Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Wednesday W's, Last of August Edition


The Way We Were. A couple of weekends ago, we went out to a local indoor shopping mall to take a long walk. It was hot outside, cool in the mall.  We bumped into a Spencers,  I can remember shopping at Spencers in the 1970's, they are still in business, still a place to find fun, offbeat, tasteless stuff. 

What am I thinking? The kitchen work is dominating my mind, I want to be in the middle of it, running the show, I am paying someone to do that, I want to stay out of the way.  Maybe I should see if Dr Spo is in network.  

Where have I been?  Lowes to discover that my beloved light maple floors have been discontinued. Fortunately I had the one piece of trim needed to bridge the living room floor to the new kitchen floor.  Not the perfect transition, but it will work.  

Where am I going?  The day after Labor Day, Metro is shutting down all rail service south of National Airport for 6 weeks to reroute tracks through a new station that has been under construction since early 2020. My commute will be unpleasant for 6 weeks.  Shuttle buses stuck in traffic, maybe driving in once a week.

What is new in my world?  I had to buy a new beard trimmer, the adjustable plastic guide on the one I was using broke - again.  

Who deserves an atta-boy! The Demo crew from last week that made such quick work of the kitchen. 

Who deserves two atta-boys? The appliance guy, the ovens are set to be delivered on Thursday.  

Who deserves a slap? Book banners and book burners. On a scale of 1 to 5, all 5. 

Who have I been thinking about? My brother in law.  His health continues to decline. Death is getting nearer, hard on my dear sister. 

What should I be doing?  Well there is always work to be done.  I need to work out the details for Spain.  I should be walking more.  

What is my excuse? It is hot, work is crazy, I am old, I have lots of them, and as someone once told, me we all have one and most of them stink.  

What have I done to make the world a better place this month?  Never enough.  I try to be kind to others.  To be generous.  To be considerate.  







 

Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Travel Tuesday : Mt Washington



 I was thinking recently how lucky I have been to do some of the work travel that I have done.  Work has opened the door for some amazing adventures.  For a few years, I had a travel budget, the only instruction was "make sure you would feel comfortable explaining to congress why you spent the money on that trip."  The travel budget went away 6 years ago with a restructure of a project.  And over the past five years the office budget was cut to the point that less and less was possible.  

I have been backed into a corner and had to redo the office budget.  One of the results should be a return to a modest travel budget for the department.  The full effect of that won't kick in long before I retire, but perhaps there will be an adventure or two before then. 

I went to Mt Washington in New Hampshire to teach at a conference.  I don't remember the topic.  I added a day to the trip at my expense, and rode the cog railway up the side of the mountain, in the fog.  Michael Downie on the YouTube channel Downie Live posted this week about his ride on the line. A great adventure.  

Monday, August 29, 2022

YouTube Monday: A New Narrowboater

During the pandemic, I discovered the joys English narrow boat videos, on Amazon Prime, then discover that my favorites were on YouTube, often on YT long before other platforms.  There are a variety of people who live on canal boats and document it on YouTube.  Some of them are brilliant content producers, some are interesting people, some are annoying. A few of my favorites have sold their boats (Cruising the Cut, Foxes Afloat, Boating Beyond ), a few seldom post.  

There are new voices, Chris started this journey about 10 months ago, and documented building his boat, he is now living on it.  He is a nice working class guy.  Retired military. Well educated and endlessly curious and learning. Divorced with kids.  His storytelling is good, and has gotten better.  He decided to buy and live aboard a boat, having never spent the night on a boat before.  He describes why, and the process of deciding and building what he wanted.  

You can follow his story from the beginning, or jump to his current postings, he is now on the boat, near his kids.  He is posting a couple of times a week, I look forward to his posts.  

Are there similar channels that you follow? 




Sunday, August 28, 2022

The Sunday Five: Retirement Plans

  1. Have you retired, or do you have plans to retire? 
  2. At retirement, stay where you are or move? 
  3. What is the ideal age to retire? 
  4. Is it likely you will continue to work after retirement?
  5. Are there parts of your work that you miss, or worry that you will miss? 
My Answers: 

  1. Have you retired, or do you have plans to retire? I have plans, there is actually a date on my office calendar that says DO NOT BOOK AFTER THIS DATE.
  2. At retirement, stay where you are or move? Our plan is to stay put. 
  3. What is the ideal age to retire? My goal is to leave while people are saying "you are leaving so soon" rather than "finally!" 
  4. Is it likely you will continue to work after retirement?  I might do a little consulting, training, and reviews. 
  5. Are there parts of your work that you miss, or worry that you will miss? My only real fear is that I will miss the structure.  
Please share your answers in the comments. 

 

Saturday, August 27, 2022

The Saturday Morning Post : Getting Older Today

A comment before my scheduled post today.  I am so glad to see the student loan debt forgiveness.  I benefited from a public interest student loan debt forgiveness plan that the State of Kentucky had, $10,000 and a year's interest taken off my balance, allowed me to pay off my debt in a little over 7 years.  I paid for most of my education.  For undergrad with the exception of one semester (my midlife crisis) I worked full time, went to school part time and paid as I went (at a nice expensive private school.)  For law school I was a full time student, and finished with a little over $45,000 in loans in 1999.  The student loan payments were more than our mortgage payment, and I went into public service work, at a modest salary.  For years I worked 50 hours a week and moonlighted to have a life and pay the debt. A little help in paying it off, was such a great relief. I hope everyone who benefits from today's forgiveness feels the same.  We are one of the few countries that treats higher education as a profit making business, instead of the building block of a stronger country.  Everything we can do to lessen the burden, makes us all stronger.  End of rant, onto my Birthday. 


It is my birthday I was born a long - long time ago, in a land far-far away from here.  Very early in the morning.  

I am always a little surprised by my age.  I am getting very near to retirement age.  And I sometimes wonder where the past 40 years have gone.  I have been filing tax returns for 50 years.  

I do believe getting old beats the alternative. Besides I am too old to die young.  

My father lamented that he had lived too long when his ability to enjoy life diminished and each day was a struggle.  There is a line in a Jimmy Buffett song, I'd rather die while I am living, than live when I am dead.  

When I was young, I never imagined that I would have the education that  I have, that I would have traveled to all of the places I have, experienced the adventures I have.  All in all, life is good to me.  

So today will be a trip to the farmers market, hopefully the pastry boy is in.  A little blogging.  A nice dinner - we will probably go out.  Gifts are limited these days.  My Sweet Bear always seems to find something fun and unexpected.  With a small family, that continues to shrink, there are not a lot of greetings.  

What does the next year hold?  More travel, I committed to taking a couple of major trips a year as long as I am working, it is good for my psyche.  I am finalizing plans for retirement, by this time next year I may be able to count the remaining months of work on the fingers of one hand.  

My wish, another decade or two of enjoying life.  

Friday, August 26, 2022

Fabulous Friday - Lawn Art and Airline Adventures




In front of the last house in Florida, I had a concrete eagle, sitting on a piece of granite from the front of the old Orlando City Hall.  City hall was imploded to make way for a new building, it kind of bothered me because the building was my age.  But Orlando had grown from a sleepy cow town to Mouse Town, and bigger diggs were in order.  

The implosion of city hall was filmed for one of the Lethal Weapon films. I have never seen all of that film.  I was watching it on a flight from San Francisco to Atlanta, someplace over Texas the lights went out.  The plane had experienced a major electrical generating system failure.  We went from 38,000 feet to on the ground in Dallas in less than 10 minutes, when we pulled up to the gate there was smoke coming out of the engine on my side.  For some reason I have never gone back and watched the rest of that film.  It was the only time I ever paid extra to watch a movie on an airline flight.  And I didn't get my money back. I made it to Atlanta later that night, and onto my destination the next day.  Delta did put me in a really nice hotel near the airport for the night.  

My how the story takes on a life of its own, that was not what I intended to talk about when I started this post.   

Thursday, August 25, 2022

The Thursday Ramble: I am calling about your car warranty that is about to expire

I recently read that the Attorney General of Ohio, is making headway at shutting down the major robocall operation on extended car warranties. If you have a phone in the United States, you have gotten the calls, often several in the same day, saying we noticed your car warranty is about to expire, or may have recently expired and this is your last chance to reinstate or extend it.  At the peak, it was estimated that they were making 100,000,000 calls a day.  That is a couple of calls a week to every woman, man, and child in the country.  Endlessly annoying.   

Most of it is controlled by two scumbag partners, most often in California. They have a nearly impenetrable network of shell companies and limited partnerships, many of them with links outside the country, making it harder to prosecute, or recover money.  Law enforcement often gets an order for them to cease operations - they simply shut down that corporation, and use another one with hardly a break.  They have been fined over $120,000,000. And they keep coming back.  

The premise of the calls creates a legal cause of action, what they are selling is a service contract, not a car warranty. Those are technically different things, and lawyers love mincing over words.  

The calls violate the Federal No-Call list.  Most of the cease and desist orders and fines have been based on violations of the no-call laws.  But that does not stop them from moving to the next identity. And Congress didn't make willing and repeated violation a criminal act, lock-em-up.

So what next.  Phone service providers.  Phone service providers can lose their license to operate for knowingly facilitating violation of federal laws. That can make it hard for scammers to find a phone service provider. 

In the early days of wireless phones, hundreds, maybe thousands of tiny local providers were licensed to provide cell service.  Often in small towns that the big name providers hadn't reached yet.  Over time the big providers covered the market, often simply squeezing the little guys out of business, only the more successful ones were bought out.  The little ones became worthless, but often retained their registration as a phone service provider.  One never knows.  

The scammers know, and they buy the license.  The licenses are considered worthless, and can often be bought for very little.  And suddenly a phone service provider in town with 100 people, that had no active lines, has a 10,000 lines connected to it, and is handling 60,000 outgoing calls an hour. The state and the feds have figured out the way to shut down the robocallers, is to shut down their phone provider, by cancelling it's license and disconnecting it from the grid.  

Advances in technology have made it possible to identify the originating provider in seconds, instead of hours - or days - or weeks. 

Shutting down the one group, will shut down over 80% of the calls.  There will be others. And the same strategy will work.  Until they figure out the next way around the system.  

 
 

Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Wednesday W's - Way, Where, When, Who, What


Way back when I was a child, my grandmother impressed on me to be seen not heard, and to listen more than I speak.  I haven't done a good job of heading her sage advice. I sometimes cast a large shadow, sometimes I want to shrink into the background and be unseen.  

Where have I been?  The office, home and the farmers market.  No place special.  

Where am I going?  I made travel plans to speak at a conference in Boston in late October.  I hope the weather is nice, I have not had good luck with trying to spend time in Boston.  I am not sure what all is going on in Boston that weekend but hotel prices are outrageous - a record for me - and not a super over the top hotel. But I want to be there.  It is a group I want to support, we have friends we should visit, and I would like to spend time in the area.  I have dead relatives there. 

When is the kitchen remodel going to start? Thursday!  Yea! 

Who have I seen?  Just the usual.  

What have I been watching?  One of the 6 local public broadcasting stations, yes six,  is playing the English Landscape Painter of The Year competition.  The show runs about 45 minutes, they bring in half a dozen artists and have them paint a scene, select a winner for the day, and at the end the daily winners face off again.  Reality TV with an artistic flair.  We started with 2015 or 2016 and are moving through the series with one show each day.  Sometimes I agree with the judges, sometimes I don't. It is fun and diverting.  

Who Deserves a Slap? DeSantis and his disciples in Florida. Censorship, imposition of his values, cultural genocide that will result in death for people like me.  On a scale of 1 to 5, about 5,000 slaps.  

What can I do about Florida?  For starters I will not travel to and spend money in Florida.  Remember tourist dollars keep Florida green, hit them where it hurts.  If they want to be a racist haven, let them be self supporting.  Second, I have had a real estate brokers license in Florida since 1980.  I have paid to keep it current since I left there in 1995.  It is up for renewal this fall, and I am not paying Florida $75 to renew it.  I will use the political motive to justify it, but realistically I am never going to live or work there again.  The odds of me falling into an opportunity to make money with it again are near nill.  It is time to give it up.  Time for me to become a retired real estate broker in Florida.  

What have I been eating?  I recently made a lasagna without tomato sauce.  J's digestion has become sensitive to tomatoes, so extra layers of cheese, veggies, and ricotta. It lasted three days.  

What is happening over the next couple of weeks?  A couple of three day weekends,  I need to take a day off this week - Friday makes a three day weekend for my birthday.  And then labor day is coming up.  The colonial fair at Mt Vernon is in September, if the weather is nice that is great fun.  

Till next W. 



Tuesday, August 23, 2022

Travel Tuesday - Trolls

I am a troll, I was born in the lower peninsula of Michigan, or as a Uper, would say, below the bridge.  The Mackinac Bridge connects the upper and lower peninsulas of Michigan.  I have never been across the bridge.  I have seen it from the air, the couple of times I was there, we flew into the Island.  

In the town my parents lived in, in Florida, the state built a new high rise bridge across the inland waterway on the north side of town.  In the shadow of it they built a new concrete fishing pier to replace the wooden one that had burned.  At the beginning of the pier was a small bar and restaurant.  I don't know that the official name of it was, we always just called it the Troll bar.  The food was good and the views of the water amazing.  The Bridge provided shade, all the better for the trolls.  

Near our home here in Alexandria, Virginia the Woodrow Wilson Bridge carries 10 lanes of I-495 across the Potomac River.  Under it is Jones Point Park.  In it is the original marker for the southern corner of the District of Columbia before retrocession.  That marker is in front of a colonial era lighthouse.  We were married at the lighthouse.  I sometimes remember it is Jones Point Park, but if I refer to it as the Troll Park, we know exactly what I mean. After all who lives under a bridge, trolls.  
 

Monday, August 22, 2022

Music Monday : The Penguin goes political Lock Him Up Yesterday! - A Randy Rainbow Song Parody

I usually leave politics to Bob, and others, but the video is - well fun.  A word of caution, if you are drinking when you listen, you may spew like this. Don't say I didn't warn you. 


And a catchy toon, Randy's book is a fun read. 


Sunday, August 21, 2022

The Sunday Five: Running Along


For years I had a framed Nike poster that read something along the line of, "there is a fat man, wearing my clothes, running my street, and I am afraid if I ever stop running, he will catch up with me."  Well I did stop running. 

  1. Are you now or were you ever a runner? 
  2. Do you know what your fastest mile or kilometer time is? 
  3. Have you ever participated in an organized run or race? 
  4. What is the longest distance you have run or walked? 
  5. Has he caught up with you? 
My Answers

  1. Are you now or were you ever a runner? I ran for about a decade, starting at about 28, I miss it. 
  2. Do you know what your fastest mile or kilometer time is? 7:03 mile, 
  3. Have you ever participated in an organized run or race? About a 100 of them. 
  4. What is the longest distance you have run or walked? 13.1 miles, I finished half marathons twice. 
  5. Has he caught up with you? About 100 pounds ago, and I am okay with that. 
Please share your answers in the comments. 

Saturday, August 20, 2022

The Saturday Morning Post - I Wonder if That Would Work


 I recently saw the registration poster for the 19th Annual Grandparents as Parents conference in Lexington, Kentucky. 19 years ago a friend of mine who was a grandparent, raising grandchildren, recruited me to be on the planning committee for the first conference.  We started out small, with a little funding from local agencies, and space in the Cooperative Extension building.  I think we had space for 100 people, and worried that no one would show up, the next thing we knew we worried that we would have to turn people away.  We went from wondering if it would work, to how can we accommodate the need.  

A couple of years later, I talked them into moving to new venue. And we morphed from a local conference to a regional one. We were worried that with the new venue and having to charge a small registration fee, no one would show up.  I guaranteed the hotel contract the first year on my personal credit card, and we sold the venue out, netting money to start the next year.  

I worked with the local bar association to get local family law attorneys to volunteer to sit down in private - one-on-one - to talk with families about the legal options. 

I was surprised, the average grandparent raising grandchildren, were in their late 40's to mid 50's.  Most often the parents were unavailable because of substance abuse or incarceration. Occasionally the children were just abandoned with family members, dropped off for the weekend and never picked up. The stories were often heartbreaking.  The efforts to provide a safe and secure home heroic. 

It is a pleasure to see this conference still going strong, after all of these years.  I wish it didn't need to happen, but as long as there is a need, it is wonderful to see that people are still finding a way to make it work.  


Friday, August 19, 2022

Fun Friday - Trains


 I have no idea why I like trains, I do. I find them fun.  Outside the train station in Lapeer Michigan are three nicely preserved cabosses.  The Detroit, Toledo and Ironton railroad would have been built to move iron ore from northern Michigan to steel mills in Detroit and Toledo that fed heavy manufacturing in the midwest.  I never knew of this one.  

Some people find cabosses romantic, my reaction was that they were very utilitarian.  Originally they were home for the brakeman, who literally climbed up on the outside of the train and engaged the brakes on train cars.  The interiors were spartan at best, often having a wood or coal stove for heat and cooking, and very basic accommodations for train crew.  

As a kid, the best part of seeing the Caboose was that the train had passed and we could cross the tracks (after stopping, looking both ways, and listening to make sure another train was not approaching.) Cabooses continued long after pneumatic brakes, a place for an observer at the far end of the train, and union rules required them, even when they were no longer needed.  Today they are museum pieces.  And fun to see.  

Thursday, August 18, 2022

Thursday Ramble - Reading and Writing


Why do I read so much? Because I can. Something like 14% of the world's population are totally unable to read or write.  An estimated 32-million adults in the United States are functionally illiterate - unable to read and comprehend, unable to read understand and reply to basic questions on something like a job application.  

Because of the way my brain is wired, I learned to read without learning to spell.  This mystified teachers in our rural schools.  I didn't learn reading in the way they had been trained to teach it. We fought over this for a couple of years. But within a couple of years reading clicked for me, and the teachers tolerated my spelling, because I clearly I understood. One of the reasons my handwriting is terrible, was to cover up my spelling. When I started taking college classes I spent a semester working with an expert, who assured me what worked for me, worked, and taught me new ways to approach spelling (this was in the early 1980's prior to spell check.)  

I didn't really become a heavy reader until my 20s. I discovered a world of knowledge and entertainment between the covers of a book. 

Computers and spell check changed my world.  In the late 1980's I bought a Panasonic typewriter with spell check and about a 10 page memory.  As I recall it was about $400; a couple of weeks pay for me at the time, but it changed my life.  Moving on from there to computers I have become much more of a writer.  And the more I write, the fewer words end up underlined in red.  Some days I get to nearly 100% in spelling, but I don't worry about it.  

If you want to improve your writing, do two things, read more, and write more.  I learn from reading, new ideas, new ways of assembling ideas, new characters, or styles.  The more I write the more naturally my writing flows.  

I can think faster than my fingers can commit those thoughts to the page.  I can read faster than I can talk - I read about 50 pages an hour. My brain sometimes assembles thoughts in odd ways, and this ends up in convoluted sentences, that communicate the point, but sometimes with the wordiness of a victorian novelist.

I really should listen to recorded books.  I have over the years, but haven't for several years.  When I was in law school, the public radio station in Louisville broadcast the Radio Reader, at 9:00 PM each night, I would go to bed, set the radio to shut off in one hour, and fall asleep to the spoken word.  I remember not wanting to miss a minute of "The Perfect Storm."  A novel I probably wouldn't read, but so enjoyed listening to.    


Wednesday, August 17, 2022

Wednesday W's - Great Aunt Edith


The Way We Were. This is my grandfather and my great-aunt Edith.  Let me sort through the family tree, she was my grandmother's father's brothers daughter. In her early life she worked in a cotton mill in England. Between World War I and World War II she entered into "service in a great house."  Think Downton Abbey or Upstairs Downstairs.  She then moved to the United States and worked as  housekeeper for the Firestone family. Sometime early in World War II a younger cousin (Sally) came to the United States for safety during the war.  Sally's father Bob followed, eventually ending up in Miami.  After the War, Edith and Sally moved to Miami and lived together there, think English Golden Girls. 

So What have I been up to? Work, I have resolved a couple of budget snafus, without anyone becoming unemployed. I explained the series of mistakes that led us to believe we had overspent a project, when in fact we had underbilled it.  Apologized and seemingly have been forgiven.  Mistakes that were made before I had access to the accounts system - but that came to light during my responsibility.  

Where have I been? Not much of anyplace, back and forth to the office, the farmers market, the French bakery because pastry boy was not at the market last Saturday, a little household shopping.  

Where am I planning to go?  I am speaking at a conference in Lexington, Kentucky next month.  We are making a road trip out of it, first stop is in West Virginia, to break up the long drive into two days, then two nights in Lexington, Ft Wayne Indiana to see my nephew, Elkhart Indiana to see friends, then Cleveland to see Jay's brothers, then back home.  We booked all of the hotels in the last week.  

What are we getting ready for?  The kitchen remodel is set to start next Monday.  The apartment looks like a warehouse, with new appliances and kitchen cabinets stacked everywhere.  We will be kitchenless for probably 3 weeks.  I have started using the new refrigerator, that is sitting in the dining room, I love it.  

Who have I seen? My sweet bear, and my office staff.  Not much going on. 

What walks have a taken?  A couple of shopping strolls around Alexandria, and a walk in the swamp, I hadn't been to Dyke Marsh in a few months.  

Who deserves a slap? GE Appliances, $4,000 in ovens ordered and paid for four months ago, and they can't tell me when the ovens will be here.  On a scale of one to five, at least 3. 
The oven stack is most expensive appliance for the new kitchen, because Thurmodore was honest that it would take at least 6 months to get the $5,200 induction cooktop I wanted, we went with the JenAir that was only $3,500 and was in stock. 

What made me laugh? Some great bloggers this week. 

What am I reading? "Leading the Unleadable," even a bigger challenge than the budgets.  

What I am watching?  Mostly YouTube. There are some brilliant content creators out there.  A young guy in Scotland posted a video is few months ago about buying and renovating a small stone house. The video was good, short, easy to watch, and went viral with ll-million views in one month.  He posted this past week, what he was paid in advertising revenue from YouTube, about $60,000, about the amount by which the remodel went over budget. 

Well, that is a lot of W's for this wordy week, 



Tuesday, August 16, 2022

Travel Tuesday - Airline Travel


It is kind of nice to be flying a little again.  Two trips so far this year, a couple more before the end of the year.  I had a few years with tons of travel, over 30 flights a year, a couple of years in a row.  It was fun, it was wearing.  Half a dozen trips a year would probably be better. 

When I was flying a lot, I was able to almost always get seats in the front of the plane.  Sometimes upgrades to business class.  A couple of memorable cross country trips in business class - you get warm nuts in business class.  

My trip in July was booked at the last minute, and on an airline I have not flown a lot since moving to DC, and I was in far back.  The last three rows had no one seated in them, I was just ahead of that, and both times the flight attendants asked me if I wanted move back a row and have the row to myself.  Yes, bliss.   

Monday, August 15, 2022

My Music Monday: Deep Purple - Smoke on the Water (Audio)


Time, life moves forward, I perceive it as linear.  We can look back, the recent visit to my home town, reminded me of the first time I heard this song.  In the high school gym, with Franko coordinating a slideshow of high school life to it. My job was to watch for the cue, and drop the needle on the 33 rpm record for the start of the show, and to be there at the end to stop the music.  That was nearly 50 years ago.  My middle brother is going to Michigan for his 50th High School reunion this fall.  I am only a few years behind him. Franko was a couple of years ahead of me.  He worked a photojournalist for a couple of decades, until the local newspaper industry died. He now manages the meat department in a supermarket, rides long distances on his bike, and adores his family.  He is, a brilliant photographer, who had better taste in music than I did.  



Sunday, August 14, 2022

The Sunday Five: the most embarrassing thing in my house


  1.  What is the most embarrassing room in your house? 
  2. If you could change it, what would you do? 
  3. What would we be surprised to find in your bathroom cabinet? 
  4. What is hidden away under your bed? 
  5. What is the oddest thing in your bedroom? (not counting spouses or lovers.) 
My Answers: 

  1. What is the most embarrassing room in your house? The kitchen - this is the before photo. 
  2. If you could change it, what would you do? What is about to happen, gut it and replace EVERYTHING. 
  3. What would we be surprised to find in your bathroom cabinet? A can of wall paint. 
  4. What is hidden away under your bed? An Ikea end table that has never been assembled.  
  5. What is the oddest thing in your bedroom? (not counting spouses or lovers.) A Leech jar, a reproduction of one from the 1700's. 
Please share your answers in the comments. 

Saturday, August 13, 2022

The Saturday Morning Post - The Condo Community Center








We live in a condominium.  For those not from around here, that is an apartment that we own, that is part of an association that manages all of the common elements.  This community is large, over 1,000 apartments in 4 high rise buildings, surrounding a community center. Altogether we have about 34 acres on a hilltop overlooking old town Alexandria, Virginia.  

The Community Center closed for COVID, and before it could reopen started a massive, once in 40 years remodel.  Work that was expected to take 9 months, took almost two years to complete.  The Community Center reopened last month. 

The first photo is the entrance on our side.  There are tennis courts and an outdoor pool on the roof. The Center is in a natural ravine, the top of the tennis courts are not much higher than the surrounding ground.  

The interior is where the real transformation took place.  We have amenities,  an indoor pool and fitness center, a private bowling alley that was entirely replaced.  A games room, a space for billiards tables that we are still waiting to have delivered (where the table tennis tables are - a gift from Brunswick for the delay), a large community lounge area, a private restaurant and bar, a small market, and a hair salon. There is also a lower level that previously was only accessible by a spiral stairway that was so difficult that I never went down there.  A proper stairway and elevator (lift) were installed, the space has a large room fitted out for fitness or dance classes.  There is also a massive TV down there so they can do movie nights.  There are a couple of smaller meeting rooms, and the association offices.  The association is a $10,000,000 a year business. 

Yes I pay a large condo fee.  Larger than the mortgage payments were on the first couple of homes I owned.  And it is worth every penny.  The place is well cared for, well managed, secure, and provides a lot of amenities.  


 

Friday, August 12, 2022

Fantastic Friday - Blitz the Wonder Dog


It has been a few years since I have written about Blitz the Wonder Dog, my sisters now aging German Shepherd.  I call him the Wonder Dog because he changed my feelings about dogs, from fear, or distrust, or even hatred, to what a sweet dog.  Once he is sure that you are not a threat, he is a sweetest, best behaved dog I had ever met.  In his younger days he was convinced that the Amazon Delivery guy was an invading army, and he would warn all within earshot of the threat.  He has mellowed.  He is 11, he has serious hip issues, is rather slow getting up.  He avoids the kitchen as his rear feet slip out from under him on the vinyl floor, and he falls and can't get up. 

Blitz was a surprise, my sister was not thinking about a dog.  Her husband called one day and said, "I am bringing a puppy home, he needs a home." He was the runt of the litter, the last one to leave home, he has outlived all of his siblings.  He was raised well, trained lovingly but firmly.  He is fantastic.