Tuesday, April 29, 2008

In Love

Where to take out-of-town family who've been to Virginia City, Tahoe, the Donner Memorial and the car museum? The mustang adoption center in Palomino Valley! We all enjoyed it tremendously and here is one little reason why..


and another...

The wild horses are gorgeous creatures one and all, yet the little fillies and colts definitely stole the show. It left our visitors all asking how you could possibly choose just one!

Saturday, April 26, 2008

A Wild Friday Night in Reno

Mother Earth partied hearty. She treated us to a 5.0 just before midnight. (Okay, so they revised that downwards to a 4.9 or 4.7, depending on where you look.)

But, let me tell you this one shook so hard that it was hard to walk. Things fell out of the medicine cabinet and the chandelier swayed for ten minutes afterwards. Fortunately, none of the stained glass fell, none of the cupboards spilled their guts and we can't find any cracks or other damage.

Getting back to sleep was hard with aftershocks nipping at us for the next couple hours, but we managed to get a decent night's sleep (JR's cough medicine with codeine probably helped). Waking up was easy since Mother Earth sent a nice sharp jolt our way right after 7:30.

Can I just say I'm thrilled with the timing? It's a weekend and at night. Parents got to comfort the kindergartners instead of me this time!

Friday, April 25, 2008

Shakers and Quakers

Earthquakes. We are in the middle of a swarm.

Today a couple of nice strong jolts at school threw the kindergartners into a tizzy. The quakes are pretty small, but we are just a couple of miles from Mogul so we are really feeling the tremors. At home, we sorta hold our breath for a couple seconds while we wait for the rolling to stop. But at school, the kidlets have to crawl under the tables every time we have a quake and that's adding to their anxiety.

The first strong 3.2 quake surprised us all. I said, "Earthquake! Get under the tables." Twenty-eight freaked-out little bodies in fetal position were under the tables before I finished. I've never been listened to so well!

That one day produced twenty-five quakes alone. Now our classroom is free of anything heavy that could fall down on a child. We plan an earthquake evacuation drill soon. Just in case. Because we don't really know what will develop.

Now the quakes are constant, usually mini ones so small that there's just a little twitch. We've had several 3 pointers that are just loud enough and bounce us around enough that we stop and wonder just how big the quake might get. Then we had the 4.2 and heaved a sigh of relief since we figured that's what the swarm had been working up to. But now we're wondering if we are experiencing aftershocks or foreshocks.

The UNR Seismology Lab is bookmarked and referred to constantly for the latest as are the USGS earthquake sites. The whole West Coast is shaking right now, but Reno apparently has the "E" ticket.

We're unimpressed (usually) by anything less than a 6.0, although we enjoy the lesser ones. Hey, the 7.1 Whittier Quake set the bar for us, although the waving walls from one of the 5.o+ Livermore quakes was kinda fun. And there was a 4.2 in La Habra that lifted our apartment straight up and set it down with a bang.

This swarm of quakes is a first for us though. Today produced four 3.2+ quakes, two of which woke us up last night and two during the day. There were about fifty other smaller ones (I counted them on the UNR site), many of which we felt.

I look out at Mt. Rose and Slide Mountain, all 10,000 feet of them and remember that they didn't get way higher than the Truckee Meadows without some serious shaking going on.

It's a good thing that geology ranks high in entertainment value at our house!

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Two Down, Two To Go

There's still no fence...but I managed to dig around the old concrete where two of the 4x4 posts used to be!

After the oak tree was removed, I had excavated around the old posts in preparation for fence reconstruction. I'd exposed the concrete, used the "jet" setting on the hose and began a little hydraulic mining on two of the posts that needed replacing. It worked remarkably well. Maybe a little too well, because when our 85 mph breezes arrived there wasn't quite enough to hold up the fence. It might have gone down anyway, but I unintentionally helped it along.

Cleanup came next. Thanks heavens for son #2 because those fence sections were heavy. I would have been smooshed if I'd tried to carry them off myself. Once the old fence was removed I could easily see the concrete footings but I kinda wimped out till the weather was a little nicer. Unfortunately the balmiest days were weekdays, but this weekend found me dressed warmly with pick and shovel in hand. I warmed up quickly once I began!

It sounds a little funny, but I love swinging a pick. I like how much easier it is than using a shovel, but I love how precise I can be with it. It's surprising how ya can hit the exact spot you aim at!

The first concrete footing was a tad daunting--much bigger than I had expected. It turned out to be about twenty inches in diameter. Fortunately for me it was shaped like a mushroom and narrowed once I was down about six inches. It took all morning, but I got to the bottom of it before noon and could feel a slight wiggle when I grabbed one of the old posts and applied a little leverage. A wiggle was all I could achieve no matter how hard I pressed. You'd think that all the Christmas/Valentine/Easter chocolate decorating my tummy, thighs, buns, etc. and sending my scale into spasms would have come in handy but no luck. That concrete must weigh well over a hundred pounds.

So...I set my sights on footing number two, which turned out to be smaller and easier. It was kinda tight quarters digging around it even though I dug out two roses what were in the way first. The poor smashed wisteria trunk, which I hope will send out new shoots, was only three inches away from the concrete. The soil was nice and soft due to all the water from my mining operations and so two and a half hours later, I could move it a bit.

Good thing too, because poor Kharma is sick of getting in trouble every time she goes over to visit the Bichon Frisees in back of us. Our neighbor is great about it, but we don't want to press our luck. So chicken wire is strung in the gap to slow her down, but Kharma pretty much laughs at anything less than a five foot fence. I'm motivated to get those two footing removed and new posts and footings installed as quickly as humanly possible just to keep the pup in the yard.

Now I'm just waiting for a big strong man with a pry bar to come my way.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

LA eNVy part 2

Spring in L.A. How well I remember it: marine layer every morning (which means it's grey until 11 or 1 o'clock) and then the sun shines nicely. Of course, down there you put a heavy jacket on if it's fifty degrees. Because that's a whole thirty degrees cooler than those extremely hot summer days.

Spring in Nevada now. Well, up here it's about how many seasons can you pack into a very short period of time.

The weekend was fabulous. Low eighties, blue sky, stars at night. Nice. It's kinda like The Screenwriter brought the weather with him. But he flew out on Sunday.

Then Monday arrived and so did the winds. Instead of the temps being in the 80s, the wind gusts were. So instead of our backyard looking like this:



It looked like this: What can I say? We had plans to replace several of the 4x4 posts this weekend. We did not have plans to crush our ten year old wisteria in the process. Kharma loved it--she thinks we enlarged the yard especially for her. Fortunately our neighbor is a dog person.

Ah, but that was yesterday. Today we woke up to find:

Yes, snow. Followed quickly by an earthquake at 8 a.m. Followed by an entire day of jittery little jolts. They are predicting seventy degrees for tomorrow.

You just can't get bored by Nevada weather.


Monday, April 14, 2008

LA eNVy?

It's nice to have family come and visit. It's even nicer, possibly, when they show up singly rather than en masse.

'Cause then you get to ignorefocus all your attentions on them more easily. We managed to neglect The Screenwriter for one whole day due to a headache that wouldn't leave. Fortunately, the Queen Mother and Erkie managed the entertainment nicely without us.

Twenty-somethings are not what they used to be though. The Sierra nightlife (cruising for girls at the local college hotspots) occupied them till the wee hours on Friday. However, Saturday night was slightly different--scuttlebutt has it that they both fell asleep fairly early and only woke up when the Queen Mother called to see if they were still alive or had died while DUI.

I found that it's also much easier to coerce smaller numbers into having their picture taken rather than rounding up a large and uncooperative group. (Although my propensity for asking them to stare directly at the sun might have something to do with their reluctance.)

It was nice to spend time with The Screenwriter. We hope he had a good time.

p.s. Isn't that puppy getting BIG!

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Prunus


It's not usually my favorite color combination, but how can you beat pink and blue at this time of year?

Come late September (with a little help from the bees, a minimum of snow on the blossoms and a ruthless culling process involving many pounds of small green peaches and a garbage can), we'll be harvesting Early Elbertas.

Peaches bigger than a baseball. Peaches so ripe that the skin just about falls off. Gourmet peaches. Incredible peaches that are completely organic. Peaches warm off the tree. Peaches I share with my neighbors and co-workers because we can't possibly eat all of them ourselves. Peaches dripping with flavor.

Whoops! I think my taste buds briefly hijacked my post. Because what I really want to say is...

Even if we didn't get one single peach, the blossoms against that blue blue sky would be beauty enough for me!

Saturday, April 05, 2008

More White River



Looking pretty and looking finished. It's very nice to have running water again. It's nice to have the mirror on the wall where it belongs instead of behind our sofa (or the Christmas tree each December) where it really didn't belong.

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

A Mighty Oak

Once upon a time, we planted a small oak in our backyard from a gallon can. We had just moved from Southern California and loved the idea of beautiful red leaves each fall. It was the smallest tree we bought for our new home.

Our little tree loved its new home and grew taller and taller. Each fall the oak leaves would turn a deep mahogany red and soon tiny acorns, no bigger than a child's finger, appeared. A mourning dove built a nest on summer in the oak's branches and raised several broods before the winter wind's destroyed the nest. Scrub jays began to sample the acorns regularly, sitting on the fence to hammer them open with their beaks.

Our children set up a badminton net and played, and the tree seemed to enjoy the sport because soon it was sending out branches to grab the birdies. Before long the boys stopped playing badminton, but that was okay because they discovered the joys of soccer and the tree never seemed interested.

The sunny hot backyard grew shadier and shadier under the oak's canopy. We set up a hammock under the oak and enjoyed relaxing while gazing up at the shiny green leaves each summer. We shared the hammock and talked about fishing and sports and vacations. The boys liked to set up a tent under the tree and invite friends for a sleepover during the summer.

After many years we finally put in a sprinkler system and found that large oak roots were in the way so we threaded the pipe through holes between them. The lawn flourished with the new water and so did the oak tree.

The rose bush began to produce fewer flowers each year though. We moved the rose and began to plant shade-loving plants like bleeding heart, columbine, sweet woodruff, and Japanese anenome instead. The plants needed extra water, even though they were in the shade, because the oak leaves blocked rain from the soil below. They blocked the snow each winter, because we discovered that pin oaks do not drop their leaves in the fall. The brown leaves stay on the branches until the new leaves push the old leaves off!

The tree grew larger and larger. Neighbors had planted expensive trees from 15 gallon pots, but the oak tree gradually caught up and eventually was the tallest tree in the neighborhood. It produced so many acorns that more and more jays began appearing and fewer songbirds built nests in the yard. The acorns would sprout every spring and we would pull tiny oaklets out of the lawn and the garden both.

The branches reached out over the lawn and then began to dip lower and lower. Mowing the grass meant ducking away from low branches, so we trimmed them. Large anacondas were about the same size as the roots that began to appear on the soil surface. It was harder and harder to find a place for new plants to grow. Every time we dug, we struck a root. The railroad ties around the garden began to move upwards and we knew our pin oak was sending roots far and wide. The yard grew shadier and shadier. Then the fence began to buckle upwards. This was not good news. The zephyrs would blow and gradually the fence began to wave like a flag in the wind. We would lie in bed, feeling the eighty mile an hour gusts rock the house, and wonder if the fence was still standing. We began tying the fence to the tree for support. We knew that fence repair loomed in our future. We lopped off most of the large lower branches and enjoyed a park-like ambiance in the yard. As the fence grew more unstable, we knew...the tree would have to go.

A few weeks ago, the last dead leaves fell from the pin oak. The shade-loving plants underneath were still dormant. The time had come. We called a tree service to come out and give us an estimate. They never showed up and the tree (and our checkbook) had a reprieve. The shade loving plants began poking their new shoots from the soil--if we waited too long, they would be crushed by heavy boots wielding chain saws. Hardening our hearts, we called another tree removal company who immediately stopped by. They quoted us a very fair price that was quite a bit better than we expected for such a huge tree and we accepted their offer.

I watched the jays and sparrows flit through the bare branches yesterday evening and felt sad that our tree had to go. I knew the birds would miss the branches and acorn bounty. I knew we would miss the fresh green leaves each Spring and the cool shade. I took some last photos of our old friend. I had to stand on the other side of the yard to get the whole tree in the frame.


The tree crew came this afternoon at 2:30. They cut off all the branches, leaving a tall pole in our yard. Then the chainsaws revved and the tree was only half as tall. They roared again and only a large wooden circle close to the ground was left. In two hours, twenty years of growth was reduced to sawdust, mulch and a pile of logs.

We still have many roots to begin digging out--some so we can put in new fenceposts, some that are running under the railroad ties, some that are reaching out into the flower garden. We will still be uprooting oaklets for several months. This summer, though, we will welcome a lush crop of sun-loving flowers planted in fresh soil next to a solid fence. Next winter we will enjoy another part of oak's bounty as we warm ourselves next to the fireplace.

We thought we'd miss our tree, but our yard looks clean and fresh rather than bare. The birds were gallivanting in our peach tree rather than the oak tonight while Kharma gazed at them intently, begging them to drop into her mouth. We planned for future shade by planting an Autumn Blaze maple seedling last summer. It should grow fast now that a large tree no longer will block both light and water. Change can be hard, but a fresh start offers many potential benefits.