking out a little?? Never have I put Mount Rainier on this blog.
// posted by Janet @ 6:36 PM
0 comments
Wednesday, October 12, 2005
Ah, Man!
My town was featured in the Seattle Times Real Estate section over the weekend. Darn! We have been trying to keep this place a secret so that not every single lot is developed. On my walks with Apolo, I love that many of our streets still have no sidewalks or curbs. We have gullies with creeks and trees so thick, you cannot see through. In fact today, as I trudged over a little trail, Apolo was attacked by a blackberry bush which grabbed his tail. Scared him to death---and I'm trying to calm him down as he freaks out and hops all over because he is attached to this gigantic bush. Luckily, the branch let go of him. Parts of Mukilteo still have a vacation cabin/beach house feel but I fear we are losing that.
So the headline was:
"Mukilteo's Spectacular Views No Longer a Secret"
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/realestate/2002547128_neighborhood09.html
""Mukilteo is one of the most charming undiscovered gems in the region — but not for long," said Lee Gallaher of Gallaher Real Estate, who recently moved from Edmonds to Mukilteo.
The Puget Sound city, 25 miles north of Seattle between Edmonds and Everett, is home to 19,360 residents and has an active real-estate market. ....
In addition to sweeping panoramas, the city is home to an active waterfront, several parks, a strong school system, a historic lighthouse and one of the busiest ferry terminals in the state, serving Clinton on Whidbey Island."
The article goes on to say that the median house price is about $380,000 and going up. Of course, housing prices are all over the place depending upon......views. A house in Mukilteo with no view and worth $400,000 will be worth over a million---the same exact house---a mere block away with a view of Puget Sound. But again, the view must be just the right view with the right objects. The view rating scale according to our county is based on 1 through 8. Eight, of course, is a sweeping unobstructed waterfront view of the water, the mountains, and all of Whidbey Island. I guess our view is between 5 and 6 and as a result, our house is worth $150,000 to $200,000 less than a house with an 8 view.
And here is why we are not an 8: we cannot see the end of Whidbey Island from inside of our house though we can see it from our back yard. But we could never have afforded this house if I could see the scene below from my bathroom. We lucked out because frankly, this is the only thing we cannot see because it is blocked by one house but we see all the way north to Canada and south to Edmonds AND we can see Possession Head from our backyard anytime we want. Plus, we are so close to the water that I can see waves, sea lions, birds and whales with my bare eyes. Proximity doesn't seem to count on the 1-8 scale.
So all of this is kind of stupid and laughable but really really important to people who only worry about money.
Possession Head, Whidbey Island with Olympics as a backdrop taken an hour ago.
My town was featured in the Seattle Times Real Estate section over the weekend. Darn! We have been trying to keep this place a secret so that not every single lot is developed. On my walks with Apolo, I love that many of our streets still have no sidewalks or curbs. We have gullies with creeks and trees so thick, you cannot see through. In fact today, as I trudged over a little trail, Apolo was attacked by a blackberry bush which grabbed his tail. Scared him to death---and I'm trying to calm him down as he freaks out and hops all over because he is attached to this gigantic bush. Luckily, the branch let go of him. Parts of Mukilteo still have a vacation cabin/beach house feel but I fear we are losing that.
So the headline was:
"Mukilteo's Spectacular Views No Longer a Secret"
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/realestate/2002547128_neighborhood09.html
""Mukilteo is one of the most charming undiscovered gems in the region — but not for long," said Lee Gallaher of Gallaher Real Estate, who recently moved from Edmonds to Mukilteo.
The Puget Sound city, 25 miles north of Seattle between Edmonds and Everett, is home to 19,360 residents and has an active real-estate market. ....
In addition to sweeping panoramas, the city is home to an active waterfront, several parks, a strong school system, a historic lighthouse and one of the busiest ferry terminals in the state, serving Clinton on Whidbey Island."
The article goes on to say that the median house price is about $380,000 and going up. Of course, housing prices are all over the place depending upon......views. A house in Mukilteo with no view and worth $400,000 will be worth over a million---the same exact house---a mere block away with a view of Puget Sound. But again, the view must be just the right view with the right objects. The view rating scale according to our county is based on 1 through 8. Eight, of course, is a sweeping unobstructed waterfront view of the water, the mountains, and all of Whidbey Island. I guess our view is between 5 and 6 and as a result, our house is worth $150,000 to $200,000 less than a house with an 8 view.
And here is why we are not an 8: we cannot see the end of Whidbey Island from inside of our house though we can see it from our back yard. But we could never have afforded this house if I could see the scene below from my bathroom. We lucked out because frankly, this is the only thing we cannot see because it is blocked by one house but we see all the way north to Canada and south to Edmonds AND we can see Possession Head from our backyard anytime we want. Plus, we are so close to the water that I can see waves, sea lions, birds and whales with my bare eyes. Proximity doesn't seem to count on the 1-8 scale.
So all of this is kind of stupid and laughable but really really important to people who only worry about money.
Possession Head, Whidbey Island with Olympics as a backdrop taken an hour ago.
// posted by Janet @ 11:40 AM
0 comments
Tuesday, October 11, 2005
Kate (Kaley) flirting with Frederick (Alex) in Pirates of Penzance
A Mezzo and a Tenor (Sipes Photography)
A Mezzo and a Tenor (Sipes Photography)
// posted by Janet @ 9:32 AM
0 comments
Monday, October 10, 2005
Homecoming Dance--Here We Come!
Alex and Kaley
Aren't they pretty, the two of them??
Lindsey, Lacey, Stevie, and my baby, Kaley
Kaley and Alex
Nathan (Lindsey's date), Alex (Kaley's date), Sean (Stevie's date), and Stephen (Lacey's date)
Aren't they cute?
Oh my! It sure is different doing this from the girl's side rather than the boy's side. Kaley wanted me to paint her fingernails after hair and make up and double sided tape and little teeny tiny hooks but we ran out of time and she had gloves anyway. Most girls get their nails done but Kaley cannot---she has very short nails for her piano. But nevertheless, she had a glorious time and loved being asked by such an attractive boy. They had a really good time together. We went out to dinner with Alex's parents while the children danced and toasted the fact our kids finally got together---after a year of hoping.
Alex and Kaley
Aren't they pretty, the two of them??
Lindsey, Lacey, Stevie, and my baby, Kaley
Kaley and Alex
Nathan (Lindsey's date), Alex (Kaley's date), Sean (Stevie's date), and Stephen (Lacey's date)
Aren't they cute?
Oh my! It sure is different doing this from the girl's side rather than the boy's side. Kaley wanted me to paint her fingernails after hair and make up and double sided tape and little teeny tiny hooks but we ran out of time and she had gloves anyway. Most girls get their nails done but Kaley cannot---she has very short nails for her piano. But nevertheless, she had a glorious time and loved being asked by such an attractive boy. They had a really good time together. We went out to dinner with Alex's parents while the children danced and toasted the fact our kids finally got together---after a year of hoping.
// posted by Janet @ 7:25 AM
0 comments
Friday, October 07, 2005
This Morning--Two Views of Whidbey
I'm kind of goofing around this morning. Seriously, I should be cleaning the house because we are having Kaley and her "date" for Homecoming and her friends and their dates and the parents for pictures tomorrow. But, Lucas said he was missing home a little so these are for him. I took them five minutes ago.
So it was raining yesterday but not today---looks to be gorgeous.
Some people fishing for salmon this morning!
View from our bathroom. Sun shining on the beach houses on Whidbey. (Am I the only person with a set of binoculars next to the toilet?)
I'm kind of goofing around this morning. Seriously, I should be cleaning the house because we are having Kaley and her "date" for Homecoming and her friends and their dates and the parents for pictures tomorrow. But, Lucas said he was missing home a little so these are for him. I took them five minutes ago.
So it was raining yesterday but not today---looks to be gorgeous.
Some people fishing for salmon this morning!
View from our bathroom. Sun shining on the beach houses on Whidbey. (Am I the only person with a set of binoculars next to the toilet?)
// posted by Janet @ 8:24 AM
0 comments
Rain, Fog and the Mukilteo Ferry
It was raining when I took this yesterday afternoon so it was hard to see--thus the gigantic photo.
As the leaves fall from the alders and maples, our view, which I am not complaining about, believe me, opens up a little more. It is kind of fun because for six months from November to April when we are inside, missing leaves enhance our views from the windows. But the other six months, May to October, when we can be out on the decks, we see more water from various outside vantage points. So it all balances out. When we moved into this neighborhood almost three years ago, people told us we'd be amazed at how the views change every single day depending on the weather, the clouds, the boat traffic, the wind and on and on. No two days are the same.
It was raining when I took this yesterday afternoon so it was hard to see--thus the gigantic photo.
As the leaves fall from the alders and maples, our view, which I am not complaining about, believe me, opens up a little more. It is kind of fun because for six months from November to April when we are inside, missing leaves enhance our views from the windows. But the other six months, May to October, when we can be out on the decks, we see more water from various outside vantage points. So it all balances out. When we moved into this neighborhood almost three years ago, people told us we'd be amazed at how the views change every single day depending on the weather, the clouds, the boat traffic, the wind and on and on. No two days are the same.
// posted by Janet @ 7:50 AM
0 comments
Wednesday, October 05, 2005
Deadly Water
Never will I be able to move away from water. As a child, I grew up with mountain views but because my Dad was an obsessive compulsive fisherman, I spent many hours sitting along side a creek, lake or river just staring happily. Our church camp in Montana was located on Flathead Lake. I loved it there and the sunsets rivaled what I see over Puget Sound. Something draws me to the serenity and beauty of the water. Interestingly, when we visited Herne Bay and Canterbury, England, I discovered that the waterfront looks a lot like Mukilteo. My ancient relatives lived there and great great grandparents were evidently seaman. So I wonder sometimes if I have some genetic coding that draws me to the sea. My English Grandpa's brother lived and died right over there on Whidbey Island. I bet he loved it like I do--the same genes.
Recently, when we were in Albuquerque, I had quite a conversation with one of my husband's scientist friends who lives there. He grew up in Kansas on a farm located in open flatland. He loves New Mexico but returns often to Kansas to hunt and spend time. The most comfort and peace he experiences is in open flat grassland. I explained that driving through flatland in Kansas or anywhere makes me terribly uncomfortable and practically claustrophobic. My son experienced the same unpleasant feeling travelling through North Dakota. We need borders of mountains and water to orient ourselves and to know which direction is which--north or south; east or west. Without the landmarks, we feel almost panicked--like being in complete darkness or in total white out blizzard conditions.
But, Mr. Scientist described to me that he had a similar feeling during a recent stay in Seattle. He said he felt penned in because he couldn't walk or drive on all of our water and the mountains made him feel blocked and claustrophobic. He couldn't go from here to there easliy. I remember my mother in law who grew up in the flatter parts of Kansas never grew accustomed to Montana even after 50 years. She always felt like she couldn't see with mountains in her face. I guess whatever imprints are made on our young baby brains stay with us forever.
The water may be glorious but sadly, in the last week, it has claimed four lives--right out here. The first was to the left out my windows but slightly beyond where I see. A medical helicopter crashed with a crew of three, the pilot and two nurses. It went down off of Edmonds in deep deep water. One body was recovered but the wreckage and the other two are still missing. They say they need the Navy with their deep water location capabilites.
The second was to the right out my windows up on the Tulalip Reservation. Two 19 year old boys had launched their boat to fish for salmon and it capsized. One of them drowned and this is too close to my son's age. This is so devastating for their families and community. At least they finally found him yesterday.
So this morning when I saw the lights of the cruise ship before sunrise, it seemed haunting with the bow pointing toward the cold grave of the helicopter.
Taken at 7 AM this morning.
Never will I be able to move away from water. As a child, I grew up with mountain views but because my Dad was an obsessive compulsive fisherman, I spent many hours sitting along side a creek, lake or river just staring happily. Our church camp in Montana was located on Flathead Lake. I loved it there and the sunsets rivaled what I see over Puget Sound. Something draws me to the serenity and beauty of the water. Interestingly, when we visited Herne Bay and Canterbury, England, I discovered that the waterfront looks a lot like Mukilteo. My ancient relatives lived there and great great grandparents were evidently seaman. So I wonder sometimes if I have some genetic coding that draws me to the sea. My English Grandpa's brother lived and died right over there on Whidbey Island. I bet he loved it like I do--the same genes.
Recently, when we were in Albuquerque, I had quite a conversation with one of my husband's scientist friends who lives there. He grew up in Kansas on a farm located in open flatland. He loves New Mexico but returns often to Kansas to hunt and spend time. The most comfort and peace he experiences is in open flat grassland. I explained that driving through flatland in Kansas or anywhere makes me terribly uncomfortable and practically claustrophobic. My son experienced the same unpleasant feeling travelling through North Dakota. We need borders of mountains and water to orient ourselves and to know which direction is which--north or south; east or west. Without the landmarks, we feel almost panicked--like being in complete darkness or in total white out blizzard conditions.
But, Mr. Scientist described to me that he had a similar feeling during a recent stay in Seattle. He said he felt penned in because he couldn't walk or drive on all of our water and the mountains made him feel blocked and claustrophobic. He couldn't go from here to there easliy. I remember my mother in law who grew up in the flatter parts of Kansas never grew accustomed to Montana even after 50 years. She always felt like she couldn't see with mountains in her face. I guess whatever imprints are made on our young baby brains stay with us forever.
The water may be glorious but sadly, in the last week, it has claimed four lives--right out here. The first was to the left out my windows but slightly beyond where I see. A medical helicopter crashed with a crew of three, the pilot and two nurses. It went down off of Edmonds in deep deep water. One body was recovered but the wreckage and the other two are still missing. They say they need the Navy with their deep water location capabilites.
The second was to the right out my windows up on the Tulalip Reservation. Two 19 year old boys had launched their boat to fish for salmon and it capsized. One of them drowned and this is too close to my son's age. This is so devastating for their families and community. At least they finally found him yesterday.
So this morning when I saw the lights of the cruise ship before sunrise, it seemed haunting with the bow pointing toward the cold grave of the helicopter.
Taken at 7 AM this morning.
// posted by Janet @ 8:49 AM
0 comments
Monday, October 03, 2005
FIRST SNOW---HERE IT IS!!!
Always, it is an event in mountainous places--the appearance of the first fresh new snow on the slopes. When I was little in Montana, it often happened in August but here it is usually October. Because our fall weather brings clouds and fog, we often cannot see the initial glazing. But, the Olympics peaked out last night just at dusk and revealed themselves. I couldn't decide which photo was better so here's both of them taken from my front deck last evening.
Always, it is an event in mountainous places--the appearance of the first fresh new snow on the slopes. When I was little in Montana, it often happened in August but here it is usually October. Because our fall weather brings clouds and fog, we often cannot see the initial glazing. But, the Olympics peaked out last night just at dusk and revealed themselves. I couldn't decide which photo was better so here's both of them taken from my front deck last evening.
// posted by Janet @ 7:53 AM
0 comments
Sunday, October 02, 2005
Fall Came All In One Day
This is how it works around here. We have lovely days in September with sunshine and then one day, a big wind hits, blows down trees, branches and leaves, and voila.....just like that, summer is gone. And it happened on Thursday. Since then, it has been foggy, misty, and drizzly.
Taken a few moments ago.
Along with October comes St. Francis of Assisi day and our annual pet blessing at our church. We all know there is "one Baptism for the remission of sins" when it comes to people but pets can be blessed over and over. Believe me, my Apolo needs it. He was terrible in church today. Our pet blessing preceded the service and then we (I) convinced our priest to let the animals stay through the Eucharist. We even took Apolo up to communion with us; he was not well-behaved. But it was joyful! And doggone it (sorry), church is supposed to be full of praise and joy for all of God's creatures.
Father Peter with cedar branches and Holy water
Apolo getting blessed
Me (on the left) and my friends with Apolo and his buddy Augustus--the same age.
Yep, this is the Pacific Northwest--Our church meditation trail.
At Home Again (view from my kitchen)--fall colors and fog and my 18th cup of coffee.
UPDATE: King5 news on the evening news just reported about St. Mark's Episcopal Cathedral's pet blessing. Pet blessings are a big deal in Seattle. St. Mark's is a major landmark church in downtown Seattle. (As a sidenote, King5 is connected to St. Mark's in that the station was started many years ago by a prominent family who belonged to this church.) Anyway, they had separate sections for cat people and dog people. This would not have worked at our church because we have several members who brought both from the same family. However, this would have helped Apolo's behavior because the cats next to us were causing him to be bad.
This is how it works around here. We have lovely days in September with sunshine and then one day, a big wind hits, blows down trees, branches and leaves, and voila.....just like that, summer is gone. And it happened on Thursday. Since then, it has been foggy, misty, and drizzly.
Taken a few moments ago.
Along with October comes St. Francis of Assisi day and our annual pet blessing at our church. We all know there is "one Baptism for the remission of sins" when it comes to people but pets can be blessed over and over. Believe me, my Apolo needs it. He was terrible in church today. Our pet blessing preceded the service and then we (I) convinced our priest to let the animals stay through the Eucharist. We even took Apolo up to communion with us; he was not well-behaved. But it was joyful! And doggone it (sorry), church is supposed to be full of praise and joy for all of God's creatures.
Father Peter with cedar branches and Holy water
Apolo getting blessed
Me (on the left) and my friends with Apolo and his buddy Augustus--the same age.
Yep, this is the Pacific Northwest--Our church meditation trail.
At Home Again (view from my kitchen)--fall colors and fog and my 18th cup of coffee.
UPDATE: King5 news on the evening news just reported about St. Mark's Episcopal Cathedral's pet blessing. Pet blessings are a big deal in Seattle. St. Mark's is a major landmark church in downtown Seattle. (As a sidenote, King5 is connected to St. Mark's in that the station was started many years ago by a prominent family who belonged to this church.) Anyway, they had separate sections for cat people and dog people. This would not have worked at our church because we have several members who brought both from the same family. However, this would have helped Apolo's behavior because the cats next to us were causing him to be bad.
// posted by Janet @ 1:14 PM
0 comments
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