Saturday, February 4, 2012

Coffee pots

Lately I've been having a little bit of an issue with coffee pots.  Yes, coffee pots.  Weird, huh.  I'm more than a little addicted to coffee, so it's important to me to have a functioning coffee pot when I'm here on the weekend.  The problem is, I'm kinda picky about my coffee pot.   It's for a good reason.  On the weekend I like to make 10-ish cups and just slurp it as I do stuff around the house, chores and whatnot.   You can get a feel for my level of addiction by the fact that I often finish the 10-cup pot I make.

Anyway, if you've tried to buy a coffee pot lately, you know that most of them are made with an automatic 2 hour shutoff, I suppose to protect us from ourselves.  That way you can't leave it on and burn anything down with it.  The problem is, if I get up at 6:00 am on a Saturday or Sunday, I'm not ready to quit drinking coffee at 8:00 am.   And I'm not really that fond of re-heated, nuked coffee.  I buy coffee from Gevalia, and periodically they gift me with a coffee maker, but they always have the 2 hour shut off.  So when my old decrepit white coffee maker (with no automatic shutoff, that's how old it is) began to look really bad I searched around until I found a coffee maker that you can program not to shut off until after 4 hours.  Cuisinart.  The Cuisinart and I have been coexisting happily for a couple of years.

About a month ago I was sitting here working on my computer about 4 hours after I started the coffee, and all of a sudden I heard the sound of something frying.  That's a little startling given I don't used any appliances in my kitchen beside the microwave and the coffee maker.  I thought, "What the hell is frying?" and walked into the kitchen tracing the sound of popping and crackling.  Lo and behold, I discovered the coating on the heating plate on the coffee maker was frying!!  I jerked the pot off and the coating was popping and crackling and literally frying off the heating plate.  I jerked the cord out of the wall, but it was so hot it just kept frying.  So I dumped water on it, and created a huge steam cloud in the kitchen.  Then I submersed the whole coffee maker in water in the sink, just in case anything was burning inside it also.  As near as I can figure, the heating plate began heating up instead of shutting off at 4 hours.  I'm glad I was home.  Well, I never leave it to shut of automatically anyway.  I'm too type A.  I turn it off if I'm leaving the house, but who knows if it would have shut off?

Anyway, I dug around in my garage and found one of the Gevalia coffee makers.  Yes, it shuts off at 2 hours but I figured I could make 2 small pots if I was going to want coffee all morning.  Or I could be really radical and drink less coffee.  That coffee maker and I have been getting used to each other.  This morning, I got it ready and when I pushed the 'on' button, nothing happened!   "Don't tell me!"  I tried another outlet.  Nope.  I tried a third outlet, just in case.  Nope.  So I dug around in the garage and unearthed my old white decrepit coffee maker and made coffee, so I could get going this morning.  And I thought about the first coffee maker Gevalia ever sent me, that grew a swarm of ants, and I began to wonder if I'm some sort of a jinx on coffee makers.

I dropped by Bed, Bath and Beyond when I was out running errands today and picked up a new coffee maker that can be programmed to stay on for 4 hours.  That's the shiny new thing in this picture.  It's the first silver coffee maker I've ever owned, but hey, I'm trying to break a jinx here.  I decided to try something different.  And you can bet I'm not throwing the old white coffee maker away.  It's lovingly packed away in my garage, waiting for the next coffee emergency.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Cacti

I usually blog on the weekends but lately my weekends have been fairly busy so I figured I'd try a week day evening for a blog post.  This evening I'm going to talk about cacti and my ability to grow things.
I think I've established along the way with this blog that although I love to grow things, I'm pitifully bad at it.  A year ago (yes, last January) I put a bunch of cactus and succulent seeds into a terrarium-type arrangement, hoping I wouldn't have to do much with it since it was a terrarium, and thus I couldn't screw it up as easily as a regular plant.  That was the thought process anyway.  

Lo and behold, the little things sprouted!  They started out as tiny green nubs and began putting out a spine or two here and there.  I carefully documented their progress with pictures at intervals, which I then lost all of when my hard drive crashed last summer.   So I don't have remaining proof that I grew them from seeds, but I did.  

Anyway, the terrarium part lasted only until the succulents got well under way.  They sent out long thin shoots which began being bent and curled by the terrarium, so I gave up, took the top off the thing and have been treating it like a regular plant.  That entails things like watering it when I think it looks dry and trying not to over water it, trying to make sure it gets sunlight, etc, etc.  Luckily, cacti can stand dry spells.  So despite my tender loving care (or lack thereof), the little things continue to grow.   As you can kind of see from these pictures the plants are perfectly happy and thriving. 

I have two types of succulents and about 10 different varieties of cacti in there.  The bigger ones came up first.  The tiny little ones at the base of the big ones and among the pebbles were slow to sprout and are small and low to the ground.  They also don't have the serious spines on them that the bigger guys do.  Most of them are getting to the point where I should be able to actually identify what type of cactus it is soon, besides using descriptive names like "roundish with long spines" "roundish with purple stripes and long spines" or "short and roundish".

I had a few seeds left so I started those leftovers this year, a year behind the original ones.  The new ones are struggling more, probably because when I was starting the first batch they were in the terrarium and the watering was via condensation dripping onto the soil.  This year they're just in a pot and when I water them I disturb the soil.  I think they've had a hard time getting started.  You can see a couple of pale green stalks in this picture below. That's what all my little thriving cacti looked like last year at this time.

Anyway, it does look like I am capable of growing cactus-type plants.  Of course, except for occasionally letting them freeze, I have managed to keep aloe vera alive, so I suppose I knew that.  It's just so much fun to watch things grow.

Speaking of watching things grow, I hope we continue to get some rain so that things will actually grow come Spring.  The drought from last year is supposed to continue this year.  People are saying they may not let us water lawns at all this year if it does continue.  We had about 24 hours of pretty continuous rain starting late yesterday, and it's supposed to be scattered showers tomorrow.  There was lots of standing water in places today as I was driving home, but unless we get more than an occasional, widely spaced day of rain, the outlook is not good.  The reservoirs between here and east Texas are basically dry . . . or were when I came through during the holidays.  Those won't fill with just a few days of rain.  So me, the sunshine girl, is actively hoping for rain. 

I guess that's all for now.

Monday, January 16, 2012

New Year - a little late!

2012!?  The years just keep rolling by, don't they?  This is my much-delayed new year's eve reminiscing.  Actually I'm only half a month late so I suppose it could be a lot worse.  This will be a short post though because I'm not really in the mood to be deeply philosophical.  Still I've looked back every year, so I'll look back at least briefly today. 

Let's see.  Overall I'd have to say 2011 was pretty good to me.  I'm actively involved in work and everything is going well there. I'm actively involved in my national professional organization and everything is going well there.  I got my promotion to professor, with a raise, and in December we got a good bonus which paid for Christmas and then some.  My life and work seem to be on a pretty nice even-keel for a change. 

So personally, things are going well, but there are also a LOT of changes going on at my work.  The department has a new Chair, and with a new Chair come changes, so that's one aspect of it.  Add to that, our interim Division head has decided she doesn't want the position and is leaving, so we'll have a new Division Head in another month.  And add to that our lab administrative director left in December.  Whenever there is this much change, people are nervous and unsettled.  I've ridden so many changes at this place that I'm sure I can ride these too, but it is a pretty excessive amount of change in a fairly short period of time this time.  It'll be interesting to see how the department grows.    

Family-wise things are going well, too.  I have a new niece-in-law, with my oldest nephew getting married in November.  My nieces and nephews all make me so proud.  What a great group of kids.  Plus I have four grand-nieces now.  Maybe my newly married nephew and his wife will add a boy to that mix along the way.  So far I'd have to say that my nephews have excellent taste in women.  All my nieces-in-law are good-looking girls.  So of course my grand-nieces are perfect.  *laughing*  Which is not to say that my nieces and nephews aren't good-looking.  As I mentioned, I have nephews ands nieces to be proud of.

So what about the new year?  I think this year I may buy a new house.  I like my little house, but the commute is getting really old.  I'm seriously considering moving to somewhere close to the rail lines.  That will be my big project for the year, probably.  At work I have lots of projects to work on to keep me busy.  Maybe I'll consider losing some weight and getting back into better shape.  And of course I always have lots of around-the-house projects that I never seem to get to. The cat-kids and I are fat and happy.  It should be a good year, I think. 

Sunday, January 15, 2012

New York, New Year

Wow!  Three months since I posted.  I always let the back end of the year get away from me and this year was no exception.  I didn't even do my usual end of year/new year musings.   I'll have to try to fit that in sooner or later.  Or I guess I could just skip it this year.

Let's see.  I have so much to talk about.  Guess I'll do this blog about my trip to the Big Apple and catch up on other things in another blog.

I have a good friend in medical school in New York, so I went to visit her for five days the week before Christmas and we had a blast!   I can totally see why people love New York.  Everything is there.  And I mean EVERYTHING.  Things we can only get online in Dallas, you can actually stop and pick up in a relatively accessible store.  Authentic food from probably every known culture.  Yum!   And of course, Times Square, Broadway, Rockefeller Center, etc.  It was impossible to do everything in five days, so we were selective of course, but everything we did was fun.

First of all, all transportation was public, which was really different for me with my independence defined by my car.  You can't live without a car in Dallas.  In New York it's not only possible, it's often preferable.  Traffic isn't pretty.  Also, I've never been on a subway in the US before so it was a learning experience. I've been on the London Underground, the Paris Metro and several systems in Japan, but nothing here in the US.  I'm VERY glad to have had my friend to act as guide.   She was in charge of getting us from point A to point B and did a great job at it.  

My friend lives in Jersey City, so we went into New York every day for food, shopping and entertainment.  We ate Greek food, we ate Falafels, we ate the best greasy cheeseburgers I've ever had, we ate authentic Japanese at a place where we were the only non-Asians inside.  Basically we ate our way through 5 days. 

We went to see Wicked!  AWESOME!  I had never been to a Broadway show, so likely I would have considered anything we saw awesome, but Wicked really was amazing.  I want to see it again.  And I now have the soundtrack for it.   

We went to see the big tree at Rockefeller Center at night, which is the first picture in this blog, and also wandered around looking at all the Christmas decorations, which are the other pictures.  As you can see, all the decorations were amazing, although of course the pictures never do them justice and I can't possibly post all the pictures I took. 

We went shopping pretty much every day.  On one side of Macy's the windows are all done with fancy Christmas scenes and puppets.  Those window scenes I absolutely could not do justice to with a picture, but this will maybe give you a little flavor of what they were like.  "Magical" is probably a good word.   In fact I'd have to say the New York is fairly magical at this time of year.

We got home pretty exhausted every evening after walking and wandering around Manhattan all day, but it was sooooooo worth it.  One minor downside - temperature.  One day in Manhattan the high temp was 27 degrees, which as you know is WAY too cold for this Texas girl.  Hats, gloves, thick scarves, heavy coat ... these are absolute 'musts' for December in New York.  And add an umbrella for those wet days.  Still the weather didn't slow us down much.  We still had a blast. 

Oh, one other minor downside, I picked up a Yankee virus, which I was coming down with the day I flew back home, and then I kindly took with me to east Texas for Christmas.  Hopefully my whole family didn't end up with it. 

So that was the NY trip.  More on the rest of my life in the next blog.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

October temps

It's an incredibly lovely Sunday morning.  The weather has settled into it's Texas Fall mode with mornings in the low 60s and high temps in the mid-80s.  Perfect temperatures.  Now if we would just get a little more frequent rain, it would be ideal.  The rain last weekend wasn't enough to break the drought of course, but much of Dallas looks green again.  That's a nice plus.  My sister in the high country in Colorado got about 10 inches of snow last weekend when I was getting rain.  I'm glad I'm not there, although the Fall colors are gorgeous, from the pictures she's sent me.

Today is a beautiful day here.  It's still cool right now, totally blue sky, bright sun.  I'm taking advantage of not having to be anywhere today to do a bunch of puttering.  Plus Sunday's my watering day, so I've been out watering the lawn and starting to cut back some of the dead shrubbery.  Amazingly, a bunch of green is showing in the interiors of those shrubs.  Looks like most of them will make it. 

My car is fixed.  It spent 3 days in the shop and is all back together now.  I'm happy about that.  The rental I had was a BRIGHT red Chevy Cobalt.  Not a bad car, but it doesn't handle like my Subaru.  I was glad to have my car back. 

Friday at work I might as well not have gone in.  Computer issues made the day less than productive, although I did attend three meetings I really needed to be at.  Given I had three meetings I suppose my day would have been fairly disrupted anyway.  The computer issues revolved around missing files.  I've spent this last week working on several PowerPoint presentations that I have coming up, and like a good girl, I saved and closed them before I left Thursday evening.  Friday morning they were gone.  Along with two excel files I had saved and four file folders full of files I had created recently.   After a minor panic attack and major ranting, an Information Systems guy came to my office to tell me that they were migrating things to a new server.  My stuff wasn't gone, I just couldn't access it.   They predicted I'd be able to access it again in, oh, eight hours or so.  *laughing*  Talk about your mixed emotions.  Vast relief that I wouldn't be required to recreate files from scratch, relief that I didn't need any of those PowerPoints on Friday, vast irritation that I couldn't work on anything current.    Life on a computer network, ne?

Anyway, not much going on.  Just thought I'd put in a picture of my pretty red roses.  The yellows are blooming too right now, but aren't as big and full as the reds.  This may be my shortest blog post ever, but that's it for today.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Amateur Auto Mechanic

My poor car.  It takes a fair amount of abuse from me.  Not that I purposely abuse it, but I drive long distances and I like to drive fast.  Almost two weeks ago now I had an unexpected meeting with some road debris.

I was commuting to work at 5:30 am and in fairly heavy traffic for that hour.  I was traveling "above posted speeds" in a group of cars three lanes across and several deep and I was moving along next to an 18-wheeler.  All of a sudden he threw up a large piece of road debris of some sort.  It came at me too fast to really tell what it was and I had nowhere to go.  Just the luck of the draw that it happened to come at me.  So I hit it on the right front (passenger side) bumper and ran over it, and my car started making 'unusual' noises.  Damn!  Was my thought.  (okay, it was more colorful than "damn", but you get the idea).

I worked my way across traffic, took the next exit and looked for a street light (not much out there where this happened).  I got my trusty flashlight and went to look and originally thought I was dragging the debris.  A big chunk of stuff was dragging and rubbing on the front tire.  I tried to pull it loose and discovered it was attached!  It was part of the undercarriage of my car.  So I twisted it around and stuffed it back up in there and drove the rest of the way to work.  The car didn't overheat or lose gas or make any more unusual noises except it was (and is) very loud when I accelerate.  When I left work, there were no drips or fluids under the car, so since I had to fly to DC the next day, I put off taking it to the shop until I got back.

Turns out that piece of debris ripped my engine shield off the bottom of my car and loosened or damaged other pieces.  The good news is that it missed my fog light and headlight on that side, and it looks like the front bumper (which wraps the whole front of the car) can be salvaged.  Tomorrow I'm taking it to the shop to be repaired and renting a car for the three days they will have it (hopefully only three days). 

So where does the amateur auto mechanic come in?  Friday as I was leaving work I approached the car and thought "what the hell?"  A large piece of the undercarriage on the driver's side was hanging down to within about 2 inches of the pavement.  I got down on my knees (thankfully I wasn't wearing a dress) and determined that it was fairly solidly attached and then drove the car home that way, carefully skirting any road conditions that would cause the car to bounce.  When I got home, I waited for the car to cool down and then laid down on the ground and got under it to see what was going on.   I even got under the car on the passenger side to see how the same piece on that side was attached.  Scarily, it's not attached.  That's apparently the broken piece that I stuffed back up in there and it's just sitting in there!  Anyway, when I pushed the hanging piece back up into place and looked at it by looking in the wheel well over the tire, I found a place where the hanging piece has a hole that matches up with a hole on another piece of the car.  So I found a nut and bolt (almost too small so I put a washer on it to make sure it doesn't come through), and bolted the hanging piece back up in place.  I have no idea if it's intended to be bolted there, but it's working fine, and I have my car to get around in until it goes to the shop tomorrow.

You can see in this slightly fuzzy picture, the shiny new nut and bolt holding the piece in place behind the edge of the tire (lower left corner of picture).  I have a tendency to try to fix things myself, although I admit I usually leave car things to real mechanics.  I needed to be able to use the car this weekend though.  Desperation is the mother of invention.  I know it's "necessity", but in my case it was desperation.  I had to be desperate to try to tackle car stuff.

So that's my car saga.

On a bright note, it's raining!!!!!!!  And the sunshine girl is dancing for joy.  It's amazing how good a mood I'm in without the sun being out.  We need it so badly.  My roses are loving the nice temperatures and with a little help from me watering and now the rain, they're blooming like crazy.  Pretty.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

October and Cooler Temps

How about that?  My weather fixation continues.  Actually, I just like sunny Sunday mornings.  It was 56 this morning when I went out to set my sprinklers.  Brrrrrrrrr!  I haven't felt 56 in a long time.  It's supposed to stay like this for a little while.  High 50s to low 60s at night, mid-80s during the day.  Beautiful weather, but no rain in sight.

I have seen rain though.  Both times I went to Washington DC in September it was raining there.  I wish I could have brought it back with me.  Still, even with water restrictions my lawn is looking pretty good.  The break in the heat will probably save it, although the same can't be said for many of the trees in the area.  Flying into Dallas last Friday, everything looks brown, and maybe half the trees are brown rather than green.  You can tell there's a serious drought here.  It looks like mid-winter rather than early Fall.  I'll have to cut back all my dead shrubbery out front and hope to find some green in the center.  That shrubbery is usually green all year.
The cat kids are fat and happy.  I found a pet sitter for them this year while I was on the long vacation and had her come in every other day.  She worked out perfectly.  Only Addy came out for her, but at least Addy got wet food every other day.  Addy didn't lose weight while I was away like she has been for the last couple of long trips.  You can see from this picture that neither of them is in danger of starving, but I didn't see the usual, Addy-dropping-weight-and-Zoe-gaining that I often see when I'm gone long periods of time.  Here they're taking an early morning drink at the patio birdbath/cat watering hole.

I have no trips in October, but a lot of small projects to complete.   I'm participating in a Webinar this week.  Then I have an e-learning project due, a talk for the lab techs, a presentation at journal club,  a set of chromatograms to tidy up and submit for a book chapter, a science project to help a local student with and a GC/MS assay to bring up in-house to make our ICU docs happy.  That's my list I'm hoping to either complete or get well into this month.  The GC/MS assay will probably take more than a month to validate, and the science project I just need to grow up some cells and figure out some basic stuff before helping the kid set up the project herself.  The talks and presentations should be pretty straight-forward, so they'll get done this month.  I've become pretty good at throwing presentations together.

My promotion went into effect on September 1st and all is good at work for the most part.    I had to qualify that because of 2 things:  We have a new Chairman of Pathology, and a new Chairman means lots of changes coming along.  It will be interesting to see how things work out.  The second thing is that the County Hospital is struggling right now and going through lost of changes.   I sign out test results over there, and they are working on getting credentialing up to date.  I haven't been credentialed over there previously despite signing out for the last 10+ years.  So I'm getting credentialed, and in the meantime, someone else is covering my signout duties.  At my primary job though things are going very well.  New instruments are being installed, and I'm staying nicely busy.

And that's the news for this lovely Sunday morning, October 2nd, 2011.  Or something like that.