The hardest part of making the decision to transfer to Boston was moving away from family and friends. So one of the things we committed to as mitigation was for Carol and the girls to spend a month in Seattle in the summer. This year that was the month of July. We all flew to Seattle on June 29. I returned to Boston (and work) on July 13, but Carol and the girls remained in the west until July 28.
I was worried that people would be busy and we wouldn't end up seeing very much of friends. But that was completely wrong. We had play dates almost every day with former preschool mates of Audrey and Charlotte. Plus we saw many of our old circle of Seattle friends. We hosted a party at Gas Works Park on a Sunday and about 50 people showed up. It was great to reconnect with them.
We also have good friends who have lived in Ecuador and Indonesia for years. They happened to be in Seattle for visits that overlapped with ours, so it was great to see Kathy & Mark and Jeremy. Kathy and Mark were in the process of moving from teaching jobs in Ecuador to new teaching jobs in Myanmar.
Audrey and Charlotte got plenty of time with grandparents and with aunts and uncles.
While in Seattle Audrey and Charlotte had a couple of sleepovers at my parents condo, and also several evenings of babysitting so Carol and I could have date nights.
After dropping me off at the airport for my return home Carol and the girls drove to Richland to spend a week with Carol's parents at their house a block off the Columbia River. Just about every day they took Grandpa's boat to "Car Beach" across the river to build sand castles and just hang out. They had a fantastic week at the Guettler house.
We also got to visit some of our favorite haunts in Seattle like Dick's Drive-in and Pegasus Pizza at Alki. We drove by our old house which hasn't changed a bit.
We were fortunate to miss the hottest weather of Boston's summer (so far). It became quite pleasant a day after the girls returned. We're in the middle of our second spell of pleasant temps and no humidity. The sticky weather will return, but it sure is nice while it's gone.
Saturday, August 7, 2010
A Usable Kitchen
Right after I returned from the Seattle the granite counter tops were installed. Within a couple of days I had installed the disposer and plumbed the drain. Once I got the granite sealed the kitchen was suddenly usable!
I moved a bunch of the food back in, and the day before Carol and the girls came home I moved the table and chairs back in. After several months eating in the living room, we could live in the kitchen again. Very nice.
There are still a bunch of tasks left to do: install the backsplash tile (just ordered) and trim the window, door, toe kick and ceiling and install the over-the-range microwave. But I feel like I've already dedicated too much of this year's good weather to the kitchen so I'm taking the rest of the summer off from the kitchen and I'll get to those tasks in the fall.
We are loving our new kitchen.
Sunday, July 4, 2010
Riding With the Eastgate Crew
I got to join my old Eastgate Cycling Club for one of their weekly Saturday rides. We did 58 miles out to the bakery in Black Diamond and back. I was very happy to be able to keep up. I guess all that bike commuting is keeping me in some kind of shape after all.
I should get to ride again next Saturday, after summer weather's traditional July 5th arrival.
Monday, June 28, 2010
Audrey Rides a Bike

I have dad guilt that Audrey got to be 6 years old without learning how to ride a bike. Last year when she was five I was very busy getting ready to move and then moving. This spring I've been very busy with the kitchen remodel.
Audrey's personality has had something to do with it, too. She sometimes can have a very hard time taking instruction. She wants to figure it out all on her own. But some things are too complicated to figure out that way.
We bought new bikes earlier this spring for both girls. Audrey tried hers a few times with the training wheels on but didn't like it. The training wheels were a distraction - she didn't like the jerk when the bike came to rest on a training wheel.
This past weekend we went camping on Cape Code for 4 days (I'll post photos and video as soon as I can, but that's probably going to be after I return from Seattle). I figured a campground would be a perfect place to learn to ride - paved roadways with very little, slow-moving traffic. I was kind of determined that she was going to learn to ride. A little too determined, it turned out, because we ended up getting into a little battle of wills. Audrey decided she wanted Mom to teach her to ride her bike. Only Mom could hold on just so.
So she did that with Mom a few times for maybe a total of about 20 minutes. Next session I took her out and promised to hold on just like Mom. I did so for about 30 seconds, but it was clear she had the knack. So I changed to just having my thumb on the back of the seat and she still did fine. So I removed my hand and just ran beside her. She didn't notice. After about 30 more seconds I told her, "Look, Audrey, I'm not holding on." She gave me a quizzical look and then it sunk in that she was riding on her own. There was no looking back after that. And all she wanted to do the rest of the trip was ride her bike. Ah, success!
Next we worked on getting started. She still has a little trouble getting things ready to go, but once she does she can get started every time. She was also afraid to go downhill at first, but I talked her through modulating the brakes to control her speed and by the time we left she was going downhill with confidence.
As a parent learning to read and learning to ride a bike are big milestones for me. Now that Audrey has achieved both of them I have to figure out what the next milestones will be. Maybe music. Carol taught Audrey Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star on the piano and Audrey loves to play it. She also makes up pretty decent music of her own.
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Kitchen Remodel. Part 3, 4, 5
It's been five weeks since my last update on the kitchen. I've been spending almost all my free time working on it. It was getting kind of old, but now there's light at the end of the tunnel and I'm re-energized. Plus we're going on vacation tomorrow (camping at Cape Cod for four days with our neighbors), then two days back at work before flying to Seattle. So I finally feel like I can take some time to post photos and an update.
The next phase after the last update was the wall work. I had to install drywall where the paneling wainscoting used to be and then blend that in with the existing plaster. That took a lot longer than I expected. Then we skim-coated the walls with slightly watered-down joint compound to give a uniform texture. Once that was done, Carol stayed up very late one night priming and painting because we were so excited to finally have paint on the walls.
Our original plan was to wait until the whole project was done to refinish the floor. But after talking to people about what it would be like (I'd never done it) I decided to go ahead while everything was out of the kitchen anyway. The range and refrigerator won't fit through the interior doors, and I didn't really want to put then outside for several days. So I just put them up on cantilevered platforms so I could refinish the floor well under their fronts. That worked pretty well.
Once the walls were painted and the floor done, it was finally time for cabinets. The refrigerator bay and its component pantry cabinet, overhead cabinet and plywood wall are the anchor for the whole kitchen. For example, the height of the overhead cabinet once it cleared the refrigerator determined the level for all of the other upper cabinets. It took a couple of tries to get it right, but now it's perfect.
Then on to the easy part - installing the rest of the cabinets. The Ikea cabinet system is wonderful. All of the cabinets are made out of the same parts just in different dimensions. Once you've assembled one cabinet you can assemble all the others in about 5-10 minutes each. Then the upper cabinets are installed on a steel rail. You just determine the height of the rail that will give you the cabinet height you want and bolt sections of rail to the studs wherever you can find studs. I used nice big lag bolts. Once the rail is installed, the cabinets just hang from it by sliding bolts - you install two nuts per cabinet and you're done. I didn't have to do one single bit of leveling on the uppers.
The base cabinets are also easy. They rest on legs that are big screws, so you can very easily level a cabinet by just turning its legs. Bolt them to the wall with a couple of molly bolts and Bob's your uncle.
Finally it was time to remove the old sink and cabinet. I had been waiting as long as possible because living without a kitchen sink would be the hardest part of the project. I had to cut the supply pipes to get the cabinet out. Then drill a bunch of holes in the new sink cabinet and figure out how to maneuver it around the orthogonal supply and drain pipes. With Carol's help I got past that hurdle.
Then it was time to plumb for the new sink and provide take-offs for the dishwasher and ice maker. After literally about 90 minutes at Home Depot trying to solve the plumbing fitting puzzle and do it with compression fittings instead of soldering, I surrendered and decided to solder. But I was smart about it this time. I cut all the pipe and fitted the whole system together dry, then took each assembly separately to the garage and did all the soldering comfortably at a bench with a vise to hold the work. Easy peasy. Then just bring the assemblies back in and install them in the compression-fitting shutoff valves. It might not look like a real plumber did it, but I'm happy with it.
The next major piece is the countertops. We thought granite would be too expensive but it has come down in price quite a lot. In fact, composite quartz and recycled glass countertops are much more expensive than granite now. Plus we don't have all that much countertop. So we decided to go for it. Carol placed the order today, tomorrow we stop by the slab yard on the way to Cape Code and select our slab, Monday they are supposed to come to make the template and when I get back from Seattle in mid-July it should be ready to install with undermount sink pre-attached.
If all goes according to plan, I'll install the microwave and the tile backsplash when I get home and when Carol and the girls get home at the end of July we'll have an almost-finished kitchen.
Whew. Yes, I'm tired. But also very excited to see it coming together.
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