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We bought a new refrigerator and it was delivered today.  It’s a very energy efficient refrigerator, as far as refrigerators go, and it doesn’t have a freezer component since we have a chest freezer which is extremely efficient.  And it fit nicely into the space available in the upper pantry area.  There is enough room on top for the dishrack to live when it isn’t being used.

Smallest wire rack with some things put away.

Smallest wire rack with some things put away.

Mishkin was very interested in opening the refrigerator door.  Fortunately for us, he’s just a hair too short to accomplish the task.

"When I get REAL big..."

"When I get REAL big..."

We still have a lot of things to do to finish this remodeling project, but it’s getting so much closer to completion.  The neatest thing is we have our kitchen back now and floors that can be cleaned.  It’s the little things in life!

It was snowing today, this morning, mixed with rain.  The sun hasn’t come out once but the clouds got thin enough that the sun was still able to fully charge the batteries from solar panels.  The aspens are starting to get leaves, and the other bushes like Serviceberry, Choke Cherry, Snowberry, Wild Roses, to name a few, are also leafing out.  The hills have a green color now instead of white.  The hilltops do have fresh snow on them, from what we can see if the clouds lift momentarily.

We put out a second hummingbird feeder, and both feeders are extremely popular.

Our pair of Western Bluebirds is building a nest in the birdhouse off the front deck, and having to defend it vigorously.  A couple of days ago a House Wren attempted to make a grab for the nestbox, and it did have possession for a bit.  The wren was inside the nestbox, preventing the bluebird from entering.  It was tense for a moment, but the wren did leave and the bluebirds regained ownership.  That same day a flock of swallows was visiting, and giving the bluebirds more to complain about.  We’re hoping the bluebirds retain possession and raise another couple of broods of babies.

Our early warning sound system told us of an early day visitor out by the garage.  I’m speaking of our macaw, who absolutely does not approve of bears.  She has a distinctive and extremely loud alarm call that she makes when there is a bear within eyesight; considering how good her eyesight is, this can be outside of the garage or across the valley on the hillside a mile away.  This time she was right, it was close to the house, and the earliest we’ve seen a bear after the snow melts.  It seems to us we normally don’t see a bear here until early June.

"What is making that noise????"  You can see this written all over his face.

"What is making that noise????" You can see this written all over his face.

We get this look on the faces of a lot of wildlife because our parrots do raise a fuss when something they disapprove of it outside the house.  I took this picture through a window next to Oro’s cage as I knew if I went outside the house I might be lucky enough to get a picture of the back end of the bear as it disappeared around the corner of the garage.  While I was grabbing a camera, Dan was grabbing a BB-gun; he has “bagged” many a bear, brown bears and black bears alike, with his trusty BB-gun.  He would dearly love to add a Polar bear to his trophy list but fortunately he hasn’t announced this plan when we cross the border into Canada as they would probably lock him up in one country or another.

My theory is the bear heard about our pantry remodeling and wanted to come take a peek.

Refrigerator and freezer will be to the left of the door, and a 4-shelf wire rack will be straight ahead.

Refrigerator and freezer will be to the left of the door, and a 4-shelf wire rack will be straight ahead.

Deeper and wider six shelf wire brackets will be on either side of the stairs in the lower pantry.

Deeper and wider six shelf wire brackets will be on either side of the stairs in the lower pantry.

The painting is all done and today our project is to put in the laminate flooring and floor trim.  Then we can move the appliances out of the middle of the kitchen floor and put the table back where it belongs.  Dan will put in the outlets and light fixtures after the floor is done, and then put up the wire shelves.  Last but not least will be putting the casing around the window.  Because the wall is log construction, the depth of the windowsill requires a ten inch wide board, and the lumber yard we went to a couple of days ago didn’t have anything that wide.  We’ll have to make a trip to Spokane to find this.

A smart kitty disappears when the macaw alarm call goes off.

A smart kitty disappears when the macaw alarm call goes off.

Mishkin has gotten adept at disappearing fast when Terry makes her alarm call.  He won’t come down from his bedroom until all is quiet, and then he looks around intently for a while to see if whatever-it-was comes back.  He doesn’t want to know exactly whatever-it-was, he prefers to be long gone before he finds out that sort of information.  He’s a need to know cat, and he doesn’t think he really needs to know.  Interspecies communication is so interesting to watch.

Seeing visual progress on our various projects is really quite exciting.  The pantry sheetrock has been completed and tomorrow Dan will be painting the room with both the primer and the final coat of paint.  Wednesday we will get the flooring installed, and then we will get to have the fun of putting in all the floor trim.

Today we had to make a foray to the store to pick up the quarter round floor trim and some stain, and a brush to apply said stain.  This is what I did for a couple of hours when we returned home late this afternoon.  Looks good and it is much more economical than the laminate floor trim.

Smelly stuff, the Minwax oil based stain

Smelly stuff, the Minwax oil based stain.

The other project that I’ve been working on is the lace shawl.  I’ve finished the body of the shawl and I’m working on the top border.  It will take approximately 13 hours of knitting to finish the border.  Once the border is finished I will weave in all the loose ends and then I can block it.  Perhaps by the end of next weekend.   I’m really looking forward to see it blocked because then the pattern will truly emerge.

Mishkin getting ready to conduct a detail inspection of the shawl.

Mishkin getting ready to conduct a detail inspection of the shawl.

The hummingbirds are making their full migratory return, and we are having hummingbird wars on the front porch. It is one the highlights of living here!

A male Calliope, his purple neck feathers flash a brilliant violet in in the right light.

A male Calliope, his purple neck feathers flash a brilliant violet in in the right light.

Today started off with a bang, or should I say scream.  Terry woke us up with her full “It’s a bear! It’s a bear!” alarm call.  She scared the wits out of the other two birds, and the cat, who was nowhere to be seen for a while after that.  We don’t know if she actually saw a bear or just our neighbor leaving bright and early in the morning.  I guess, if you are a bird brain and haven’t seen a bear for quite a while, that a white pickup truck might be easily confused with a bruin.  We certainly didn’t see anything outside worth screaming about.

Terry has been providing us with entertainment.  The other evening we were watching the old Alfred Hitchcock movie, “The Birds,” and Terry would laugh when the birds attacked the people.  It made watching the movie a whole lot less frightening, having a macaw laugh track, but it was a little surreal.

This morning Mishkin (after he got over the earlier fright), attacked and killed a roll of toilet paper – all over the floor in the hallway.  He has also been coming face to face with chipmunks on the front porch.  I’ll have to try to get a picture of that, as it is quite funny to watch the chipmunks sitting up on their back feet, studying the cat who is studying them.  Mishkin doesn’t seem to get the glass part of Kitty TV.

He does get something else though, which is quite amazing for a cat.  He totally gets pointing now.  If I point at something, he looks to see what I’m pointing at, instead of a normal catly attitude of not caring at all what any other being on the planet thinks about anything.  It is quite a leap of thinking ability, and we’re impressed.

I’ll work on getting more pictures of hummingbirds once I get the battery recharged on the camera.  There is a male Rufous Hummingbird staking out a bush in front of the porch.

Dan thought I should show how mean I am, hitting him over the head with a cast iron pan while we were putting the kitchen floor down. The truth of the matter is that I only dropped it on his head, accidentally. It does, however, answer the question about hard headed-ness once and for all. 🙂

It didn't dawn on me to take the pans off the pot rack next to the cookstove location.

It didn't dawn on me to take the pans off the pot rack next to the cookstove location.

The first third of the flooring in the kitchen is done. We have to stop now because the cookstove is in the way and we can’t move it without help. Monday after Jack and his crew are gone, we’ll see about finishing the floor. Progress!

Flooring is called Cherry Block

Flooring is called Cherry Block

The lighter floor will help brighten up the room, and the flooring has some of the lighter hues of the maple cabinets.    I’m happy, can’t wait to see what it looks like when it is all finished. and the appliances are back in the pantry where they belong.

The black thing laying on the floor to the right of the door is the heat shield that goes under the cookstove.

Yeah, I know I said we weren’t doing remodeling this year, but we couldn’t stand it anymore!  It is the pantry’s turn to get a face lift. Actually instead of merely a face lift, its more like a complete makeover including plastic surgery, liposuction, in addition to every cosmetic procedure known to mankind.

It all started with mice.  We’ve had a problem with mouse invasions since we moved into this house which is no great surprise since the house began it’s life as a small log cabin (the kitchen was the original whole house), with additions being made to it.  First addition was the living room and 2nd floor bedroom, then the bathroom and original master bedroom (now our exercise room), and downstairs laundry room which also has the solar equipment (inverter, controller, panels and batteries), was added.  Since we moved here, we added the current master bedroom off the kitchen.

Due to this method of additions to the original log cabin, there were mouse entry points throughout the structure and we’ve been working to eliminate these miniscule doorways to keep the mice out.  Judicious trapping and Mishkin have helped to totally eradicate the population that was living in the house.  The colony is gone.  Hurray!

So, now the pantry was the last obvious place that needed serious attention.  To describe the original room when we moved in here, the original door into the pantry was a homemade door that looked like a hatch door on a submarine.  It was roughly a foot off the kitchen floor, and when you entered the room you stepped onto a small one foot deep landing not much wider than the doorway, which immediately descended stairs.  Off to the left of the stairs was a platform which had some doors in the base of it, used for storage.  The woman who used to live here seriously hurt herself once on this arrangement, breaking her leg in a fall.

The only light natural light came from a very small two feet wide by one foot tall fixed window, and the other light in the room was a very (and I do mean VERY), funky 18 inch long 12-volt florescent light fixture attached to a beam running across the ceiling.  The roof was pitched to match the exterior roof line except where the light fixture was attached, where a false dropped ceiling was built, making a flat ceiling for the rest of the room.

The walls of this room were logs on two walls, roughcut wood planks on the opposite wall, and a combination of roughcut and hard foam insulation on the last wall.  Shelving was built into place using that most lovely of materials known as pressboard plywood, a very rough type of plywood usually used for an underlayment for flooring.  In other words, all surfaces in the room were impossible to clean, and very unsightly.

We replaced the original door, cutting it down to the floor so tripping was no longer an issue, and we built a floor in front of the door, and then built stairs down to the lower part of the room.  This basic layout exists to this day, but has been improved somewhat.

Part of the demolition was to remove the false ceiling and raise the height of the ceiling to its original height, a huge relief for Dan who is over six feet tall and was forever hitting his forehead.  We knew this demolition was going to be a horrible job to tackle, so we hired Jack and his sons! 🙂  They found a packrat nest from last fall up in the ceiling.  Horrific discovery in our opinion!!!!  We knew a packrat was getting into the ceiling last fall and we were able to chase it out of the house and close off that entry point.  Actually, Mishkin is the one who chased it out the house, thereby earning his keep for the rest of his life!

Jack and sons basically gutted the  pantry room, and started over with fresh insulation.  By removing the old insulation and ceiling we found multiple openings along the top of the wall which were plenty big enough for mice to enter the house.  Those were all blocked off prior to installing the insulation and sheetrock.

Whew, mess is gone and we're down to a clean slate.

Whew, mess is gone and we're down to a clean slate.

The other thing they did was to replace the old tiny fixed window with a new three foot by three foot sliding window, which will have a screen when the building company gets it for us, and we will be able to see in the room without having to turn on a light, and air out the room in the summer when the house gets warm.  Hurray again!

After putting in some new walls to cover the old log construction and rough rock foundation, we now had a place to put light switches, electric outlets, and ceiling lights which are in walls instead of having to be surface mounted with galvanized metal boxes and flex tubing.  Another huge improvement!

Sheetrock followed next, and the final shape of the room is coming into focus.

Same view through the door into the pantry.  Very different!

Same view through the door into the pantry. Very different!

We extended the floor of this upper platform, boxing in around the stairs.  It feels a lot safer now to walk down the stairs, no risk of stepping off an edge and falling.

New window!  A lot of natural light will really improve this space.

New window! A lot of natural light will really improve this space.

Having a source of natural light will mean no need to use the overhead lights during daylight hours, a savings on our power consumption which is always a good thing indeed.

The messy part of the job is in process.  It has taken two and a half days to reach this point; it would have gone much faster if anything was square or level.  As if! 🙂 Sheetrock creates an enormous amount of dust, and that’s before sanding off the mud the covers cracks!  This messiness will continue for a week until two coats of mud are done.  Then a massive clean up will occur and we can begin painting.  We’ll use the same color of pastel yellow as is in the kitchen.  This is the fun part of remodeling, getting to that stage.

While Jack and his boys were here yesterday finishing up the messy bits, we got them to help move the cookstove from its home in the corner of the kitchen, and we are going to work on replacing flooring in the kitchen from varnished pine board which are really impossible to clean to a laminate flooring that matches what we put in our master bedroom.  Our plan is to lay enough flooring today that when they return on Monday, they can help us move the cookstove back in place.  With four of us lifting and moving the stove, it’s no big deal.  But the darn thing weighs about 600 pounds and with just Dan and me trying to lift it, well we could do it years ago but not a chance now.

A disaster area now, but we have faith it will improve soon.

A disaster area now, but we have faith it will improve soon.

In the middle of the kitchen floor where the table used to sit there now resides a chest refrigerator and freezer, and space for walking around is now at a premium.  We are both trying to maintain absolute calm while completing these two projects, but it’s hard.  Disruptions in our living arrangements are a lot harder to take now that we’re older.

The other thing Jack is going to do on Monday is to relocate and replace the water filter down in the laundry room.

It will take a couple of weeks before both of these projects are done.  We still have to figure out what we want to do in terms of storage in the pantry.  We had originally thought about using cabinet storage but since I think we’ve totally solved the mouse invasion issue, and cabinets will make the room seem much smaller, we’re considering either the white melamine shelving, or wire racks on both sides of the room, flanking the windows.  We’re a ways away from installing these two options, so right now we’re still considering.

It’s going to be nice when it is all done, and we can’t hardly wait.  Mishkin will get to stay in his bedroom while we’re working on flooring.   He would have entirely too much fun whacking things across the floor and pouncing on the workers, namely us.

It is a gorgeous spring day here, temperatures slightly above freezing already this morning, and nary a cloud in the sky.  It is a nice contrast to yesterday morning when it was snowing!  We have a pair of Mountain Bluebirds here investigating the nest box already claimed by the Western Bluebirds.  They will have to work out ownership.

View from front deck, looking south and west

View from front deck, looking south and west

The grass is beginning to turn green but up here, none of the bushes or trees have leafed out yet.

View from front porch, looking due west.

View from front porch, looking due west.

The sun now sets immediately to the left of the white capped Mount Baldy.  In another couple of months, it will set far to the right of this mountain.

View from front deck looking west and north.

View from front deck looking west and north.

The solar panels are going to have a field day today producing power.  We’ll do laundry courtesy of the sun and not touch the batteries at all, and be able to watch our new television as much as we want, and I can do any baking that I fancy doing.  All after the flooring is laid but that should really only take us an hour or so once we figure out the first line of flooring.  The first wall is anything but straight.

They’re BAAACK!

First hummingbird for the year, a male Calliope, the smallest bird in North America.

So tiny

So tiny

Caught in the act

The buttercup horde was back today, or at least two of them were; a doe and last years’ fawn were here snarfing up flowers just like they knew what they were doing. Truth be told, there’s really no doubt at all the buttercups are there for dining pleasure more than viewing pleasure.  But I can still whine about it 🙂

This delicacy was gone by the time this youngster was born last year.

This delicacy was gone by the time this youngster was born last year.

Fawns are born the first week in June, and so this little one is approaching one year old.  We wonder if this was the fawn that was running laps around our house last June.

But, just in case this is an illegal activitiy. I got a close up picture for future lineups.

Profile Mugshot - Suspect #78978123-84529

Profile Mugshot - Suspect #78978123-84529

Mishkin hasn’t really noticed very many deer; he’s good at being oblivious when the mood is upon him.  But these two were so close to the front deck that I couldn’t resist picking Mish up and taking him to the front sliding glass doors to see if he would notice these two interlopers and what he would do.

The reaction was immediate.  He fluffed up totally, and growled!  He’s a big cat, almost a year old now and weighing in at a solid 13 pounds, and he has a deep and impressive growl.  He watched the deer from the safety of his rug next to the door, and then hopped up on the end-table next to the window and kept a close eye on the deer until they wandered off.  He’s a good watchcat, and very brave.  I can’t hardly wait until the first bear arrives.  He’ll know one is here because he’ll get to hear the famous macaw alarm call.  Terry absolutely can’t stand having a bear in the yard.

Tail fluffed but tucked neatly away, and ears slightly back, ready for action...

Tail fluffed but tucked neatly away, and ears slightly back, ready for action...

We had an amazing sunset last night.  It didn’t last hardly any time at all, but when the sun went below the horizon, color flashed all across the sky.

Amazing colors from west to east, fading within five minutes

Amazing colors from west to east, fading within five minutes

There are some Spring Beauty flowers for me to take pictures of sometime today when the weather warms up a bit. The heat from the cookstove is so inviting this morning and I’m feeling wimpy, so I think I’ll just stay in the kitchen for a while. We’re going to have a hectic few days while the satellite TV person is here (we’re switching from Dish to DirectTV), and a propane stove person is coming the same day to see the basement and discuss what sort of propane stove might work best. We have a propane heater downstairs but have never turned it on. And our contractor friend Jack will be here with his sons to do some work on the house which is too hard for us to do. It’s going to be a wholesale invasion. Yikes! Mishkin and I will retire to the upstairs bedroom for the duration.

All Decked Out

A female Ruffed Grouse seen strolling slowly across the grass outside our front door. She’s all in her spring feather finery, and she has an admirer out in the aspen grove. He has been drumming before light for over a week now. We love grouse! They are such little thimble brains.

In the grouse world, this is one hot chick!

In the grouse world, this is one hot chick!

I made pizza for lunch today, and now I’m baking an apple bread which has raisins in it, and because I had leftover pineapple from the pizza, I tossed that into the bread for good measure.  It smells good, from the cinnamon.  It makes great toast, spread with cinnamon icing.

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